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  • EPISODE 121 VIOLENCE THEME: PRINCE OF DARKNESS : WHY I HATE GUNS

    EPISODE 121   VIOLENCE THEME:   PRINCE OF DARKNESS

    (why I hate guns)

    alan skeoch
    Sept. 2020




    Dad Startled us one Christmas when I was  15 and Eric 14.   He bought us a Red Ryder  BB gun.
    That was the only Christmas present he had ever bought us and he used the usual scam…i..e He put
    a dollar downpayment and left the rest to us.  Or, rather, to mom since I do not remember how the financing
    was resolved.

    The gun had a very short life…one day and it died ignominiously smashed against the Manitoba Maple in our back yard.
    That one day still embarrasses me now that I am 82.  What an asshole I could be at times.  If you judge my seeming Voltaire
    like innocence as some kind of fairy tale Prince of Light marvelling at the world around him.  Then you are not getting
    the true picture.  I am also a Prince of Darkness who has  done things of which I am not around.  The BB gun caper is my best example.




    Dad set himself up as an example of proper BB gun behaviour that Christmas Eve, 1954.  We opened  the paper bag 
    and found the new gun.  Mom frowned.  She loved her husband but could not always control him.  She had no idea
    he bought this ‘dollar down’ Red Ryder special.  Mom disliked guns.  “Give me one god reason why we should
    have a gun,” she said.

    Dad took the gun right away and set himself up as a sniper in our little second floor kitchen.  “Leave the goddamn light out.”
    The window was small.  Just enough room for mom to hang out the clothes to dry on the revolving clothes line.  There was
    a clothespin pocket on the line where mom forced dad to keep his Limburger cheese.  Strong stuff.  Maybe his cigars as
    well…White Owl Invincibles that he could only smoke outside the house.  Best lit boldly at the racetrack. Lit at home slyly
    in the back yard only.   So dad was familiar
    with the little window located high above the back fence.  Perfect sniper eyrie.

    Our cat Tinker was a bit of a loose woman, so to speak.  She had lots of lovers when she came in heat.  Other families
    had their pets ‘fixed’, something we could not afford or, more accurately, something of which Tinker disapproved.
    A couple of Tom Cats made the mistake of serenading Tinker that evening.  They got a stinging BB for their efforts.
    IF he even hit one.  Long distance from kitchen window to back fence.

    Christmas Day 1954 or  might have been1955.  That day we went to the farm likely by Gray Coach bus since we did
    not have a car.  Uncle Frank met us at the Fifth line  with his team of horses and the big bob sleigh or with his well used
    Model A Ford that smelled of cattle dung.

    Eric and  I took turns carrying the BB Gun … as if it was some kind of sacred artifact.  As the oldest I got the  first
    shot out between the house and the barn.

    “Eric, walk about fifty feet away and keep you bum facing me. We’ll see if
    a BB can sting you through your breeks”

    “Yow!  That hurt, Alan.”

      I think that act of stupidity was the moment Eric lost confidence  in  me as  an older brother…as  a mentor…
    as someone worthy of admiration .

    About that time our cousin Ted Freeman arrived in a decrepit Model T Ford that George Johnson had got working.
    Not a top of the line model.  More like a car en route to the scrap yard but out for one more time.
    Eric and I hopped in the back.  I had the gun.   

    Here  is how  I used it.

    1) As we drove down the Fifth line I took pot shots at drive shed and barn stable windows.   
    Seemed like fun.  George and  Ted must have been flabbergasted.   Word went up snd down
    the line afterward and I did pay for a few windows I think.  Not sure because I tried to wipe the
    memory.

    2) Walking back to Grandma snd Granddad’s farm after George headed home I was pleased to
    see Angus McEchern passing  by with his red half ton. “Watch this, Eric!”  I raised the gun
    and  took one shot at the back window of the truck.  Angus put on the brakes. Got out.
    Looked at the little round hole in his window.   He did not say a word.

    How could I be so stupid?   The amazing part was that I was forgiven.  Some of the 
    talk on the line  must have gone like this,  “Did  you hear what that city boy Skeoch
    did on Christmas Day.  City people  don’t know any better, they live in a jungle.”

    That night, when we caught the Gray Coach Bus back to Toronto the BB gun
    met its demise.  Smashed  against our Manitoba Maple.

    Eric came out of the adventure as pure  and honest as the driven  snow.
    …with a little red mark on his bum.   I had to do a lot of apologizing
    …but I was forgiven.   Dad?  No one snitched on him.   Payment?
    I think mom put up the rest of the money owed on the gun.

    alan skeoch
    Sept/   2020






  • VIOLENCE THEME: SHORT PERIOD OF PURE TERROR AT 120 MPH

    EPISODE 121    SHORT PERIOD OF PURE TERROR AT 120 MPH


    (120 mph is a guesstimate)

    alan skeoch
    Sept. 2020

    BELOW are three 1954 pictures of the Oldsmobile 88.  The first picture was included
    because of the girl.   Sexy.   Bill’s Olds 88 was black as I remember.












    Bill Mashtalar was the biggest boy in our Grade 8 class picture.  I never knew him
    really well but did consider him one of my friends.  His parents were Polish and
    lived in a grand home a few blocks away.  They must have had good jobs
    because the bought a big brand new Oldsmobile 88 about the time Bill and
    I were in Grade Eleven.

    “Alan, do you want to go for a ride?”
    ‘In your new car?”
    “Of course, just got my licence…we could go down
    to High Park and see what’s happening at night.”
    “How?”
    “The Oldsmobile has a search light on it…we can sneak up on
    lovers and catch them in the sudden beam…should be fun.”
    “Dangerous?”
    “Nah!  They’ll think we’re cops.”

    Now the idea did not particularly appeal to me at the time
    but I was reticent to refuse since this was a big moment for
    Bill…getting his licence and all.   So away we went in the
    darkness of a fall evening.  Maybe ten o’clock.  About the
    right time for sexual activity to be at a peak.

    Bill drove slowly.  Low beams.  Until he spotted a car
    pulled off the roadway in High Park.  Well off the roadway
    and therefore a likely candidate for the spotlight beam.

    Bill slowed down, switched off his low beams…crept up to
    where the target had left the road and then BOOM…
    on came the hand held searchlight…soon focused
    on the suspect.

    Not lovers.  A bunch of guys drinking.

    “What the fuck!  You bastards!”…A string of solid obscenities
    direct our way.
    These guys did not think we were cops.
    “Quick, let’s get the bastards!”…and  four or five guys leapt
    into their car and slammed it into reverse.

    They wanted to get us…and it was our fault.  If caught,
    the result would not be pretty.

    The chase was on.  Bill switched on the lights and
    accelerated as much as was possible on the High
    Park road. Down by Howard  House with its cannon aimed
    out at imaginary invaders.  Hard right turn onto the Queensway
    then a left fn right onto Lakeshore.


    The QEW was open at night…clear running…and the Olds 88 was opened up full throttle.  This pictures shows
    the QEW at rush hour in 1954.   



    “We’ll get on the QEW.  Speed up…”
    “They are right behind us.”
    “Pray we have green lights to the QEW…we cannot stop.”

    We were lucky…all green.  We sped up he QEW ramp…accelerating.
    No traffic.  “Where are they now?”
    “Right behind us…catching up.”
    “I’ll open her up…”   Speeding…90…100…110…heading
    for 120 mph.  Fast and getting faster.

    “Where are they now?”
    “Dropping back…Lucky we have this Olds.”
    “Where will we go?”
    “Beyond Highway 27…maybe as far as Highway 10, Port Credit.”

    “How will we get home?”
    “Slow…Lakeshoe Road and side streets “
    “Maybe up to Bloor…then home.”

    Tail between our legs…
    We got home.  Exhausted.  Not much to say to each
    other.  Really embarrassed and lucky.

    So I have always had a softs spot for those Oldsmobile’s…88’s
    and 98’s.  

    Now long gone.

    alan skeoch
    Sept. 2020

    P.S. There were others in the car but I cannot remember who
    they were.  We were all shaken.  We were not fighters.




  • EPISODE 120 VIOLENCE THEME: SOMEONE WANTED TO BEAT THE SHIT OUT OF ME. WHY? REMAINS A MYSTERY

    EPISODE 120   VIOLENCE THEME:     SOMEONE WANTED TO BEAT THE SHIT OUT OF ME.  WHY?  REMAINS A MYSTERY 


    VIOLENCE:  CAN FRIENDS BECOME ENEMIES?


    OUR Graduation class from Runnymede Public School in 1952.   Wow, were the girls every pretty.  I began to notice them
    in Grade 6 which may have been a little early.  See Joan McReynolds (third left). I liked her but never said so or even acted
    interested.  I am third right, back row. That’s our grade 8 teacher, Mr. Hambly, who invited us all to his home
    on a beautiful June afternoon.   Some of us felt a little guilty about firing paper caps into his prize wasp nest when his
    back was turned.  He was a very nice person.   The big guy is Bill Mashtalar (story coming…close call violence years 
    later).

    My student ID card from 1954…it was three years  earlier that the threats came.   Why would anyone want to beat me up?
    Should I go to WESTERN Tech or just pretend the threat never came?



    My three years at Runnymede  Public school were happy years.  Grades 6,7 and 8. Non-violent years
    except
    for the trick jump into Roger Pughs back yard. But that only worked  once.  When we 
    did a vault over the board fence there was a drop of eight or nine feet that we could
    not see.  Nasty drop.  Fun to persuade a novice to “:Follow us”.Good joke.  Unprepared
    follower went into a free fall with no parachute.  We knew the trick and  landed on our
    feet. Potentially violent I suppose.

    My first few months  at Humberside Collegiate were not great.  Culminated in
    a potentially violent fight that I was destined to lose.  Someone knew my locker
    number.  One day my text books were loaded with indelible ink obscenities like
    “Fuck Off” “Asshole”, etc.  I was devastated because I did not know I was hated
    by someone until that moment.  The only person knowing my combination lock number was one of my
    good friends.  We shared the locker.   He was the only possible source.  Why would he do that?  Later that week
    there was a scribbled note in my shared locker. “Come  over to Western Tech
    after school.  Someone wants to fight you.”  I know this note does not sound like
    much of  a threat but put yourself in the shoes of a non violent kid, in a brand new 
    school, suddenly confronting anonymous enemies that wanted to beat the shit out
    of him for no discernible reason.   I still do not know who hated me that much.
    Nor why.
    That’s a laugh.  But it will affect your lungs…left unsaid.


    It was  possible the cigarette incident triggered the hatred.  But that is a  stretch.
    The First week at Humberside I walked to school with Bill Rankin and Bob Taylor.
    Friends.  They stopped at the Ravine Gardens hockey rink to light up cigarettes
    before school.  “Try it, Alan…get some cigarettes”  So  I stole three Craven A
    cigarettes from Fran’s pack at Hertell’s drug store where I was a clerk earning
    35 cents an hour.  Fran would not care but I did not want anyone to know i was
    starting to smoke.  So next day I lit up the Craven A with Bob and Bill.  I remember
    the moment so  clearly.  As I dragged the smoke in my lungs I thought, “What the
    hell am I doing this for?”  And I threw away the cigarette then gave my extra 
    stollen cigarettes to Bob and Bill.  We did  not share much after that.  They both
    left high school in Grade Ten.  Our friendship evaporated with the smoke.
    Maybe Bill resented me for some reason.  He was also my locker partner.

    Did I go over to Wetsern Tech to get the shit beaten out of me?  Get serious.
    I stayed put.  Never found out who had been ticketed to beat the shit out
    of me  but suspected several erstwhile friends.  Maybe not Bill as he said
    he others knew our combination.  Odd Comment though. There was no follow up to the threat.
    And I began looking for new friends.  Found them.  Russ Vanstone,
    Gord Sanford and Jim  Romaniuk.   Friends for life.  

    alan skeoch
    Sept. 2020

  • EPISODE 119 PORCUPINE AND LAST SHOT OF THE 22 CALIBRE RIFLE

    EPISODES 119  PORCUPINE AND LAST SHOT OF THE 22 CALIBRE RIFLE.

    alan skeoch
    Sept 2020
    I know this is a summertime picture.  Imagine no leaves and an icy day in
    midwinter.


    The older I got the more guns I saw. Especially on visits to the farm.
    It seemed every teen ager used guns and  loved hunting just for
    the thrill of the kill.  Groundhogs were the most common  target because
    there were so many digging up farm fields. Now there are hardly any.  None
    on our farm.  None on the fields of the fifth line.  In  1950 they were as common
    as hen’s teeth and therefore worth killing it seemed.   

    Porcpines, however, were rare.  And I thought they were protected. i.e. not to
    be shot.

    One winter  day, however, I ran breathlessly back to my Grandparents farm house.
    “Granddad there’s a porcupine in the big pine deep in the back swamp.”
    His response startled and unsettled me.  “Wait until I get the gun. Then we
    will go back to the bush and get him.”   I did not want to do that.  I loved
    the discovery of a live creature high in a tree.   

    Granddad was old by then and  had to walk with help of a crutch.  He did
    not get out of the farm house much in the winter unless they needed firewood
    from the pile back near the pump.  So this was exciting for him.  Not for me.
    We hobbled our way to the back bush.   I hoped the porcupine had moved off
    but it was still there.  High up.  “Have you used a rifle before, Alan?”
    “No.”  “Well this is a chance to learn…aim and shoot.” (22 calibre  single shot rifle)
    I aimed and deliberately missed a couple of shots.  Granddad would not give 
    up so my third sot was a killer shot.  “You hit him…but he’s not dead…you will
    have to climb the tree to get him down.”




    What an ordeal.  I climbed the tree easily but as I got close to the porcupine
    blood began dripping onto me.  Felt terrible.  With a stick I tried to knock him
    out of the tree but no luck.  Some Porcupine quills fell on me as well as the blood.
    No luck.  Left him there and we hobbled back through the snow
    to the farm house.  Defeated.  I think he was disappointed in me.  

    The next week there was word goiing up and down the farm line about dogs
    getting into tussles with porcupines.   Quills stuck in their muzzles.   Both Granddad
    and I kept our mouths shut.  This was no doubt my porcupine who finally died
    in the tree and  fell to the ground.   I felt a lot of guilt.

    After granddad  died the 22 rifle was  part of  our inheritance.  Mom hid it.
    When she died the rifle was supposed to go to our boys, Kevin and Andrew. 
    Instead  Marjorie insisted we give it to the OPP for destruction.  End  of the rifle

  • EPISODE 118 VIOLENCE IN MY LIFE, PART TWO. THE KILLING FLOOR

    Note:  Another warning…do not read if sensitive like I was (and am)


    EPISODE 118   VIOLENCE IN MY LIFE, PART TWO:   THE KILLING FLOOR


    alan skeoch
    Sept 2020

    My brother Eric with old Betsy, our shared woman’s bicycle…taken just before we moved
    from 18 Sylvan Avenue



    Mom really feared my brother and  I would be drawn into the mini gang climate
    of Dufferin Park in the late 1940’s.   We, my brother Eric and I, knew that was very
    unlikely.   We lived in our own world of make believe and found that very satisfying.
    Especially when we found the barrels.  

    Some importer on Dufferin Street was shipped his goods from the far east in huge 
    hand made wooden barrels  with wooden hoops.  Once emptied they were free for
    the taking so we rolled several…two or three..across  the park to the tin clad garage
    at the back of our rented flat at 18 Sylvan Avenue.  Our landlady, Mrs. Southwick, did
    not seem to care that we were creating a make believe world in that garage.

    We set the barrels up vertically then cut holes in the sides so that a one room barrel
    hideout became a three room barrel hideout.  Inside we put treasures found nearby
    like the wooden parts of old pianos from the piano factory or, better still, the so called
    weapons of gang warfare…pipes, knives, clubs.   Two throwaway items were not
    collected.  Used safes, by then  we knew what they were.  And broken beer bottles with’
    long necks.  These beer bottles with long shard necks for hand grips and  shards of
    lethal glass ready  for action.  An easy weapon.  just smash a long necked beer bottle
    on a rock.  Presto!  A weapon.  

    As mentioned earlier I knew this weapon intimately having fallen on one that
    had been discarded in the park when Eric, mom and  I were playing Blind Man’s
    Bluff.  I still have the stitched up scar on my instep to prove it.

    Our fort was grand until discovered by boys of  a rougher nature.  First some 
    took a shit in the fort.  Then they braced us once just outside the fort as mentioned
    in Part One of this story.   Remember  The incident when I learned my brother
    could  be very brave when faced with trouble. That incident was so disgusting that
    I will say no more other than to give Eric credit.

    Mom decided we must move.  Neither Eric, Dad nor I wanted to move.  We had the huge
    park  as our playground.  Dad had Dufferin racetrack across the road.  Convenient
    for the three of us.  But mom did not like what was happening. And she was the
    leader of our family  The supporter most of the time.  The money earner.   Dad 
    was a skilled and  well paid  tire builder but he spent every dime he earned at various
    racetracks.  

    One day mom’s friend Joyce
    Bannon phoned.

    “Elsie, the house next door just came up for sale.  It is cheap…$6,000…might
    be just what you wanted.”  Low downpayment.  So we  became house owners.  The house was ours.  We lived
    upstairs …3 rooms and a tiny kitchen.  Eric and I shared the bedroom with Dad
    when he was on night shift…we slept at night, dad slept on days.  Mom slept
    on the couch in the middle room with her purse as a pillow to inhibit Dad’s need
    for cash at the racetrack.  Imagine, or own house.  A duplex of sorts.

    Mr. and Mrs Douglas lived downstairs.  He was a bartender at Spadina and Bloor.
    She was a retired prostitute according to whispers.  Wonderful pair of people.
    Mrs.  Douglas loved having boys around since she never had any children. They
    were quite poor.  Chain smokers because when they died  the walls of the little
    duplex were a sticky sickly yellowish brown.  Awful. But good people.

    So mom bought 455 Annette Street by putting a small down payment and monthly
    mortgage payments of perhaps $100,   I do not know how she did it on the money
    earned as a garment sweatshop worker.  She was smart. That’s for sure.

    HALCYON DAYS…NEW HOUSE

    For Eric  and I these months and years at our own home were our halcyon years.
    Yes, we joined or formed a gang.  We patrolled the streets of our territory
    down Gilmour Avenue to Runnymede Public School.  A gang!  Did I say
    a gang?  We were a bunch of pansies.   Instead of fighting we sang.  What a 
    bunch  of losers.  A gang that sang.   “Heart of  My Heart,  Lazy River, etc.”
    Not a minute of violence.   

    I suspect readers would rather hear about violence rather than sweetness and light.
    So suffice it to say we had good things happen to us most of the time at our
    new home.  Cub scouts, Boy Scouts, Rover Scouts, Presbyterian Youth, even
    a short stint in a choir for me.  A longer stint for Eric whose voice must have been
    more angelic.  All that and  more.

    THEN ONE VERY DARK DAY :  VIOLENCE ON THE KILLING FLOOR

    STOP READING HERE…IF YOU ARE SENSITIVE





    Violence came though.  From a most unexpected source.  So violent that it was
    almost wiped out of my memory until I began writing this story.

    The  worst violence came from a kind of  do gooder from the YMCA.  Mom registered
    me with the High Park summer outdoor program in the summer of 1950.  Seemed OK but not
    great.  I could put up with it.  Until..until…until…the horror day arrived.   My do gooder
    leader, probably just a teen ager, ran out of things to do with his assigned boys
    so he got imaginative.

    “How would you like to go on a field trip to the slaughter house?”
    “Where?”
    “St. Clair and  Keele…Canada  Packers.”
    “Raise your hands if you would like to go.”
    (Hands must have been raised…not mine…I did not like the word ‘slaughter’
    and was confused by the word ‘packers’.  What is an abattoir? All the other boys were excited 
    by the idea.   Yes,  I mean all.  So away we went.)

    Right away we were led to the gallery above the cattle killing floor.  High up
    so we could see the whole process.
    If I had been hit by  a ten ton truck I think I would have been more shocked.

    “The cattle are led up the ramp by a Judas goat. See it there.”  (seems the 
    traitorous creature was a goat in my memory but it could have been a cow.)

    “The lead cattle are stunned by a bolt action hammer…breaks their skulls…maybe
    kills them.  Then a chain is wrapped  around their back feet and up they go on
    the moving line.  First the throats  are cut that’s why the killing floor is covered
    in blood…the twitching is just nerves, the animals are dead…”

    I was so horrified by what I saw  that this is the first time in my life I have ever
    spoken or written about it.   I am not sure readers could take the full story.  I
    moved to the back of the boys. Most of them crowded along the rail actually
    enjoying what they were seeing.  Perhaps some were faking.   I hope some 
    were faking.  It was hell.  I knew  at that moment what hell must look like even
    though I did not believe in hell.  

    I could not move.  Closed my eyes.  Behaved  like a pansy I suppose.  Would
    we ever leave this insane place?

    Who are those men with the long knives on the killing floor?  I mean who would
    take such  a job?  (There is an easy answer to that.  Most we’re New Canadians…immigrants)

    Men Sloshing through the blood. ..cutting, carving.  Will it never end.  Must i keep
    my eyes open?

    “Next we will go to the hog slaughter floor.  that is  done a little differently. Follow
    me.”

    “Did our councillor say ‘Next’?  What could be worse than what I am seeing
    below me.  Stop! Now! I must close my eyes….must get out of here…
    run, Alan, run…”


    I am  not sure how I escaped.  I never got to the hog killing horror.  Somehow I
    got out of the place.  Exit signs ,,, fear of a wrong turn. Somehow  I walked home.  Stunned. Trying to block  out
    what I had just seen.  I sm shaking now, in September 2020, just recalling that
    moment in 1950.

    Ever since that moment I have had trouble eating meat.  In The immediate aftermath
    I  ate no meat.  For months and months.  I never told mom much  about what
    I had  seen.  Not sure I even told  Eric.  That was a horror I have saved for my
    82nd  year…2020.  And even now I cannot tell the full story of those cattle moving
    along the chain hung from giant hooks as their bodies  were dismembered.  There
    I said  it.  At last.


    There has never  been violence in my life that comes near in comparison  to the
    St. Clair slaughter house…Canada Packers or Swift’s … not sure which.
    In later years I came to understand  why one farm family I knew ate lots of peanut
    butter and no meat.  They knew what happens to their animals eventually.  Or 
    maybe they just liked peanut butter as  I did from that moment on.

    Mom’s meals were  often things I would rather not think about like pork hocks and
    Head Cheese.  The names disguised the food somewhat.  Mom did not have
    a lot of money so she made do with cheaper lines of  meat.  I must have saved
    her some money when I  stopped eating meat.  

    Stopping was not so easy.  Meat was a staple…part of most meals and
    sometimes hard to resist.  I loved meat pies for instance even though
    a look at the contents below the crust was disquieting.  Chunks of meat…perhaps
    not the nicest cuts.   



    Time was a great cure.  It was  possible to relegate the memory of that killing floor
    to the back burner of my brain.  The older I got the less I thought about it.
    This is the first time I have put in words that horrible experience.  Even now
    that is not an easy thing to do.   I have spared my  readers by not going into
    the detail of what I saw with those long knives.



    Gutless, some of you are saying no doubt.  And it was true.  I was gutless…scared…and  scarred for life.

    alan skeoch
    Sept 2020

    P>S>  When Dad retired he took a short job st the St. Claire stock yards organizing the cattle unloaded  daily from farm
    stock yard truck, one of which was driven by Bob Root’s father strangely enough.  Dad’ stock yard
    job did not last long.  He had to climb s stock yard pen fast when an animal went mad and charged him.
    He got another part time job in a liquor store afterwards.

    My good friend  in High school, Jim Romaniuk, had a father who spoke only broken English and fluent Ukrainian.  He worked in one of
    the slaughter house at St. Clair and Keele, perhaps on the killing floor although I doubt it as he was such a gentle kind of msn.  Then
    again he had trouble with English and had to take whatever jobs he could find.



    P.SThe stock yards peaked in 1977 and began a rapid decline thereafter until it closed February 10, 1994. Redevelopment began with Home Depot, the first of the “big box” stores to locate on the stock yards site and the CPR shops. A new stock yard was established near Cookstown a small community north of Toronto without any rail service which was no longer required. Following a corporate takeover, Canada Packers closed, the property was levelled and eventually redeveloped with housing. (D/R Macdonald, The Stockyard  Story)


    COMING EPISODE 119  VIOLENCE IN MY LIFE, PART 3   WHEN FRIENDS BECOME ENEMIES

    EPISODE 120  VIOLENCE IN MY LIFE, PART 4    FOOTBALL CHANGED EVERYTHING