Seasons Change

There is something very special about mid-September. The sun sets closer to eight pm than nine and the from one day to the next the air cools and warms and cools again until fall officially arrives sometime in October. In the garden, huge Hosta blossoms shrink to less than their average size as does every perennial sharing the garden beds. The potted annuals start to bloom less flowers and as the days get shorter, they shrivel and die.

It is at this time of year, I like to play Russian Roulette with the weather and if I wake to blue skies and a promise of a forecast with a high of at least twenty-two degrees Celcius, I throw the paddle board into the trunk of the car and I set off to my favourite lake. What the spring and summer deems an habitual activity, becomes in mid-September, these chance thrills to see just how much more time on the lake I can get with my board. 

Paddling in September is a solitary act. Like the seasons come and go, so do children who grow and then go. At first, when they are little they go back to school then they go off to college, university or work and then they sometimes go somewhere remote and call it home. I cherish every opportunity I get to paddle on the lake with one or both of my boys and in September, I get another opportunity to cherish — the solo drive to my solo paddleboarding destination. 

Alone but by no means lonely, I am terriffic in a partnership, great in a the company of a few and good in a crowd but I really enjoy my own company and appreciate the times when I am alone with my thoughts, imagination and ideas.

Unlike the summertime trips to the lake that are filled with music, snacks and conversation, reflection starts the moment I leave the drive way, turn down the windows and turn up the music and I take in all the changes signalling that autumn is approaching. 

The reddish-orange of the leaves on the maple trees, the yellowing of the leaves of the birch and the way the foliage begins to get sparse along the roadside that allows me more frequent glimpses of the water as I drive to where I need to be. I think of all that I … we… have done this year — new things, habitual things. I think of the amazing and somehow perfectly timed job opportunities that fell into our laps, and the ones that we missed. I think of the people we have met, good friends that are still with us and the ones we’ve lost and the people we have ushered back into our lives and will hold on to for dear life.

Fifteen minutes into my drive, I pass the long driveway where we used to turn onto long before we moved into the area. A glance in the rear view mirror lets me know that there is no one close behind me and I slow the car almost to a crawl and look at the property that belonged to my husband’s parents. I listen closely and I swear I can hear the sound of my sons’ laughter and the melodic giggles of my niece and nephew when they were small, riding on the tractor or on the ATV with my father-in-law. I glance onto the extensive property and I can still see in my mind’s eye, the dogs chasing frisbees and sticks and I can still smell the char of the beef on the grill. And while the essence of everything in that house — my in-laws’ home could have been so much better, the good times still rise above the times that were less pleasant. Now new owners have knocked down the old yellowing house and erected a new, gleaming white and (from the children jumping into the newly installed pool) a happy home and it makes me smile. The season has changed on the property and there is joy radiating from the house all the way to the roadside where I am slowly rolling by.

Driving away, the music and the wind blowing through the car makes me add singing to my smiling and a feeling of peace settles in my heart. I inhale and I feel like I have breathed in three times the volume of air than I normally would and when I exhale. 

I feel light.

I feel, well, I feel uplifted. And as John Hiatt sings Have a Little Faith In Me, I am back on the open air red clay tile dance floor at Sandals Dunn’s River Falls, dancing with my new husband at our wedding before twenty-two of our closest family and friends. 

I think of our life and I feel proud. Yes, I know people usually describe it as blessed and lucky and all of those sugary things but I am proud because we have stood the test of time and boy were we tested. I remember thinking of our life one new year’s eve in our apartment in Montreal and I remember thinking it was perfect — almost too perfect and I remember wondering when the other shoe was going to drop. And when it did, it dropped like a boulder off a mountain top onto a valley village below. 

We had a tough go of it — REALLY tough but I’m proud we were always able to come back to the one thing that bound us and still binds us now. Our love gave us hope and an ability to laugh even when we felt like crying. Our love gave us faith in each other and very often when we found ourselves at the bottom of a scummy barrel of life shit, we would tell each other, “it’s you and me and we will get through this,”. Love kept me and my husband strong through the days of our son’s diagnosis, job losses, financial distress, big moves across the country, loss of parents and the loss of dear friends. Our love got us through things that would have ended most couples and torn apart families and now, the simple things that bring us joy is a constant reminder that love heals and rewards too. We just had to keep reminding ourselves what brought us together in the first place because that was what was going to keep us strong and keep us together.

North Beach Provincial Park Lake Ontario Photo by D. Barsotti

At the thirty eight minute mark, I get into the Provincial Park seamlessly. The usual visitors from Quebec have returned to La Belle Province and though their absence frees up several parking spaces, I do miss hearing their Quebcois banter and the smell of Bain de Soleil. The September beach bums are all local — perhaps one or two from Toronto — and the pace is slow and lazy. I get my board from the trunk, connect it to the pump, assemble my oar and put on my life jacket. Once the pump shuts off, I lock the car and head to the water’s edge. The bigger, longer beach to the right of the parking lot has waves butthey are not very tall and the more enclosed lake on the left side of the lot is completely still. Not a ripple because there is no wind and the water looks like glass much like it does early in the morning in the summer. The water has receded somewhat — another sign that the weather is changing because the beach is wider and I find myself walking faster than usual to get the board into the water..I step into it and immediately retract my foot. 

Yeesh, so cold! A reminder of the bleaky, cooler and rainy days of the two weeks prior. Though the temperature has risen to twenty-six degrees Celsius, even in this very shallow part of the lake the water is icy. Today would not be an ideal day to fall in so my brain knew that my core had to be engaged at all times.

I dismiss the feeling of sharp knives stabbing into my feet and mount my board and I set off and I decide not to do the circumference of the lake this time but to paddle directly across it as there were no jet skis or boats zooming by today. The cottages in the distance are all empty except for one where I see the elderly couple grilling something on the barbecue, the white smoke looks like a snake dancing straight up to the sky. I pass the family of swans, the babies now free of their mucky greyish-brown fluff are stark white like their parents, and I pass two gaggles of Canadian geese who are quietly drifting beween the reeds and lily pads. Today they aren’t honking, flapping their wings wildly or hissing at people on the beach. Like everyone at the lake, they too are chilling in the peaceful vibe the glorious mid-September Sunday has to offer. 

An hour passes and I have crossed the lake twice and I realize I hadn’t thought of anything while I was paddling. I just listened to the gurgly sound of my paddle and my board moving through the water. I listened to the birds , looked at the sunlight gleaming and dancing on the water and I breathed in the air that didn’t smell of burnt wood, diesel from a boat or food being cooked on the beach.

It smelled like nothing. 

It was just clear — like my mind. And when I returned to the beach, tired but happy, I felt the corners of my mouth pushing my cheeks right up to my eyes, almost closing them. I don’t think I ever smiled like that while deflating my board, dis-assembling my oar or ridding myself of sand before getting into the car. .And even with the little pang of sadness in my chest, not knowing if today was indeed the end of my paddleboarding season, I drove along the wavy side of the lake, pulling over to take some photos of this most perfect mid-September moment.

Perfectly clear and clean water at NorthBeach Provincial Park Photo D. Barsotti

Still smiling.

I smiled all the way home and smiled and sang my way through the grocery store because my husband texted me asking me to bring home a carton of milk.

I smiled as I walked across the parking lot to my car and as I always do — and yes, I really always do, I smiled when I pulled into the driveway and saw him standing there waving and greeting me.

Life gets busy and like my husband, I get caught up in work and managing our finances a lot(kid in university), but every now and then and especially when one season fades and another gleams, I remember that this story of ours, the story of Tom and Daniella full of chapters of Adam and Logan; chapters of his family, my family, our immediate little family and our friends. This story of the places we’ve grown up, the place we met and the places we’ve lived; the places we have recently seen and are yet to see…this story, will end one day. It’s up to us (and yeah, fate) how we write it. It is up to us to figure out how we are going to deal with everything this life throws at us and on a day like today — a Sunday in mid-September when I have time to reflect on our journey, I realize that life is a gift measured in moments and I remind myself that these moments are not meant to be wasted on things that do not matter. I don’t know how many more seasons I will have on the lake but I do know this —  I’m not going to waste time worrying about it. I’m just going to live each day until it pops into my life again.

I hope you find moments of peace in your life. 

I hope you have moments in between seasons when you are able to reflect on the times of your life — all of them  —  and I hope your reflection ends in a smile, with the realization that you are still here — still relavant and still alive. 

You still can both give and receive love and that no matter what anyone says or society dictates…know that you are enough and you are blessed with the incredible gift of life with all its lows and it’s highest of highs.

Now, go find a way to take it all in.

The Things We Need To Say

One of my childhood nicknames was Hallmark. I was the kid that made greeting cards for everyone and filled them with heartfelt words, expresssed in language beyond my years. As I got older and caught up in the blurr of life, I drifted onto the path where being busy was an acceptable excuse for not reaching out to others. There were more phone calls from telemarketers than from family and friends and text messages devolved from words to letter soundbites to emojis — even Facebook had an options for those way too busy to post by way of the poke or wave. Like so many people, I didn’t have time to talk to anyone who wasn’t providing me with something I needed and once the day wound down by the time I remembered I hadn’t spoken to my family or friends in a while, I’d glance at the clock and realize I was probably the only one who wasn’t asleep.

As we made the leap from television and radio to online streaming, the world became louder. We hear about everything moments after they occur. From people of power called out for tweets gone wrong to every new varient of the coronavirus discovered, to every fire, flood and frivolous fanfare, we are bombarded by the noise of the world. Yet, we are deafened by the silence of our lonliness. Even when I found myself sitting across from friends in person or virtually, I recognized how disconnected I’d become from people I actually had relationships with. We’d bounce from one meaningless topic to another until one of us blurted out the words of saving grace “Well, I gotta get going. Chat soon?” Yeah, right…..more like the Jamaican’s say “soon come” (meaning sure someday, some indefinite time in the future or maybe even NEVER) and as I slipped back into this life of mine that I thought was so busy, I turned up the volume of the noise of the world to drown out the loudness of my lonliness.

As my sons got older, I decided to teach them how to not get lost in the so-called busyness of life. After all, if it weren’t for them desperately trying to be heard by the adults in their lives, I might not have been able to re-direct myself onto a path that allowed me to be a less busy, more attentive human more generous with her time. As awkward as it can be, I make it a point to tell the people in my life regularly how I feel about them. We all want the people who matter to us to tell us the things people only say to each other in the movies. I want to hear how I make others feel. I want to hear that I am loved. I want to be thanked and I want to know that people are glad I’m around. I’m not looking for praise or popularity. I just want to feed the part of my soul that needs the comfort of feeling that I matter and that I have a purpose. If my soul’s yearning for a little uplifting and reassurance occasionally, I’m sure everyone’s is too. So I started with the three men in my life — my sons and my husband.

I know at any time, someone in our little family pod could die and should I go first, I don’t want them to wonder what they meant to me. I tell them I love them of course, but most of all, I hilight what it is I love about them, why I admire them, what makes me proud and why they are important — not just to me but to our community and to society. I believe that people, especially young people need to understand that they are important and that their existence is vital to the world. I think people need to hear that whether they are blessed with a long life or a concentrated one, what they think and do and what they bring to the table truly matters. The look on their faces as they process this information, the pause in the phone conversation after hearing these words allowed me to see and hear that my words have stirred up something positive within them. My younger son told me that the day I told him why he was important, they weight of the burden he was bearing became more tolerable. He told me knowing he was important made him feel stronger and more confident and he was able to say the same to others in his life. When I said the same thing to my older autistic son, he stared at me for what seemed like an eternity, smiled and hugged me and whispered “thank you Mom,”.

There are two songs that come to mind when I think of how necessary it is for us to un-busy ourselves so that we can connect with each other. I think of Five for Fighting’s 100 Years that reminds us that in the blink of an eye we are 15, 35 and 99 and I realize that if we don’t remember to say what we need to say when it matters, which is the essence of John Mayer’s, Say, we may go to our graves saying nothing at all. I don’t want that to happen to me so I make the time to reach out to that person who pops into my mind while I’m working or driving around. I try to plan some kind of outing for my group of girlfriends every two months or so and my bulletin board has post it notes to shoot person A or B a text to see how they are. I remember at the end of every staff email I send to thank them for bringing their unique talents to my autistic son’s life and remind them that we see and appreciate how much they do to enhance his life every day. These are the people who show up everyday to help my son and they do it not because they get paid, but because we give them the same love and kindness they show our son.

We can reverse drug use, depression, sadness, anxiety and suicide if we make the time to show love and kindness. A text, an email, a phone call or a face to face conversation brings as much joy to the giver as it does to the receiver. Mindfully chattting less about myself and finding out more about someone else lifts me up in ways material things cannot. Even people who begin a conversation by telling me they don’t have time, take a breath and slow their speech and they tell me the truth about how life’s been treating them. People need to talk. We need to listen. It’s important because they are important and life is short and they need to know while they are alive that they matter.

So I challenge you to realize you aren’t busier than anyone else. I challenge you to tell someone the things you would like someone to tell you…tell them something that you thing would lift them up and bring a smile to their face or give them that little confidence boost they might be looking for. If you do it once, I promise you you’ll do it for the rest of your life.