How do we end up where we are?

January 7, 2014 | By | 11 Replies More

How do we end up where we are?  Is it our own choice, or is it something more mysterious?  The way we frame the story of our own life is critically important.

51xWNDPDHHL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_Once it was common for a woman to go wherever her man found work.  Some men followed their women, or (rarely) a couple decided together where to put down roots.  I was in the first category, and for years it worked on me, that I hadn’t moved to Canada by choice, but that my husband had moved us here.

He said it would only be for a year or less, but from the beginning he loved his job and never really considered working anywhere else.  Then we had children and they grew up Canadian, and gradually I understood we weren’t going anywhere.

Anti-Americanism, social reticence, and long cold winters were elements of life here that I found difficult.  Eventually I became a Canadian citizen—a dual citizen.  I recognized with deep gratitude the value of socialized medicine, the rich mix of people around me from all over the world, the fascinating history and beauty of the landscape in what is falsely believed to be one of Canada’s ugliest cities–Hamilton, Ontario.

Yet even as I built friendships and became part of a community I would now find very difficult to leave, I continued to feel that, had the choice been mine, I would not have settled here.

Then something happened that made me stop.  Stop regretting all those roads not taken.  Something that reminded me bigger elements are at work.

I’d met my husband in Indiana, where I was a graduate student in English and he was a post-doc in Biochemistry.  When we married, we knew he would have to leave the U.S., as he’d come from Ireland on a three-year Fulbright Scholarship. To live in the States, he would have to reapply from outside it.  So he came up to Hamilton’s McMaster University, and the rest is my history.

After my mother died my sisters and I went to close the house I grew up in.  It’s in a small Western Kentucky town, one I still get homesick for, though it has changed radically since I left.  The house had been ours for over sixty years and there were layers to excavate.

It was the labour of love so many people know—discovering thousands of family memories through mundane objects: Daddy’s prayer book and rosary; his toolbox; Mama’s rain cap in the Anderson’s Hairdressers’ envelope; her green-handled kitchen scissors.  We call it “breaking up housekeeping”, but it is also heartbreaking, to dispose properly of all this stuff made precious by those who handled it.

It took us weeks.  We all had our various lives and responsibilities to get back to.  In the end, to my deep satisfaction, I was the last person in the house.  The rooms, echoing and shining, were empty for the first time since 1940. Only a few things at the back of the hall closet were left to go through.

Under some coats and blankets, I found a small trunk, winkled it out into the hallway and opened it up.  Paper.  This was what threatened to bring us down during those weeks of cleaning–the piles of paper that had to be gotten through.  And here were more letters, bills, documents, notebooks, all from the decade before I was born, the 1940s.

Cathedral BookletAfter hours of reading, I reached down into the very bottom of the trunk and drew out the last object in the whole house to be sorted.  It was a paperback booklet and when I read the cover I felt one of those cosmic jolts that throw you from your horse.  I recognized the image before I could confirm it by the title:  Souvenir Booklet of the Cathedral of Christ the King, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, 1947.

For a moment I sat on the floor of the hall in utter disbelief, staring at it.  I know Hamilton’s Cathedral well. I’ve attended many services there; two of my children graduated from high school in it.  One Lent I went there to pray for one hour every day after work.  Now here it was, helping me close my family home 1,000 kilometers away.

In 1975, when I told my family I was moving to Hamilton, no one had said a word about any connection we had to such a foreign place.  No one said, “Oh yes—Hamilton.  We have a booklet on their cathedral.”  That might have made me feel less strange about going there.  I suppose they’d forgotten about the souvenir.

And yet, I understood how we had come to have it—our only Canadian connection.  My beloved Aunt Cil had attended St. Bernard’s Academy in Nashville, Tennessee in 1929.  It was an exclusive girls’ high school. (The story of why she went there for her senior year is too long for this blog, though it, too, is filled with serendipity.)

One of her friends there was Catherine Laurent, from St. Catharines, Ontario.  I knew Cil had visited her in the late ‘40s. Now I could piece it together that, being a devout Catholic, Cil must’ve made a side-trip to Hamilton’s then-new Cathedral of Christ the King.  She brought the booklet back to my parents as a keepsake.

A keepsake indeed.  It reconciled my heart to my second home, as I closed the first.

As my friend Jo (born in Wisconsin, living in British Columbia) often reminds me, “We are exactly where we are meant to be.”

Bernadette Rule‘s most recent poetry collection is The Literate Thief: Selected Poems (Larkspur Press, Monterey, Ky. 2007). She also edited the book Remember Me to Everybody: Letters From India, 1944 to 1949 by Frederick Gower Turnbull (West Meadow Press, 1997) and In the Wings: Stories of Forgotten Women (Seraphim Editions, 2012).  Rule teaches at Mohawk College and hosts the weekly arts-interview program, Art Waves (archive.org/details/artwaves).  A new poetry collection, Paper Doors, is forthcoming from Larkspur Press.

 

 

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Category: On Writing

Comments (11)

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  1. Mary Ellen Latela says:

    Sometimes we think we know how we got to where we are, at least geographically. However, I am not the same person who moved from CT, to Indiana for husband, back to CT, to Massachusetts for job, to CT for grad school, to California, North Dakota, Connecticut for work, to Maine – just because – now to Missouri. My next move … anywhere but here. And I think there will be a move… the signs are cropping up … kids restless with their jobs, wanting more space, preferring the cold (which I cannot stand any longer), and I want to decide this time!
    Professionally, I wanted to be a teacher… I am a teacher. I wanted to be an author … I am an author. Socially, I wanted to have close friends nearby, but the really good friends were left behind in the various moves, and telephone doesn’t substitute for a warm hug, a cup of tea in a cozy living room, and sweet homecoming. This topic opens me up to reflection, much more reflection. Thanks so much. Mary Ellen

  2. My story is in many ways the mirror of yours… I grew up in Saskatchewan, on a farm settled by my family more than 100 years ago, then moved to “the States” for a two-year position, met my now-husband, and am still in the U.S.A. My children, though they visit Canada, grow up embedded in American culture.

  3. BookishTrish says:

    “We are exactly where we are meant to be.”
    Beautiful ♡

    • bernadette rule says:

      I agree, Trish, (I’m not embarrassed to do so, because the thought isn’t original to me.) Thanks for your response.

      Bernadette

  4. Tina Hudak says:

    Bernadette,

    This is a beautifully and tender narrative. You craft a story that supports such a cosmic relationship – place & meaning. Life does put us where it needs us, and so often we rail against it rather than understanding and accepting. I think it was Joseph Campell who stated or restated that when we are “following our bliss, doors open where there were no doors”. Thank you for this posting.

  5. Laura High says:

    Touching piece. I’ve come to realise you should follow your heart. I thought mine wanted to go somewhere else recently and realised it really didn’t. Home is where you feel it is. Thanks for sharing. Laura

  6. Randy Kraft says:

    Touching piece and so true. A reminder to stay open to the turns in the path that lead us to new often better places.

  7. mirriam says:

    I found my college journals. They were not what I expected them to be. It surprised me to see how I’d laid out my future and knew it so well, even though I feign shock at every new thing that happens. I have one from 2000, right before the new year. And I write about a woman named Willow (inspired by the Frost poem “Maple”) and she is the mother of 6 month old twin boys named Jacob and Jordan. Seven years later I had twin boys. I named them Joanas and Jacob. I didn’t find out the genders before I gave birth. I have on video my brother asking me what I thought they might be and I said “boys” without a second thought. We hadn’t even picked out names for girls.

    So yes, I am where I am supposed to be on my way to the next spot. At which time I will again be shocked. Even if I know where I’m going.

  8. Marialena says:

    This post made me catch my breath. The poetry, the rightness of finding unexpected clues to our present in our past. As much as we think we know how A led to B and we responded with C, other connections run deep, below the surface. Very beautiful, thank you, Bernadette.

  9. A clue to the future lying buried in a box from the past…what a wonderful story. It makes me feel that no matter how convoluted our paths may be, strands of meaning loop forward and back through time, like threads weaving the grand tapestry of our lives.

  10. A treasure,a golden nugget, a hopeful talisman to find this website on a freezing cold Canadian morning, with thanks to Bernadette Rule and her wonderful reminder of the places that serendipity takes us!

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