Tuesday, May 18, 2010

A Book Is A Gift You Can Open Again and Again

C.S. Lewis once said, “One day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again”. I must be getting older because I am reading fairy tales for the second time in my life. Both of my daughters, Madeleine, age 9, and Georgia, age 6, will still sit and listen to me read anything about princesses and mermaids. I want my girls to love to read and enjoy using their imaginations to picture what the words on the pages mean to them. I want them to see me reading for pleasure and hopefully that will influence them to become voracious readers themselves. Sometimes in life we don’t get what we want.

My mother is an avid reader. As a little girl I would get such pleasure from sitting beside my mom while she read. I loved the even rhythm of her breathing and the musty smell of the pages of her paperback novels. To her, reading meant relaxing and escaping from the reality of my sisters, my dad and me. Because of the calming effects my mother’s reading, I began reading at a very young age. I wanted to be just like her. I was reading Dr. Seuss and Little Golden Books by the age of 4. I had a limited library of my own but my mother took me often to the library so I could explore the shelves and choose my own escapes.

For my eighth birthday, my Aunt gave me the Nancy Drew mystery, “The Secret of Red Gate Farm”. I was so excited to be given a real novel and I could hardly wait for my party to conclude so I could start reading. I was shocked when my mother said that Nancy Drew books were too old for me and that she would keep it aside for me for a few more years. I was devastated. Now that I’m a mother I understand that what my mother, meant was that she felt the content of the novel was too advanced for me at the time. What my eight year old self heard was, “You are too young to be able to read this book.” I took my mother’s words as a challenge. I surreptitiously read “The Secret of Red Gate Farm” and then admitted it to my mother and begged for more Nancy Drew books. I couldn’t get enough and read almost all 63 books in the original series. This began my love of reading novels. I discovered a love of losing myself in the stories and the characters of an enthralling novel. I would rather read a book than watch TV. I suppose reading made me feel adult and more like my mother.

After reading all of the Nancy Drew books, I discovered Judy Blume, Louisa May Alcott, C.S. Lewis, Lucy Maud Montgomery, and Laura Ingalls Wilder. I would devour any book that got in my way. As I grew into my teen years, I read popular novels of the time by V.C. Andrews. Although trashy, they were entertaining and were considered the ‘cool’ books to read at the time. My friends and I would talk about the books and giggle about the inappropriate relationship between the brother and sister. I didn’t know it at the time but those confabulations were my first book clubs.

My all time favourite book from my childhood is “The Trumpet of the Swan” and I have forced it on my kids twice now. My grade two teacher, Miss Steibel, read it to my class and I fell in love with Louis the swan with each turn of the page. I imagined I could hear the trumpeting “koh-ho” of Louis’s parents trying desperately to get their young cygnet to speak. This book was magic to me and I wanted so much for my own children to love it as I do. They humour me and listen quietly while I read it to them but they don’t ever want to discuss Sam or Louis and their unique relationship. They must think I’m a little crazy when I try to mimic the koh-ho sounds in a vain attempt to excite them and get them to love the book as well.

When I found out I was going to be a mom, I had many hopes and dreams for my kids. One of those dreams was that they would share my love of books. I imagined the family all sitting quietly on the couch reading and just enjoying the silence while our minds were busily putting the stories in our hands into mini-movies on our internal movie screens. This has not happened yet. Georgia does enjoy books and is working very hard at reading but she hasn't felt that connection to a story yet, the way I did as a young child. For Madeleine, reading is a chore. It does not come easily to her and I can’t help but blame myself for her lack of enjoyment from reading. I will always wonder if I didn’t read to her often enough or if I could have offered her more help when she was learning to read. I suppose I assumed that she would be just like me and fall in love with the extraordinary world of books. I must admit that Madeleine’s lack of enthusiasm for reading is a source of frustration for me, but I do understand that each child is different. My hope for her now is that she will discover something, a hobby, perhaps, that will provide her with an enduring comfort the way books do for me.

It would be more than fair to say that books have shaped me into the person I am today. The characters that I fell in love with live in my heart and I call upon them when I need to borrow some words and let the strong women characters speak for me. More than once I have wished that I could live with Laura, Mary, Ma and Pa on the prairie and live a simple life or be a feisty dreamer like Anne Shirley. I wish I could go back to the time of innocence in my life when I didn't understand what was going on in “Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret”. It should come as no surprise to learn that my nickname for my daughter Georgia is George, just like Nancy Drew’s best friend. I still hold out hope that my girls will become involved with the characters they discover in their own experiences with reading. When I become a teacher and am reading fairy tales for the third time around, I hope I can inspire my students to love to hold, smell and read books and jump into the pages of a book with both feet.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

The Road to Vegetarianism Smells of Bacon.

It's been a week without meat and I'm doing OK with the new way of eating and shopping. It's actually been pretty easy. I've been for dinner at my sisters and out to a restaurant without any hankerings for meat. I've been grocery shopping and didn't even walk past the meat section. So far, so good. I came home to find my husband cooking bacon and didn't even start salivating. I'm not going to lie, it smelled damn good but, I just thought about the sizzling pig flesh and moved on.

Now, for the hard part-the family! When I approached my family about making a united choice to give up meat I was met with a mixed reaction. My eldest daughter let out an audible sigh of relief and said, "thank you, mommy". She made the choice not to eat meat 2 years ago and hasn't looked back. My husband's response was interesting but, not surprising. He really gave it some thought for awhile. He was chewing on the idea which got my hopes up. As he opened his mouth, I thought he would say that he would ponder it for a few days and then we could talk about it. Nope, he said, "what about chicken?" So, needless to say, my husband will need some more pondering time. I knew my youngest daughter would be resistant as she loves meat and would happily eat steak at every meal but, I thought I could get her on the animal rights and cruelty issues. She loves animals and hopes to one day adopt 5 dogs and 2 horses. Her response, "I can't live without bacon." Some people might remind me that I am the one that buys the groceries, therefore I'm in charge. That would definitely be one route to take with my family, however I don't' live in a dictatorship. Every family member needs to make his or her own choice. I think that to stick to this new lifestyle one must make the decision for themselves and for their own reasons. No one likes to be told what to do and, undoubtedly, if I make this decision for them, it will be meaningless. I am making my choice and perhaps I will be an example for them.

It's been tough explaining to people that I am making this transition from omnivore to vegetarian. Of course, being a vegetarian is not a new idea and all of us know at least one vegetarian in our lives. I don't know why it is so crazy, then, for me to become a vegetarian. Am I too old? I am learning more and more about factory farming and its impact on the environment and our health as consumers of meat and citizens of the world. This is where I start the conversation. What is funny is that a lot of my friends immediately seem to be defensive about eating meat, like somehow I am questioning their choices. Not true! I am educating myself on a global issue that effects each of us on the planet and when questioned about the choice I am making I'm going to share what I know. I am new to this and I have no intention of judging people about their choices. It's like my mental framework has changed because of this new knowledge and I can't 'unknow' it. Now that I know the effects of factory farming I can't continue on the same path. The only thing I can do is make the daily choice to not eat animals and hopefully my family will learn from me and make the change along with me. Until then, I am going to have to be tested by the smell of bacon on weekend mornings and summer barbecues. I love a challenge!

I'll keep you posted.

Well, no one said it was going to be easy.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

For my baby

Baby
By Kristina Fraser

Here’s a little heart to break.
We know it will, eventually
Feel the ache of love or stabbing pain of sorrow.
We can’t shield her from this.

Newly created and beloved.
Tiny hands to hold
Forever clinging to innocence
We will be her anchor.

Tender shining skin
Glowing and dewy
That will tear and bruise
We will try to buffer the hurt

Here’s a mind to mould
That is designed to learn
And will know more than we can know.
That will one day teach us.

Perfect pink lips
Flawlessly shaped
That will kiss us innocently
And one day caress the neck of a lover

Tiny baby
We will try not to break you

Monday, February 8, 2010

Sickness

Sickness
by Kristina Fraser

A single cell mutates
in the body of a healthy man
and waits for the opportunity to strike,
like a predator lays in wait
for its prey
to reveal vulnerability.

An evil shadow
spreading its blackness throughout his body
an insidious darkness
invading the core.

It spreads like spilled black ink,
slowly seeping into every cell
obliterating his vibrancy
leaving only a bag of skin
for his loved ones to cry over.

It snatches his youth and eats away at his strength.
It strangles the breath
out of his frail body.
It doesn’t give him a chance to fight.

Evil won and it took it everything.
It took his plans for the future
and took mine, too.