Poetry by Josephine LoRe

josephine lore

Straightening Nails

his granddaddy settled in Ridgedale
North Saskatchewan
a carpenter all his life
and gave the six-year old
a simple task –
straighten nails

for this was a time when nothing
got thrown away, nothing
taken for granted, everything
repurposed, everything reused


and with a hammer and intention
the boy spent his summer
straightening nails

for this was a town where every
window, every
floorboard, every
plank and every
nail saw new life

he remembers driving through town with his mom
she pointing out all the buildings and houses
where his granddaddy had created something
and just how proud that made him feel

all these things made from
his hands, from
existing wood, from
straightened nails

he’s a grown man now
wondering at 40 if he has done
enough, if he has left legacy
enough, wondering what his boy
will keep of him
when he is gone
taken by disease
his spine, a bent nail 


impossible for him to stand
the spasms in his hands so severe
impossible to hold on

in a wheelchair
his son at eye-level 

but you don’t need to be taller
for someone to look up to you

his son sees
the man, sees
the kindness, sees
the devotion, hears
the words that rhymingly
rhythmically honour mother
country, soldiers, granddaddy

he is teaching his son the value
of not bulldozing through life
of saving and reusing
of straightening nails

Return to Journal

a pearl in this diamond world … Josephine LoRe has published two collections:  ‘Unity’ and the Calgary Herald Bestseller ‘The Cowichan Series’.  Her words have been read on stage, put to music, danced to, and integrated into visual art.  They appear in anthologies and literary journals across nine countries. https://www.josephinelorepoet.com/ 

A Tribute to WordCity Literary Journal by Nancy Ndeke

ndeke800

n idea whose time has come, like a full term pregnancy must birth.

Word is as alive as life is. Word is a force and carries a moment often beyond itself. It consolidates thoughts and makes a presentation like a well choreographed musical where the instruments and instrumentalists become a unified rhythm of sounds and cymbals to present a mesmerizing outcome that only one present at such a show may tell with breath held and an open mouth in wonder. A running eye is the climax of such a psyched otherworldly experience.

So has WORDCITY, which bounced with health at first breath. Under the able hands of the beautiful soul artist par Excellent sister Darcie Friesen Hossack, and the iconic black poet, Cde brother Mbizo Chirasha, words met at a stage where Excellence calls the shots. From the cold climes of the Canadian large hearted humanity, from Europe and all its diverse philosophies and ancient love of the written words, from the America’s and it’s diversity in race representation that’s sometimes begs fairness, from the heart of Africa where drums still beat resistance to poor governance and mass frustration, from the Middle East and it’s tumultuous times at war and peace, from  Asia and the far East with their it’s cultural heritage still visible beyond the temples and rich spices, from the Australia and New Zealand where life is calmer than most places, to the Alaskan territory where climate change is beginning to speak clearly, WORD CITY is well represented in voices that shine human situations, conditions and social issues in the physical, spiritual, emotional, thought and the literal world.

And a city in all its privacy and public departments, in it’s avenues, highways, streets and alleys speak a common language at the intersection of Poesy, essays, short stories, photography and excerpts from old scripts. The vivacious voices of the city guests and dweller’s stream their thoughts through the river of the written words.

Such is the awesome and incredible journey that has begun and is already archived by the dexterity of fine editors and great contributors in the WORDCITY.

Mine is the most humbled of appreciation to have had a sip at this fresh flow of a gigantic spring of moving spirits to bring humanity into a Communion of connectedness.

WORDCITY, ALUTA CONTINUA!

Nancy Ndeke.

Return to Journal

Poetry by PAWEŁ MARKIEWICZ

Paweł Markiewicz

Confession of
the poetical firefly to
muse-butterfly of poesy

You must excuse me. You dear dreamer!
I have overly felt my dreamery about Golden Fleece.
I built my small paradise without any other ontological beings.
I based the dreamiest sempiternity on tenderness of my wings.
Thus. I painted  my wings in color of an ambrosia.
Withal: I liked dew of dawns for the sake of elves.
I loved too much  the wizardry of mayhap dreamy Erlkings.
I had to read many fairy tales of the Winter Queen.
I have enchanted your night rainbow.
I have become a magician of dawn.
I loved the Morning Starlet – the dreamy Venus.
I collected all shooting stars after a dreamier night.

Excuse me. My dear butterfly
fulfilled in same after glow
and bewitched by lights of moonlit and
starlit nights!
Let us dream over night!
Unto an epiphany of first
angels of red sky in
the morning.

Return to Journal

Paweł Markiewicz was born 1983 in Siemiatycze in Poland. He is poet who lives in Bielsk Podlaski and writes tender poems, haiku as well as long poems. Paweł has published his poetries in many magazines. He writes in English and German. 

Poetry by Mansour Noorbakhsh

Mansour 4

Dignity
“To: Joyce Echaquan*”

A flat tire stopped us
In the middle of a vast desert
extending between two oceans.
Sands can move through the borders
freely with the wind,
as waves can move
through borders in the ocean.
No border exists for sand and waves.
Sands are equal, waves too.
We are stopped in the middle of a desert
a few kilometers far away from the border,
the dream of freedom.
Sweating and burning under
the intense Sun. Dying. Thirsty.
And I think of those who drowned
in the ocean waves, a few kilometers far away from a border
attempting to save their freedom,
their dignity.
Sands are equal, waves too.
“The rank is but the guinea's stamp” ** 
But still human beings are equal
in dying.

* Indigenous woman records slurs by hospital staff before her death.

https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/indigenous-woman-who-died-at-joliette-hospital-had-recorded-staffs-racist-comments

**From “A MAN'S A MAN FOR ALL THAT”
by Robert Burns

 


Till You Recognize Me

Even sky, somber or starry needs the sound of crickets to enliven the night.

So, we may listen to it, or listen to our chanting-like paces. And still nothing can placate a blown away dream by an irreversible sudden awakening.

Rescue a poem for me, the words of childhoods, motherhoods or loves, lost in Tehran, Baghdad or Kabul or died in Damascus, thrown out of a hospital’s window, drowned to die in an abandoned pool, perished in a shot down airplane or in a glorious holy jail, disappeared or stolen somewhere in Middle East, Africa or agitated, mortified, grieved somewhere else. And still the spell of responsibility or “justice” is a sardonic smile, the selfishness of unreal protests. Respect, regard, or sympathy in the absence of your voice is an ironic tautology. Just your subterranean words threaten those who see us as the staggered and silent human-like shadows. They shoot the poets. Rescue a poem and say something that keeps me dreaming the chanting-like paces of your childhood; lively, happy, and decided. Say something to rescue us from the shadow of what you see amiss and ensure we recognize each other while we are walking along this dusty road, beside that roaring river, or toward that thriving meadow, as we move toward it, if we move toward it. Your silence frightens me.

Honourable mention in the Annual Contest, 2020 of Brooklin Poetry Society

https://brooklinpoetrysociety.com/honourable-mention-mansour-noorbahksh/

Return to Journal

Mansour Noorbakhsh writes poems and stories in both English and Farsi, his first language, and has published books, poems and articles in both languages. His book length poem; “In Search of Shared Wishes” was published in 2017. He tries to be a voice for freedom, human rights and environment in his writings.

He is an Electrical Engineer, P.Eng. and lives with his wife, his daughter and his son in Toronto, Canada.

Poetry by Lydia Renfro

Lydia Renfro

Thanksgiving

I’m set to go, here at last.
Pack up my beleaguered brain, fill myself
with glories of going home.
Just as my ancestors, I’m starting in the east
coldhearted and coast-lonely,
to cross fields and plains,
come up again to that mountain. I will
find my people inside, all coffee and dominoes,
smiling to tell me that the pansies
have sprouted in this fine spring weather.
And here is my father, resplendent in his overalls,
soft in his work gloves. His ruddy skin,
rough from years of work and sun,
smells of cinnamon and dirt and books.
Kissing his cheek is like singing a hymn.
His hands are so big, he circles fingers around my wrist
and cups my own hand against his hollowed palm.
And where is my sister? The wild eyed warrior
whose blonde hair stood in nests as a girl?
I cannot feel my feet until she is squeezing me tight
telling me my face is droopy from the journey.
We’ll pick up the conversation we’ve left off-
the one started as children in the deep night.
And what of the sisters and brothers never born?
No nicknames for the ones unsat on picnic blankets.
Maybe they’re meeting down by the creek at dusk,
playing ghost games with the hickory sticks
we’ve long since abandoned.
On the shelf, with the pewter creamer,
Piles the dust of the deaths we’ve collected,
the names kept safely under tongues
to stitch through our grief songs.
And joining, maybe, each columbine
that didn’t pace with the garden bed.
This is my Thanksgiving.
Did you think it would be an autumn poem?
No. It is a family poem, an earth poem…
it’s the truest poem I know how to make.
It bristles my heart and sings the wounds there.
This poem goes on and on forever,
there’s no proper way to end it.
My life is tied up inside it all and so I won’t say here finished
but rather, until you return with grass blades on your feet…

 
 

North, and What the Woman Saw There

Look how summit, empty of all the useless kinds of noise,
Sends out evergreens that are bold and steadfast,
standing eternally flush against a mountain sky.
Ancient goats and wind, snow unmelting—
time is simply a guest here.
What peerage, to be a mountain citizen.
I am only a transient visitor though,
heading west, tempted into pause
by wild peaks who are not ashamed of anything.
What of the epoch of my life?
Tilling earth till fingers crack,
sweat, dead aunts and rough goodbyes,
labor that says well done, dear,
now begin again tomorrow.
Yet also pancake suppers and the
sound of a sister’s laugh at dusk.
With each step westward, each
sudden drop of a heart disappointed,
there are also snapdragons, erupting.
It almost comes out even.
We are horizontal creatures,
taking liberties with going up.
A brief hush, a moment to soul-intone
then back down with me,
to my unrequited life,
carrying year after year in my skin.
Continue on west, for familiar ones,
for potato soup in blue bowls and
sooner or later, death.
Maybe the breeze lifting off the slope
is the mountain saying peace?
I think it’s just me, supplicating.

Return to Journal

Lydia Renfro holds an MFA from Adelphi University and is the recipient of the Donald Everett Axinn Award for Fiction. Her work has appeared in Litro U.S., Siblini Journal, The Blue Nib, Witches Mag, Miletus International Literature Magazine, The Merrimack Review, Isacoustic*, and others. She currently lives in Colorado, and is completing her first novel manuscript.

Poetry by Yash Seyedbagheri

mir-yashar seyedbagheri photo

Sinking

down a country road,
swarthiness blends into soft soils on sunny days
a kaleidoscope of flame and golden leaves
shimmers and sings against pale skies


a wall of pines rises
swarthiness tucked in needle blankets
but even here,
thunder rumbles


and every time it rumbles
lightning flickers
it draws closer
swarthiness sinks a little more


into soils drenched by rain
illuminated by lightning
long, white, jagged arms
digging a grave

Return to Journal

Yash Seyedbagheri is a graduate of Colorado State University’s MFA program in fiction. His stories, “Soon” and “How To Be A Good Episcopalian,” have been nominated for Pushcarts. He has also had work nominated for The Best of the Net and The Best Small Fiction. A native of Idaho, Yash’s work is forthcoming or has been published in The Journal of Compressed Creative Arts, Write City Magazine, and Ariel Chart, among others. 

Poetry by Michael Lee Johnson

michael lee johnson

Flower Girl 

Poems are hard to create
they live, then die, walk alone in tears,
resurrect in family mausoleums.
They walk with you alone in ghostly patterns,
memories they deliver feeling unexpectedly
through the open windows of strangers.
Silk roses lie in a potted bowl
memories seven days before Mother’s Day.
Soak those tears, patience is the poetry of love.
Plant your memories, your seeds, your passion,
once a year, maybe twice.
Jesus knows we all need more
then a vase filled with silk flowers,
poems on paper from a poet sacred,
the mystery, the love of a caretaker−
multicolored silk flowers in a basket
handed out by the flower girl.




Fall Thunder

There is power in the thunder tonight, kettledrums.
There is thunder in this power,
the powder blends white lightening 
flour sifters in masks toss it around.
Rain plunges October night; dancers
crisscross night sky in white gowns.
Tumble, turning, swirl the night away, around,
leaves tape-record over, over, then, pound,
pound repeat falling to the ground.
Halloween falls to the children's
knees and imaginations.
Kettledrums.

Return to Journal

Michael Lee Johnson lived 10 years in Canada during the Vietnam era and is a dual citizen of the United States and Canada.  Today he is a poet, freelance writer, amateur photographer, and small business owner in Itasca, Illinois.  Mr. Johnson published in more than 1092 new publications, his poems have appeared in 38 countries, he edits, publishes 10 poetry sites.  Michael Lee Johnson, has been nominated for 2 Pushcart Prize awards poetry 2015/1 Best of the Net 2016/2 Best of the Net 2017, 2 Best of the Net 2018.  194 poetry videos are now on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/user/poetrymanusa/videosEditor-in-chief poetry anthology, Moonlight Dreamers of Yellow Hazehttp://www.amazon.com/dp/1530456762; editor-in-chief poetry anthology, Dandelion in a Vase of Roses available here   https://www.amazon.com/dp/1545352089.  Editor-in-chief Warriors with Wings:  the Best in Contemporary Poetry, http://www.amazon.com/dp/1722130717.

Poetry by Nancy Ndeke

ndeke800

I'M POSSIBLE.

Possessed with ideals of perfection,
Shapes and sizes telling beauty,
Skin tones and heights,
Pedigrees rules the mortal man,
Dare you a scar acquire,
Or bent of back in need of wheels,
Masses stare in disbelief,
Love may well take a back seat,
Or all together commit you into hiding,
As if you planned a defect,
As if you invited a malady,
Not even age is spared,
It has to be ferried to a 'home' away from home,
Cultures and curses like vultures,
Justifying the oddity of inflicting pain on the already pained,
That a mental disorder is shame,
That a crooked limb is a sham,
That a debilitating ordeal with epilepsy is anathema,
Autism must be left at charitable homes,
The body may suffer hardship for sure,
But what of a mind whole and willing to combat,
Will you give it a chance to thrive?
The body may encounter a defect at birth,
And stare unrecognizing of it’s environs,
Did you check the soul to see an artist gifted?
The body may break and turn on its own,
Blazing the torments of weather in an unhinged state,
Did you ply the depths of those thoughts,
To help the sufferer break from the illusion?
Often not, for by social training,
We embraced norms that are abnormal,
To tag and blame a victim twice with malicious labeling,
To run from what we don’t understand,
To refuse to see the humanity of the weak and afflicted,
Damning them accursed and an embarrassment,
Yet, in this life and all its accompanying glories,
Health is a chance as time is an illusion,
Wealth is trade for the senses and rich with pretense,
Abled of body is purely by a hand unseen,
If you chose your parentage then you could also chose your location of birth,
If you are that perfect a being to trash those abled DIFFERENTLY,
You fault a force beyond you.
I'm possible not impossible in all the negatives in your marking scheme.
To be human truly calls for deleting of the bigotry of judging,
Which falls into bullying one completely without fault,
Except a visitation by fate behold his best wishes.
Life is more than the physical form,
Life is divine even in assumed deformity,
And perfection is as delusional as the judges who dare to fault life.
Embrace all,
Tomorrow is not yours but belongs to children,
And the ones who you so brand maybe your household guests tomorrow.
Karma never goes to sleep.
Spread love and humbled appreciation to life.
No one chose whom and how they are.

Return to Journal

Nancy Ndeke is a multi-genre writer. She writes poetry, hybrid essays, reviews, commentary and memoir. Ndeke  is widely published with four collection of her full writings Soliama Legacy, Lola- Logue , Musical Poesy  and May the Force be With you. She has recently  collaborated with a Scotland-based Writer  and Musical Artist,  Dr. Gameli Tordzro of Glasgow University on the Poetry Collection Mazungumzo ya Shairi, and  also  co-authored the poetry anthology , I was lost but now am found with USA Poet Renee Drummond  -Brown . She contributes her writings to the Atunis  Galaxy Poetry ( Belgium), TUJIPANGE AFRICA( Kenya, USA), Ramingo Porch, Africa Writers Caravan , WOMAWORD Literary Press, BeZine  for Arts and Humanities( USA), Andinkra Links 5,  Wild Fire Publication, Williwash Press, The poet by day webzine, Writers Escape at Poetry, Different Truths, ARCS PROSE POETRY. Nancy Ndeke  also works as a literary arts consultant, copyeditor and  Writers’ Clinics Moderator.

A Covid Recovery Road Trip Pt2. Memoir by Gary Fowlie

Gary Fowlie

May 28

Covid Gramps and the Arrogant Millennial

An overweight, out of shape young man is jogging. He stops and sweats all over the sidewalk on an uphill stretch of Edgecombe Avenue in Washington Heights. He wears no mask and shows no concern for this busy stretch of pavement, where other old masked men like me have escaped our lockdown for a walk, in hopes of unlocking housebound muscles.

            I pass and I hold my tongue, but when I hear him panting up from behind, I turn, stretch my arms out and yell, “If you’re not going to cover up at least keep your distance.” He ignores me and chugs right past. “Arrogant fucking millennial,” I send his way but soon regret it—not because he stops and sends me back an exaggerated unmasked cough, and follows that up with, “I hope you die Gramps!”

            It’s not his fault he doesn’t know that I’m in recovery and may or may not be immune to the Covid bug that hopped, skipped, and jumped its way down 162nd Street to bite my 65-year-old ass. No, I regret my comment only because my temper got the best of me. When he turned to jog away I hit out again, this time going even lower: “Your parents must be very proud of you.” I should have known better. My mother once told me to never forget how easy it is to raise someone else’s kids. She was right. I’m sure his parents did the best they could. That he turned out to be a self-centered ass isn’t their fault.

June 3

The Good the Bad and the Hopeful

The Covid pandemic has proven the existence of the ‘Law of Unexpected Consequences.’ A fractured health care system, and the limitations that ‘State Rights’ put on a united front when the health and financial well-being of the nation is shattered, speaks to the negative side of this. As for the race- and income-related inequities and inequalities, it just took Covid to rip the scab off that permanently festering wound.

            I’m a student of the Dave Chappelle ‘School of American Government.’ Chappelle, a great Comedian, said he was prepared to give Trump a chance, but when pressed to comment on how that chance was playing out, he told us to think of the President like “a bad DJ at a good party.” The party would go on even if the music was out of tune. A better DJ would eventually come along.

            Chappelle brings me to the hopeful or positive aspect of the unexpected pandemic consequences. I believe America is finally ready to address its systemic race issue, and because of President Trump, I’m also hoping that it will come to its senses about health care.  I’d like to see the US live up to its republican free enterprise principles by allowing inter-state competition in health insurance, which, if you didn’t already know, has been illegal. Instead of healthy market competition in the insurance market place, we have 50 separate health insurance regulators and the ‘mini’ Blue Crosses they’ve spawned. They’ve distorted the private insurance market under the guise of ‘states rights’, and in the process they’ve killed any chance of achieving free market efficiency and lower costs—something which America has always been good at, and which I, the son of a car salesman and an Avon Lady, have long admired.

            I see two more proven and unexpected positive outcomes of Covid. First, it has shown us the importance of an affordable internet ‘utility’ to deliver Education and Health Care. Second, it exposed the problems with policing. Communication technology might seem like it’s tearing us apart at times, but in the past few months it has demonstrated how critical it is for spotlighting serious issues and bringing us together. The most obvious example of this is the 7 PM salute to the health care warriors. Another day of sirens, death, and displacement could be weathered by clapping, singing, or, in my case, whistling along with my neighbors. We could see that we weren’t alone, and we were all very thankful that there were people willingly to put their lives on the line for us.  

            The most personal and positive of unexpected consequences arrived for me on the morning of June 3, when we hit a long overdue milestone. It was the first day that not a single soul perished from Covid in New York City. I was so happy that I cried. It didn’t matter that this was likely due to dropping testosterone levels in a senior male, or the fatigue from fighting the virus, or simply an overreaction on the part of a sentimental fool; the fact is, I’d never before cried from joy. More importantly, there couldn’t have been a better time to experience this confusing and exhilarating emotion. Besides, I had plenty of reason to feel happy. We would be leaving on our recovery road trip the next day.

June 5 – 12

Cruising Covid America

The Divided Counties of America was no more than an abstract media image until we started driving through them…We drove through Pennsylvania…, then through Ohio where the ever-so-efficient ‘Turnpike Travel Plazas’ had been turned into reluctant pit stops for gas. Green ‘Go’ Day was a fever dream that ended at the Pennsylvania border. No man may be an island, but it seemed that every county in every state we passed through had become a fiefdom. No interstate standards meant no guarantee of safety. The Covid virus could cross county lines even easier than we could.

            We spent the next two nights in South Bend, Indiana, which felt like middle precautionary ground. There was lots of social distancing, lots of signage telling everyone what to expect and what to do, but with so few people around that I started to wonder why they bothered. We did find a restaurant that struck the right tone, by which I mean that it had servers who didn’t remove their masks to talk, and used only online terminals to place our orders— foregoing the need for menus or credit card germ swapping. The restaurant had attracted enough newly masked bodies to make me think that the old hospitality model had a chance of surviving.      

            The murder of George Floyd, caught up to us in South Bend. It had been almost a week since the waves of anti-racism action had begun to roll across the country. A sole ‘Black Lives Matter’ banner was waved from the bridge on Colfax Street, where the quietest and politest protest in America marched past our hotel.

            Things would be neither quiet nor polite by the time we made it to Minneapolis. First we skirted Chicago and cruised through Wisconsin, stopping only to buy a box of Leidenkugel Pilsner, which I love but still couldn’t drink. There wasn’t a mask in sight, and it was the first time since we’d left New York that our insistence on wearing one ran into the politics it appeared to go against. I was told by the cashier, “You don’t have to wear that in here,” which sounded more like take that damn thing off you liberal snowflake. When I told the owner that I was recovering from Covid he stepped back and instinctively covered his face with his hand.“A mask works better than your fingers,” I said and laughed. He didn’t find it funny.

            Minneapolis Burning had become Minneapolis Numb by the time we arrived. Sheets of plywood covered the downtown business core, and it was deserted by 5:30 in the afternoon. I couldn’t even find an open door to check into the newly repurposed factory building hotel in which we intended to spend three nights.

            We had hoped to discover the truth behind the tourist hype that Minneapolis is a bicyclist’s heaven—with endless trails around a green and friendly city. What we discovered was a city in mourning. It was mourning the loss of its own innocence, its willful ignorance of the police brutality that had been happening for years within city limits, and the loss of one of its citizens whose life, it appeared, wasn’t worth a counterfeit $20 dollar bill.

            George Floyd was laid to rest on Tuesday, June 9. Meanwhile, in Houston, after a week of action and attitude realignment that cut across economic and political boundaries, we walked 20 blocks from our hotel up Chicago Avenue to the storefront where his life was being memorialized, and his death etched in chalk on the sidewalk out front. It took a sadistic 8 minutes and 45 seconds to bring an end to George Floyd’s life, and when it did, 400 years of America’s original sin were brought back to painful life. As we passed the burnt out buildings and smelled the still fresh ashes, we prayed that Minnesota and the rest of the country might finally atone for the indescribable sin that was slavery.

            My attachment to Minnesota comes via my wife. Her grandfather had been one of 10,000 Minnesotans of Scandinavian stock who took their pioneering spirit north-west at the turn of the 20th Century. They wanted a shot at the last best prairie, which just happened to be across from Saskatchewan, on the US side of the border between our two countries. This border, 125 years ago, was as seamless as it is today when the snow falls.

            We had passed through Minnesota on our way back from Canada the summer before to attend a family reunion in Rush City. It was there that I’d met some of my wife’s staunchly Republican Farmer cousins, many of whom had held their noses and voted for Hillary because they couldn’t tolerate the not-so-Minnesota-Nice Trump. They were even less enthusiastic about him after he’d sacrificed their Chinese market for Soya Beans in a tit-for-tat trade war. It was a market they’d spent generations developing. The fact that they were now being compensated for their loss like “welfare bums,” as one cousin put it, was proof the President has no idea how fiercely proud and independent American farmers are.  

            There is a sensibility about the people of Minnesota that gave me hope as I watched them, many with children in tow, visit the spot where George Floyd had been killed. If any state can face and fix the scourges of racism and white supremacy, it would be Minnesota. It is in Minnesota that the practice of hot politics meets cool reality. It is where ’cooperative capitalism’ has long flourished, despite it seeming like an anachronism. In Minnesota, as in Saskatchewan, the long, cold, and potentially deadly winter makes it hard to ignore the needs of one’s neighbor or any of the customers one hopes will return when it thaws. Cold hands not only breed warmer hearts—they help ensure healthy revenue growth.

            Covid had almost become an afterthought as we walked back to our hotel from the George Floyd memorial. Still, a plague is a plague. The reality of my own lingering symptoms were brought home again. I would spend the next two days trying to regain the strength needed to make it to the Canadian border.

            Hives and a rash, Covid’s latest indignity had receded, only to be replaced by the sense of tingling overheated feet, hands, and occasionally my painful ‘canary in the coal mine’ ear. This was not a symptom of Covid, I was assured by my doctor over the phone. It was just another of its inflammatory post-viral effects on my autonomic nervous system.

            We approached the closed Canadian American border at Portal, North Dakota, with anticipation and trepidation. We had been assured that even though ‘non-essential’ traffic between the two countries had stopped two months earlier, with a Canadian passport, a place to quarantine for 14 days, and the support of someone who could help feed us, we’d be welcome. My status as a Covid survivor was the unknown factor. How much would the Officer at the Canadian border want to know about that, eh?

            There are two lessons about border crossing I wish to impart. These lessons have served me well during a career I had been fortunate to have—one that had been full of international travel. The first is that regardless of the country you’re entering, always be polite to the inspection officer. No problem there: I’m Canadian, and still able to separate a New Yorker’s need for hasty straight talk from my Canuck inclination to be gracious. The second rule is never give more information than you have to. This was the rule I adhered to at 8:02 AM on Saturday, June 13.  

            First off, the Officer wanted to know if we were prepared to quarantine for two weeks.  “Yes Sir. We are.” Would we have access to fresh air and someone to bring us food? “Yes Sir. We did.” Did we have more than 24 cans of beer? “No Sir. We didn’t.” Did we have any cannabis? This question came as a surprise. Cannabis is legal in Canada, but not in North Dakota. The Economist in me couldn’t help but wonder whether Canadians had reason to fear some competition? Regardless, it was a definite “No Sir.” Then came the big one. Did we have a cough or a fever? “No Sir,” I said truthfully. Fortunately, he didn’t ask about tingly lower extremities, ears, rashes or shortness of breath. That was it. No more Covid queries. We were told that once we crossed into Canada we were to stay put in our cottage, not to venture off the property, and not to have anyone else set foot on it.

            Finally, the border guard asked, “Did we have any questions?” I did. We might be crossing the border, but we still had nine and half hours of driving north to our quarantine location. “I’m going to need gas at some point,” I said. “How do I manage that?” Pay at the pump he told me. “So what if I have to pee?” I could feel my wife cringe, but the Officer didn’t seem surprised by the question or my resurfaced New York bluntness. “Wear your mask,” he told me. “Do your business quick and observe social distancing rules.”  

            I would choose a copse of trees to pull into an hour later rather than risk a restroom encounter. I only had to social distance myself from some Crows that seemed to delight in mocking me.  

June 13th – June 27th

Canuck Quarantine.

I had 14 days to contemplate 14 weeks as a Covedite, and I watched in horror from our Saskatchewan isolation at the virus denial still raging south of the Canadian-US border. I also did my share of praying that the hard won battle ground of New York would hold. Still, I couldn’t help but take pleasure in the fact that Floridians were being shunned if they decided to seek safety up north. Covid Karma is a bitch dude!

            The Covid recovery road trip took us through nine states, and in each one I got the sense that the majority of Americans have great respect for science. Given a leadership that respects that belief, they’d be more than willing to sacrifice, at least in the short term, for the greater good. What greater good can there be than the health of “We the People.”

            The Founding Fathers had managed to cast aside their self-interest 234 years earlier, so why was this proving to be such a big deal today. If they could agree on the inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness while being killed by the British, why can’t we come to this sort of collective wisdom during a pandemic that has already killed nearly two hundred thousand?

            The Founders must have also known that in the long run, self-sacrifice without equality is a fool’s game. Lincoln certainly did and he rose to the challenge by abolishing slavery. It has been 157 years since the Emancipation Proclamation, yet his belief that a “house divided against itself cannot stand” is just as applicable to the economic and healthcare inequities of today as it was to the scourge of slavery then.

            Lincoln didn’t claim that perfect equality was achievable, and he certainly didn’t foresee the threat Covid would pose to a United ‘house’ of America; but he did see the need to commit to the idea of equality as essential to creating what the Constitution terms “a more perfect union.” The Union must, he said, “become all one thing, or all the other,” to be truly free. On this guiding principle, Lincoln declared, there can be no partisan dispute and no bipartisan compromise. This is a principle he would have easily applied to a disease that poses a similar threat to the life and freedom of us all.

The 4th of July

Vive le Camus

Independence Day arrived, and with it, endless analysis of the impact of Covid on America’s God-given liberties. Like many, I’ve sought the insight of those wiser than myself on how best to hold tight to my individual freedoms without sacrificing the common good. To date, the most perceptive insight I’ve come across is an essay by Michiko Kakutani in the New York Times Review of Books. Fortunately, its awkwardly long title, “Coronavirus Notebook; Finding Solace and Connection in Classic Books,” speaks simply and eloquently about the importance of fiction to our understanding of a non-fictional crisis like the pandemic of 2020.

            “In times of crisis,” Ms. Michiko K says, “literature provides historical empathy and perspective, breaking through the isolation we feel, hunkered down in our homes. [It] connect us, across time zones and centuries, with others who once lived through not dissimilar events. Her survey of the works of great writers who exemplified this led me to Albert Camus and the book he published in 1947, entitled “The Plague,” which he based on French pandemics of the previous century. It provides testament to individuals like the novel’s narrator, Dr. Rieux, who risks his life to tend to victims, and sees nothing heroic about his work. It’s simply, he says, “a matter of common decency.”  

            Dr. Rieux, unlike the President, identified with victims of the plague: “There was not one of their anxieties in which he did not share, no predicament of theirs that was not his.” And he knew that the “essential thing was to save the greatest possible number of persons from dying.”

            Camus, Cuomo, and the Queen have helped me summon the courage I needed to accept life in the pandemic petri dish that was New York City, and live with the unknown long-term consequences of the disease. They also gave me the determination to confront those who lack the sensibility of New Yorkers who’ve survived Covid, and are not shy about calling out those who believe their right to stupidity is equal to my right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of a N95 mask, if not always happiness.

            The Covid Plague of 2020, like the French plagues of the past, has a lot to teach us. This includes the need to be especially worried about those in positions of power, like Dr. Richard, the head of the local medical association in the Camus novel, who is slow to recommend any action to combat the disease for fear of public alarm. He doesn’t want to admit the disease is a plague, referring to it instead as a “special type of fever.” Does this remind you of anyone?

            Camus is not specific about the controversy over testing in his 1947 novel, but I’m sure that his Dr. Richard would have done everything he could have to ignore the rising numbers, just as the President has. They wouldn’t make him look good, and what’s more important than appearances? Thank God for Dr. Rioux of Camus’ fiction and his non-fictional counterpart, Dr. Fauci.

            The Covid Plague has taught me two very different truths, which Michenko K’s brilliant analysis strikes me as possible, regardless of how contradictory they might seem. Foremost is the understanding that we must remain ever vigilant, because the plague bacillus, like the poison of fascism or its systemic cousin racism, “never dies or disappears.” Yet, we must just as strongly hold on to the optimistic belief that “what we learn in the time of pestilence” is that “there are more things to admire in man than to despise.”

            I just wish I could raise a glass of beer and drink to that.    

August 1

Covid Vigilantes – Canadian Style

There’s no denying the splendor of a social distanced Covid recovery in a Canadian National Park. There’s also no denying the weirdness that is a hallmark of the disease, and of 2020 itself. Watching ice hockey playoffs at 10AM on a beautiful August morning is the least of it.

            Canadians haven’t exactly welcomed any stray Americans who’ve found their way into their country via a loophole allowing them to pass through to Alaska. The RCMP have even had to tell people to stop calling in to report cars with American license plates like ours. I’ve kept a Canadian flag windsock waving above the driveway where our car is parked and I’ve taken to writing ‘Canadians’ in the dust collected on the back window of the car just in case someone decides to run their keys down the car frame, which has been known to happen.

            There’s no lack of dust on the grid roads of Saskatchewan, and no shortage of rednecks either. One, we’ll call him Boater Bob, pulled up behind me in his truck hauling his fishing boat. When he spotted my plates he did his best to cut me off as he passed, flashed his middle finger and mouthed obscenities our way before leaving us in his wake. If that’s how he reacted to the license plates, I thought, what would he have done if he knew I was a ‘Covedite’.  

            Canadians are smug about their country’s Covid response when they compare it to that of their American cousins, which they do a lot. Not so smug are the 400,000 Snowbird Canucks with real estate south of the border, who are facing the fact they may not be able to escape the butt-numbing polar reality of winter this year. I’ve had to remind more than one self-righteous friend that when it comes to Covid, Canada has the natural advantage of fewer people and more land. It’s a lot easier to isolate in a moose pasture than in a concrete jungle.

            Still, Canada has performed better at critical moments. In the early stages of the pandemic, it was able to ramp up testing more quickly, enabling it to better isolate the sick, trace contacts, and limit the spread. A single-payer healthcare system makes it easier to allocate protective equipment and emergency services. The country is less divided and more disciplined, and its politicians have largely set aside partisan grievances for a ‘Team Canada’ effort.

            Canadians have often been accused of being humble to the point of boring, but in 2020 it’s a definite advantage. ‘Sorry eh’ is the dull bromide of Canadian speech, but it provides a natural defense against Covid. No one wants to be the ‘Super Spreader’ identified as Grandma’s killer.

A Four Month Covidaversary

August 17th

This Covid recovery road trip has been a long haul on two fronts. We’ve traveled 3,563 Canadian kilometers—that is 2,213 American miles—between homes on either side of the border, and the ‘long haul’ of the Covid recovery itself has proven to be more gruelling and much lonelier up here than I expected. I know no one else who has had the disease, and I’ve become the cautionary case in point for my friends and family. I appreciate their concern, but there’s only so much self-centered whining that anyone who hasn’t been hit by Covid wants or needs to hear.

            It would have been easier to find the sympathetic ear of a fellow sufferer in our Manhattan zip code, where, according to a City of New York Health Department study, 33% of the residents have antibodies. This means that on 162nd Street, one in three people have been infected, whereas in our Saskatchewan place of isolation, only one in seven hundred and eighteen people have had Covid.

            Fortunately, I’ve found some support at Covid Long Haul Fighters Unite, a Facebook group where you can compare your ongoing symptoms, count your relative blessings, and convince yourself that you’re not crazy. Regardless, there are thousands like myself seeking reassurance on the site. There are definitely some psychosomatics in this group and others who have tested positive, and are finding that Covid is a convenient excuse to blame everything that’s wrong with them on the virus. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t cause hangnails, but that’s about the only thing I’m convinced of when it comes to our post-viral syndrome status. It turns out, I’m not the only one to have inflamed Covid ears, tingling toes, and legs that seem to rendezvous most nights between 2 and 4 AM. And when I asked whether anyone else finds that alcohol sets off their symptoms, I had dozens of positive responses within a few hours.

            Misery indeed loves company on Facebook, but if truth be told, I’ve had some miserable days. SOB, Covidien shorthand for ‘shortness of breath’, is truly a SOB. The chest tightness made me question the health of my heart, and brought me as close as my bloody ear to seeking medical attention. Good and bad lung days are the touchstones of my existence now. However, the balance of days is on the plus side; there are definitely more good days than bad.  

            I’ve done my best to put some humor into my overnight ‘Tingly Toe’ report to my wife, but it’s said that the clown hides his tears. Jim Carrey, the Canadian Clown, provides ample proof of that. He wrote a book, Memoirs and Misinformation, which I read while in Covid quarantine.

            It’s the uncertainty of it all that seems to get to me—to us—if I’ve been reading the postings of my fellow ‘Long Haul Fighters’ correctly. Had this virus been Mono or Hep C, at least we’d know what we’re in for, what might be prescribed, and how we might fare in the long run. But Covid is a daily revelation of yet-to-be-experienced misery for many.

            There’s simply no guarantee that if we are lucky enough to make it to our one year ‘Covidaversaries’, we won’t wake up to discover that our ‘tingly toes’ or inflamed ears have fallen off. This uncertainty, as irrational as it might seem, is compounded by the guilt of self-pity. I should be grateful for every minute of every day. Like anyone who lived through New York’s hellish Covid Spring, I have to remind myself just how very, very, very lucky I am to be alive.

            I’m also definitely thankful to have spent my summer outside of the United States, although it’s been painful to watch from a distance. It’s a bit like seeing a friend give into alcoholism—circling life’s garburator in the mistaken belief that it won’t hurt too much when he or she hits the drain.  

September 11

Home is where the C Train Stops

Margaret Atwood says that every Canadian has a complicated relationship with the United States, while Americans only think of Canada as the place the weather comes from. Still, when it comes to the cross-border relationship in this Covid year, it’s not the least bit complicated. Eighty-one percent of Canadians want the border between our countries to stay closed, and for most Americans, weather is the least of their worries. However, for us, both weather and a complicated relationship with America are at issue.

            Our children want us to stay put in Canada, where the Bull Elk are starting to bugle, signaling a willingness to tear apart any challengers for their pick of the ‘rutting’ season harem. Frosty breath over a Labor (Labour) Day barbecue is the cool whisper of six months of winter to come. Still, our NY roots and responsibilities, left to simmer in summer pestilence, are calling.

            New York City, which was the epicenter of hell on earth (with 24,000 dead, 230,000 infected), seems pretty heavenly now. Mask wearing is a fact of life. Outdoor dining, streets closed to traffic, and more bike paths look like they could become a permanent fixture—at least until winter blows in on an Alberta Clipper or a Saskatchewan Snowstorm. The tourist hordes are missing, and my wife says she looks forward to walking into the reopened Met and MoMA without having to fight past them.

            The car is loaded and the route planned. We’ll rendezvous with family in Ontario for an early Christmas gathering. I’ve got a doctor’s appointment that I don’t want to miss, and a list of questions the length of my arm to ask. The Covid recovery isn’t over but the road trip will soon be….

            What awaits us in America, besides the reality of Covid, is a surreal electoral season we have no say in, other than to do our utmost to get people out to vote, in hopes that America will regain its welcoming heart and the “you can achieve anything” spirit I’ve long admired. It’s been said that Canadians value equality more than Americans, who put their freedom above anything else. I don’t see why they should be mutually exclusive. Why else would the preamble to the constitution ask that ‘We the People’ create ‘a more perfect union’? Surely, this should be a union that will ensure freedom, enshrine equality, and encourage a renewed effort to make the United States a beacon for those of us who value all lives, all liberties, and all people’s right to pursue their own version of happiness.  

Return to Journal

Gary Fowlie is a Technology Economist and Consultant.  He is on the Advisory boards of ID2020, a non-governmental agency that is working toward secure digital identities for all and of ‘Geeks Without Frontiers’, which brings emergency telecommunication services to disaster relief efforts. Gary was formerly the United Nations Representative in New York for the UN specialized agency, the International Telecommunication Union.  He led an inter-agency UN effort to ensure information and communication technologies were recognized in the UN’s Sustainable Development Agenda. Previously, he served as Chief of Media Liaison for the United Nations in New York and was responsible for communications and advocacy for the UN World Summit on the Information Society.

Poetry by Saraswoti Lamichhane

sarah swoti

good-bye home town
above the rich crops of the valley
paddy, maize, millet, green, greener, grey
I fly away from my center, to the edge, farther and farther away
silence brings me back to my senses
my laughter-lit Cindrella hours are over
the hills that guard the valley fade dim
soon they soften my memories
this moment shall become a dream tomorrow
history when I visit here next
tangled:  every twist and turn of this bond
once the ties that dig deep are cut
I shall set myself free like a bird
in the space,
I shall belong here, there and everywhere



October walks
a sudden gust peels
the scarf of autumn
away from its twigs
troops upon troops
swarm by
stumbling
screeching
crawling
in the theatre of time
on the ramps of thrills
you landed
weightlessly
not to the gravity
but on my arms
your darkening edges
curl slowly
bit by bit
to the core
death disguised in colors
works heavily on your palm
makes you swaddle to the vein
like a newborn
seeking for warmth
to you little leaf
death, but a flight
landing weightlessly
from the twigs to my arms

Return to Journal

Saraswoti Lamichhane comes from St. Albert. She is a mother of two happy daughters. She is a life celebrator and loves exploring beyond her world. At the age of twenty-four she decided to transplant her life from Nepal to Canada. She claims to have nature as her second mother. She loves wandering around the open space with her camera gears. She is an optimist and a continuous spiritual learner. Her poems have been published in a few journals & anthologies across the globe.