Memories

Liar ! Liar!

Memory is indeed a precious thing.

Memory can also be a liar.

For instance, I thought I remembered being a good and accurate typist. After all, I had stopped in Regina, Saskatchewan, having phoned ahead, to spend a week or ten days at a secretarial college learning the typewriter keyboard. I had been typing on a linotype at my hometown newspaper setting type. That was a very different keyboard and it seemed to have come naturally. And I WAS good at that. Very good. And that skill helped me through university, where I was headed after my Regina stop.

But when I dug out my old file of travel stories I had written on a small portable typewriter I had bought while working in Italy after my North African/Middle East travels, I was shocked to discover that my memory was rather faulty in that regard. Some of the pages looked messy. They had type-overs, words x-ed out, typing mistakes, hand-written corrections and additions… Truly a mess, and no editor anywhere would have accepted a submission looking like that.

Typing 2--this is how some of it looks039This is an example of some of my bad typing: words ex-ed out, scribbled out and written over, etc.

And I constantly find that my memory of a common event and its geographical place is at variance with my fellow travellers, or“memoirists.”

This discovery was jarring for me. And since I am still care giver to my wife, although she is now in a care home, I see, every day, just HOW distressing this is for the the Dementia/Alzheimer’s victim. And yes, I think they are victims. They have been singled out and picked on. They have been brutalized by this dread disease. It is the goodby disease. It changes everything. And, as I wrote in my last blog, we then become our loved one’s memory. Guard it well. Share it often.

For, on the other hand from the devastation of faulty and lost memory, the “lying memory,” memory can, and should, be your friend.

For instance, about those old stories I so badly typed: Those stories are surely more accurate than my current memory of them, having been written more immediately after the experiences. For they are

now distanced by decades of new memories packed into the memory chamber on top of them, squishing them down, compacting the details into tinier and tinier “atoms,” until memory become sketchy and I (we) remember only snatches, vivid mind pictures and “word engravings” of single mental photos taken from the overall event. Sometimes the mind edits them.

After all, that is how memory works. It’s like any muscle—it has to be worked regularly. (But not to the point when, on the umpteenth telling, someone threatens to run you through with a pointed stick.)

So, with these valuable records, my memories are prompted into a more clear, vivid, and accurate…friend. Although, by and large, I’d give myself a good passing grade overall for my past typing.

Typing 1--how I remembered it038

 

This page was virtually error free, as was virtually all of my linotype proof pages.

Still, old memories do get fuzzy as we gather so many new ones as we work and play. So, we should document our photos (I plead guilty for not having done this), organize them, file them safely, review them often, share them with each other, and preserve them. Above all, keep on sharing them with your Dementia/Alzheimer’s loved one.

Whenever I do this, Ann smiles and caresses the images of our mutual past, and sometimes she kisses them. Tender, tender moments, indeed. Shared love.

Here’s a wee thing I wrote a few years ago while caring for Ann

Remember Me

Forget me not, for I’m still here
Please don’t fear for me;

Remember me, remember us–
Please don’t make a fuss.

We had good times, remember them–
Remember me, remember us.

So plant a flower, a forget-me-not–
Carry me in your heart.
Remember now, forget me not.

— —

This little poem appears in my little book “Ann, A Tribute” by H. W. Bryce. It is due to appear also in my upcoming book, “Chasing a Butterfly.”  Ann's Cover

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More Camels

More Camels Indeed

Correction: In my last blog, I misidentified Walt. That is not Walt mounting the camel. That was me. Know thyself??

The moral of that story is: 1. Never work when very tired. 2. Wear your stupid glasses. Especially when working with fine details. The original size of this photo is less than 1 ½ X 1 inch. (Yeah. I know. Still locked in the Imperial Empire days of measurement. Truth is, Canada failed to convert most people over the age of, say, 30, when good old Motherland went metric. Still, grocery stores continue to sell by the pound weight.)

— — —

Dateline: Somewhere near the Mediterranean Sea on the North African Coast.
Sometime in 1963.

Slug: An innocent abroad, experiencing life.

We were running late, again – we seem to have done that a lot – and it was dark. We didn’t so much as choose a campsite as simply stop driving and pitch camp. We knew not where we were, other than vaguely, but it was all quiet, flat, and definitely isolated. So, we camped. And flaked out.

This is what we woke up to:

Waking up to more camels033

Well! Who were the goats then? And well, sorry, it is an old and faded photo. Sorry, too, for those among us whose memories are fading and have faded. Memories represent life. Comes a time when we become our loved one’s memory. At any rate, our lives at that point underwent a minor shock, as if we’d been experiencing a minor earthquake. Like I said, it was a rare thing indeed if we ever woke up amidst … nobody.

And then, and then…

This is what we were treated to:

More Camels -- This is what we were treated to035

A herd of camels – coming straight at us. Do these things never sleep? This old photo represents the view through my eyes — blurry from sleep. And a wake-up call to my blurry memory.

However, things did quieten down.

More Camels -- This is more like it036

Now this is more like it. And we were able, eventually, to stroll across that broad square and purchase a few things in a little store there. And through it all, nobody bothered us, as witness the two striding walkers.

By the way, that beat-up old Land Rover, an ex-Brit army vehicle purchased on The Rock of Gibraltar, carried us clean across North Africa, then, via boat to Beirut, all through the Middle East, through Turkey, and on to Greece, where, sadly, our journey ended. I flew on to Rome with my remaining few bucks to meet a friend from home, and Walt eventually sold the Land Rover. He sent me a third of the proceeds. He was a better friend to me than I gave him credit for.

My big regret today (apart from any about the trip itself) is that I didn’t share more fully with my wife and boys. And now, she can’t fully share my memories – and as I say, memories make the man (meaning person) – and worse, she can’t share hers. And my memories of her memories are scanty at best. And that is sad. Please don’t make that mistake.

On the bright side, when I do share photos with her, she recognizes people and places, she smiles, and she caresses pictures of the children.

“Together we trod the boards of life,
Together we share the stage.”

–H. W. Bryce

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Man on Camel — Part Four

 

The Man is on the Camel

Blogging 101,etc.

I cannot find a memory story of how we got there, but pretty sure it was because Walt insisted on holding out for a house stay instead of going on to yet another camp

 Don’t accurately recall the sequence of events, but these things did happen to us.

During our North African trip, we’d been robbed (Man on Camel Part three), we’d been mobbed (a future blog), we’d been kidnapped (a future blog), and we’d had an encounter with a Scorpion. It was enough to smarten you up…

Let’s say it was after the scorpion that brought us to the camel ride.

Once again, we were late bedding down for the night. Once again, out in the open, with only a bare minimum of scrub brush for shelter, we threw our mattresses down on the hard-packed sand, and began the ritual of trying to relax.

We arranged ourselves in a sort of half-star pattern, Paula and Walt forming a vee with their thin mattresses and mine heading west, perpendicular with Walt’s facing south at the head. A movement caught my eye. I looked down quickly and spotted a little black object scuttling under the head of my mattress.

“Did you see what I thought I saw?” Walt asked.

“I most certainly did,” I said in my best imitation of Stanley Oliver of the old comedy team Oliver and Hardy.

It was a scorpion. Black, small, and deadly.

Walt drew out his jack knife and opened the blade.

“Lift the mattress,” he said, “and I’ll stab it.”

I got ready. I looked at Walt. He nodded.

I gripped the corner of the mattress, took a breath, and jerked it up. Walt, poised with his blade, took a stab. The scorpion scrambled away, diving for more cover. I lifted the mattress higher. Walt stabbed, stabbed again. And again.

“Got it!” he declared in triumph.

He held his knife up with the scorpion skewered on it, still wiggling.

“Well, put it out of its misery,” Paula said. “Poor little thing.”

The poor little thing died, right there on the blade.

“I’m keeping this for a souvenir,” Walt declared.

Capture

©rohanrb.deviantart.com, from www.freetattoodesigns.com

Scorpion – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scorpion

Scorpions are predatory arthropod animals of the order Scorpiones within the class Arachnida. They have eight legs and are easily recognised by the pair of grasping pedipalps and the narrow, segmented tail, often carried in a characteristic forward curve over the back, ending with a venomous stinger.

This might have been Walt’s motivation, for while we were in the next town on our way South to see the Aswan Dam and the new home of the relocated Valley of the Tombs, he decided that we didn’t want to sleep out again that night.

For some reason that escapes my memory (future blogs) we wound up at the local police station. I suspect it was something about the having been mobbed and robbed and being “attacked” by a killer arthropod. I remember waiting it out. The police put us in the upstairs of a vacant house while Walt negotiated. When he joined us, he said he was holding out for indoor accommodations.

In the end, he got them. The upstairs room we were waiting in. No furniture. So we spread our mattresses on the bare wooden floor, harder than most of the shiftable sand we had bee sleeping on.

Well, next morning the police got us up early. They gave us breakfast, and piled us into their jeeps and we drove down to the Nile river. There, they got us into boats and took us for a ride on that famous water course.

I can’t say that I was very much at ease during that ride. My mind insisted on filling my vision with marauding crocodiles and killer worms if we spilled overboard. Our hosts insisted that we scoop some water up and drink it. Courtesy dictated that we do. We did. I developed a “sympathetic” stomach ache. I couldn’t wait for the ride to end.

Once we landed on shore, I surreptitiously checked my limbs for leeches, trying hard not to be spotted for a sissy. I wondered if years in the big city had softened me that much. After all, as a child, my brother and I couldn’t wait to get into the river for a swim, and that river was host to many and many a leech (blood suckers to us), and, under the bridge, a favourite swimming hole with us, surrounded by bats hanging upside down on the abandoned end of a barbed wire fence.

Still, the stories…about the Nile…about its dangers (in the water) and the perils (upon the water)…they live in the head.

At any rate, our eager hosts were more than anxious to make up for any bad experiences we had had in their beloved Egypt. They took us for a camel ride.

So there I am, on my camel, a peace offering well received. The camel was a friendly one and jogged rhythmically along the sand and the dunes, rocking me gently forward and back with each loping step. It was bliss.

Perhaps this is not as dreamatic (well, it is dreamatic, a la the typo, but I meant to say dramatic, of course) as expected, but it is indeed one of my favourite memories on my travels, and I do treasure it. As they say, it may not necessarily be the destination but the journey. And I grew greatly in my mental journey for it.

So I have chosen my Man on Camel for my gravatar, indicating the journey I’ve been on, and the journey I am on, and the journey to come. In many ways, it indicates me coming out of hiding and taking on the world. About facing imagined dangers head on. May my camel give me a smooth ride. With adventures on the side, of course.

Herb in Sahara '63Me climbing up the shifting sand of the Sahara dune, with a pocket full of Sahara sand, me metaphorically coming out of hiding behind life, happy to be in the background, happy to be the support person, not the leader.

And I still don’t wish to swim in the Nile. Nor do I wish to drink it. Not without boiling the hell out of it first.

Walt mounting camel, Paula riding camel030

Paula riding camel; Walt climbing aboard, with our “cameleer.” Note: Long since we have all lost contact. These are my memories; theirs will obviously be different, as demonstrated in a number of famous films where the story is told over and over, each telling by a different member of the communal experience. So Walt and Paula, thanks for the memories, and if you should ever stumble onto this, please forgive the use of your images, and get in touch, willya?

 

— — —

 

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Man on Camel — Part Three

“Experience makes the man.” — H. W. Bryce

Blogging 101 – Man on Camel – Part Three (short version)

Indie Herbas told by Indie Herb

 The police

Having discovered we’d been robbed, and having suffered endless traffic along the dusty excuse of a road to the canal where we were camped beside a bridge, we finally got some sleep. But the old man and his family came back one more time. He brought tea. So we drank tea. Eventually, all was really quiet, and we got a few snatches of more, although uneasy, sleep.

By 6:30 in the morning, we were packed up and leaving the campsite. We arrived in Girga, at the police station a little after seven. We actually had to wait for any officers to arrive. Meanwhile, a veterinarian grooming what I referred to in my writing later as six of the loveliest steeds we had ever seen. He took time out to play host. He ordered us coffe and some Arabic bread, oil, and seed, for breakfast. There are kind people wherever you go.

The entire morning was spent in telling our story, first to this officer, and then to that. Plus, each new face simply had to hear the whole story right “from the horse’s mouth.” Finally the officer charged with investigating the case arrived and wrote our story down. After considerable delay, Walt was driven back to the scene of the crime by a young lieutenant and some roughies.

Paula and I were instructed to write out our statements of events and to list each and every item that had been stolen, plus the value of each. The officers compensated by treating us to a good lunch of “fhoul (beans), Arab bread, and Arab paste made of a different bean, ground, and the like.” (Evidently, although I was a journalist, I didn’t exactly nail the food thing in my earlier story.)

When Walt returned, he said the police contingent had pushed the villagers very roughly around, and hadn’t hesitated to strike them. He said the police covered the area so fast and so forcibly that it could have been a war.

After more paper work and more delay, we decided to push on to the next town to see the tombs and to return the next day to see what had developed. We got about twenty minutes from the station when a small truck that had been trailing us for miles with horn blaring found a spot to overtake us. It braked to a skidding halt in a cloud of dust. We braced ourselves for an attack, gripping our pathetic little clubs, which we got after an earlier attack by a mob, and holding them under the dashboard.

It was the young lieutenant and his guerrillas (that’s what I called them in my story at the time). They were grinning ecstatically and shouting wildly as they waved our stolen belongings in the air.

Back at the station in Girga, the men dragged out the suspected culprits – five very ashamed, head-hanging young men, two of them very young.

“Well, what do you think of our police now?” the officers asked us. “Do the police do things that fast in America, ay?”

We were asked to examine the contents of the loot. Then make out a new list. Then sign it.

After that, the police ordered “a great feast,” and we had to sit with the officers and eat. The cruel part was that the door was open to the hallway – and there sat the five suspected culprits, on the floor, where they could watch us eat.

After the meal, the prisoners were brought in, and we were asked to identify them. Of course we could not.

“That’s all right,” the officer said, “we can.”

Walt and Paula asked what would happen to the young men. It was harvest time and being of farm stock, their presence would be needed by their family or tribe.

“Oh,” the officer said, tossing it off as nothing, “they’ll go to jail for three to six years.”

Walt and Paula pleaded for clemency, but the officer insisted that the case was closed and we could go on our way.

We drove away feeling despondent instead of jubilant that our things had been recovered, including all of my precious photographs – AND the $1,500 Zoomar lens.

Well, that was the Egypt as I experienced it in the 1960s.

Next: The man is on the camel.

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Man on Camel

Blogging 101 — Who is that man on the camel, part two

Man on Camel (Cont’d.)

Slight correction from Part One:

To pick up, I was travelling with two Americans across North Africa. At this point, we were heading south along the Nile to see the Aswan Dam and the Valley of the Kings, whose treasures had been moved to save history from the flooding the dam could create.

But en route, were running out of daylight as we sought a place to camp for the night. We came to a spot where we could cross a canal. We found a spot right there, beside the road and on the canal bank.
We fed ourselves and took to our beds and settled down to do a little letter writing (me) and reading (Walt and Paula).
“Well.” Walt sighed. “here come our usual visitors.”
“They’re a little late,” I commented. “They usually come before we finish eating.”
“And often before,” Paula recalled.
Indeed, we never camped anywhere across North Africa, however isolated the spot, but we were in the company of visitors when we woke up. So, actually, these folks were a bit early.
The visitors were two young men, who took a darn good look at our setup, crossed the bridge all the while looking back at us, and disappeared into the darkness. We settled back in.
But soon the men returned – with three others, and the procedure was repeated in reverse.
One of them leaned over the hood of the Land Rover and spoke to us. We all had to strain to peer at him in the dim light. Any conversation soon sputtered out, as the men were quite vociferous if not outright rowdy, and we were glad we had the water behind us. Eventually they drifted off, laughing and boisterously shoving each other like playful kids.
Soon, tired from a long day’s journey and things having quieted down, we decided it was time for sleep. I went round the Land Rover to collect our cover blankets and my kit.
They weren’t there.
We’d been robbed!

End Part One

 

Herb riding camel028

Man on Camel – Part Two (short version)

Sometime in the middle of the darkness, something woke us up. I rolled over and reached for the knife I had stashed under the mattress. But a very strong hand grabbed and held my wrist. I looked up and out. An old man was staring down at me.

The old man quietly, gently, showed my my knife and signaled to hush and be calm. I have no idea what invisible force was at play, but this did put me at ease. I looked around. We were surrounded. They’d been so quiet that Walt and Paula were still asleep.
As I was a farthest from the Land Rover in the order of vehicle, Walt as transport protector, Paula, then me as perimeter watchdog, The old man had singled me out. We soon established that the people accompanying the old man consisted of his rather large family.
The asked for water. We provided water and the old man signalled that we all drink. We all drank.
Somehow I was able to understand the old man’s communications, and he mine. He signed that they knew we’d been robbed. He “said” that they knew who had done it, and that the culprits were not of their people but were from a different village.
Then he signalled for us to wait. Another signal brought a relative out of the night and produced an apronful of cucumbers. These he offered us, with some warm host-like warmness, and urged us to eat. We did. Skins and all.
I communicated that we intended to go to the police in the morning. We all understood the word police. Again the old man signalled to wait, signalled to his family, and another woman appeared with an apronful – this time dried dates. These, too, we ate while signalling to each other, this time regarding the theft.
I imitated snapping a photograph. They all nodded, smiled and uttered sounds and laughter of understanding. But it was not a camera that had been stolen. In my kit, other than clothing, silver jewellery I had bartered for, and other personal things, were my most prized possessions, my photographs. And a $1,500 Zoomar camera lens – on loan from a friend.

To be cont’d.

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Practice Schmactice!

Blogging 101 – Post Grad Day One

Daily Challenge – Practice Makes Perfect.

They say that practice makes perfect.
No. It doesn’t.
Well, not necessarily. They don’t say how much practice you need to put in. Or what kind of quality that practice needs to be. Or even what mastery is, or how to tell if you have it.
So, so far, the talent I wish I could practise to perfection is mastery of building a website with all of its component parts. And controlling it!
In following the advice in other spheres, for instance, walking 10,000 steps a day will make you fit – okay, I manage 3,500 on a good day, not counting those in the house, and so far, this has failed to give me 6-pack abs. Huh. Neither has doing 30 seconds of what I call hoist ups from a sitting position. Guess I’m no body builder.
However, being ever the dreamer—you have to be a dreamer if you think you’re going to make it as a prize-winning writer, and/or blogger — I have not let that dissuade me from practising. So I joined the Blogging 101. And practise as I will, I have no sign of mastery setting in.
***Time out*** I’m going to do some deep breathing here to master the art of conquering jealousy. But dang! The 101 bloggers are gooood! Oops. Deep breath.
Okay. Okay. I’ll keep practising. I’m up to it. I am. I AM!
Meanwhile, I’ll finish my Man on Camel story later. I SHALL master that, okay!!??
–PS: Practice is a noun. Practise is a verb. Never mind what spell check tries to tell you.

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Hello and Not Goodbye

Indie Herb asks

Who is this man on a camel?

Long story. It starts in Toronto. Young man, working at The Globe and Mail newspaper of record. It was a case of use it or lose it. “You didn’t use your holiday last year,” they said. “If you don’t use it, you lose it.”
“Can I,” I asked, “put it back-to-back with this year’s holiday?”
“As long as you don’t want it in the middle of the summer.”
I took the month in March. It was during one of Europe’s coldest winters.
My aim was to “do” the festivals of Spain and Portugal. I got as far as Madrid. I fell in love. I decided to stay. And I was fortunate enough to find work at the Mangold Institute, teaching English as a Second Language, as it is now called.
However, come late spring and, to me, we were in the midst of a severe heat wave. I would walk from the hacienda room through the shaded streets and lanes, until I hit a broad street of heat waves shimmering up off the pavement. I had to cross. I steeled myself, held my breath, and paced across. Still, when I stepped onto the sidewalk, a wall of extreme heat hit me hard as it bounced off the whitish wall.

Well, that was just about too much. So, when I was lined up at the American Express to collect my mail, the notice on the bulletin board was irresistible. It read something like this:

Group traveling south across the Sahara.
Call Steve at 000-000

How could I resist?

A large contingent of us took the train to Gibralter, where the group broke up into two, and I was asked to join the group planning to travel across North Africa. The other group actually took off south. They suffered dysentery en route, break downs – both vehicular and personal from what I heard later – and wound up in Chad, where at least one member was hospitalized. Eventually they found their way back home to California by pack boat.

As for the rest of us, we had our adventures, and wound up in Egypt, heading for the Aswan Dam and the Valley of the Kings.

But en route, were running out of daylight as we sought a place to camp for the night. We came to a spot where we could cross a canal. We found a spot right there, beside the road and on the canal bank.
We fed ourselves and took to our beds, settling in to do a little lett
*er writing and reading.

Along came a energetic bunch of young men, who stopped to “converse” with us. After some success, the guys rattled on across the canal.

We settled down and went to sleep.

Sometime in the middle of the darkness, something woke us up. I rolled over and reached for the knife I had stashed under the mattress. But a very strong hand grabbed and held my wrist. I looked up and out, right into the eyes of an old man staring down at me.

To be continued–

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