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Showing posts with label Toronto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toronto. Show all posts

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Pride Toronto Redux

Pride Toronto hasn't even begun accepting applications to march in this year's parade, but already last year's controversy is back in the news.
Queers Against Israeli Apartheid is pulling out of Toronto’s annual Pride Parade in what the activist group called a “challenge” to mayor Rob Ford, who had threatened to cut the city’s funding to the parade because of the group’s continued participation. The Ford administration’s response? Prove the group is out, and we’ll provide funding. Mr. Ford and his allies on council had said they would cut Pride’s funding altogether if Queers Against Israeli Apartheid takes part. The group’s vocal opposition to Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories has elicited accusations of anti-Semitism, but some advocates argued the reluctance to fund Pride had more to do with the mayor’s stance toward a flamboyant gay and lesbian event. Pride relies on the city for about a quarter of its budget. Last year, the city gave the parade a $123,807 grant and $245,000 worth of services, such as litter cleanup and policing.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

St. Patrick's Day Parade...San Francisco celebrates! Saturday March 12th!




 






On Saturday, March 12th, the annual St. Patrick's Day celebrations kick off in downtown San Francisco.

Mike Moriarty takes on the duties of Grand Marshall for the much-anticipated parade which starts at 2nd Street at 11:30 a.m. and heads up Market Street to the Civic Plaza.

The theme this year is "Giving Back."

Revellers will join in and participate in "all things" Irish.

For starters, there will be a fine array of Irish dishes and children's rides to keep the blues at bay.

My father was a fiddler who once played with legendary Don Messer in Toronto (Canada).

For years, my dad played up a storm - with a twinkle in his eye - with the Jolly Millers (his band) who played in Hogs Hollow (a few decades ago!).

So, I am of Irish decent.

Consequently, I'll be trotting down to the festivities to get heartily involved.

At a minimum, I'll be chug-a-lugging a mug of green ale or two!

See 'ya there!

http://www.thetattler.biz




Old posters collector's items!

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Internet...intriguing ghosts from the past! Touching someone!






Heady days at Rochdale College!



Today, I am once again swept away by the remarkable mysteries of life, and - most certainly - the potent reach of the Internet!

For instance, earlier today, a curious e-mail arrived from across the miles from an individual I met by chance over forty years ago in Toronto (my hometown).

A young woman - by the name of Jennifer - zipped off the communication to determine if I was "Don" - who used to reside in an ashram suite at Rochdale College in 1968 (an experimental communal-living unit at the free school) - which was all decorated in black (and featured in TIME magazine that year).

In a previous post, I mentioned my heady days at the free college, in the turbulent sixties!

Post: 10/26/2008

http://forgusbeylan.blogspot.com/2008/10/blogginginternet-opens-door-to-past.html

So, I expect that by way of a precise search on GOOGLE, the lass was able to locate me years later, as I vacation here in San Francisco (and work on a new series of paintings).

In response, I composed a quick note to inform the acquaintance from the past  - that yes, indeed - I was the individual she was seeking from the ghostly (but memorable) days of her youth.

My birth name was "Donald", but years later - after I was separated from my family - I legally changed my name to Julian Ayrs (and - subsequently - my destiny was set on another path, too!).

Just now, I received a delightful e-mail back, in which Jennifer fondly recalled that I was kind-of-like a Pied-Piper who delighted folks way back then (when I was a free spirit and danced in the streets of downtown Toronto).

Whew!

That's over four decades ago!

But, what touched me most, were the kind sentiments expressed therein.

Gosh, it's such a compliment to remembered so fondly over the years, and still be in the heart and mind of a innocent young girl, who was a mere eight years old when our paths originally first crossed!

Life is sweet, eh?

And, I count my blessings, for that!

http://www.thetattler.biz




Unknown Student
(Rochdale College on Bloor St. in Toronto)

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Justin Bieber...Happy Birthday! Sweet 17 Pop Icon dating Selena Gomez!







Amidst the brouhaha of his 17th birthday, Justin Bieber has cranked up the frenzy a tad, with the official announcement that his heart is going pitter-patter over a gal pal.

Uh-huh!

The flavor of the month - with the raging hormones - is dating cutie Selena Gomez!

Tongues of gossips at the tabloid rags have been wagging that it's old news; after all, they caught the pretty twosome weeks ago in passionate clinches (spied pecks on the cheek, too) now-and-then on the fly on the high-profile celebrity circuit.

OMG!

I vividly recall when I was 17!

Way back in the 60's - in my heady trippy-hippie daze - I got busted for dancing on a police car in the downtown streets of Toronto!

Post:  12/26/10

http://forgusbeylan.blogspot.com/2010/12/hairmemories-of-gerome-ragni-rock.html

So, my advice to the "Bieb"?

Kick up your heels and par-tay hearty (fellow Canuck) dude!

http://www.thetattler.biz




Justin & his musical mentor!

Monday, December 13, 2010

Memories of Humberside High (Toronto)...by Julian Ayrs!






I like to stroll along the sidewalk after school

  Step on the Crack!
  Break your mother's back!

The gleaming cars streaming by
Side-stepping slow-poke pedestrians dawdling on the street
The real lived-in faces!
And, the never-ending buzz of the frenetic city

Thirty times!

I will not chew gum in class
I will not chew gum in class
I will not chew gum in class


Julian Ayrs
Memories of Humberside High
West End
(Toronto)


*High Park

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Barbara Billingsley...death rustled up sad memories of foster homes!





Pop TV Sitcom "Leave it to Beaver"





The death of Barbara Billingsley - who tenderly (and expertly) breathed life into a role that personified middle America’s romantic image of the ideal mother - triggered a flood of emotions over the weekend that were difficult to quell.

If you were raised in the fifties - and resided in a suburb in the Unites States or Canada - like moi! - you probably flopped down in the family room after school to catch the hilarious antics of “Beaver” (played by child star Jerry Mathers).

And, in a pivotal moment in any one of the weekly storyline on "Leave it to Beaver",  viewers may have been touched by the worldly-wise motherly advice Mrs. Cleaver may have offered up on the heels of rescuing the lovable lug from the jaws of tragedy for one reason or another.

The “Cleavers” - and the make-believe world they inhabited - best represented the American dream (which consisted of a two-child family unit, a cozy bungalow replete with picket fence, and late-model car in the garage) and the country’s longing to attain it.

For me - the notion was a surreal and precarious one - that often caused me to cry myself to sleep at night.

In retrospect, when I look back and reflect on my childhood, it’s easy to understand why.

Every day, I walked an emotional tightrope between reality and illusion, as I struggled to perpetuate a charade that the Children’s Aid Society foisted on me.

On the surface, it appeared to all-the-world - school friends, teachers, and other residents in the suburbs of Toronto that I crossed paths with - that I was just a normal kid born into the privileged middle class.

Unfortunately, nothing could be farther from the truth.

In fact, I was a ward of the State, taking shelter in foster homes from the first day I was snatched away from my mother’s care (age 7) ‘til I became a legal adult on my own (age 18).

When my father (an Irish fiddler who played with the “Jolly Rogers” in Hogs Hollow) passed away to spirit unexpectedly, my mother was left in a lurch, and unable to take care of the seven children (I was born last) left behind.

Unfortunately, I was too old for adoption, so I ended up in a handful of foster homes until I became a teenager able to survive on my own.

Although the agency took a lot of care in placing me, occasionally a parental situation would turn out to be a nightmare, and I would summarily be relocated into a new family situation.

Part of the problem?

The individuals who signed up for the task of parenting were opening their doors - not because they were kind-hearted people inclined to offer up a home to a needy child - but because of the financial perks involved.

In one scenario, my foster father was out-of-work due to a serious illness, and I was a simply a meal ticket.

Over time, Mr. Collett built up a resentment towards me which finally exploded in a ball of fury one day.

As I sat on the couch one afternoon, the former carpenter (who once worked for Disney), suddenly jumped up and started to punch me on the head.

“Listen to me when I’m talking to you,” he angrily shouted at the top of his lungs, as his wife dashed in from the kitchen screaming.

“Willard, stop!  Stop it,” she begged.

For starters, I wasn’t aware that I was allegedly ignoring the man.

If anything, I was probably hanging my head to hide the fact I was shedding a tear or two.

Believe it or not, that was the only occasion in my entire life, that a father “figure” ever mistreated me.

Needless to say, when my social worker became aware of the incident, I was on the move once again.

Thankfully, I ended up in the home of Ruth Fowler and her husband Harry, in one of the best family settings of my entire youth.

As I explained to Mrs. Fowler years later, she was the best mother I ever had.

Why?

Because she allowed me to be myself, and explore my creative side, among other things.

Also, for the first time in my life, I was also allowed to invite friends over to the house at 7 West Hill Drive (West Hill) to celebrate a birthday one year with cake, soft drinks, and party games!

Instead of being forced to wear hand-me-downs that Mrs. Collett rustled up from friends with boys my age, Mrs. Fowler took me shopping for new clothes at the start of school in September.

I vividly recall nervously asking Mrs. Fowler if I could have a trendy jacket that caught my eye - expecting a resounding “no” - to follow the meek request.

Surprise!

The fiery redhead responded in her own thoughtful way as usual.

“Of course. You’re the one that’s wearing it, dear, not me.”

You can image the rush of relief - and joy - that rippled through my being that day.

At long last, I was being treated like a person,and  not an intrusion on someone’s life.

I am overcome with emotion now as the memories rise up - and overwhelm me as I look back - in anger?

Not quite.

Somewhere along the line, I managed to develop an optimistic side.

Only God knows how!

Instead of lamenting about the downside of my plight - being an unwanted foster child hungering for love and tenderness - I’ve tried to be philosophical about the troubled experiences that often float up unexpectedly out-of-the-blue and continue to haunt me to this day.

For example, I joke to friends who were unhappy with their parents, that I was lucky being a foster child.

“If a home didn’t work out - and I didn’t get along with my foster parents - the social workers would try to place me in a better family situation,” I uttered up with a shrug.

Then, I would underscore the obvious.

If an individual was unhappy with their home  (or didn’t savor their relationship with their parents) tough ti**y.

Of course, over the years, I have often wondered what I would be like today, if I had of been left in the charge of my mother.

I probably wouldn’t have been scarred emotionally, or become alienated, always feeling like an outsider in life.

In the final analysis, I’ve learned, there is no substitute for a mother’s love.