Alan Skeoch

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  • EPISODE 1003 bkacksmith workbench

    EPIEODE 1003    bkacksmith workbench


    alan skeoch
    January 7, 2024

    IT has been 38 days that I have been tiotally housebound due to knee surgery.  Today we made a brief escape to photograph a few of our blacksmith items for  set dresser, Jacklynn Shoub.

    A dark grim day,  




    January 7, 2024
  • EPISODE 1002 SHORT VERSION OF EMERGENCY WARD “DELICATE ADVICE”

    EPISODE  1002   SHORT VERSION OF EMERGENCY WARD “DELICATE ADVICE”


    alan skeoch
    January 4, 2024





     “PANIC! MARJORIE WE NEED TO GOT TOTHE HOSPITAL, THE
    ;KNEE IS SWELLING UP”  

    1) Arrived at hospital at 4 a.m. Friday 
    December 29, 2023.   

    2)  Doctor arrived 7.30 a.m.  “Infected, must be opened
    up and cleansed, New dressing….must act fast.”

    3 Sinking feeling…infection  My brain reeled,  To reopen my knee?New Years weekend.

    4)  “Not here…go now to hospital that did original surgery “

    5) Centre of Toronto.  But we did it.   Emergency assessment by another
    doctor. “We do not think it is infected,” moment of gasping relief did not last long

    6) “You have a blood clot,   very dangerous’’’

    7  what does that mean?  “33 To 66 days under hospital care.  Very delicate,,danger that clot goes to heart,  blocks passage of blood.”

    8_) “Ultatsound  technicians are shared by 3 hospitals,,,hard to book 
    Christmas week but we will try?   could be 6 to 8 hour wait time.” ultrasound done
    as technician happened to be in building,..luck

    9) Emergency ward filling beyond capacity,  Standing  room only.  A lot of desperate people included 6 police escorting a tall man who ws cuffed.   We waited and waited,

    10   Time was a blurr. until  Saturday night when a doctor said my name
    and led me to a cubicle.  Dark, Feeling of impending doom.
    THEN
     “Mr. Skeoch there’s no sign of infection nor is there 
    evidence of  blood clot.  You are free to gol”

    11) “Can I shake your hand doctor?”

    12)  I wonder if any reader of this sequence will ever understand how
    it feels to have
    the Sword of Damocles hung over our heads for those three days.

    13)  All in all I remain confident that our Emergency Rooms are amazing…
    but we were beat,,,three judgments were made,,,the third was best,
    The swelling of the knee joint went down slightly

    alan and marjorie skeoch
    January 4m 2024

    postscript: 

    afterDec. 12 surgery… For ten days our son Andrew plunged blood thinner into
    my stomach with a syringe.
    why? To avoid blood clots
    January 4, 2024
  • special note re episode 999note: It was not the blood thinner that caused the problem.

    I hope readers do not conclude the blood thinner was a problem. It was not. I was proud of Andrew for offering to do the injections of the thinner.
    alan

    December 25, 2023
  • EPISODE 999

    EPISODE 999: ALAN SKEOCH EXPLAINS HIS ABSENCE
    alan skeoch Dec. 25, 2023
    Surgery. What went wrong?
    KNEE SURGARY Simply put my body did not like one of the drugs and told me so violently. The result set me back for a few weeks while I expected only a few days. The therapy will continue.
    I have stories ready when I feel better.
    alan skeoch
    P.S. “One of you must plunge this blood thinner into Alan’s stomach each day for ten days … that will reduce the chance of blood clots. Here are ten syringes with the syrum. Who will do the job?” “I will,” said son Andrew.

    December 25, 2023
  • EPISODE 926 SUMMER 1959 PART 5 “VESPER INCANTATO PEREGRINAM VIDES” (SOME ENCHANTED EVENING, YOU WILL MEET A STRANGER)

    EPISODE 926    SUMMER OF 1959:   “VESPER INCANTATO PEREGRINAM VIDES” (SOME ENCHANTED EVENING, YOU WILL MEET A STRANGER)


    alan skeoch
    Dec. 7,2023



    Our love affair …on an “enchanted evening” at a dance “across a crowded room”, I met a “stranger” and 
    “never let her go”.


    Some enchanted evening
    You may see a stranger,
    you may see a stranger
    Across a crowded room
    And somehow you know,
    You know even then
    That somewhere you’ll see her
    Again and again.

    Some enchanted evening
    Someone may be laughin’,
    You may hear her laughin’
    Across a crowded room
    And night after night,
    As strange as it seems
    The sound of her laughter
    Will sing in your dreams.

    Who can explain it?
    Who can tell you why?
    Fools give you reasons,
    Wise men never try.

    Some enchanted evening
    When you find your true love,
    When you feel her call you
    Across a crowded room,
    Then fly to her side,
    And make her your own
    For all through your life you
    May dream all alone.

    Once you have found her,
    Never let her go.
    Once you have found her,
    Never let her go! 

    Love at first sight sounds a little over dramatic but elements were true in my case.  Russ, Jim and I Were singles at a
    Victoria College,  U. of T. dance.
    Sophmores…second  year men …inflated egos  perhaps.  I saw her right away.  “across a crowded room”

    “Jim. that girl looks nice.”
    “Right,” and Jim darted across the dance floor and danced with her then returned
    “Jim, you did not give me a chance. I spotted her.”
    “She is nice, Alan, really nice.  Your turn is now.”

    And we danced.  The evening suddenly become enchanting.  We danced slow to something like “My Prayer”, cheek to cheek”
    and frantic to any lyric by Elvis Pressly”.   And the dance ended.  The crowd dispersed.   She headed for her residence and 
    we caught the bus to western edge of Toronto.  I did not even catch her name.  

    Latin was not my best subject but one fragment got into te the long term storage compartment of my brain. “Vesper Incantato,
    peregrines vides,” … “Some Enchjanted evening, you will meet a stranger”…across a crowded room.  The hit song from
    Rodgers and Hamerstein’s South Pacific.   Our Latin teacher loved to sing i to us in Latin.

    That is how it happened.  But who was she?

    Next afternoon at football practice our team was doing excercises running around the trcak a few times.
    Lo snd behold, there she was leaning out a window of her residence.  Fourth floor.  I spotted her.

    “Hi, up there, what are you doing tonight?”
    “Nothing much”
    “Meet you at seven at Wymilwood” (coffee shop for Victoria College students)
    “OK”

    Her name is (was) Marjorie Hughes,  freshwoman from North Bay, … a nice person for sure.  We clicked
    She became secretary for her 6T2 student executive.  A lot of people thought she was nice.  One boy
    even proposed marriage to her unknown to me.  She chose to take a chance on me.  Big risk. 

    We all have priorities in our lives.  My priorities changed in 1959 as a result of a speech given to
    Humberside graduate by th Dean of Women from University of Guelph. 

     “What is most important to you as graduates?” She paused.  “I suspect you have high goals….high careers in mind.”
    Let me give you a word of advice at this fork in the road of your life journey.”

    “The most important goal should be finding a person with whom you wish to spend the rest of your life.”
    Pause.  “Career is secondary.  Too few people are aware of this.   Your career might last for 30 or so years.  Your marriage, 
    should you be so lucky could last twice as long.   Be vigilant.”

    Number of my fellow graduate thought that was dumb speech.  They had clear careers in mind…doctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers, etc. etc.
    Personally I thought she was right.  I was looking for a wife.  University was secondary…no university was third .  Football was second.
       Adventure ss a geophysical explorer was new the top as well.  Until a geologist I worked with died and his body was flow from
    the bush in Chibougamau.  Suddenly this goal faded.

     But finding a person with whom
    to spend my life was the very top of my list.


    We soon got around to holding hands.

    Marjorie had come through a tough year in her life in 1955 when both her mom and her dad died.  She was
    a Grade 10 student at Lawrence Park Collegiate when all meaning her life had was shattered.
    ‘I went to school that morning dad died.   I was numb…walked back home. No one seemed to care.”



    Her mothers’ sister, Phyllis Morgan was a Latin tescher in faraway Norh Bay.  She became Marjorie’s guardian.
    A life changing event..  “All I owned was put in my suitcase when I took the bus to North Bay.  What wonderful
    years followed.   Chippewa High School.  Dances, Curling Team, Drama Club (I Was a witch), summer cottages, trips,
    friends..
    …life changed.

    Also a lot of boyfriends many of whom I met.  Nice guys.    
    she chose me


    My family was huge.  Marjorie became part of it.  Dad was unpredictable so much so that I never brought a girlfriend to 
    meet him until Marjorie. He fell in love with her immediately.  She liked horses and Dad had spent a lifetime at
    racetracks looking for the golden ring which  he never grasped.   He loved her so much
    that Marjorie could not breast feed our boys because Dad appeared at our house every spare moment.



    Marjorie became part of our family.  A big part.  She even spent  several summers as part of a  series
    of mining wildernes jobs one of which was at Paradise Lodge on the lonely Algomaa Central Railway stop
    72 (?) where she brought our cat, Presque Neige, and her electric machine which amused the crew
    as we had wolves howling for the cat at night and no electricity for the sewing machine.

    we had a very rich life ahead of us.  




    Love 

    December 8, 2023
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