Saturday, September 15, 2012
Photo of the Week - Carnevale - The Venetian - Las Vegas
In August when we were visiting The Venetian, we came upon some interesting foliage. There were two who looked like this:
And then they started moving....
Monday, September 03, 2012
The Pas Centennial
Welcome Home. The greeting was
at the end of a long journey. In many ways. This was the town where
I grew up, where my parents moved early in my life to find work that the south
couldn't offer. I can see now that I was one of those teenagers who
couldn't wait to go out and see the world. I moved back. Several
times. And then no more.
What did I expect going back to a
town I left 37 years ago? Would I recognize anyone?
The Pas Centennial Parade Float |
The Pas' 100th celebration of its
incorporation centred in the community complex. Headquarters. When
we walked through the doors, we could see pockets of people. Like many
years ago, my best buddy Sheila and I spent the day together, checking what was
happening around town. In the middle of the reception area, we stumbled
upon her two sisters, one who lives in The Pas and one who lives in
Alberta. You can't really tell who will be the ones that leave and who
will be the ones that stay.
I gravitated to the wall of photos,
seeing a lot of faces I knew long ago. "Patricia Rawson, is that
you?" I was impressed. When she said her name, I couldn't
connect the picture I had of her in my mind. And yet she did.
A few other people gathered around;
they were all from my graduating class. Our chat was brief. Too
brief. I would like to have asked them what happened in their lives,
where life led them.
The crowd grew. I recognized
friends of my parents. My uncle and aunt. He was with one of his
two daughters and her daughter. Explaining relatives to people can get
complicated fast. The granddaughter was now 23; I had never met her
before. How does that happen?
We wandered to the souvenir table; I
picked up a picture book of the 100th centennial. Paris Cafe, Gateway
Drugs, Cambrian Hotel. All gone now. In fact when I drove down
Fischer Avenue, so much is gone - the park where my sister was pushed off a
slide and landed on the ground with a misshapen arm, the shop where every
September we went and got a new pair of shoes for the school year, the store
where my dad bought his clothes.
What isn't gone...
As my family moved away from The
Pas, my visits became infrequent. But always when I came back, I stopped
at the lake. Clearwater Lake. This is where I brought
my children for vacations. Of anywhere in the north, this is where part
of my heart resides.
Coming home. What happened for
me during the homecoming was a connection between the past and now.
Reunion. With family, school mates, dear friends, grown up children I
babysat, ex-relatives, my nephew and his family (and now I am a great aunt!).
We drove back to Winnipeg through
The Bog. We found a picnic table alongside an arm of Lake
Winnipegosis and ate Saskatoon pie. Around the table sat my mother, sister and daughter, my
travel companions for our northern adventure. So much of who were are has
roots in the north, so much of our history. I wonder about home.
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