jamesq: (Default)
I promised myself that I would visit my brother's memorial before the summer was out. So I decided to bike down to it. The only problem being, it's in Fish Creek park, and that's clear on the other end of the city. Still, I had a full battery, and nothing to do all day. After a rather enjoyable two hour ride, I made it to the Bunsmead memorial "forest". It's not really a forest yet, since they only started planting the trees six years ago. My brother's tree was only a year old, since they dedicated it last summer.

I found the main plaque, one of six. This is for all those that were lost in 2017.

Bill's memorial plaque

There was no markers for the individual groves on site. The funeral home's website had a map though, and I managed to find my way to the 2017 grove. The trees all had blue ribbons with the date on them. Some of the ribbon's had names written on the reverse side. I wasn't going to search over a thousand trees for Bill though, especially since I have no idea if Becky or the kids actually picked out an individual tree.

This must be the place

My brother's drink of choice, back in his prime, was Black Label or Extra Old Stock. I heard he'd cut back a lot in his last few years. Anyway, When he was alive, I kept a six-pack of Black Label in the fridge for him. After he died, I still had two. One I drank on his birthday last year, revealing that either Black Label is a really shitty beer, or that you shouldn't keep beer in a can for multiple years. Possibly both. Well, I cracked open a warm can of three-year-old beer, took a swig, and poured the rest out on one lucky tree that I decided was Bill's.

Miss you, bro.

Black Label for my Bro

I still had a lot of juice in the bike's battery, so I decided to bike back. I got about a 500 yards when I realized I was getting tired. The bike might have had enough juice to get back home, but I didn't. I decided to reroute to a train station, since it was a holiday, and therefore not rush hour. Bikes are allowed on the trains during non-peak times. Nearest station, Shawnessy - Calgary's 2nd most southernly station. And I was prepared to take it all the way up to Dalhousie - Calgary's 3rd most Northwesterly station.

That's when my bike started to act up. I'd take a corner and I'd feel the rear wheel shimmy a little. And the bumps were getting a lot more noticeable. These are signs that your tire is going flat. I got as far as I could before I feared I might damage the rim, and I got off the bike and managed to pinch the tire with my bare hands, showing that it had barely any air left in it.

Hypothesis: I punctured the wheel on the dirt trail by my brother's grove of trees, since it was fine before then.

Thankfully I'd decided to head to a train station, and not back along secluded bike paths. That mean I only had to walk the bike about a kilometre to a gas station. I refilled the tire and rode an additional kilometre to the train station.

Complication #2: They want you to put your bike at the end of the cars, but those doors have a bar down the middle, which made it too narrow to get my bike in. I decided to go to the middle doors (no bar, to accommodate wheelchairs and such). In that time between doors, the driver deactivated the doors and left without me. Swell, I got to wait another ten minutes for the next train.

Complication #3: Did I mention it was a long weekend? Calgary Transit does all their major track maintenance on long weekends. There were no trains running between Heritage and City Hall station - about 7.5 Km. I take the train anyway, figuring Heritage is close enough I could probably just bike home. I get off at the station and check my estimated range - 24 Km. Distance to home? 23 Km. Ok, I could just do this, and I was close enough I knew most of the route. I get on my bike and immediately notice that the rear wheel was shimmying. Checking the tire again, I find it wasn't a slow leak, it was just plain flat, and I wasn't going to hop from gas station to gas station to try to get home, because flats don't get better.

I had three options: I could continue with transit - a lot of the city buses, including some of the buses they use to sub for the trains, have bike racks. But I would have to take a bus to city hall, then the train to Dalhousie, then walk it 1300 metres to home. Woof. Next option was to call a cab - you can request cabs with bike racks. Wasn't to fond of a $50+ cab ride. Finally, I could just ask for help. First person I successfully reached was Allison, who was gracious enough to come get me. I did get an offer from Murray on Facebook, but alas, I didn't see his offer until I estimated Allison was on the road.

Allison came. We got the bike home. And now I get to take it to Bow Cycle tomorrow to get the tire fixed. Whee!

Oh yeah, my bike route (does not include train or car ride):

42 Kilometres - woof woof!

jamesq: (An actual picture of me.)
My brother killed himself yesterday. I'm still processing this. Mostly I'm sad for his family, who over the last twenty years got to know him far better than I ever did.

LJ - BillInThe70s.jpg
(The earliest picture of Bill that I have. Taken in the 70's I imagine)

We were never close, as I was seven years younger than him. We were never together at any age where we could really relate to each other. When I was old enough to want to hang around with my brother, he was of an age where it was deeply uncool to have your kid brother hanging around. I was an over-serious nerd, he was one of the kids who hung out with the bad crowd. That got so bad that my parents ended up sending him to live with family in Vancouver, where he straightened himself out. That sounds like some sort of weird military-school-exile-thing, but I'm pretty sure Bill was in on it, recognizing that he needed a clean break from the crowd. I remember shouting matches in the house, but not over that.

LJ - cadets.jpg
(Cadets. Bill is the one standing farthest to the right in the second row)

Due to his moving when I was a kid, we never got to know each other as young adults. He was living his life in Vancouver when I was in high school. He eventually moved back when I was in University.

We had different educations, life experiences, political views. He helped raise a family, and I'm a bachelor. But for all that I say we have nothing in common, it's not actually true.

We had similar senses of humour. Bill got most of my jokes and vice-versa. Mom and Dad certainly raised us in similar ways. We had a similar legacy from that. The values that were instilled on both of us were very strong.

LJ - Bill in Cadets.jpg
(This picture of Bill reacting to a sour note was taken by a Calgary Herald photographer. They were kind enough to send us a print, since I doubt we still have the actual newspaper anymore)

Later in life we bonded to a small extent over our shared burden - my sister. I grew to simply write-off her antics, but Bill took them more and more personally as time went on. Partly that was simply because he had a lot more contact with her growing up as well as when they were adults, but mostly it was because he was often the target of her BS.

LJ - BillMomDadAtExpo86.jpg
(Bill, Maxine, and Gordon Cyr. This was taken in Vancouver's Gastown during Expo86)

It wasn't until yesterday morning when my Aunt broke the news to me that I realized we shared one more thing: Depression. I'm guessing here, but if my brother felt he had to kill himself, then odds are he was depressed, and probably had been for a long time. I've been there, and I've felt the urge to kill myself. It got bad enough that I sought help for it. If only Bill had done that.

Depression lies. The worst lie that depression tells you is that there is no hope. Don't believe it. I'm living proof that you can, if not beat depression, at least negotiate a truce with it. I haven't thought seriously about suicide in years. My depressive incidents have become fewer and of shorter duration due to the mental tools I learned in therapy. And I know that there is help if I need it. My friends will support me and there are professionals out there who can help me.

If you are feeling suicidal, you can walk into any emergency room in this city and get help. "I'm thinking about killing myself" is what I told the triage nurse. It was the first step, and I'm glad I took it. I wish my brother had taken that step.

LJ - BillAndBeckyWedding.jpg
(Bill and his new bride Becky, at the Justice of the Peace office in the Palliser Hotel)

The last time I spoke to my brother was a year ago at the family Boxing day party. He left me a voice mail on my birthday, and I wish I'd done at least that much for him on his. Would it have mattered? Probably not, but who knows?

Right now, My brother's widow Becky is devastated. His children, Thor, Ruth, Russel, and Bill have had the carpet yanked out from under them. I am so very sad for them. I wish I had the words to help them through their grief, but that is beyond my ability.

http://www.mhfh.com/cyr-william-bill-randolf-2/
jamesq: (An actual picture of me.)
Dad died last night. It's a horrible thing to do, watching a loved one slowly stop breathing when you're powerless to stop it.

If there is any consolation, it's that, for the first time in a long while, he's not suffering anymore.

I'm going to miss you old man.
jamesq: (An actual picture of me.)
I got the phone call at 1:40 AM this morning. My Mom had passed away.

She had been admitted to the Agapé hospice on Saturday and everyone assumed that she would be there for several weeks. As it turns out, it was actually really quick. Monday night we got a call from the hospice staff telling the family that Mom was fading fast. We all rushed to see her.

Needless to say, she was not at her best. My Mother was never particularly healthy, but to see her in the hospice bed, nearly skeletal from the wasting of cancer, and largely incoherent from pain killers was easily the worst thing I've ever had to do. But I'm glad I did it because it gave me the opportunity to say good-bye.

There were times when Mom regained consciousness. It was during one of these spells that I managed to say what I needed to.
"Mom, it's James - We're taking good care of Dad. Don't ever doubt that I love you and I'm going to miss you."
Her eyes turned towards me and for just a moment she focused on me. I knew then that she heard me and understood.

I have a lot of regrets and wishes. I wish my Mom had seen the condo she helped me to buy. I wish that she could meet my future wife and children. I wish I could remember what her laugh sounded like.

Tuesday night we visited again and this time she was out of it the entire visit (though according to my sister Trish, she was coherent in the afternoon when some her siblings - my Uncles and Aunts - came to visit). All she was getting at this point was painkillers. No saline, no water - she was now quite literally at the end of the line.

I wasn't there when my Mom died. I had to take care of my Dad. My sister was there, and bless her for that - As terrible as it was for me to hear that my mom had died, I can't imagine what it must have been like to be holding her hand as it happened. But I'm glad Trish was there and Mom wasn't alone during her last moments.

It fell to me to tell my Dad the bad news. But he had hear the phone and my end of the conversation (My Father may have an excess of ailments, but his hearing is not among them - he can hear a spider crawl up the wall) and knew what it meant. Of all of us, my Dad is taking it the hardest.

Well I cried long and hard - eventually I cried myself to sleep. Sleeping helps - today I'm still sad, but I'm keeping it together - it's like the sleep has turned this into grieving day two, instead of grieving day one. Tomorrow we're going to make all the arrangements for the memorial service and cremation. Today was a day for being together as a family. In addition to my siblings and in-laws, my Uncle Rick and Auntie Sharon also came by to lend their support. I'm glad they did.

Writing helps too. I've felt a little numb today, and writing this entry has helped me to get some of my feelings out in the open. This means frequent breaks as I reach for the tissue. It's hard, but it's something I promised myself I'd do. This page, and the hardcopy/album I'm making from it, will be a sort of remembrance of my Mom. Not the best start though because I want to remember my mother they way she was when she was before the cancer, rather than the shell of a woman I saw last night. Naturally the first thing I did was described how she was last night. Time to start describing her, rather than what she had become.

For me, the perfect year for my mom was 1995. It was my last year at home. They were growing old, but weren't yet unhealthy. My Dad had not yet had the stroke that brought the great man down and forced my Mom into a life of servitude. They were both enjoying the first year of their early retirement, with flush cash, no debts, and a moterhome capable of spending three months in Arizona (which they did!). In short, they were enjoying the rewards of a lifetime of hard work.

It would have been beautiful if it had lasted.

There were so many things about my Mom that I just didn't know until recently. I intend to find out more as time goes on.

Mom was the youngest child in her family. The other kids called her "buttons" growing up - I only found out about this from my Auntie Ev two nights ago.

She saw Bambi when she was a child and the forest fire scene scarred the daylights out of her. She cried when Bambi's mom was shot.

Until only a year ago, I though my Mom had had scoliosis growing up, which resulted in her having a hump on her back that I never really noticed. It wasn't scoliosis - it was polio. I found this out when we were discussing chiropractors, and my assertion that they're quacks. Turns out that my Grandfather had sent her to a chiropractor when she was young because they claimed they could cure the curvature of her spine that was brought on by the polio. What she really needed was a back brace and physiotherapy. Physiotherapy being largely nonexistent in the 40's she didn't get the proper treatment. She did come away the experience with the same opinion that I have: Chiropractors prey on the gullible and their treatments are as effective as doing nothing, with the added bonus that they may actually make you worse.

She went to St. Mary's High School right here in Cowtown where she was taught by the nuns. Being shy, she had a lot of the same experiences growing up that I had - namely being picked on. Ironically, in many of the same places as I was.

I inherited my sense of humour from my mother - though being Generation X, my sarcasm is much more acute. There was a time (when I was a teen) that My Dad was, very tongue in cheek, trying to illustrate the difference between Cyrs (my Dad's side of the family) and Agnews (my Mom's side of the family).
"We should have a coat of arms describing showing how much better we are. On each side there would be a clenched fist showing how strong we are"
Here my Dad demonstrated with the standard Hulk pose, clenching his fists towards each other.
"But we're also smart, so between the fists there would be a brain. Brains and brawn, what do you think of that?" he said.

"Squish!" replied my Mom as she giggled to herself.
There is so much more I want to write, but I think it's time to sleep again. I hope I dream of my mother in happier times.

Maxine Lorraine Cyr (nee Agnew) May 8, 1935 - May 21, 2003.

I will miss you until the end of my days.

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