The Vinyl Café Notebooks (28 page)

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Authors: Stuart Mclean

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And I realized in that instant that this was not a random moment. I realized right there and then that I do this all the time.

“Erica,” I said, digging deeper, going for it. “You just said hello to me.”

“Yes,” she said.

“Erica,” I said. “Are you
sure
I didn’t say hello back?”

I already knew the answer. But I had to hear it. Because inside of me I had been the puppy dog of hello. I was sunshine and lollipops and little lambsy-diveys. Inside I smiled at Erica and said all sorts of nice things. Outside, well, the truth was otherwise. The truth was standing in front of me.

“You didn’t say a thing,” said Erica.

I was into it now. I went for gold. “What did that make you think?” I asked.

Erica paused and looked away. I asked again. “Erica,” I said. “What did you think when I ignored you like that?”

Erica said, “Well, I thought you must have a lot on your mind.”

That’s what she said, but I know what she was thinking. She was thinking the same thing as that guy back at the yellow light. She was thinking,
What an idiot!

“Erica,” I said. “Does this happen often?”

I didn’t have to ask. This was, after all, my moment of insight. It was all as clear as day. Suddenly I knew what went on. People smile and say hi to me all the time, and as far as they see, I respond like this. I close my mouth, frown and nod my head, the way the prime minister might nod as he passes a member of his security detail whose face he recognizes but whose name he doesn’t know. Although not inside of me, understand. Inside of me there is effusiveness.

For some reason there is a malfunction, some disconnect, between my imaginary hello and, well, my actual hello.

Don’t ask me why. I am not privy to that part yet. I dwell in the brain stem. Just know this: if you have ever passed me in the hall and I appeared to ignore you, it actually wasn’t like that at all, and I apologize if it seemed that way.

I am not, as Erica so generously attempted to claim on my behalf, a particularly busy guy, and I certainly don’t have a lot on my mind. The truth is that the guy at the yellow light got it right. I am, it turns out, an idiot.

4 October 2009

SUMMER JOBS REDUX

The summer I was seventeen I got a job at a YMCA day camp. I had had other jobs before, but this was my first real one. I don’t know what made it feel more real than the others. But there you go.

The highlight of that summer was not the work, though it was work related. It came at the end of every second week, when the kids were sent home early, and we were paid, cash money, in a little brown envelope. My pal Alex Cunningham and I would take our envelopes, and our teenage selves, down the street to Murray’s Family Restaurant. We would order the same lunch every time: vanilla shakes and the Hamburger Royale, which came with cheese and fries and all the fixings. And when the hamburgers came, the two of us would sit there staring at our plates like two big-time operators.

There is nothing quite like the feeling of spending money you have earned yourself.

That was the start of it for me, that summer at the Y.

The next summer, my father got me a job in the small village of Saint-Tite, Quebec. I had failed grade eleven French for the second year running. I think he decided plucking me from my anglo Montreal neighbourhood and dropping me into the heart
of French Quebec would do me good. Or, more to the point, perhaps, serve me right. It was a construction job, working on a road crew who were paving the highway that ran alongside the St. Maurice River between Saint-Roch-de-Mékinac and Saint-Jean-des-Piles. When I arrived I realized, to my horror, that I was the only English-speaking person for miles. I spent an incredibly lonely couple of months in Saint-Tite.

On the weekends, when the French college boys I was living with went home to Quebec, I used to hitchhike some twenty kilometres to Grand-Mere, which was the closest place you could buy an English newspaper. One Saturday afternoon when I had picked up my
Montreal Gazette
, I took the paper into a hotel bar and sat down at a table smack in the middle of the room. It was livelier in there than you would expect for a Saturday afternoon, which I put down to the famous French joie de vivre. Trying to get into the spirit, I sprawled my feet up on the extra chair at my table, flung open my newspaper and started to read. When I spotted a waiter, I waved him over and asked for a beer. He gave me one off his tray but wouldn’t take my money. I guess you pay when you’re finished, I thought. And I kept reading. It was some time later, much too much later, and only when I saw the bride dance by my table, in her bridal gown, that I realized what was going on.

I had crashed a wedding, and everyone there was either too polite, or too horrified, to say anything.

One Friday, when I just had to get home to see my friends, I snuck away from work early so I could hitchhike to Trois- Rivières in time to catch the Friday train to Montreal. I didn’t tell my foreman I was leaving early because I was afraid he
wouldn’t let me go. I left without telling anyone. When he realized I was missing, and no one could explain where or why, the foreman decided I had stumbled into the St. Maurice River and drowned. He had the river dragged and spent the rest of the weekend in horror. When I returned on Monday, he demoted me to flagboy, a hateful and tedious job.

I lasted until the middle of August. Once again I snuck away—this time in the middle of the night. I waited until my roommates were asleep and slipped out quietly. This time, I
did
leave a note.
I have to go home and write a French sup
, I wrote to the French college boys I was rooming with,
au revoir
.

I slept on a bench at the small station until the train came. It was the middle of the night. The station master signalled he wanted the train to stop by placing a red lantern at the far end of the platform. I remember the great sense of liberation I felt as the sun came up over the St. Lawrence River and I sat in the rattling dining car drinking my first-ever cup of coffee.

The few weeks had done the job. I passed my sup and got into Sir George Williams University by the skin of my teeth, and even though I have never mastered the French language the way I would have liked, that summer in Saint-Tite left me with enough fluency, and more importantly confidence, to muddle through whenever I have the opportunity. I feel grateful for those few weeks, although guilty about the cultural devastation I undoubtedly left in my wake.

The next summer, the summer of 1967, was Canada’s centennial, and the summer the World’s Fair, Expo 67, was mounted in Montreal. I had just finished my first year in
university. As spring approached, all my new university friends were busy lining up jobs at the fair.

The theme was
Man and His World
, and my pal Nick decided to take that slogan as a personal challenge. Nick began that summer with a pledge to swing a date with a woman from each of the sixty-two participating countries. Nick, who was nothing if not well organized when it came to organizing dates, sealed the deal when he triumphantly spent the fair’s final night with a flight attendant from Czechoslovakia.

While my friends spent that summer embracing the world in Montreal, I (
Qu’elle imbécile!
) decided that was the summer to head west. I took the train across the country and got myself a construction job in Calgary.

On weekends I would hitchhike to Banff where, instead of Czechoslovakian air hostesses, I spent my nights sidestepping the coyotes in the bison paddock on the edge of town. I had somehow come to the conclusion that the fence around the paddock would keep me safe from the bears. I cannot explain what made me think that camping in what amounted to a cage full of bison would be any safer than a forest full of bears, except to say that I was young and probably shouldn’t have lived to be this old. Certainly not if Darwin was right about anything.

I saw a little of Expo when I got home at the end of August, although not nearly as much of the fair, or the world, as my pal Nick.

I had a number of other summer jobs over those years. I worked in a bar, as a busboy, which I left shortly after dropping a tray of drinks over a table of regular customers. In
a factory assembling ski poles. And in a paint plant stacking boxes of paint onto pallets.

But my favourite summer job was my last, which was, in a pleasing sort of symmetry, working once again for the YMCA, where it all began for me.

In the summer of 1969, I got a job at Kamp Kanawana on the shores of Lake Kanawana in the Laurentian Mountains.

Kanawana is where I found my sea legs, where I was able to leave the shaky and uncertain turbulence of my adolescence behind and find the road, or, more to the point, find the wherewithal to find the road, that led from adolescence to adulthood.

I was a wholly unsuccessful adolescent—a failure on the playing field and in the classroom.

I was the boy who couldn’t throw the ball as well as all the other boys. Who was afraid, or unable, to study. And once you remove both academics and athletics from a boy’s curriculum vitae, there is not a whole lot left to work with.

I arrived at camp with a backpack full of fears. But I found myself in a place where I felt, for the first time ever, that I fit in and had something to contribute to the greater good. That gave me confidence, and confidence is very important to the growth and development of a young person.

Kamp was my safe place.

And it is only because I found myself there, or found my best self there, that I was eventually able to find, and then follow, my heart’s desire, CBC Radio.

I couldn’t have done that, couldn’t have tramped off into the unknown, if I hadn’t had those summers at camp and, no doubt, all those other summer jobs.

I learned something at all of them.

I write about a family; what preoccupies me as a writer, however, is not the family I write about—Dave, Morley, Stephanie and Sam—but the world in which they live. And I don’t mean the geopolitical world, or even the nation-state. I mean the world of the family, the neighbourhood—the safe places that foster a sense of belonging, and a sense of place, that are so enormously important to the development and preservation of healthy societies and healthy individuals.

It turns out, if you look at my work carefully, I am still working on the things that I was taught during those summers.

You wouldn’t expect that a summer camp, or a construction job, or a few weeks in a bar or a paint factory would amount to much, but these things add up. And what they add up to is always bigger than you could possibly imagine.

So as another summer takes us in its warm embrace, here’s to all the kids and all their summer jobs. Here’s to the summer hotels and the summer camps, here’s to the lifeguards and the counsellors, here’s to the chambermaids and the tour guides, and to the gardeners’ helpers and the landscapers.

Here’s to the landscape of summer work.

Here’s to waiters and waitresses. To beginnings and endings, to hellos and goodbyes. To everyone heading off into the wild blue yonder, I pray that you will learn in your summer work, as I did in mine, that work is prayer, that God is in the details and that it is a good life with much happiness to be had if you can find it. I hope, too, that you discover that a summer job, like a summer love, can be much more than you ever imagined.

17 May 2009

RUG VERSUS CHAIR

I am embroiled in a war with the rug in the room where I work. Or, rather, the wheels on my office chair and the rug are fighting, and I am sitting above them, like a Roman plebe, high up in the Colosseum as they haul away a bloodied gladiator, his bayonet and his spirit abandoned in the sand, the portal doors rise, and out comes ... the rug and chair.

It is a battle that has been fought for centuries, the battle between form and function; the chair representing function, with its plastic wheels and little levers, which allow me to adjust not only the angle of the back and the height of the seat but also the angle of the seat and the height of the back. It is a wholly unattractive chair by any standard. Big and black and ominous, the sort of chair you might see in the control room of a nuclear reactor, but since I have bought this chair, my neck and shoulders no longer ache after a day in front of my computer. It may be ugly, but it does the job.

The rug has no functional value whatsoever. It is wholly unnecessary. But it’s the only aesthetic addition to a room woefully bereft of beauty. A touch of vanity, to be truthful. I bought it on an impulse after a friend turned her nose up at the ratty floor the rug now covers. Unlike the chair, the
rug was cheap: $99 from a discount warehouse up the street. But it has a certain softness, and it has given me a certain satisfaction.

I sit at an L-shaped desk, and am constantly wheeling myself from one arm of the L to the other. Each time I roll, the rug rolls with me.

Well, that’s not accurate, because I
come
with the same frequency as I
go
, and one would think that at the end of any day, the law of averages would dictate that the rug, while having travelled some distance, would end up more or less in position. But that’s not what happens. For some reason peculiar to this rug’s rugness, it only wants to move in one direction—that is to say, westward.

When I roll from the computer desk to the writing desk, my rug goes with me, but when I move back, it doesn’t. Thus, at the end of every day, the rug is bunched up on one side of the room and not underfoot where it should be.

So every night before I leave my office, I roll my chair into the hall so I can put the rug back to rightness. It’s an exercise that takes several minutes, and can be troublesome when you are already in your coat, and running late for dinner, as you promised not to be. After a year of this, I approach my end-ofthe-day rug straightening with the same resignation with which I do the dishes—with the certain knowledge that no matter how good a job I do today, I am going to have to do it again tomorrow.

You might think that after a year I would hate this rug. Strangely, the reverse is true. Rather than resent its unruliness, I get pleasure from the few moments each day that it is straight. The last thing I do in the evening before I flick off the
light is flick my eyes around the room to check if my rug is correctly squared with the walls. In the morning when I open my office door and see it lying there, I feel a flush of pride if its edges are lined up correctly.

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