GRANDMA FORNES (copyright)
September 2, 1999: To begin this journal, I may have to go back to a bit of history. A journal of a life should start with the day you're born and end with your death, I guess. But this one starts in the middle of my life, so I'll try to catch you up on what I've been through 'til now. So you know where I'm coming from. I've got to think about that for a bit, but I'll be back.
September 3, 1999: The only surprising thing about the plaque on Grandma Fornes wall—just above the dining table in the little room off the kitchen—was that it had the word Hell in it. I had the motto memorized before I started school; I was a good reader but hadn't yet been introduced to figurative language so the Hell in the plaque was a literal place, in this case at the end of a paved road.
Paved roads
were good, gravel roads were noisy and the car would slide around sometimes so
that Grandma Fornes would crank the wheel sharply, utter an “Oh, dear” under
her breath—as close to cursing that she ever came, I think—and lean into the
steering wheel in a manner that wasn't figurative.
Grandma
Fornes became a born-again Christian when I was eight. I didn't quite know what
that meant until I was twelve or so; I had thought that bornigan was one
word, one of those strange, long words that grown-ups use to talk about
subjects like pregnant and penis, etc. I didn't have a penis, though, until I
was thirteen, but I did have a weewee. I got a penis in Health Class in Grade
7, when I learned that only girls had vaginas. I was extremely envious,
although for all I knew, a vagina had to be something like a penis, only
better, obviously, considering the fuss Miss Tobald made about it.
In Grade 8,
they showed us pictures and I changed my mind. “Penises are far more
interesting than vaginas,” I said to Howard Cousins, trying to make
conversation with the coolest guy in Junior High. Sometimes I just open my
mouth and crap comes out.
“Grow up,
squirt,” he said. “you don't have a clue.”
As if he
did.
It's true,
though. Growing up with a Grandma leaves you without a lot of important
information. I had no clue about a whole bunch of stuff until I got to junior
high, although I did know how to do cross-stitch and had done a pretty good tea
towel with a dog and a cat in a friendly pose one winter when the evenings were
long and boring. Come to think of it, most evenings—summer and winter—were
boring living as I did in a house with two Grandmas and me.
“Why,” you
may ask, “were you living with a Grandma, let alone two?”
Well the
reason was one of those things I didn't learn the significance of until much
later. In High School, the guys would have said that my dad—who is
unknown—knocked up my mom—who was probably a slut anyway and deserved it—and
the long and the short was that she had a baby—me—when she should have been in
Grade 11 and her mother—Grandma Fornes—took me in so she could finish her High
School—which she never did—and the rest is history.
I may try to
find my mom someday; not now, for sure.
Anyway, you shouldn't have asked if you didn't need to know.
September 4, 1999: My name is Michael Fornes. I am 19 years old and I've decided to write this journal because my English 101 prof suggested to the class that journaling is a good way to hone writing skills.
First, some
promised but necessary background.
Henry Hudson
High School was true Hell—as well as being located on a paved street. I started
my Grade 9 year there with good intentions; I would make Grandma Fornes proud
of me. And even in Grade 9, I got top marks in everything but Phys Ed, which I
considered an abomination-of-a-course. We dribbled basketballs, soccer balls
(from foot to foot), worked out with medicine balls and climbing walls and
usually ended with a volleyball game in which I can safely say I never did one
thing the whole year to assist any team I happened to be on in acquiring one
single point. The Phys Ed teacher—Mr. McDermott, a cranky, red-faced
coach—introduced me to the word inept. I looked it up: it's an adjective
for people who can't dig, pass, set or spike a volleyball. The preferred noun
form is ineptitude, not ineptness like Mr. McDermott apparently
thought when he said, frequently, “I've never seen so much ineptness in my
life!” Not just to me, but to all those of us who were too fat, too clumsy or
too disinterested to master game skills.
Phys Ed
isn't a required course in college, thank God.
I just realized that you might well be
wondering why I call her “Grandma Fornes,” since the bastard son of a teenager
and an unknown father would logically have only one grandmother. My biological
grandmother, Grandma Fornes, had a sister Edith who had lived with her since
her husband—my apparent great uncle—was killed in a farm accident.
I can't
remember when it started, but I always called my great aunt, “Grandma Edith.”
Grandma
Edith never had any children. Grandma Fornes only had the one, my mother Laura
Fornes whose father, my grandfather Fornes, “was killed while on peacekeeping
duty in Cyprus.” (That's the official story; there's no possibility of “Grandpa
Fornes” having been in Cyprus at the time given by Grandma Fornes, but I have
never had the heart to contradict her and have unsuccessfully Googled and
Yahooed every possible avenue of information on peacekeeping in Cyprus to try
to prove her right.)
My family
tree has routinely had most of its few branches lopped off, apparently.
Somewhere out there is my mother, who may or may not be raising half-brothers and half-sisters for me. More likely, she's long since disappeared down some sinkhole like East Hastings in Vancouver or the Tenderloin in San Francisco. I've read about those places; “white trash” tends to end up there. If that's where Laura Fornes got to, I may be the only living branch on our tree.
September 6, 1999: I've never been born-again, although it wasn't for lack of trying on the part of my two Grandmas. I went to church on Sunday mornings—dutifully, I never caught on to what was going on exactly. I attribute this to the fact that my two Grandmas weren't born-again until I was in Grade 3, and so it was a bit like walking in on the middle of a movie. I never picked up enough of the plot line to let me appreciate the punch line, which, I gathered, was an eternity in Heaven, a place of endless bliss, or Hell, it's opposite in every way.
Grandma
Edith is (was) pretty up front about her conviction that I am a lost soul. She
cajoled and pleaded with me several times, mostly when Grandma Fornes was out
shopping or decorating the church, begged me to get down on my knees and repeat
after her the Sinners' Prayer from the Gideon New Testament I got in Grade Six.
I found the suggestion embarrassing in the extreme and said, “I'll think about
that . . . later.”
“Later may
be too late,” she'd say. “You could get hit by a car on your way to school.”
I unpacked my suitcases in the residence a few days ago and found she'd slipped a brand new King James Bible into the overnight case. I like it. It has a nice heft to it, thin pages, a nice font and in the front, a place for my family tree, a feature likely redundant to my needs. For there to be a family tree, I believe it's required that there first be a family.
September 7, 1999: If you haven't guessed it by now, I'm fat. I have always been fat. And as Shakespeare said—Grade 12, Hamlet—people might well end up being known by their flaws, not their strengths.
I haven't
decided yet whether it's a strength or a flaw, but I routinely take the
opposing position on just about everything—just ask Grandma Fornes. I wrote
an essay as my assignment-of-choice to disprove Hamlet's theory (see paragraph
above) by pointing out that in Canada, a drunken reprobate like John A.
MacDonald was elevated to the status of a George Washington despite his being
the worst possible Prime Minister for the time unless you happened to be a
white, English, Protestant Ontarian entrepreneur. Mr. Scoles—my English
teacher—and Miss Clansen—my Social Studies teacher—got together and decided my
essay was “absurd,” and obviously plagiarized, and gave me 24 hours to do a new
assignment. I opened my mouth to defend myself, then changed my mind because I
had, in fact, copied the words the worst possible Prime Minister for the
time unless you happened to be a white, English, Protestant Ontarian
entrepreneur, from a Macleans article in which the columnist was actually
quoting someone else.
Knocking off a new assignment in 24 hours wasn't a big deal. Hours and hours of keyboarding practice while most kids were out shooting hoops has meant that I can type faster than I can talk—or walk. In 45 minutes, I cobbled together an analysis of Hamlet's reason for contemplating suicide in his To be, or not to be soliloquy. I confined myself to words of three syllables or less to make sure I wasn't charged with plagiarism . . . again. Mr. Scoles gave me a “B” and added a note: I hope this has been a learning experience for you, Michael.
September 8, 1999: It was a learning experience. And there have been many. The first time a circle forms around you in elementary school and the taunt, “fatty, fatty 8 by 8, can't get through the garden gate,” is chanted at you in chorus, you know you've had a real learning experience. The lesson is this: the borders of normal are strict; fall outside them and you're on your own.
My roommate
is Jake MacDonald. He moved in after me, four days late for the start of
classes, in fact. I was working on this journal when he dragged in a trunk and
three suitcases yesterday. His mouth said, “Hi, I'm Jake,” but his eyes held a
comment with which I was already totally familiar: “Shit! They've put me in
with a boring fat guy!” I've hardly seen him since; his suitcase is on the bed,
clothing scattered about and the rest of his luggage still unopened.
I envy the guys with enough money to rent their own place off-campus.
September 9, 1999: Our room is in two halves, mirror images of each other. We each have a single bed, a desk with three three-foot shelves above and an internet connection, a three-foot closet, a chest of four drawers and a shoe rack. My first order of business was to unpack everything into it's place. My clothes went into the closet with all the hangers' hooks pointing the same way (in case of fire), shirts, jackets and pants separated for easy access. Grandma Fornes had packed two boxes of books for me; she chose my favourites from among the books she'd read to me to help me get to sleep, many of them novels I didn't fully understand but which left me with indelible images: Captain Ahab pursuing the leviathan Moby Dick across a stormy sea, Lorna Doone falling at her wedding with a bullet from the hated Carver Doone in her back, Jean Valjean breaking a window to steal a loaf of bread for his starving family.
Grandma
Fornes was a good reader; her voice rose and fell in a rhythm I can still hear
when I lie back at night and relive the ascent up the stairs to the garret
where Raskalnikov will murder the pawnbroker woman. High school teachers were
exasperated to learn that the offerings they put before me were often familiar
to me already. Although Grandma Fornes hadn't read Catcher in the Rye to
me, it was one of the forbidden fruits I picked and ate after Grade 6 when I
got my first all-my-own library card.
I've got all
the classics lined up on the top two shelves: six feet of great literature.
I wish I could say that Grandma Fornes had had a classical education before she married, and that her life was a Greek tragedy of lost hopes, but the fact is that the books she read to me gained entrance to our household accidentally; they were left behind in the attic by a former occupant and Grandma Fornes hauled them out when she needed something to read to me to get me to sleep before midnight. I think she fell in love with the novels by chance as she read to me. I think it's no small feat to absorb the wisdom of the ages for the first time when you're in your fifties. There's a word for that: Grandma Fornes was an autodidact like Leonardo da Vinci or Herman Melville. I pride myself on being an autodidact as well; I credit Grandma Fornes for that.
September 11, 1999: This is beginning to look like a novel. It couldn't be, though, because its too much like real life, where events of consequence seldom happen. For a story to be a story—my English teacher in Grade 12 said—it has to have a complication of significance which is resolved in the end. (That's for a short story; a novel can have multiple complications of significance—he said.) So now this is a journal which I will continue to write until, well, I don't know 'til when. Journals have rules too. Especially if you write them to be read by someone other than yourself; that's how a journal is different from a diary.
Jake
MacDonald moved out. I don't know why, but I have my suspicions. I'm glad he's
gone; I would be overjoyed if no one else moved in. I'd get the shared-room
price for a single which makes a difference of $93.00 a month. To be a story
with a complication of significance, Jake would have had to murder me in my
sleep because I'm fat, like the protagonist in The Telltale Heart by
Edgar Allen Poe who kills his housemate because he's cross-eyed and he (the
protagonist) can't stand to look at him, or be looked at by him—I can't
remember which right now.
See what I
mean about the difference between a story and a journal? In a journal, people
move out without saying anything; in novels, a whole lot of emotional fuss is
made, dark secrets come to light and the universe groans. And then, of course,
the protagonist begins a new and better life and lives happily ever after. At
least they did in the one or two Christian novels Grandma Fornes read to me
before I told her I didn't want to hear any more of those happy-ending tales.
“Why not?”
she asked. “Don't you want things to end happily?”
“In our
lives, yes,” I said, “but not in stories. It's too fake.”
She stared
at me for a while. “I don't understand you,” she said.
Once Grandma
Edith got mad at me and called me a snot-nosed little brat, and I guess
I was, although how “snot-nosed” is the right adjective for what I was confused
me. I always looked up the big words in the books Grandma Fornes read to me and
then I'd use them on Grandma Edith to irritate her more than she already was.
Once I told her to quit her ubiquitous complaining when she told me for the
hundredth time to hang up my wet towel properly so it would dry. Grandma Fornes
waded in at about the same point at which Grandma Edith slapped my face.
“Don't be so
impertinent,” she said. “Show Grandma Edith some respect.”
I looked up impertinent,
but I couldn't figure out why pertinent with the prefix im, which
would make it not pertinent, could possibly apply to what I'd said.
This entry
is long; I was home for the weekend and now it's Sunday evening and the dorm is
quiet and I can't think of anything to do but write.
I'm sad.
Grandma Edith is headed for an unhappy ending. I snapped at her when she did
the “hang up your towel properly” thing with me over my scuffed shoes and
Grandma Fornes called me into her bedroom and told me that Grandma Edith—her
older sister—has Alzheimer’s.
I know what
Alzheimer’s is but when I got back to the dorm, I looked it up online and read
a long description, including the fact that there is no known cure. Grandma
Edith's mind will deteriorate beginning with her memory functions until she
doesn't recognize anyone, is in a nursing home and unable to do anything much
for herself. “Death by a decade or two of mental strangulation,” I read on a
website about a new, revolutionary treatment that “could be coming soon.”
This weekend didn't have a happy ending.
September 12, 1999: A bad thing happened in History class today. Some would say it was nowhere near being a significant complication, but sometimes an insignificant complication feels, well, really significant. My History 101 prof, Dr. Busenitz, asked a question. He said, “Our Charter of Rights and Freedoms tries to protect people from discrimination on the grounds of gender, age, religion, etc. Who would you add to the list if you were asked?”
“Unattractive
people,” someone offered and Dr. Busenitz nodded.
“Jocks!”
“People with
acne!”
“Amputees!”
“Jocks with
amputations and acne!” said someone else to general laughter.
And then the
girl beside me said, “Obese people,” and she looked at me, turned crimson and
said, “Oh damn, I'm so sorry!” More laughter.
Then the bad
thing happened. I turned away, let my hurt show. I should have winked and said
something like, “That's OK. I've got a mirror.” I didn't. I blew it.
It wasn't
the stuff of fiction, but it sure felt significant. Big stuff grows from little
seeds. Grandma Fornes told me a thousand times about the war that was lost
because a cavalryman lost his horse which had lost its shoe because it, in
turn, had lost a nail. “Pay attention to the nails or you may lose the war,”
she would say.
Janice Eaton (the girl) was probably a nail-episode.
September 14, 1999: And now, a confession. On September 1, I resolved to diet until I'd made it down to 100 Kg. I had visions of what I'd look like, visions including girls in swimsuits lounging on beaches and me telling a very funny joke and them laughing uncontrollably. I even remember the joke: “I wondered why a baseball looks bigger the closer it gets, and then it hit me!” That joke is hilarious: it's wonderfully ironic—verbally, that is.
After the
episode in History class I made straight for the cafeteria and bought and ate
three pieces of apple pie with ice cream. The girl at the counter looked me
over and handed me the pies on a tray without a verbal comment. I didn't care.
I knew what she was thinking. I generally know what people are thinking.
September 20, 1999: It's been almost a week since I wrote in here. The rule is that you write something every day or so, whether you feel like it or not. Rules are obviously made to be broken, otherwise they wouldn't exist. If the general rule was that everyone must love his neighbour, there'd be no need for a rule about bullying. This possibly makes sense . . ..
September 23, 1999: Janice Eaton sent me an email yesterday. She's obviously feeling very guilty and wants to get that particular albatross off her neck. Don't know how she got my address. “Michael,” she wrote. “I'm really sorry for what I said. I didn't mean to hurt you.” I wrote back: “I hope you're not losing sleep over it; I only moved to another desk because I couldn't see the board.”
Actually, if
they put in a little room with closed-circuit TV so I could watch the lectures
from there, I'd pay good money for that. It should probably have room for two:
one for me and one for the Jamaican girl with the frizzy hair and the funny
name—Precious Gem—whose been in Canada long enough to know that 99% of us are
narrow-minded, ignorant ass-holes. I'm no different; a Canadian who's highly
prejudiced against thin, blond, narrow-minded, ignorant ass-holes! (Hope
Grandma Fornes never gets to read this.)
Grandma
Fornes phoned me last night. Grandma Edith “wandered” a few days ago, they
found her two kilometres from home carrying an empty grocery bag. She said she
was just going shopping. Grandma Fornes said she wasn't sure she could take
care of Grandma Edith much longer, especially if she started to wander out the
door to who knows where. I said, “Maybe she was actually going shopping.” “No,”
Grandma Fornes said, “there's no shopping down by the lagoon.”
Grandma Fornes has taken care of me since I was a baby. Considering my size, she probably took care of me too well, let me eat way too much but that's another story. Now she phoned me to tell me that she needs help. A page is being turned. Before we hung up, she said: “We need to pray for Grandma Edith.”
September 25, 1999: Holy cow! Only three months and six days until my computer blows up! They call it Y2K—it stands for Year Two Thousand—and they're telling us that most computer systems have the capability of keeping a calendar built into them, but only until 1999 since they only used the last two digits of the year when setting them up and so “00” might just as well be understood by the computer to be the birth-of-Jesus date as the one that follows 1999! Hilarious! Didn't they imagine that life would possibly go on after 1999?
Power
stations will shut down, airplanes will crash, all our bank accounts will be
wiped out, anything that has information stored on a silicon chip will “cease
to function.” Grandma Fornes gave me cash to buy this laptop computer for
“educational purposes”; she was petrified of anything done on or by computers
after learning in church that there's pornography available to anyone who owns
one of these. Mine is an IBM Thinkpad; I bought it second hand and had
enough money left over to buy an ink-jet printer. I'll take my notes in class
on it for three months and six days yet; then I'll buy a notebook and a pen.
Har, har!
I checked
out the porn and it's there all right. Naked women cavorting for the camera
didn't need to be good actresses to catch my attention . . .. Wow! Grandma
Fornes would be horrified. She'd throw my laptop on the floor and stomp on it!
Mostly, they want you to give them your credit card number so for $9.95 you can
see the real stuff. The last thing Grandma Fornes would give me is a
credit card, although she did get me a duplicate debit card in case I need cash
suddenly. I've got strict orders to phone her before I ever use it.
What do I
want with cash anyway? A piece of pie from the cafe across the street? (Only
three times so far; the cafeteria food isn't great, but it's buffet . . . eat
all you want.) Maybe I could take Janice Eaton to a movie. She's feeling guilty
and might just go out with me.
Not bloody likely.
October 1, 1999: Grandma Edith is dead; dead and buried. The funeral was yesterday. The pastor said, “Now she's not wandering into the countryside over rocks and badger holes. Now there's no danger of her drowning in the lagoon. Now she's walking on streets of gold, dressed all in white, one with the angels.”
She looked
peaceful and contented in her coffin; serene would probably be a good
word.
Grandma
Fornes was sad. I was sad and at one point, when everyone scattered dirt on the
coffin, I sobbed like a baby. I couldn't help myself.
Grandma Edith's obituary was short; I helped Grandma Fornes write it and there just wasn't that much to tell. Born, did some gardening, farming and stuff, lost a husband, got old and died.
***
I complained
about the B+; they don’t backtrack on marks. Volleyball referees don’t reverse
their calls either. Guess it wouldn’t work out; you’d be dealing with nothing
but complaints all the time. Anyway, I didn’t feel like continuing the journal;
I knew it was an A. Anyway, what would be the point? A fat, first-year, B+
college dropout would have to commit a Columbine for his life to be even
vaguely interesting on paper.
I could have
aced my first semester exams but I didn’t write them. I had what’s called a mental
breakdown and Grandma Fornes brought me home from the hospital. She blamed
herself for letting me go off to the city before I was ready. I’m OK with that
assessment, (I mean the part about not being ready, which I obviously wasn’t)
except that nothing is her fault, not mine, nor poor dead Grandma Edith’s, nor
my biological accidental mother who should have had an abortion probably.
I blame it
all on Y2K, Janice Eaton, Jake Whatsisname, Dr. Busenitz . . . actually,
everyone who’s not me and Grandma Fornes.
Yesterday,
(when I said pretty much the above) she said right out: “ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!” She
stopped “to collect herself,” as they say in the novels. “I’m not gonna live
forever, Michael, and I’m not leaving a helpless . . . a helpless baby behind .
. . defenceless . . ..”
Then she
laid out the plan for the rest of my life: 1500 calories, 3 km. walking, 30
minutes on the weight machine every other day, Read the “Word of God” for 30
minutes every morning. “What if I cheat?” I said.
“You won’t,”
she said. “I’m gonna order the StarPhoenix and every morning, you’ll walk to
the PetroCan to pick it up. It’s exactly one and a half kilometres one way.”
“And what if
. . . ?”
“I’ll need
the paper by seven-thirty. Nothing opens before eight. Charlie always drops the
papers off on the front step at PetroCan. There’ll be no chocolate bars for
sale that early.”
Everybody
has a person, I’ve read. Only one. In my case, Grandma Fornes. I don’t have the
heart to tell her what I know to be true.
It won’t
work. It can’t work.
At least, it never has.
