New Year's In Veracruz With My Rosemary
Thursday, December 31, 2020
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Burnaby - Springer Ave - 1975
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For me New Year’s has always been a bittersweet event. I
never did like going out and then to be suddenly embraced by perfect strangers.
And I don’t drink.
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Rosemary & Alexandra Elizabeth - New Year's Veracuz 1968
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Rosemary had adopted, since I can remember being together, the
idea of eating twelve grapes before the clock struck 12. This was a Spanish
custom in my family. This year I did not have the heart to do this in
the solitude of my Kits home accompanied by Niño and Niña.
But I can remember at least two most memorable New Year’s. They were our first, ones, one in 1967 and the other in 1968. In the latter our new
Alexandra Elizabeth was with us.
Those first two New Year’s we spent in the port city of
Veracruz where my mother in her house on Navegantes taught school to the children
of the employees of Alcoa Aluminum who had their headquarters in the city.
In that first 1967 New Year’s it was not our first time
there. We had been there before, and if I count back, 9 months from Ale’s
birthday in August 1968, surely she was engendered in some hot night in
Veracruz where I had carefully oiled the hinges of our two separate bedrooms.
New Year’s in Veracruz, with the hospitality of my mother who
adored Rosemary, was a pleasure. Rosemary never did adapt to the humid heat of
the port city and took various showers during the day. But I remember those evening
walks on the Malecón (Spanish for a seaside boulevard) holding hands and
smelling that curiously almost pleasant smell of humidity, the sea, bunker oil
and fish. All I could do was to stare at Rosemary’s face and think how lucky I
was to have that blonde all to myself.
And of course at midnight nothing beats the sounding of the
ship’s sirens. Because we lived in the altitude of Mexico City it was startling to wake up on January 1 to the
louder noises that happen when at sea level there is more oxygen.
In that 1968 New Year’s
Eve when Ale was four month old we might have taken her on her first Veracruz
tram ride. She might have sat with us as we sipped the famous jarocho (Mexican Spanish for of or from
Veracuz) coffee called a “lechero” at
the Parroquia on the Zócalo. This notable corner coffee and restaurant
establishment was tiled in white (it almost felt like you were in a bathroom)
with large overhead fans. But we opted for the portales outside where the marimbas played and you could hear the
clanging of the trams and smell the sweet exhaust of the liquid gas-powered
(all made mostly of wood) buses.
The curious banality of death
If God were a woman
My Rosemary & Leibniz and Newton
Ashes denote that Fire Was
My Rosemary - the Decider in Chief
Who will be first? She was
Who Will Be First? May 18, 2013
My Rosemary the Hoarder
My Rosemary is no more
Smelling behind the ears
On the same wings, these two can fly
My Rosemary's nine beds
Esa rubia en especial
Deo gratias
In spite of all those cold Vancouver New Year’s Eves my
memory of the evening has always been of humidity and heat and of holding
hands.
With the death of Rosemary on December 9 there have been few
events since then that have in any way helped me forget that she is not around.
But there was one happy incident which I will write about here so I can finish
this 2020 in an almost positive note that the next year will bring some needed
joy in what is left of my now unshared existence.
I wrote this blog in which I included a lovely Polaroid
SX-70 snap that I took of her in 1975 when we had just moved to our house in
Burnaby (Springer Ave). As things go I noticed that the photograph was
luminously beautiful. But I could not find the original. I asked Ale I Lillooet.
I looked into all our family albums and in those files of family photographs
that are currently in disarray in our (my) dining room.
I was desparate as the scan that I had was in very low
resolution. I looked everywhere. Then I went to a large armoire in our piano
room. There was nothing in the drawers. I opened the double doors where there
are some Mexican dresses. On the floor there was the Polaroid staring right at
me.
Such joy!
The Curious Banality of Death & the Remnants that Persist
Monday, December 28, 2020
“La gente que se da citas precisas es la misma
que necesita papel rayado para escribirse o que aprieta desde abajo el tubo del
dentífrico” Julio Cortázar – Rayuela
“That people who make precise dates are the same kind who need lines on their writing paper, or who always
squeeze up from the bottom on a tube of toothpaste.” Julio Cortázar - Hopscotch
Death in the 21st century I am sure is no different from
others. And yet.
In the other century when someone in the family died you
called up your other family and friends and then you put an obituary in the
local paper. People would then mail sympathy cards. I have received many in the
last couple of weeks since the death of my Rosemary. But the cards and emails have come for a 21st century reason.
What surely makes death be seen in another light or facet is
the role of social media and in my case my posting of my blog in social media.
When I saw what was coming I began to write blogs that describe the process of
my Rosemary’s going away in a subtle manner so that few would guess outright
what was happening.
Her death was an ordeal (surely to her) but to my two
daughters and granddaughters, and of course me. I must write here that the
writing of it all has given me solace in an understanding as I tried to put
what I was feeling and thinking into words.
When my Rosemary died, not too many minutes later, I
photographed her hand on Niña the cat (her cat, my cat, our cat).
It has been difficult for me to change from saying or
writing “our” daughters, cats, house,
etc to the singular “my”.
But what has been more difficult is the slow removing of
stuff that reminds me of her that makes it painful for me to live alone in a
house with two clingy cats,
I believe that they quickly forget of situations but
understand that they now only have one human to attach to. And this they do.
And this is calming and soothing. I don’t feel completely alone.
Removing that stuff is the difficult task. Her hearing aids
went to a friend of my daughter Ale in Lillooet. I keep finding the little
batteries for them everywhere and I must take them to London Drugs. My daughter
Hilary will come on Saturday to sift through our bathroom drawers to remove all
the medicines that are not needed.
I have been emptying the fridge since December 9, the date
of my Rosemary’s passing. My daughter Ale and I thought of all kinds of food
that we thought Rosemary might want. There was soft white bread, cut up melon,
mango sorbet, Orange Crush and lots more. I have been eating it and have had to
throw mouldy bread away. What am I to do with the Nestle Quick she mixed I heaps
with her 1% milk? She would stir the mixture in a mug with a spoon and make a
noise close to that of chalk on a blackboard. I hated the noise. I miss it now.
What am I to do with the decaf coffee grounds she stopped drinking months ago?
A curious quirk of her sickness was that strange female-pregnant desire to eat
stuff for one day or two and then no more. How were Ale and I to know that a
cancer of a liver (among the many things wrong with Rosemary) would not make her want to
eat anything? In the last three days, Coke and ice was all she would consume.
If God were a woman
My Rosemary & Leibniz and Newton
Ashes denote that Fire Was
My Rosemary - the Decider in Chief
Who will be first? She was
Who Will Be First? May 18, 2013
My Rosemary the Hoarder
My Rosemary is no more
Smelling behind the ears
On the same wings, these two can fly
My Rosemary's nine beds
Esa rubia en especial
Deo gratias
Today I washed the sheets and pillow cases. I had changed them
after Rosemary died. But there were death stains on the mattress cover. I
washed it twice. Is this a remnant of her death, a presence that I have
obliterated?
In the scan here you see the empty Kleenex box. She kept
them and would fill them with cheap boxed Kleenex. The tube of toothpaste, she
purchased all our toiletries. Once this one is used up I will have to suddenly
buy toothpaste for myself. The kitty litter odour eater ran out last night. I
emptied the kitty litter (Tuesday, tomorrow is when the garbage is collected)
and bought the Arm & Hammer at the Bosley’s around the corner. I have
learned to take out the garbage and my daughter Ale is going to slowly teach me
how to pay bills.
Cooking is now a tad easier. I can eat what Rosemary did not
want to eat. My food bill will be a more frugal one as opposed to “our” food
bill.
Traveling, when that happens, will be complex. I worked with
a travel agency called Rosemary Elizabeth Waterhouse-Hayward
Rosemary had a thing for paper napkins. There were at least
three kinds with a Christmas theme. The one here is what we used for our
Christmas Eve dinner (photographs to put in a blog soon!).
And yes I was never able to convince her in our 52 year marriage
that you had to squeeze the toothpaste from the bottom. She was obstinate and that was one more reason why I loved her.