Category Archives: General

Bawdy language

On a magnificent day such as this it is quite impossible to resist the nescient swell of buoyancy and well-being!  Even the sweeping fluffy white clouds that occasionally block the sun and momentarily darken the earth are marvellous! In addition the air is dry, the wind is mild and the tingling sunshine is golden. The burgeoning emerald corn stalks provide a luxurious labyrinth adjoining the swaying yellow wheat fields. The cornered agricultural landholdings across the flat horizon are like rising walls from beneath the sea showcasing the now archaic demarcations of the earliest settlers and land surveyors. Everything – past, present and future – is exceptionally clear!

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The perfect life

Having endured the often diaphanous though always limiting consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic for the past 1½ years I am not disposed to describe the sufferance as anything approaching either ideal or perfect. Indeed the travesty came upon us mid-March, 2020 rather precipitously. We were as a result unprepared for what followed. It has proven to be a steady though almost imperceptible declension, one which for me at least has succeeded to erode my erstwhile hospitable view of the future; that is, until now. Though I am reluctant to proclaim complete removal from the gnawing inhospitable circumstances, I have seemingly graduated to a more comfortable stance.  For one thing – and perhaps the most critical – my overall health has improved. This dramatic anomaly is as much a peculiarity to me as it may be to anyone else.

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Serendipity

What it is precisely that changes the flow of things is not always identifiable. Sometimes it’s an action. Other times it’s a reaction. And at other times it seems no more than the change of the weather. Whatever the cause it is assured that things will change one way or the other for reasons sometimes no more relatable than chance or fortune. Depending upon the consequence of change, the overall outcome may or may not be sustainable or pleasant. One presumes that the backdrop to change is the alteration of events.  It may on the other hand amount to something just as significant though no more visible than a change of mood. The governance of one’s internal rumination and one’s external behaviour, while inextricably entwined, is just as volatile and unpredictable as trying to control the weather.

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My Playlist

Playlisting can be a significant factor in the career of a recording artist. I can’t imagine the algorithms which govern the royalty payments from Apple Music! From the vantage however of the listener the object is as forceful, as complicated and as prophetic. Though the listener’s commercial interest does not compare to that of the artist, the settlement of what constitutes one’s personal playlist is not meaningless nor any less expressive. From my perspective playlists evidence an anchor of all that is preferred in one’s life. The evolution of the preferences is gradual but perceptible.  Many of us no doubt flatter ourselves to conclude that the process resembles distillation; that is, refinement and clarity, elimination of garbage and inadequacy, achievement of purpose and ambition. And for the most part, I’d agree that it is. But whatever the transition, identifying its singularly beguiling characteristics is always relevant. There are two ways to get down a river; viz., either you know where to go or where not to go.

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Summer at last!

We stalwart adventurers of the Northern hemisphere enjoy but an attenuated expression of superlative summer weather!  Today was one of those magical golden days with fluffy white clouds clustered beneath the azure dome, a light wind at times almost still, emerald green corn stalks wavering in the fields and the site of laden passenger vehicles with attached trailers carrying boats and canoes. Though I always recall with fervency the advent of the summer solstice on or about June 21st each year, it is more probable that the most popular mark of summer’s brilliance surrounds the two national holidays in Canada and the United States of America celebrated almost contemporaneously (by no coincidence I am sure) on July 1st and 4th respectively. Those latter dates convey recognizable clarity to the holiday and temperate purpose.

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People who’ve influenced me

Bartley McGregor

When I was a boy aged 10 years approximately I met a chap of about the same age named Bartley McGregor. His family in addition to having a large home at the top of the hill also had a colony nest for Purple Martin birds.  One of the hatchlings fell from the nest.  Bartley – who had been looking for the chick before we arrived for a visit – led me to an ancient wooden shed near the colony nest.  There was a slopping boardwalk into the shed.  I looked under the boardwalk and found the chick. When Bartley and I howled into Dr. McGregor’s drawing room to share the news of our find he referred us to his neighbour Nobby Wood, a naturalist who lived next door.  Mr. Wood took one look at the chick and pronounced its doom because there was no way to mount the height of the pole on which the colony nest perched; nor he said could we possibly feed it because it had to be fed constantly. He said the bird ate bugs.  I took the chick home with me and my mother spent a good part of the night by the outside porch lamp collecting bugs and moths to feed the gaping yellow beak of the chick.  The chick thrived. I would take bicycle rides with the chick on my shoulder.  I returned to Mr. Wood and showed him the chick.  He wrote an article about it in the Red Deer Advocate called “Billy’s Bird“.  We agreed it was best to release the chick among the hundreds of other Purple Martins about the property.

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Languishing in the summer haze

Though we haven’t fully succeeded to escape the sobering desideratum of humanity – namely, interminable and seemingly incremental medical and dental attendances, renewing debit and credit cards, health cards and driver’s licence and getting a haircut – we have however shifted from that tedious zone into a moderately less constrictive one of muted desperation. We’re not out of the corral but with the advent of the sun reaching its maximum declination on June 21st, the horizon outlook is now fully visible. I’ve decided that the date aligns with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s anticipated opening of the Canadian border for non-essential vehicular travel on July 21st. It affords further though hesitant anticipation. Meanwhile there is nothing to do but languish in the summer haze.

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My huckleberry friend…

Today is July 1st or Canada Day! And it’s time for merrymaking! Unquestionably I am proud of my numerous blood, familial, friendship and social alliances within both Canada and the United States of America. Though I once lived in Washington DC and though we have since made a routine of wintering part or all of the season in Florida, the only memorable occasion I have of the Fourth of July or Independence Day is a trip we took to Fort Lauderdale years ago when I was still practicing law.  We mistakenly imagined that Florida would be isolated in the summer.  Indeed based upon another trip during a different period we had previously taken to Florida in the summer that observation was accurate.  But we discovered it didn’t hold for the Fourth of July.  There were throngs on the beaches and line-ups for restaurants! We anodized the miscalculation with fresh oysters and vodka martinis! The conjunction of the American and Canadian national holidays is particularly trophic as both countries begin to relax from the COVID scourge. It naturally enlivens our prospective.

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Domestic flavour,,,

On the last day of June – the day before Canada Day on July 1st – the public atmosphere is noticeably clamorous. The opening today of personal service industries – hair salons and nail spas – has as well engendered uncommon activity and with it no imperceptible degree of optimism. The thread of a familial theme promotes a decidedly domestic flavour to the energized commotion. It is an occasion for us to reunite within the sphere of our ambitions. For as long as I can recollect we’ve abhorred the ribaldry of a statutory holiday. So we secure ourselves contentedly within our compass. It has thus inspired the stock nutritious features; viz., literature (Thomas Babington Macaulay’s “The History of England from the Accession of James II“), music (Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca“), food (garden fresh vegetables) and smug anticipation for what is on the horizon.

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