Home

It took me a long time to break away from childhood home. I left home at age 19 after my father beat me and not for the first time. On a Saturday night, I locked up the men’s clothing store where I worked and came home to my enraged father. He was angry over a lie that my younger sister had told him involving me and he hit me full on in the face the moment I walked through the front door. He was waiting for me, as he often waited for me, and started pounding on me the minute he got his hands on me. He proceeded to beat me as I lay on the floor with my raised hands shielding my face and as my mother and sister looked on. After he had hit me to his satisfaction, I escaped the house and took the bus back downtown to my workplace, unlocked the door, and switched off the store alarm before I used the shop’s olive green wall phone to call my boyfriend at the time. He had been transferred to Toronto a few weeks prior to that, and when I told him what had happened with my dad, he told me to call his former housemate and that person would let me stay with him for as long as I needed. I did as he said and I moved into that house the following Monday. Instead of attending my classes at university, I moved into my boyfriend’s old room. I got two waitressing jobs to pay the rent, which was a substantial burden during my final two months of university.

I had resolved to leave my hometown forever once I wrote my last university exam, which is what I did. I wrote that final university exam at 9 AM, and I left my hometown that same afternoon. I rented a van, packed up what little I had, and drove to Toronto. I wasn’t going to Toronto to be with that boyfriend. I was just going to get out of that hometown and away from my family forever. I never saw that boyfriend again.

After living in Toronto for three months, I met the man that I would later marry. With him in my life, I called home to let my family know where I was and to tell them that I was safe and was working full-time. I was hoping my mother would be proud of me for having found a full-time position in Toronto with my university degree, and there would be no more anger, but even then, I was screamed at on the phone by my mother. My older sister was about to marry and I was told to come home for the wedding. I wasn’t invited by my sister to her wedding; she had always deeply resented me. I was told ‘to get my arse home for this bloody wedding’ by my rageoholic mother and I did. I wish I hadn’t. I wish I had been strong enough to stay away from them for the rest of my life, but I wasn’t. I just wanted a family’s love.

At the wedding, my sister sat me at a back table with people she and I had worked with as teenagers at McDonald’s while she sat non-family members at the family table where I should have been seated. She didn’t want me there, and could not have treated me worse had she tried. My future husband was my date to my sister’s wedding. That was our first date. He was shocked at how poorly I was treated by my family.

In my marriage, I asked my husband to move farther away from both our families. I wanted us to go teach in British Columbia or Scotland. He was a teacher too. He always said that he didn’t want to live and die in his hometown, but he never had the courage to leave it. Had he truly loved me, he would have taken me away from my family when he saw the hell they put me through. When my marriage broke up six years later, my former husband asked me to promise him that I would not return to my hometown and to my family. My husband’s mother used to say of her gentle son, “Blessed be the peacemaker.” He saw the good in everyone but he saw no good in anyone in my family. He hated my sisters and my mother for how they treated me.

I didn’t go home right away, but two years after the divorce, I wanted to go home to be near family. I needed someone. I needed to be loved and sheltered and I looked to my own blood. I should never have gone back to my hometown, but I did. I stayed in my childhood home with my parents and living in that house again was hell. My mother could never let anyone live in peace. She was like her own mother. My maternal grandmother was also an abuser and a nag. My mother left Scotland to get away from her toxic mother. I moved out once I had full-time work and could afford to rent a place on my own. My mother nagged me about the rent I was paying and told me that I needed to have a house. I listened to her and moved back into the family home again to save for a house though my father made it clear that he did not want me there. Each time I moved back into that house, I felt like a huge failure, which I was. I was also beaten down and controlled by my mother. My father more or less ignored me in disappointed, passive-aggressive silence except when he lost his temper. One night, he threw me across the room and I shattered my right hand in several places when I landed on it. My mother quickly told everyone that I broke my hand by hitting my father but that was another of her lies about me. I could never hit my father. He was too fast and too strong for me to ever fight back though I tried. At the end of the school year, I left that town again and drove out to British Columbia, shifting the gearshift of my standard car with my right arm in a neon-pink cast.

It wasn’t just my hand that was broken. I wasn’t strong enough to stand on my own two feet. Adults who have been abused as children don’t have roots or wings. In British Columbia, I couldn’t find work, but it was the summer and I was looking for a teaching position. I felt traumatized and was unable to rationalize the situation and talk myself through the uncertainty and into staying. I still had my teaching position in my hometown. Without giving British Columbia a real chance, and in part because I didn’t know how to pick myself up at that point, I turned my car around and came home again, back to my mother’s control, raging temper, cutting remarks and my father’s bitter, judgmental silence. I was trying to be loved by someone and I turned to my family still unable to accept that they were never going to love me.

Perhaps one of the reasons that it took me so long to leave that childhood home is I had a great deal of fun with the other children growing up on that street. The children on our crescent were a big gang and together we played night and day especially during the summer holidays. We were out on our bikes, we played in the back field, we played baseball, went swimming, and played hide and go seek at night. As a little girl, I had also adored my father. He was my hero. Once he told me that I was ‘the apple of his eye’. I was a real daddy’s girl and went wherever he went in part to stay away from my mother’s unpredictable, hair trigger temper. When I kept going back home, I was trying to return to that time of childhood innocence when another took care of me, and when I was lovable. I was trying to feel safe and loved. I was retreating from the world, which I found to be threatening as a young, beautiful woman and as a survivor of sexual assault. I needed a haven. Unfortunately, my childhood home wasn’t a safe place. It never was, and when I went home as an adult, all of those people with whom I had grown up had moved away. In truth, their families had moved away while we were still in school. Once their families could afford larger homes, they moved from our crescent. My family remained on the street that we grew up on. My mother is still there. When you are broken, you can’t heal in the place that broke you amongst the people who broke you and continue to mistreat you. You have to leave and you have to leave for good. It took me many decades to find the strength to do that. After my father died, I finally left for good. I went out west to British Columbia again, but this time I had a job waiting for me. Having work meant I also had a community. I wasn’t alone. That was the beginning for me.

I did go back home one more time. Six years after I moved to British Columbia, I got a teaching job not in my hometown but in my home province. The idea was that I could be closer to my widowed mother as she aged. She often called me crying and told me that my two sisters and my nieces and nephews – all of whom still lived in the same city as my mother – never came to see her. I knew what it was like to be alone and heartbroken, and I wanted to comfort my mother in her time of aloneness. I accepted a teaching position in a fly-in, northern, Indigenous community that paid $20,000 less per annum than the post I had in British Columbia. I don’t know what I was thinking taking it. I was putting her needs ahead of my own as I always did when, in truth, she was fine. She was a rich, old widow. She didn’t need me. Once I was working in my home province again, I flew my mother to Montréal that Thanksgiving where I took her to a Montréal Canadiens’ game; however, nothing I did for my mother was ever good enough as it wasn’t during that trip to Montréal. There was never any pleasing my mother. The harder I tried to please her, the more she hurt me with constant cutting remarks.

When I traveled home for Christmas that year, no one met me at the airport. I saw two mothers embracing their daughters as we all waited for our suitcases to come off the luggage carousel. Those mothers gushed over their daughters who had arrived home for the holidays. They smiled and hugged and kissed. I stood alone. I took a taxi to the family home to find a darkened house as my mother was already asleep in her bed. I wondered why I had bothered flying home and sat alone in the family living-room and wept. I was left alone again that holiday as my mother and younger sister were invited to my older sister’s home for Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, as had been the case for the past 30 years, but I was again excluded. The only time my older sister included me in her life, was when I was married. When I was single before marriage and after I was divorced, I was not welcome in her home. Of the three of us, she alone had children. My parents let her exclude me at every holiday and at every family event because had they not, she would have deprived them of seeing their only grandchildren.

That Christmas was the last time I was home. My mother started in on me straight away. Abusers will lure you back and when you give up your independence and have nowhere else to go, the abuse will suddenly escalate. My mother accused me of eating two apple pies that she had made. The more I denied eating them, the more she called me ‘a bloody liar’ and told me that I ‘disgusted her’ and screamed at me to ‘get out of her bloody sight’. She had always called me a liar. Even when I was telling the truth, I was called a liar by my mother. I believe the popular word for this behaviour is ‘gaslighting’. When I found the pies in the downstairs freezer, I presented them to her, put snow tires on my car and drove fifteen hours in a blinding snowstorm to return to my horrible teaching position in that horrific, northern, fly-in Indigenous community. As I put my life at risk white knuckling my way through that blizzard, I told myself that never again would I turn my life upside down to try to make my mother happy. There was no making her happy, and I was done. I needed to try to make myself happy if it wasn’t too late.

After Christmas, I got a position in the Northwest Territories for more money than I had made teaching in British Columbia. I moved back across Canada on my birthday in -55 degrees Celsius temperatures, away from my mother but this time it was for forever. I was done with all of them. I was a wonderful, kind, loving, funny, intelligent, educated, thoughtful, generous, and creative woman, and my family didn’t deserve to have me in their lives. I would not have treated a dog the way they had always treated me and continued to treat me.

When you grow up with siblings, your experience of that family will not be the identical observations of your siblings. My older sister has a unique experience of that home and of our parents as the eldest child. Never wanting her to feel displaced by the second born (me), she was given priority treatment in the family like being given her own bedroom and a car when she turned 16. My younger sister has her own experience of our childhood home as the baby of the family. She was eight years younger than my older sister and five years younger than I. She, in many ways, grew up as an only child. As their last child, my parents cherished her in a way that was different as well. Often the oldest child and the youngest child share a unique bond as was certainly the case in my family. Further apart in age, there is often not the same sibling rivalry or any sibling rivalry between an oldest and youngest child in a family with more than two children. Together my two sisters always vetoed any vote I might cast in an attempt to select a television program or choose a restaurant. My singular voice was silenced by their collective voice. I was erased by them, which is what my older sister in particular most desired; she wanted me not to exist. I was certainly left out. Even my childhood bedroom was a makeshift room in the basement without a closet or lighting, while my sisters each had a finished bedroom upstairs next to our parents’ bedroom.

I was also a typical middle child. I was fearless, spirited, rebellious, reckless, curious, and I was always looking for a good laugh and a better time. My sisters disapproved of me and accused me of acting as I did for attention. Maybe that was true. Perhaps I felt unseen as the middle child and acted as I did to be noticed by my parents. I’m not sure about that since I naturally always attracted attention wherever I went. From an early age, heads turned when I walked into a room. There was female jealousy when it came to me and my sisters. I was taller than my sisters and slender. I had a lovely figure. I was beautiful, blonde and had my father’s beautiful, big, blue eyes that everyone complimented. I was athletic and played basketball at school. I was on the swim team. I won the Academic Award every year in my class. I was class president and class valedictorian. I was popular in school. My high school sweetheart and first love was the quarterback of our school’s senior boys’ football team and captain the senior boys’ hockey team. I had many boys ask me out throughout my life. I was kissed and I started dating before my older sister did. I went to dances and parties with boys before she did. My younger sister never went to any parties or dances. My sisters were plain. They were wallflowers. They had freckles, were short, not athletic, overweight, and invisible to boys. My sisters hated me. It was really themselves that they loathed, but they thought that they hated me. Regardless, the outcome was the same. I was shunned by them.

I was molested by a teenage female cousin visiting from Scotland when I was seven. My elder sister refused to share a bed with that cousin though they were closer in age. As the eldest, my sister was given priority and what she demanded was granted. I was sacrificed again because I didn’t matter. I had no voice, no say. I was thrown into my parents’ bed with that cousin, and she proceeded to molest me every night for the duration her thirteen-and-a-half week stay in Canada. I never spoke of it. I buried the shame and the pain of that molestation deep within me. Had I spoken of it, I would have been called a liar anyway. The rage and reckless behavior that emerged in me as a teen was connected to that sexual abuse and to the daily screaming, berating, verbal battering and physical beatings that I suffered as a child living with a short-tempered, stressed, abusive, narcissistic, immigrant mother. When we moved to Canada, my mother had no family support. It was a very stressful time for her, I’m sure. I bore the brunt of her anxiety while my older sister was at school and my father was at work. My younger sister had not yet been born. I was alone with my mother’s temper every day and she made my childhood a living hell. I was corporally punished for normal childhood behaviour and curiosities. When, as an adult, I tried to speak of the abuse I suffered growing up, my older sister screamed at me that if I was hit it was because I was “bad and deserved to be hit!” No child deserves to be hit. Children are innocent. My older sister was the mother of four at the time she roared that at me when I attempted to speak to her of my experiences of abuse growing up. I expected her, as the mother of four children, to understand that a child was not to be hit. I think she did understand that, but her blind hatred for and jealousy of me prevented her from viewing my pain as an abused child as valid. In her estimation, I had it coming.

When a person who has grown up in an abusive home works to heal, they will speak of their experiences of abuse. We are only as sick as our secrets. We want to find our voice and speak our truth so that we can be well, and perhaps even experience a little joy in our lives. The other family members will often deny that those things occurred in order that they may continue to be in relationship with one another. If they delve too deeply into the truth of their familial relationships there is a risk that they will stop being in relationship with one another. The person striving to heal and live an authentic life in their own bruised and scarred skin, will be labeled as the ‘prodigal’, the ‘black sheep’, and the ‘problem child’ as I was. The family will drive whom they perceive to be the family troublemaker from the family. In ancient times, when a village experienced difficult times, the community attached all of its sins to a goat and drove the beast from the village so life could be blessed once more. That is what happens to the abused person trying to heal in a family steeped in denial and desiring only superficial relationships with one another and with other individuals outside the family. That individual needing to speak of their suffering becomes their family’s scapegoat because truth and depth terrifies the abusive family. The victim who refuses to stay silent is gaslighted and shunned by their blood. That broken individual who should be surrounded with the love and compassion of their family are instead driven from the family. They are on their own. That is what happened to me.

My mother said to me once, “I hope not all the memories you have of your childhood are bad.” They’re not. I grew up in the 1970s and I still listen to 1970s music every day. Longing for nostalgia, those tunes trigger some sweet memories for me. When I hear a song like ‘Sunny Days’ by Lighthouse for example, I often think of lying on the shuffle board court at East Park Golf Gardens with my best pal who grew up across the street from me. My little red Radio Shack transistor radio between us, we’d lie on our beach towels facing one another, our long, slender limbs touching the heat of the cement shuffle board court. Fresh from the swimming pool, we’d lie there and let the summer sun beat down our wet backs bronzing our skin and further bleaching our already blonde hair. My tongue still tastes the tang of the blackcurrent Fruitellas that I always bought at the East Park Pro-Shop mixed with the sweetness of the Strawberry Twizzlers that she and I shared as we sipped ice cold Coca-Colas and talked about the boys that we liked and laughed together about how to further tease and torture them. I can still smell the sunscreen, sweat, and chlorine on our skin, and I see myself squinting at her in the sunshine, laughing with her. My life was sweet in moments like those and it was to those moments that I attempted to return whenever I went back to my hometown as a broken adult. Instead of making a new life for myself and creating my own family away from there and away from my dysfunctional family, I was unconsciously clinging to those fleeting moments of sweetness from my fractured childhood and I was holding on to something that wasn’t real or healthy for me to cleave to.

I remember visiting East Park Golf Gardens when I went home the last time, but it was all changed. East Park Golf Gardens was unrecognizable. It is a water park now. Nothing about that city is as it was when I was a child growing up there. To go a step further, I’d say that Canada, as a nation, is not the country that we immigrated to in 1966 as a young family full of hope and dreams. Maybe that is what is meant by that old cliché ‘you can’t go home again’. Of course, you can return home, but you’ll find that it’s all different. What you remember of it is gone. The people that you once knew and may have loved have all but vanished. All that remains are the memories you have of that time in your life and of that place, and some of those memories are good. Certainly, some of mine are. Just not all of them. You take memories with you wherever you go. They live in your heart. You don’t return to a place that you purposefully left and a place that is now lost to you, to revisit memories. I think that was what I tried to do each time I move back to my hometown. I clung to the good memories and thought I could change the bad things about my family and childhood so that I could be loved and appreciated as part of my family. I wasted so much time and energy doing that. I almost destroyed myself in the process and I missed out on living a life as a result; I ended up alone and with nothing.

I am praying to God to help me change that now. I pray it is not too late. I ask that all that was taken from me in sorrow may be restored to me in love, Christ’s mercy and His peace.

Dualchas

Dualchas is the Gaelic that refers to one’s belonging to a landscape. Scotland is the land of my birth and the landscape for which I have always longed.

When you’re Scottish, you can never fully be anything else. Yet, when you are taken out of Scotland as a child, you can never be fully Scots either. You are forevermore without a country, and when you are in one of those countries in the future, you inevitably feel homesick for the other place. You are destined to be an outsider in both places. You are forever without a home. 

I was born in Scotland in 1965. When we immigrated to Canada in 1966, I was sixteen months old. My Uncle Peter said I was dressed all in pink for the farewell to family at Prestwick Airport on April 25th, 1966. “You were not a happy bunny,” Uncle Peter said. “You cried and screamed and kicked in your mother’s arms. You did not want to go.”

I grew up a North American. A blonde, blue-eyed girl who liked to tan, swim like a fish, wear cut-offs and run barefoot through the hot Canadian summer. I longed to look like Farrah Fawcett, I cheered passionately for the Montréal Canadiens and loved David Cassidy, Bobby Sherman and Lee Majors. We went home to Scotland for one summer and two Christmases. Family in Scotland also came to Canada for summer holidays.

I went to teacher’s college in Glasgow in 1990. I was 25 and newly married to a Canadian. He remained in Canada teaching while I earned my teaching credential in Scotland though I asked him to come with me for the year to have an adventure as a young married couple. He wouldn’t. I often wished I was single then, free to meet a Scotsman, and free to remain in Scotland upon graduation to make a life in the country of my birth; however, I wasn’t. I had a commitment to return to in Canada so begrudgingly back I went. I returned to my husband and taught in Canada for the next 35 years.

Through a divorce, and many career transitions, I continued to long for Scotland and that Scotsman I dreamed of whispering sweet everything into my ear in his rugged brogue. I created vision boards, a dream box and prayed to God daily to lead me home to Scotland and to the Catholic Scotsman He had chosen as my husband.

I had been working as a principal in Canada since 2019. Still, returning to Scotland remained in my heart. Last summer, I interviewed for positions in Scotland from Canada. I rose at 4 AM to speak to different personnel in Scottish schools at 3 PM their time. I was offered work as a supply teacher in two different Scottish districts for August 2023. They advised me to start there and eventually I would find a full-time position in a school.

I was staying in Vancouver with a friend and her husband over the 2023 summer, interviewing for various positions in Canada as well as Scotland. I was offered a position as a supply teacher in Vancouver, BC. I interviewed for a principal’s position in Alberta. It was a Catholic School named for the patron saint of Scotland. I was offered the job. I decided it was a sign from God. It was a wink from heaven telling me that He had heard my prayers for Scotland. Scotland would happen but not yet. I did want to work as a Catholic school principal, just not in rural Alberta.

During the summer, as I prayed for direction, many little signs came to point me in the direction of Scotland. On one occasion, I went to Mass at a Catholic Church in Vancouver. They had a bazaar that day. I didn’t want anything but decided to poke about. I saw an old book of Psalms that fit in the palm of my hand and bought it for 50 cents. When I got back to my friend’s place, I saw that little book was published in Scotland.

As the summer drew to a close, I asked God for a specific sign. I asked Him if I was meant to go to Scotland to let me come across someone that day with a Scottish accent. I was teaching summer school in downtown in Vancouver. I took the Skye Train into the city and back home each day. After school that afternoon, two men sat next to me on the Skye Train and proceeded to speak to one another in thick Scottish accents. I told my friend that night and she dismissed it as a coincidence. I didn’t agree with her. The next day, the two Scotsmen were on the same train carriage with me again. That wasn’t a coincidence; it was a God-incidence.

The safer choice, in my opinion, was to take the principal’s position in Alberta and put off Scotland yet again. I was sick to my stomach at the thought of taking the position in Alberta. That is another sign from God. How you feel about a decision is God’s direction. When I left Canada’s north that summer, June 2023, I swore I would never go back. Now I was returning to the north of Canada, to winters of -50 degree Celsius temperatures and to another small farming community. There were also no available houses in the rural Alberta town. I had to rent a basement suite for me and my small dog, Oona. I had lived my life in the basement of my parents’ house as a child and youth, and swore I’d never live in a basement again. I was desolate going there.

The day before I left British Columbia to drive to Alberta to prepare to begin the principal’s position, my friend told me that Rod Stewart was playing in Vancouver’s Roger’s Centre.

“Is that another sign?” she asked.

“Yes,” I said.

It was another sign for me to go to Scotland. Still, I ignored it and forced myself to go to Edmonton where I would stay the night before continuing further north to the small Alberta town where I was to work in a few weeks’ time. The night I was in Edmonton, Rod Stewart was playing in the stadium across the road from my Edmonton hotel. I bought a ticket for the show, dug out my Scotland t-shirt and went to see my sexy countryman perform. God was telling me to go home. I still didn’t.

The reason I didn’t was a simple one: money. I didn’t feel that I could afford to go to Scotland. Any decision that I have ever made based on money has always turned out to be the wrong one. I never seem to learn that lesson. Once I got to Alberta, it cost me $3500 to certify my car, and over $3000 to buy a bed and other necessities. I also treated my staff and students with my customary generosity as their school leader. Going to Alberta didn’t save me any money. I was also placed at the bottom of the Alberta teachers’ salary grid while Alberta TQS took six months to properly place me and pay me accordingly. That process wasn’t sorted until after I left Alberta on January 30th, 2024.

These too are signposts as God directs steps. There were those many obstacles establishing myself in Alberta. I was very unhappy living in the basement suite. The woman that I rented from had two dogs that barked constantly when she wasn’t home. When I complained about the non-stop barking, she told me to leave. By then I had a job offer in Scotland to teach English. I felt losing my living situation in a town with no other living options was another signpost. I needed to seize the opportunity and go. I felt dreadful leaving my school, my staff and the students, but I was very unhappy in Alberta and I needed to give myself this chance of living my dream and moving back home to Scotland and meeting my Scots’ Catholic husband. Time was ticking on. I wasn’t getting any younger or prettier working in northern Alberta.

On January 31st, 2024, on my 59th birthday, after leaving my job as a Catholic principal in Alberta, Canada, I gave away all that I owned, sold my car, got on a plane in Calgary, Alberta and flew to London, Heathrow with my dog. We stayed the night in London before taking the Caledonian Sleeper overnight train to Scotland and arrived in Inverness on February 2nd, 2024. We were home.

Christmas

When my mom’s brother calls from Scotland with the news that their father has died, my mother makes high pitched wailing sounds and rolls on the living-room floor clutching the phone to her breast.

“Oh no, no,” she wails. “No!”

I stand watching not knowing how I might comfort her.

My mother decides not to go home for her father’s funeral. Rather we will go home to Scotland as a family at Christmas to fill a void for my grandmother.

Once in Scotland, my mother’s youngest sister takes me Christmas shopping in Glasgow. I buy my dad a watch for five pounds and we buy black crepe paper and canned snow to make a crèche at my gran’s. When I go to place the infant Jesus in the manger, my auntie tells me that I have to wait until after midnight on Christmas Eve.

“Can I place Him then?” I ask, certain that honor will be bestowed upon the eldest or the youngest rather than the middle sister.

“Aye, you can do it, hen,” she tells me.

To make sure it will be me, I pocket baby Jesus and don’t let Him out of my sight before Christmas Eve.

We gather for sing-songs at the homes of various family members.  My sisters and I receive simple presents from some of our relatives. We walk in a soft snowfall as a family to St. Stephen’s Church for Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve, and return to my gran’s to the sound of pealing bells, the clock having struck one. I take baby Jesus from my pocket and place Him in the manger as soon as I burst through the front door.

On Christmas Day, we snap open Christmas crackers to find colourful tissue-paper hats, which we wear at dinner, as knells of laughter compete with my grandmother’s weeping.

“My man, my man, my poor dead man,” she cries.

My mom, embarrassed at her mother’s show of emotion, tells her to be quiet. “Och, mother,” she says. “Shush-up.”

My grandmother never gives my grandfather a minute’s peace when he is alive. When she wails for ‘her poor dead man,’ I don’t understand. They hated each other.

New Year’s Eve is my dad’s birthday. With my sisters and cousins, I help my gran make my dad a Hogmanay plum pudding with money baked into it. We wear paper hats that night too and at the bells, the children run outside to bang pot lids together and yell, ‘Happy New Year!’ in the streets.

My father flies home before we do. The night he is to depart, I am asleep with cousins in my gran’s back bedroom as the adults have a farewell party for my dad in the front room. Hearing a commotion, I creep out of bed and see my dad’s face through the frosted pane of the front door. He went to say cheerio to the Gannon family up the road and my gran deliberately locks him out. My auntie tries to pry the long, iron door key from my gran who holds it behind her broad back. I scream at my gran to let my dad in and seeing me there, she quickly hands my auntie the key. When the door is unlocked, my father rushes towards me and sweeps me into his arms to soothe me, returning me to my bed. I beg him to take me home to Canada with him, but he leaves without me.

That Christmas I am surrounded by kin, no matter how poorly behaved at times, and I have my father’s love. The holiday isn’t lonely for ten-year-old me. It is my best Christmas ever.

 

Embrace of Faith

After I leave my marriage, feeling rootless in Canada, I travel several days by plane, train, ferry and bus to reach the remote, coastal village in Donegal that is Griffin ancestral land. I cross the border into the Republic of Ireland at Londonderry, Northern Ireland. Still two years before the Good Friday Peace Agreement of 1998, armed British soldiers stand guard at the border crossing. My Uncle Frank awaits my arrival beneath a bus depot light, newspaper tucked beneath his arm, navy knit-cap resting above bright, blue eyes so like my father’s and my own.

“A hundred thousand welcomes,” he says, smiling.

It is midnight before my uncle mutely leads me to his cottage, each of us puffing frozen exhales into an aubergine sky. My fatigue is replaced by a sense of marvel at the brilliance of the stars against the blackness of night. A simple mattress placed in front of his fireplace is to be my bed, and after a snack of warm biscuits and hot tea, I sleep feeling closer to God than I have in sometime.

In the morning, I open the curtains to look upon a postcard view that the darkness hid from sight the previous night. White cottages dot emerald hills, white clouds break an azure sky, and white sailboats dance on cobalt water. My uncle and his toothless hound-dog, Binbo, walk towards town. Pulling on my boots, I chase after them.

The Catholic Church is white and quaint in its splendor. My uncle and I take turns entering the chapel and stand outside with Binbo. As we depart the chapel, my uncle says, “It’s divorce, then?” Ashamed, I can only nod. “Give it to God. He gives beauty for ashes,” Uncle Frank says.

My uncle is constructing a home for himself and his wife, Bridie, with the help of my Griffin cousins. I join in the assembly and physical exertion and the sweet sensation of belonging begin to quell my grief. I attend daily Mass with my uncle, and find that my faith sustains me.

On my daily run over the surrounding hills, I stop at the white cottage that is my grandfather’s birthplace. Touching its damp stones, the same prayer always settles on my lips. “God. Carry me.” My heart is shattered.

I buy a postcard showing the village chapel. On it I write: “I’m in God’s country. Standing where your father stood. Walking where he walked.”  I mail it to my father in Canada. 

Rain christens Donegal on my last day in Ireland. I pluck a rock from the north wall of my grandfather’s cottage to bring Griffin strength home with me when I leave that place that has proven to be my sanctuary in January 1996. My uncle takes me to a seaside cemetery and together we examine family headstones.

“There’s always arms for you to fall into, Angela,” he says.

I turn to face the seashore, hiding my tears from him. Ocean waves wash clean silver sands, the water reclaiming in its visiting grasp life stuck there, eager to return to the sea. The rain, fragrant with Donegal bell heather, falls ever softly. Something sacred surrounds me and the internal voice I am beginning to heed whispers above the roar of the Irish Sea: I’m with you always.

In the doorway of the bus station, a British soldier stands guard, his unwavering gaze fixed past me. Inside the station, I write on an ocean-view postcard: You’re never alone.

I mail it to myself.