THANK GOD IT'S FRIDAY
BC PIRES
FATHER'S DAY falls this Sunday but I've already had the best possible rise out of it: for five days last week, both my adult children were at home. My son returned to London, my daughter will at month-end. But every second with them both was magical. We are all on the long and winding road that leads to we all know where (even if some us hope and pray it ends somewhere else). I am farther down the road and love to see them run, dance and leap about on it. But I will chinks out my remaining time in baby steps.
My own father taught me an incredible - it is the right word - amount when he was alive; but he taught me even more in death. In the early nineties, my father's last years (he died on April 4, 1993), I often turned up from London myself on my parents' doorstep. And they'd just let me into my old room.
When Vodka Hitler took Europe a hundred years into the past on February 24, I was staying with my mother, as part of the extended celebration of her 86th birthday. I don't think I missed my father more in 30 years than in that first month of Putin's Sin.
If he'd lived, my father would be 90. His late adolescence/early adulthood spanned his university education in North America and the start of the Cold War. Mine spanned the Rolling Stones, the Mighty Shadow and Catch-22. For all his brilliance, my father's simplistic view of the East-West conflict made capitalism (though a severely regulated form of it) good and every commie bastard bad.
If he had not died so early - two years younger than I am now - I really don't know what our relationship would be like today. We might have continued growing increasingly close, as we were in his last years, or may have drifted far apart, as we were for most of what I must call my own adult days - although I cannot imagine him letting anything get between him and his only granddaughter.
When my father lived, all his children's spouses had been led to St Ann's, like mad people, and lunch at his house every Sunday. When he died, we spread out. South America. North America. Trinidad. Barbados.
All three of my sister's sons went to the same high school in Parkland, Florida in the 90s and 2000s, and one that became famous - notorious - on Valentine's Day, 2018, when a deranged young man murdered 17 students with the same kind of gun used in Uvalde recently.
Had they been my children's age, all my sister's sons could easily have been shot dead at their school on the same day.
That's how small our modern world is.
The actor Matthew McConaughey last week held up a pair of green Converse sneakers, the only thing that identified one victim in the Uvalde murders; the rest of this innocent little girl was so torn apart by the bullets from a weapon of war that her own parents could not recognise her.
And Americans will still elect a majority of Republicans in November.
Who will tell you plainly they will always repeal Roe v Wade and force rapist pregnancies to term and never repeal assault weapon bans, because t