A Late Christmas
Sunday, February 22, 2026
 | | Camellia sasanqua 'Yuletide' |
A Yuletide Memory Postponed
Time
confuses me as I thought that I had purchased a Camellia sasanqua ‘Yuletide’
just in the last four years. That could not be the case as Rosemary died on Dec
9 2020 and for at least three years before she would nag me in about the second
week of December to go and look for this camellia that blooms near Christmas. It
seemed that the camellia was not all that hardy and it would die.
This year my
camellia survived from last year but (a big but) it did not bloom until a few
days ago. Why would this be? My suspicion is that those camellias from the past
were grown in a greenhouse so they were forced to bloom earlier.
Whichever I
look at this I can only smile when I enter or leave my house as my camellia is
on a stone block outside. It has only two blooms. I cut them both for this blog
without having second thoughts.
This
camellia, like all the plants in my garden, have (flowers or not) the lovely
face of my Rosemary.
Rosemary's Hellebores & Thinking Too Much
Thursday, February 19, 2026
 | | Top - Helleborus 'Honeymoon Blue' & Helleborus x niger 'Honeyhill Joy' 22 February 2026 | The date of the scan here is today when I wrote this blog. I am filling holes as I have been doing a lot of bed rotting with Niño and Niña. I have been staring at the ceiling and doing a lot of thinking. As Captain Beefheart said in his Ashtray Hearts - 'He's had too much to think." Captain Beefheart - Too Much to Think It is
impossible for me to look at the now flowering hellebores without thinking that
if Rosemary were alive she would look at them and smile. My Rosemary kept her
emotions mostly to herself. Even though she must have laughed I don’t have a
memory of her doing it.
Because of
the cold rainy weather these weeks I keep postponing the inevitable which is to
clean up my garden and prune my roses. The pots with my hostas have dead leaves
that I have to remove. On a string of sunny days this can be a pleasant task. I
do use a short ladder and my daughter Hilary says she wants to be present when
I am on it. I try to be careful and I like to be independent but I just might
take up her offer.
One of the
spring activities that Rosemary and I indulged in was to go to nurseries to see
what new plants were being offered. Now I am more likely to keep just what have and when something dies to just remove
the plant. My garden is what I call a shoulder to shoulder garden where you do
not see dirt. My hostas grow to be big so that dirt underneath does not show.
Just like I
don’t plant to go to the American Hosta Society Convention this year
(partly because I want to avoid going to
the US ) I do believe that I might even stop paying my dues and not be a member
of the society.
Is
increasing withdrawal an indication of my age? I believe it is.
Involuntary Autobiographical Memory
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Julian Barnes - Death and the Lemon Table The Julian
Barnes book Departures(s) is definitely not a novel even though it is called
that. I am reading it slowly as there is so much information that for me is
startling which at the same time I can understand.
Barnes
mentions something he calls IAM which stands for Involuntary Autobiographical
Memory. Some people have an extreme version of this and become stifled in their
life to continue on.
While I do
not remember (even if I try) what it was like when I was born I remember st
stuff like being 7 or 8 and my mother was combing me. She said, “This hair over
your forehead makes you look like Hitler.” I believe I asked him who he was but
I do not remember her answer.
This IAM and
an extreme version called HSAM or highly superior autobiographical memory,
keeps appearing in my thoughts all the time. There is one in particular that I
have written about before. I was six and I went into a cabinet to help myself
with more candy corn that my mother had hidden there. When I opened the cabinet
there was a mirror. I stared into it and thought, “This is me.” Since then it
has become almost impossible for me to look into a mirror and not be back to
when I was six. I think immediately of Borges who said that every first time is
followed by that first time, over and over. And famously he asked, “Is this the
last time this mirror will reflect my face?”
I had two
good friends from my four years at the Catholic boarding school, St.Edward’s
High School, in the late 50s. One of them, Howard Houston taught my older
granddaughter when she was 8 to fish. The other friend, Lee Lytton my wife and
two granddaughters met in his birthplace in Sarita, Texas. He was most gracious
and invited us to a nice restaurant by a river.
Why are
these two friends in my thoughts? These thoughts are definitely not voluntary.
I will have
to keep on with the Barnes book to see if he has more revelations on the
subject.
When I look
at a book in a bookstore I like to read the first paragraph (and sometimes the
last). I wrote about that here. In Departure(s) Barnes has this first paragraph
– The other day I discovered and alarming possibility. No, worse: an alarming
fact. First Paragraphs and Autobiographical Novels
But even
more startling is that on the previous page he has the title for the first
chapter – The Great I Am.
I believe
that this book is the best book to read if you are reaching that age when
oblivion is statistically an immediate possibility.
The
photograph of Rosemary illustrating this blog I took in 1969 a year after we
had been married in Mexico City. It is in front of my bed on the opposite wall
where she stares at me and I stare back. I was there in 1969 with my camera in
hand. I cannot stop thinking that. It is my AIM working and like Borges would
have said, I look at her portrait which I just took.
And pensive monitor of fleeting years!
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
 | | Galanthus - 15 February 2026 |  | | Galanthus - February 6, 2022 |
To a
Snowdrop – William Wordsworth
Lone Flower,
hemmed in with snows and white as they
But hardier
far, once more I see thee bend
Thy
forehead, as if fearful to offend,
Like an
unbidden guest. Though day by day,
Storms,
sallying from the mountain-tops, waylay
The rising
sun, and on the plains descend;
Yet art thou
welcome, welcome as a friend
Whose zeal
outruns his promise! Blue-eyed May
Shall soon
behold this border thickly set
With bright
jonquils, their odours lavishing
On the soft
west-wind and his frolic peers;
Nor will I
then thy modest grace forget,
Chaste
Snowdrop, venturous harbinger of Spring,
And pensive
monitor of fleeting years!
When I
started my blogging in 2006 I had no idea that many of my blogs would combine poetry with my
photographs. Through the years I have amassed over 150 blogs where I mate my
images with Emily Dickinson. I have blogs that feature Jorge Luís Borges, William Carlos
Williams, Julio Cortázar, Alfonsina Storni and many more. This blog will be the
first one where I combine Rosemary’s galanthus with William Wordsworth. One of the results of all this is that because I have a decent memory I know quite a few poems about many subjects.
The
snowdrops in my Kitsilano garden were all put there by Rosemary. She did
everything possible to have something flowering in any month of the years.
Right now, besides her snowdrops, there are five helleborus. I wrote about them
here. Rosemary's Hellebores
The
hellebores remind me of Rosemary because they are sturdy and bulletproof just
like she was. But because she was dainty, gentle, small and feminine the
snowdrops are my Rosemary.
Julian Barnes - Death and a Lemon Table
Monday, February 16, 2026
 | | Alex and Pancho - Ektachrome - Curtis Daily |
 | | Rosa 'Betsy Sinclair' |
Julian Barnes's Departures(s) NY Times Review Read it to find out about his Lemon Table. La Santa Muerte The Horror of Death - the Philosopher Opines A few days ago I read a terrific review of Julian
Barnes’s latest and not quite novel. It is called Departures(s). Barnes says
this will be his 15th and last book. While he is a tad younger than
I am he has Parkinson’s and a cancer that is not quite terminal.
I know that while I have promised myself not to buy
more books, I know I will have to buy and read it.
In other blogs I have written about my favourite
Barnes novel Nothing to Be Afraid Of. Because I lived in Mexico for many years
I don’t avoid thinking about death as so many do in our Anglo USA and Canada. I
have taken photographs of a Mexican friend where both of us explored the patron
saint of Mexican drug traffickers called La Santa Muerte.
As a little boy of 8 in Buenos Aires my mother took me
(definitely with a purpose) to the open casket funeral of a neighbour. He was a
teenage son who had run into a train in his motor scooter. I remember seeing
his bandaged face. A few weeks later a neighbour across the street won the
lottery. For about a year I thought that only neighbours died or won the
lottery. A year later my mother went to
the Philippine Embassy on Caller Florida which was in the same building as the
American Embassy. Next to it was the Lincoln Library that had a novel surprise
for Argentines. If you became a member you could borrow and take a book home. I
looked a book or magazine called American Heritage. In it I saw bodies of dead
soldiers (mostly Confederate) taken by Timothy O’Sullivan during the American
Civil War. It was then that I really had my first glimpse of the inevitability
of death. I marveled how those dead soldiers looked no different from the men
walking outside on Calle Florida.
My next exposure to death happened in 1966. My uncle
(a pleasant fake one) Leo Mahdjubian called me at my office at the Argentine
Navy and said, “Alexander your father kicked the bucket yesterday. He was taken
to the hospital by a police sergeant so you will have to go to the police
station to sign some documents.” I was called by that sergeant who told me he
had been a friend of my father and that he knew that he had been working hard
at a laundry to save money so he could bribe an army general so that I could be
sent back to my mother’s in Veracruz. He further told me that he had emptied my
father’s pockets as they would have been emptied at the hospital. With the
money that my father had been saving, this penniless conscript paid a cheap
funeral for his father.
Rosemary and I were there at my mother’s bed in 1972
when she was dying. I was able to watch and hear her breath in and then die. We
could not find a local doctor to sign a death certificate. This was done by a
vet who said, “Tu mamá está muertita.”
But my most devastating witness to death happened 6
minutes before Rosemary died in bed on December 9, 2020. She asked, “Am I
dying?”
How does one answer? I did not.
Somehow the little yellow rose in this blog brings me
a pleasant memory of Rosemary even though I purchased the rose after she died.
Closed for Demolition
Sunday, February 15, 2026
 | | Rosa 'Betsy Sinclair' | I had already on my breast a little sign that read: - Closed for demolition-. And here you have me painting the walls, opening the windows, decorating the table with a yellow flower, with which autumn pays for its charms. Mexican poet Carlos Pellicer A few months
before my Rosemary died on 9 December 2020, my cardiologist called me. He
noticed that I had applied for a right knee replacement. He told me, “Alex, you
must cancel this as you will have to take care of Rosemary.” This I did and
until now I have not had any problems with that knee. My rheumatologist told me
that cycling was good exercise to keep my knees in shape.
A couple of
days ago I went cycling for an hour. When I returned my right knee had that
familiar pain of 5 years ago. I have to be careful going up and down the stairs
to my room as I tend to lose my balance.
This has all
resulted on my thinking about my age. I look at Niño, who while being in
remission from his lymphatic cancer of the intestines, looks at me sometimes
with a faraway look. He refuses to walk around the block with me on sunny days.
I have written before how when he stares at me I think that he is telling me, “Alex,
don’t die before Niña and me. Who would take care of us?”
At my age I
have four Vancouver friends my age, or older, who have intact marbles. The rest
of those my age or over have all since died. I do have a cousin in Buenos Aires
who is 82.
This
isolation of living alone with Niño and Niña is now really hitting home and can
now see that my immediate future is about to end.
A Bedtime Story for Valentine's Day
Saturday, February 14, 2026
 When we
arrived to Vancouver from Mexico City in 1975, I believe I may have gone to
Wreck Beach where I photographed some sand ripples. I made a Valentine’s card
and gave it to Rosemary,
Today is
Valentine’s Day and Rosemary stares at me from her portrait on the wall
opposite of my bed. I just cannot help myself and I have to stare back.
Because I am
really an English speaking Latino I am a tad romantic. Rosemary and I did lots
of stuff together where we explored our romantic involvement with each other
and celebrated many a time with active shenanigans in bed.
One occasion
I remember well is that we commemorated one of our wedding anniversaries at the
Granville Island Hotel. We first saw the film An Officer and a Gentleman. I had
called the hotel to tell them to have an ice bucket with a bottle of good
champagne in our room. It is most difficult for me to forget that were unable
to turn off the ice making machine of our room refrigerator and we had a
sleepless night with next to no shenanigans.
In our home
all the plants (first in Kerrisdale) and now in Kitsilano are reminders of our gardening relationship. I must admit that
before Rosemary told me how to be a garden snob I would buy those silly
(without scent) red roses for Valentine’s Day. But I did buy her Belgian
chocolates (my faves they were).
Now with her
gone I often open my room closet and look at her shoes all in a row. From the
very beginning of our 52-year relationship I would tag along when she went to
buy shoes and she listened to me when I suggested a pair she should buy.
Another
romantic memory is of us going to The Bay to buy sheets, pillow cases and
towels. Every time I make my bed in the morning her voice in my ears says, “Alex
let’s make the bed neat for the cats.”
I believe
that our relationship was a good one as we pursued lots of stuff that we did
together. One of them was daily breakfast in bed. We did this for 25 years. I
was often very hungry for breakfast as Rosemary was more active in the morning
as we were about to wake up (you know what that entailed).
When I look
at my cats these days I cannot stop from asking them, “Do you remember
Rosemary?” They are a living connection for a woman that I loved.
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