Love Harder

On the surface, I look normal. Healthy even. My past, it's invisible to most. You'd have to look close to see the cracks in my facade and most people don't bother.

But I can't escape those cracks. There are reminders, flashing like a neon sign on a dark city street, reminding me I'll never escape this path I'm on. A single white stretch mark beneath my belly button. A tattoo on my back with a scar running through the center.

The crows' feet at the corner of my eyes, less from aging gracefully and more from being thrust into a vortex of pain. My nose ring, a reminder of the numbness I carried and a desperate desire to feel anything once more.

Yesterday, a lady asked me how I cope on the rough days.

The day before I received an email asking how I survived.

The week before, a tweet exclaiming surprise and astonishment that I had a deceased child. They didn't know.

My wounds are no longer on my surface, festering with the rage of raw grief. They've scabbed over from time and endurance and the million tears I've cried. They're hiding under the surface of what you see, threatening to rise to again with a sudden memory or a sad song on the radio.

I wear a skin that is too small most days, fitting tightly to leave no room for the pain that follows me around. It is painful to live with a lost child. To hear of your child's antics. To see another four year old thrive. To watch a five year old blow out their birthday candles. To watch other's children live. It cuts sharp like a knife through the jello of protection I've managed to scab around my heart. I wonder, sincerely, if it will ever not hurt to see everyone else's children grow up, when my child did not.

Love harder.


Losing Shale was the most violent experience of my life. His death was sudden, swift and cruel. We were shredded in moments we never knew to anticipate, left alone in the carnage of death, our lives ripped violently apart with the quiet passing of a small child.


I haven't quite figured out how I survived that moment, or how I continue to walk around in various states of zombification. I can't think of that night, or the days that followed without clutching my chest and having to remind myself to draw breath.


But there are moments, more now than ever before, where the pain is pushed aside, hidden behind the clouds of joy I've peppered into my landscape. Like chasing butterflies, I've chased joy because it has been the only thing that has kept the monster of grief at bay.


Laughter rings in my ears now, and happiness is no longer a fiction to wonder about. It is real and it coexists with the stark reality that death is final.


Most people don't see the quiet moments anymore, the ones where grief sneaks up on me and shatters my joy. It doesn't take much. Shale is everywhere with me, imprinted in me as much as the freckles on my nose.


Small moments of wondering what he'd be like now. He'd be ten. Would he be tall? Would his hair still curl into soft ringlets when it grew out? Would he be able to say Mom? Would he look like his brother Frac? Would he like his brother Jumby? Would he walk?


Those questions torment me, haunting me with their answers held silent, and it burns my soul with a physical pain I would once have told you was impossible. Imaginary. But it is as real as the pain of getting kicked in the groin by a little boy on a playground. This pain exists. And worse, it seems to endure. Nothing stops it.


So I've learned to live with it, like a bad limp, or an eye that keeps watering. It is simply part of what makes me Tanis, whether I like it or not. I'm tired of fighting the fact I carry an inescapable pain with me that no one can see. I'm tired of being sad that others no longer grieve for the child that once shined so brightly with the love he shared.


It hurts to see my kids remember their little brother and cobble together their memories of him, hoarding them close in fear they'll forget the love they once shared with him. It hurts almost as much losing my son all over again.


So yes, I have a son you never knew I lost.


And no, I don't really know how I cope on the rough days. Mostly, because I don't cope. There is no real coping in the face of such loss. There is simply existing through the violence of the pain.


My great secret for learning how to survive this unthinkable loss is that I don't have a secret. I've survived and I hope I will continue to, always because it's a choice I've made. To survive this. For myself, for my existing children, for my son who never had the luxury of survival.


But more than survive, I choose to live and to love. Everyday, with great passion and forethought, because I never know if today is the last day I'm going to be able to hold my loved ones.


Death changed me.


It made me love harder.


Which, I guess, is the real secret to how I survive, how I cope.


I love. Even as it hurts to do so.


I hope you will too.


How To Teach Your Kid To Drive. Old School Style

One morning, during a spring school holiday, my father walked into my bedroom while I was still sleeping, tossed a shirt onto my head and told me to get my arse out of bed and get ready to leave the house in fifteen minutes because he had plans for me.

I remember having just enough time to jump into the shower and get dressed and jump into his truck while moaning about the fact my hair was still wet and I wasn't wearing any makeup and I was hungry and oh God Dad, where are you taking me?

He never did tell me where our destination was; instead preferring to ignore my questions and yammer on about how one drives a stick shift. He prattled on and explained the basic mechanics of how a standard engine works and demonstrated shifting gears and braking for over an hour until I realized he was taking me to his best friend's house out in the country.

The house where Boo lived.

When I realized I was being chauffeured to the place where a hot teenaged boy lived while I was wearing a sloppy green sweater and my hair had dried into a natural frizzy state I was less interested in listening to instructions on how to operate a vehicle and more panicked about how to make myself presentable given the lack of a hair brush, make up and cute clothes at my disposal.

Priorities. I had them.

Instead of pulling into Boo's family driveway, he drove into their hay field and parked the truck upon a hill and then got out of the truck.

Realizing my father was about to let me drive, I suddenly forgot about cute boys and eagerly slid into the driver's seat and waited for my father to get into the passenger seat to begin my very first driver's lesson.

He never did. He turned his back on his truck and me and started lumbering to the house where Boo's father was watching from the window.

Dumbstruck, I rolled down the window and yelled after him, "Wait! Aren't you going to teach me how to drive?"

My dad turned around and hollered back, "I just spent the last hour teaching you how to drive. If you were too dumb to pay attention it's your own damn fault. You'll figure it out. Don't hit anything." And then he strolled (while laughing) out of site and into the house where he and my future father-in-law laughed their arses off at my flummoxed attempts to start a stick shift with virtually no knowledge.

This shouldn't have surprised me as much as it did seeing as how my father decided to teach me to swim. His brother and him took my brother Stretch and I out to go fishing, and once we were in the boat they tied ropes around both my brother and I and tossed us into the lake. Every time we started to sink they'd haul us up by the rope for us to sputter for air and then tell us to figure it out.

Eventually we did. After swallowing darn near half the lake.

Parenting old school style, before laws and shit.

Needless to say, sitting in that truck, trying to get it to start was not something I'll ever forget. Nor was the feeling of finally figuring it out and then subsequently bunny hopping all over Boo's dad's hay field. I was triumphant that afternoon.

That was also the day Boo's and my romance started. But that's a story for another day.

I eventually learned to drive off the hayfield and on actual roads but it had less to do with my father and more to do with Boo, his brother and my big brother, all taking me under their wings and teaching me the skills I needed to attempt to get my driver's license. Something I was in no real hurry to do.

I lived in the city, had public transportation and taxicabs at my disposal, plus a plethora of friends who were all happily willing to squire my arse around. The idea of having to get both a learners permit then a driver's license was not one that thrilled me. So I put it off. And off. And off.

It wasn't until I was 18 that I decided to get my learner's permit to drive. Only because I needed official identification to get into the bar. I then put off getting my driver's license until I was 19 and only then did I bother because my boss told me I wouldn't be promoted with out a license to drive.

Well, that and the fact I really, really wanted to be able to see Boo whenever I wanted to. Young love is a great motivator.

My daughter, however, is not like me. She harbors no fear of driving, feels no anxiety about it and as such, spent all of last summer studying the driver's training manual so that on her 14th birthday she could take her learner's permit test.

Of course she passed.

And of course I wouldn't let her drive.

Because she's fourteen and I don't have a death wish to die beside her in the passenger seat as she drives us off the road.

Instead, I passed that responsibility on to her father, so that one day, she too could have the curious memory of how her daddy tried to teach her to drive. The only problem with this is, her father is never home. Now my daughter is closing in on fifteen, whining every chance she gets about how all the other kids with their learners get to drive with their parents, Mom you are such a big meanie and oh God, my life is so unfair.

(And yes, my daughter will actually be taking certified driver's training lessons nearer to her 16th birthday, just as I did when I finally decided to get my license, but this does not appease a 14 year old who holds a permit to get behind the wheel.)

So in a moment of sheer craziness, I walked into my daughter's room and told her to get her arse out to the car in fifteen minutes because we had places to be.

She bitched to me that she wasn't ready to go anywhere, her hair wasn't combed, she didn't have any make up on and where are we going and I ignored her and explained how standard engine worked and how one shifts gears and stops and avoids bunny hopping and back sliding down a hill.

And then I pulled into her grandmother's hayfield, where 20 years ago I once sat and tossed her the keys.

My knees were actually shaking and a million butterflies threatened to eat through my stomach lining as I watched her slid into the driver's seat very excitedly and then I turned around and walked away.

"Wait Mom! Where are you going? Aren't you going to teach me to drive?" she called.

"I just did. You'll figure it out. Don't hit any trees." I called back as I walked to the house, towards my past, my present and her future.

She survived. As did the trees. As I did. Once more.

The beginning of her future as my own personal chauffeur. Payback is a mother's right.

Redneck Mommy Does New York

Why did the redneck cross the New York City road?

She saw a Tim Hortons on the other side. True story. Yay for traveling across the continent and into another country just to eat Timbits!

New York was awesome. Which I hadn't really expected. As much as I love to travel, I never honestly wanted to go see New York. The sheer size of the city and the volume of it scared my small city, country bumpkin heart and I would have been happy living out my days never having set foot in the Big Apple.

I'd have missed out. I had a blast.

It helps that I went prepared, thanks to all of y'all. I had proper walking shoes, I was armed with interesting places to go visit and I had an extraordinary travel partner.



What I didn't have was a personal air-conditioner on wheels following me around as I tramped about the city. Holy heck, New York City in the summer is hot. As in hawt. Like boob sweat, ear sweat and every other extremely unsexy sweat imaginable. The heat bounced off all the concrete and my poor Canadian winter loving body just about melted like Frosty the Snowman.

A little boob sweat should never stop a good tourist though and so we walked.

And walked.

And walked some more.


The view from the Empire State Building



Times Square and me. Along with thousands of other snap-happy slightly lost tourists.


Times Square rather disappointed me. Although I did enjoy me some Naked Cowboy shaking his thang in front of me. However, I kept wanting to throw a blanket around him and tell him he's bringing shame to real cowboys everywhere. I mean, please. A straw cowboy hat? Invest in a Stetson and take some pride in your panhandling.


My kids wouldn't let me post the picture of me copping a feel of Liberty's boob. They're fuddy duddies.


My friend and I found the first of the fake Lady Liberty statues dotted around the tourist areas and in a moment of silliness we posed for pictures. Just as my buddy was snapping my picture a clearly concerned homeless man ventured up to us and whispered, "You do know that's not the real Statue of Liberty, right?"

And they say New Yorkers are unfriendly. Please. That bearded dude totally earned a dollar with that tip.

Waiting for a ferry to see the Real Statue of Liberty, thanks to my new tour guide director.


Since I had absolutely no reason to be in New York other than to enjoy myself, my girlfriend and I happily strapped on our tourist hats and toured. We hit all the big tourist attractions, and a lot of the smaller ones. We rode the subway, which smelled very similar to what I imagine a sewer pipe would. In fact, I'm pretty sure if someone urinated in the corner of one of the subway stations that may actually have made it cleaner.


We spent more time wandering off the beaten path, getting hopeless lost and enjoying every minute of it.




It occurred to us half way through our little adventure that the only animals we had seen in our travels was the odd dog on a leash. Right about then is when a pigeon pooped on us, I spilled my drink down my dress and a squirrel started to stalk us. City wildlife makes me twitch and walk around looking like I peed myself.


Crazy eyes. I swear it wanted to jump on my face and rip off my nose.


Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Or the chick on her back.


After stumbling upon a little art gallery, I found the souvenir I wanted to take home with me. Never mind it cost almost as much as my car. However, when I sent a picture of the little statue to my husband he immediately called back and yelled, "Are you on crack? What is wrong with you?"

I bet if I had sent him a picture of the Bloggess's big metal chicken statue he'd have been all over that and have asked if I could get two so he could plant one on each side of the driveway to pretend they were his personal gargoyles.

There may be a reason the two of us have never invested in any real art.


This is why cell phones and cameras shouldn't be allowed near slightly inebriated people. Dorkiness ensues.


There was food, (oh my god, the food. Amazing.) There may have been some wine. And perhaps a mojito. Or three. But in my defense, we had just spent two hours getting hopelessly lost while wandering about looking for an interesting place to eat. What we found in two hours was a steady stream of Irish Bar and Grills. It was as though all the restaurants in the greater Manhattan area had been transported to the moon and replaced with Irish pubs and maybe the occasional questionable looking noodle house.

I was about to give up on ever sitting down in a non-pub type restaurant when a NYPD officer took pity on us and pointed us in the direction we wanted to be. After asking if he could join us after his shift. It was too bad he was like 12, and I'm like, married with four kids and old. Otherwise, I'd have totally accepted his offer.


Sexxay. 


So I can officially cross visiting New York off my bucket list, even if it was never really on it. And the best souvenir I brought home with me? The 7 blisters I managed to accumulate on my feet, even after wearing sneakers and old lady walking sandals.

Thank goodness for the Walgreens across the street. Sorry about cleaning out your blister Band-Aid supply. You may want to restock for the next tourist who isn't really prepared for the concrete jungle.

*A big thanks to Isabel, Neil, Barry, James and Jason for going out of their way to take two little tourists under their wings and make our trip memorable. Also, you were missed D.*