Category: Uncategorized

  • EPISODE 831 “DON’T DO IT! NOT ENOUGH ROOM!” THEN THE LITTLE BLUE CAR ACCELERATED AND DISAPPEARED

    EPISODE 831    “DON’T DO IT! NOT ENOUGH ROOM!”  THEN THE LITTLE BLUE CAR ACCELERATED AND DISAPPEARED


    alan skeoch
    June 4. 2-23

    We were drifting down the Fifth when a giant spider appeared…immense green thing.  Bigger than a bread basket.
    Then a little blue car passed us and I know what the driver was thinking.  So do you.   He …(must have been a male driver
    because no female would be so stupid)…He thought , “I can rip through the gap between the spiders legs.:

    And that was the last we saw of him or the spider.


    A little further down the road we met a giant centipede that looked really hungry.
    I think it ate both spider and that little blue car.   

    We did not stop to inspect.   Discretion is the better part of valour.

    To whom should we report this tragedy?

    alan

    Postscript

    Remember the bit of doggerel about Algie?

    “Algie met a bear and the bear was bulgy and the bulge was Algie!”

    The little blue car met a centipede that was bulgy and the bulge was the little blue car.”..

    (somehow that version is not as good as the bear version…but it happened.  At least I think it happened.
    The male driver?  That was a guess based on prejudice….it could have been a female.

    alan
  • EPISODE 830 SAD LITTLE BOY THAT I NEVER HELPED…and MARJORIE … ALMOST PARALLELS

    EPISODE 830    SAD LITTLE BOY THAT I NEVER HELPED…and MARJORIE … ALMOST  PARALLELS


    alan skeoch
    June 2, 2023


    Fwd: PARKDALE C.I. FLASHBACK: HE'S DEAD, SIR! MURDERED! SHOT TO DEATH  TODAY! (FROM ALAN SKEOCH) – Alan SkeochWhole class 'shocked' and 'confused' after teacher wears blackface to  school, student says | CBC News

    MY life has been happy most of the time.  Only a Sore knee from football injury. Unlike the student i remember so well at Parkdale  C I in the 1960’s which has a similarity to
    what Marjorie and her brother faced in the 1950’s.   (Picture of Marjorie and Doug Hughes )

    WHY WAS I SO LUCKY IN LIFE WHILE OTHERS FACED TRAGEDY…ESPECIALLY ONE LITTLE BOY WHOSE NAME IS FORGOTTEN?


    Last night I could not sleep so memory took over.  For some strange reason I thought about
    a sad little boy in my Grade 9 class at Parkdale C.I.  He was very shy….avoided speaking if he could.
    Likely poor.  How do I know that?  Because  a lot of the students were poor which made him
    unremarkable I suppose.  

    I think his dad died in November in 1964 or 1965. Think he sidled shyly up to my desk and said “My dad died.”  Or
    another student told me.  That evening I went to the funeral home. A dark place wth 25 Watt light  bulbs. 
    Frightening.  The boy was alone in one room.  Seemed surprised and glad to see me. But sad and confused…perhaps frightened. 

    “How is your mom?”
    “She died.”

    No mom.  No dad.  No siblings.  No visitors.  No funeral service.  Just this sad little boy and the
    casket with his father’s remains.

    Why did he come to mind on a sleepless night over sixty years later?  Why?   Because I did nothing to
    help.  Just visited the funeral home across from Bellwood Park where other kids joyfully played ball hockey.
    I did nothing.   I am not sure I even alerted the principal about the boy.  I do not even remember his
    name.

    How lucky I was.  Surrounded by people who liked me.  A huge extended Skeoch family … so large
    I had trouble sorting out my nieces and nephews.   My grandparents on both sides welcomed visits 
    with food and genuine interest in my life.

    Yet this little boy had no one.  Sad.  Sadness captured by the song Old Man River… “Nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen.  
    Nobody knows but Jesus!”

    Whch made me start thinking about Marjorie.  Fast asleep beside me in bed.  A happy girl…woman…wife….future parent.

    Both her parents died.  Her mom died at Christmas 1954 when Marjorie was in Grade 9 at Lawrence Park Collegiate.  At her mom’s funeral she
    did not cry until Mr. Chick, her teacher, brought her home form class to the funeral home.  At least She had her dad
    who taught her how to fish, how to raise baby rabbits. That was some consolation.

    But in April 1956 he died as well.  Marjorie found him and did not know what to do.  She woke her brother.

    “Doug, I think Dad is dead.  What should I do?’
    ”I think you should go to school.  I’ll look after things.”

       Marjorie walked to school in a daze. Sat in her class
    and wondered why.  What should she do?  What could she do? She went to the office.

    “I am going home.”
    “Why?”
    “My father died this morning.”

    And she went home.  Her high school did nothing.  Marjorie was like the sad little boy described 
    earlier.  No mom.  No dad.  No one seemed to care.  Her brother was eight years older than Marjorie
    Already making his way in an adult world.  

    “What happened to your house?”
    “We were renters.”
    “Your furniture?”
    “People came and took what they wanted.  Strangers.”

    There is one big difference between the sad little boy and Marjorie.  She was rescued by her aunt Phyllis Morgan who
    was a Latin teacher in the North Bay high school.

    “Marjorie, you will come to live with us when the school term ends.”
    “Pack what you can carry.  We have a room for you and a new high school..”

    And that was all.   Her brother put Marjorie on the train to  North Bay with her single suitcase.
    That was the low point  Soon events turned upward.

    Marjorie was loved and rescued.   

      Her life in North Bay turned out to be wonderful.   She joined the curling team, drama club,
    played basketball, went skiing, got good marks, danced, had lots of boy friends who were serious about her.  How do I know that?
    Because when I appeared on the scene she introduced me to them all…even one that proposed marriage.

    Her aunt created a new life for Marjorie  Helped her forget the terror of that
    morning when she found her father.  She was loved.

    Maybe.  Just maybe…that sad little boy in my Grade Nine class had an uncle or  aunt …older brother or sister…friend..
    that rescued him.  

    I do not know.  All I do know is that I did nothing .   I did nothing.  And that memory stays with me still.   

    What should I have done?

    alan skeoch
    june 2, 2023

    P>S>   What do schools do when tragedy strikes a student?  I will ask Mary.

  • post script to episode 829

    The actual comment on the portable step”
    “what do you expect me to do?…”stand up , sit down, bark like a dog’ at which point te whole class began standing up then sit down and then barking like dogs.”
    alan

  • EPISODE 829 TEACHING … WITH RESPECT, ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE. WITHOUT RESPECT NOTHING IS POSSIBLE.?

    EPISODE 829    TEACHING  … WITH RESPECT, ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE.  WITHOUT RESPECT NOTHING IS POSSIBLE.?


    alan skeoch
    MAY 30, 2023


    How would you handle this situation?  My Grade 13 Home Form decided to play a joke on me
    THEY took over the blackboard where I had drawn a gross caricature.

    Someone wrote 
    “Mr. Skeoch ,alias E.T.” (the extra terrestrial movie had just been released)
    The drawing was mine…big nose, big mouth.
    The words were written by someone in 13D


    Today, May 30, 2032, I asked Marjorie what she thought of E.T.

    “Who?”
    “Remember the movie  E/T/. the extra terrestrial; who visited our planet…toured on a bicycle 
    “Yes, that would be the late 1960’s,  why do you ask?”
    “If you had to describe E.T. in one word, what would it be?”
    “Inquisitive…..he was curious”
    “Is that a good characteristic?”
    “”Of course it is.”
    “Then this picture must be flattering.”
    (Students felt secure enough to make fun of me  and still have respect)

    WHAT THE PICTURE REVEALS

    1) I AM wearing a 3 piece suit so pic must have been taken around 1970

    2) Picture reveals that my home form, 13D felt relaxed enough to write “Mr. Skeoch alias
    E.T.”  and sign collective name 13D

    3) The caricature was draw by me.  Big nose, big mouth, brush cut.   I think I was teaching Voltaire’s book Candide in
    which the boy Candide toured Europe with his teacher whose name in translation was
    “Big Mouth”, a name my students enjoyed.

    4) As a group we were relaxed enough to do give and take….i.e. join a conversation.
    “Why did Voltaire put ‘Big Mouth” in his novel?

    5) Famous line in the book?  “If this is the best of all possible worlds, what then of the others?”

    6) My comment?  Read Candide, you’ll love it because the chapters are only a couple of pages long.

    7) What was my own personal discovery about teaching?  I remember my shock those first few days
    as a teacher….the students all called me “Sir”….and they did this for my entire testing career.  
    What did “sir” mean to me?   It meant the kids respected me.   As a teacher if you are respected then
    all things are possible.   If there is no respect then nothing is possible.

    i.e.  We had a teacher at Parkdale C.I. who just could not get  respect.  One day when I slipped out for a coffee
    I found him sitting on the step of his portable classroom. 
     “What’s wrong?
    “The students have taken control.”
    “HOW?”
    “I was having difficulty with them.”
    (The classroom was full of noise and kids jumping up ad down…and laughing…hooting even)
    “God awful noise they are making…how did that happen?”
    “I lost control and said “What do you expect me to do…”stand up, sit down, act like a fool?”
    “Then all hell broke loose…they began jumping  and sitting .jup and down…hooting.”
    “Odd.”
    “Worst thing is that they have now locked me out of the portable classroom.”
    “Call the VP”
    “Are you kidding.  he will think I cannot teach…have no respect….so I will lsit here until the bell goes.”
    (And he did. He was still siting there when I cam back with my coffee.  The hullabaloo was continuing…
    he never got respect and eventually gave up teaching.  Very sad.  Nice guy.)

    alan

    P.S.   THE PICTURE WAS REATURED IN THE PARKDALE YEARBOOK AS I REMEMBER

  • EPISODE 828 COYOTE…ALMOST INVISIBLE AT HIGH NOON

    EPISODE 828    COYOTE…ALMOST INVISIBLE AT HIGH NOON


    alan skeoch
    May 30, 2023


    We live in a frantic intersection of raw QEW and Hurontario highways in Misissauga.  
    Currently the throughways are being ripped apart  for an  LRT.

    Within a stones throw of the construction is one of the places where coyotes feel at home.  They have taken 
    ownership of a several acre woodland.   And they are not afraid to show their ownership…their lack of 
    fear. Our dog Woody smells coyote spoor when I cannot see anything.

       I could see nothing that was alivedown the back of
    lot where an ancient dump rake rests.  Nothing. Noting Nothing. Woody knew better.
    Evenutually the coyote slipped from the woodland camouflage into the daylight.

    No intention of running away.  Daring Woody to dig under the fence. Hungry.


    Back to being invisible in an instant.  If your eyes are good
    you can see him or her beside the left wheel of the dump rake.  I think, but not sure.

    In the small wilderness park a male and female coyote are raising three or four pups.
    Playful stage right now.  Woody is now aware that coyotes prefer food to play. Dangerous  should
    he venture down the back of our lot.  He learned that the hard way when he
    slipped through the gate and joined a coyote a while ago.   Not a playful moment.
    The coyote took a bite out of Woody’s backside.  Food. Woody skedaddled back home fast.

    Do not expect to see the coyotes.  They are smart.  They move around seeking, rabbits, garbage.Softly from place to place.
    Itinerent.   They are not stupid.   Why do they seem to prefer urban places to rural places?
    Food I believe.  Not as many cats around here as their once were.Coyotes are not a big danger
    to Woody  Little dogs are more edible

    I like the coyotes.  Not everyone does.