Saturday began under bright sunny skies, but slowly, over the course of the day, high thin clouds dulled the sunshine. We walked in the morning on the Ricki trail and then came home for lunch. In the afternoon, we played fetch at Rollo Park. A soft day like every other.
I’ve been invited to the birthday party for Nancy. She’s turning 80! I accepted immediately because it was Kris inviting me, and of course I want to be part of a celebration for Nancy. But then I found out that there will be a dozen people, and I try to avoid large gatherings. I’m pondering what to do. My choices are baking a cake and writing a nice card and dropping them off ahead of the party, but avoiding the party, or going to the party and taking an Ativan. That’s what Dr. S. says the drug is for—prophylaxis ahead of something challenging.
The evening was spent watching a movie. I’ve subscribed to Mubi because it’s only one dollar a month for the first three months, then I’ll cancel. But it’s an interesting sight. Most films seem to be independent features; I don’t recognize any of the titles. It’s a rich resource for people who like film and more obscure films, in particular. For a buck a month, you’ve naught to lose.
The rain came in the afternoon. It was gentle, and it makes everything look so shiny and green. I like the rain; it makes being inside feel so cozy and warm. Plus, it’s washing all the fertilizer I put out into the roots of my plants at a crucial time of year.
Everything feels good because Sheba is back. Normal, healthy, happy, irritating, Sheba is back, and without any foot problems. It makes everything feel better, having that problem solved.
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I got an email from a long-forgotten college acquaintance. He is writing a memoire (who isn’t?), and he wanted to go over an incident he wants to include in his book. Here’s the story….
Once upon a time where there were no cell phones, my friend and I were in second or third year at UBC. I was in the habit of going to Brock Hall on Thursdays at lunchtime. There was a cafeteria there and plenty of places to sit with friends who I ate with regularly on Thursdays. Thursday was the only day of the week that had a lunch break, campus wide, of two hours.
I suspect something must have been going on with Connie, because at our lunch on this day my friend remembers, I asked people if their loved ones knew how to reach them on campus. I asked because that morning, on my way to the campus, I realized I was unreachable.
There were 25,000 students on campus. Connie was in care and Don had absolutely no knowledge of anything about my studies—except for one name. Sadly, I have forgotten the professor’s name, but I really liked him. I was taking zoology, and he was my lab prof. I got to know him because every four years, back in the day, the university had an open house for the greater Vancouver community.
I volunteered to work the three days of the open house as a volunteer for this professor, and over those three days, he realized it was a course of the heart for me. I was not in the course just for credits. From then on, he gave me lots of opportunities, so I talked about him a lot. Don picked up on the name from my stories about this professor.
With Connie in care, Don at work or with his girlfriend Rita somewhere, nearly all our communication was by phone or notes. Billy Earl, the head nurse on the ward where Connie lived, always told me anything she told Don, because once, when Connie had a health crisis and they were not sure that she would live, Billy told Don, but Don didn’t tell me.
She was shocked that I never turned up that night. When she saw me next, she took me to task for not coming, and when she discovered Don hadn’t told me, she never trusted Don again. When lunch was over, I resolved to contact Billy and figure out a way for her to contact me on campus. I decided to visit the student services centre to seek their advice.
My next stop was a class on one of the central academic buildings on campus, and when I got there, there was a note posted on the front door telling me to call home because there was an emergency. I called Don and went to Connie’s side for yet another false alarm. But while I was there, I found out Don remembered my prof’s name, so he called my prof, and luckily, he was not only on campus, but in his office to answer the phone. And he went around and posted all the notices.
Of course, I told my Thursday lunch club about the incident the following week. And this friend who called me, wanted to refresh his memory of the chain of events that connected me to Don.
Imagine, something that happened to me is in someone else’s memoir.