I know it's been a while since I've
written and will inform you all of all the changes that have gone on
in my life in the last year, both good and bad at a later time. Right now I want to
tell you about a Kindred Spirit of mine. His Name is Vic.
I met Vic at a Karate function a few
years back, and just happened to find him roaming about the area
where I live and offered him a lift. It's hard to talk about him
with out discussing Karate, which we did a lot. He was also my
Sensei for the past year. We did spend a lot of time discussing
Karate Theory, Bunkai and Oio, The great teachers of old and of new
and anything to do with Martial Arts in general, even if remotely.
Our relationship was so much more than
Karate. We would spend hours around his kitchen table just talking
about everything and anything. He'd talk about his Grandmother who
was Italian and called every noodle Macaroni, His Grandfather who
spoke “the old tongue” only when he wanted to discuss something
in front of him that he didn't want to him to know. He regretted not
being able to learn Gaelic and had only managed to pick up a few
words. He'd tell me stories about the places he'd lived and some of
the things he'd done. A lot of which I'm far too much of a
gentlewoman to repeat. He got excited every time one of his black
belts came to visit and tell me all about it. He'd tell me stories
about his wife and his daughter, both of whom he spoke with such
reverence and admiration I was pretty terrified to even spend time
with his daughter.
We went everywhere this last year
together. We went on excursions weekly somewhere new. If I went to
the grocery store he came with me anytime I'd leave the house he
would come along. My friends started calling him my shadow, or “my
husband”, which he was mistaken for once by a 11 year boy much to
his amusement and my distress. I enjoyed having him around. We
could talk for hours and loose track of time, or sit in silence and
just enjoy being in each others presences.
We also watched the stars together.
Last year I had learned that we might have the chance to see the
northern lights. I picked him up in the middle of the night and
drove out of the city just to see if we could catch a glimpse of
them. We never got to see them, but he told me all about how to tell
the difference between a planet and a star, (stars twinkle planets
don't). He talked of the 7 sisters a star cluster warriors and
hunters used to use as an eye test. (I'm blind I couldn't find them).
Once driving home from Karate we both mistook a plane for a planet
and laughed our asses off. Real Junior astronomers we were.
It was a good thing that he wasn't just
my Sensei, because I probably would still be doing push ups for the
amount of times I called him an ass hole. (Always jokingly and with
love). Like the time he broke the cane seat that he bought (probably
from a yard sale or second hand store) fell on his rear among the
fishing gear and hooks and managed to save his coffee amazingly. He
sat on mine. Or the time he kicked a full bucket of worms off the
deck that I had just bought by mistake, because he was busy fiddling
with his rod. I think he got a kick out of it.
He loved when his daughter checked up
on him and told him to wear proper attire. A lot of times I think he
wore the wrong thing just so that I'd send him in the house to get a
hat or a coat and I think he did the same with here. It made him
feel like we were paying attention.
We went camping in the Summer and he
loved to warm himself on the fire. My friend and I were concerned
that he was going to fall into it or loose his teeth in the flames.
When he woke and used the bathroom, we tried to sneak his chair back
from the fire. He came back and not to be out done stood there over
the fire kinda rocking from side to side or back and forth, jingling
his change in his pocket. When we finally went to sleep in the
tent. (much to my relief he had brought PJ's because he had joked he
was going to sleep in the buff. They were Skip's PJ pants. How he
managed to fit them is beyond me. They were unisex) He got up in the
middle of the night and accidentally burnt all the kindling. He must
have noticed sometime around dawn, because he went lumbering through
the forest looking for twigs to break to replace the kindling. He
had cake for breakfast as it was his birthday (the night before we
had burgers for dinner with cake.) I made us coffee (his hands were
always too big to fit in the container) and then we went fishing and
then for a drive.
We liked to fish, and did a lot of it.
In September we went fishing for salmon in the rain for hours. The
only place we had to keep our smokes from getting wet was in his back
pocket. Every time I wanted a smoke or he'd want one I'd have to
fish them out of his back pocket. (His hands wouldn't fit.) We
laughed a lot about, “It's been a while since I've had a woman that
close to my ass.” he smirked and giggled about. One time when we
were fishing we spied a folding chair that he wanted. It was across
the mouth of the creek and he didn't swim. The water wasn't that
deep but the water was moving quickly and he didn't want to get
caught up. I peeled down to my undies (making him promise that he
wasn't going to tell anybody he saw my undies) and waded into the
water, across the way and retrieved the folding chair for him. He
kept it and dragged it home.
Only two things I found out scared him,
One was drowning and the other was holding his grand daughter for the
first time. This great big man with great big hands was really
afraid of hurting his newborn grand baby. When he finally held her
in his hands he stared in awe at this little precious life he held in
his arms. It was amazing to watch him fall in love. Something if
you have never experienced watching before is indescribable. I was
happy I got to share this moment with him.
I took him to my parents house a few
times where he borrowed my dad's binoculars and sat still as a stone
for three hours watching the lake and all the wildlife and birds. I
took him to the cottage my parents rented so we could fish and see
the wildlife there. We caught nothing and ended up going home
because he had worn pants and a long sleeve shirt, short sleeve and
fishing vest in 30 degree weather. He got heat stroke and slept
until we got back to Oshawa. He wanted to wear the vest that his
daughter had bought him. He loved to show it off.
On my birthday (December 12th) he
phoned me and sang me happy birthday and had something special for
me. I was supposed to go over later that afternoon or evening and
have coffee with him. He was excited and in good spirits. He never
texted me back. It was the last time I was to hear from him.
I drove him to Karate every Monday for
a while and went to pick him up. Concerned that I hadn't heard from
him. There was a pit in my stomach, that had been there for a while.
I hoped that he had gone over to see his daughter and grand baby. I
hoped that he had forgotten to pay his phone bill and that's why he
never called me back or texted me. I hoped that he maybe lost his
phone (which he had done the week before and I found for him.) I
knocked and waited for him to holler at me to come in. (I was long
passed knocking. Usually I just walked in, but something made me
hesitate.) I took a big breath, screwed my courage to the sticking
place and went in. I found my friend, my shadow, my Sensei, my
buddy, on the floor.
That image will probably never fade
away no matter how much time passes. But ever time I see it in my
minds eye as clear as a snap shot I remember. I remember the way his
eyes twinkled when he was really amused by something, or the way they
lit up when he had a brilliant idea. The way he loved to laugh which
to me a lot of times sounded like Ernie. The way this giant of a man
never made me feel small in any way. The way he'd reach down his
great big hands to haul me up over an embankment. The way he was
always around to help me around the house, changing smoke detector
batteries or putting up my gazebo or some other thing. The way he
would curse like a trooper fishing as he tangled the line or hooked a
tree or himself for the hundredth time that day. The way that he
always made time for me and I for him. The way he loved the stories
that I wrote about the fish that turned into a dragon. The way he
ran out of the grocery store with an arm load of Knockwurst after
searching for a frigging year like the lady in the IKEA commercial
who yells start the car! The way he took care of me, and the way I
took care of him. These things I remember. Every day.
We were Kindred Spirits. The words I
miss him seem so cheap and so flimsy to describe the way I feel.
Although I wish I had met him sooner, I was so very grateful for the
time that we spent together.