I
hate goodbyes. They’re awkward. As an introvert, I fret over them
as I sense them approaching. Will there be a hug? Is this a handshake
moment instead or is that just weird? What do I say? Every word
matters...to me, at
least.
At larger gatherings, I try to slip out unnoticed. Don’t want to
interrupt the flow. Don’t want to call attention to myself. And
then
it all spirals back to that hug versus
handshake
thing.
So
maybe the timing of this one is a big mistake. It stretches back four
months and there’s another four to go. Goodbye, Vancouver. Goodbye
British Columbia.
I
suppose the first serious thoughts of leaving popped up in June or
July, back when I plummeted
into my most recent
round of deep
depression.
Mired
in wicked,
unrelenting
despair,
I knew
it wasn’t the
time
for
making big decisions.
I was struggling to make
it
through life
in
ten-minute
intervals,
fighting what felt
like
another
looming psych ward admission. Despite
all
the
fog,
what was clear
was that I wasn’t thriving here.
No
longer
working, I was becoming
more
isolated
when
the
whole
reason
I’d moved
back to the
city
after
a decade
in
a rural environment
was to become
more
connected.
Epic
failure.
That
“fool me
twice”
expression
came
to
mind. I’d left
Vancouver because
things
weren’t
working. Why had I thought things would be
different
the
second
time
around?
I always love my time in Ottawa. |
In
August, having
weathered
my internal
storm, I flew
to Ontario on an exploratory
mission. I’d narrowed
down my “next
stop” Canadian options to Ottawa and Toronto. Ottawa is prettier,
closer
to family, an hour from the
family
cottage
and
much more
familiar
to me.
Aside
from
a few
blips, I’ve
visited
the
city
every
year
of my life.
I’d
come
close
to
moving there
a
couple
of
times
in the
past.
I
really
didn’t know Toronto at all despite
living
my
first
thirteen
years
in nearby
Hamilton. Ottawa seemed
the
favorite,
Toronto
the
dark
horse.
And
yet,
after
an afternoon
back in Ottawa, I knew
it was too small.
I
knew
I’d often
feel
disappointed,
leaning
on my aunt and cousins. Their
social lives
are
well
established.
It’s one
thing
for them
to make
time
for
once-a-year
visits; it’s quite
different
being
around all the
time.
As
I still hold out a
shred
of
hope
for
falling in love
again,
I also knew
that the
gay
“community” always seemed
teeny
tiny. Yes,
it only takes
one
guy,
but I need
to at least
start with a fair-sized
pool.
Ottawa
was off the
list.
It's Toronto or bust. |
The
list
was no longer
a list. One
city.
No pressure,
Toronto.
My
first impression
was positive.
My
hotel
seemed
to be
on
the
edge
of
a sketchy
area
but, only a block away, things improved
significantly. I walked
for hours that first evening,
strolling down busy Queen
Street,
observing
how it took on a different
vibe
every
few
blocks, eventually
finding my way to Lake
Ontario.
It was clear
that the
city
lacked
the
shine
of
Vancouver or even
Ottawa but
what I liked
about Toronto
from
the
outset
was
the
international
feel.
I
like
the
bustle
of
big cities
and
this
place
felt
alive.
I spent
the
next
couple
of
days trying to be
cautious,
for once
looking
before
leaping.
Could I really
see
myself
living there?
In
a word: yes.
It was worth a try. This would be
where
I’d
try to restart
my life,
a
scary yet
exciting
prospect for a fifty-five-year-old
single
gay
guy who knows absolutely no one
in
the
city.
Still,
for a couple
of
reasons,
I didn’t just want to ghost Vancouver.
To
avoid mortgage
penalties,
it would be
best
to target
the
sale
of
my condo for April 1, 2020 but, more
than
that, I wanted
Vancouver and me
to
part on good terms.
We’d
had a rocky relationship.
A friend
of mine
who
loves
the
city
and says he’ll
never
leave
cringed
when
I described
Vancouver as hollow—pretty
exterior,
nothing inside.
Yeah,
harsh. I wanted
to spend
my final months enjoying
the
city’s
best.
In
some
ways,
I feel
like
that
guy who hangs around at a party after
everyone
has
left
and fails to take
a
hint when
the
host
slips into a unicorn onesie
and
a pair of bunny slippers.
You
still here?!
I
continue
to
run my favorite
routes
around Stanley
Park and along other
water-adjacent
paths. I bike
to
Deep
Cove,
to
a beach
area
near
the
airport
and uphill to the
University
of British Columbia. I even
did a 140-kilometer
round-trip bike
ride
past
my favorite
views
on
the
Sea
to Sky Highway
to Squamish. All
this is what lured
me
here
twenty-five
years
ago. There
are
worse
places
to fail.
I
also wanted
to use
the
city
as a base
to
fit in a
few
final weekend
road trips—Victoria, Tofino, Whistler,
Seattle,
Portland,
the
Oregon
Coast. I’m also trying to get
to some
of
my favorite restaurants
one
more
time.
That’s
a little
trickier
because
many
of them
are
vegan
and it always feels
like
I’m
putting my friends
through a traumatic ordeal
when
we
go
to one
(if
I can convince them
to go at all).
The
time
remaining
seems
too long, yet
I know it will wind down quickly, especially
with me
being
away
at least
a month for more
travel.
There
will
come
a point when
I’m not
so
much living in the
city
as leaving
it. Maybe
it’s
hit already.
Yesterday
I did my last workout at my gym. (My membership
was up for renewal
and they
offered
me
a monthly rate
three
times
what I pay on an annual basis to stay on four more
months.
Five
years
of business and the
sales
rep
kept
throwing in
extra
fees.
“You might as well
just pay for the
full
year,”
he
said.
Nonsense!)
The
day
before
I
had drinks with a guy I’d dated
for a while.
As
we
left,
he
said,
“See
you
soon.” In
my head,
it was goodbye.
We’re
casual
friends
now,
the
kind
for whom you need
six-month gaps just to have
enough
to talk about. (For
the
record,
I went
with a hug, not a handshake.)
My
condo doesn’t
feel
so much like
a
livable
space
anymore;
not
for me,
at
least.
It’s
transitioning into a sterile
environment.
Last
week
I had a couple
of
real
estate
agents
in and I picked
one
to
go with for listing the
property
after
the
holiday
season.
I’ve
parted
with forty shirts so far, stuffing them
in the
clothing
donation bin. I
awakened
in the
middle
of
the
night,
wondering
if I should fish out a Ted
Baker
piece,
one
that
I’d bought three
years
ago and only worn once.
Then
I envisioned
myself
on the
six
o’clock news:
Guy
Gets
Stuck in Clothing Bin.
Okay
then.
Goodbye,
Ted.
Just how many veggie hot dogs can I
eat in the next four months?!
|
There’s
still more
paring
down to do. I
have
a
vanity full of half-used
gels
and shampoos, all a testament
to my eternal
quest
for a product that will actually lead
to shiny, bouncy, fuller
hair.
(Why did I think it would be
a
good thing for my head
to smell
like
a
grapefruit?)
The
back
of my fridge
is
getting
sparse
as I’ve
been
reaching
in and pulling out long-expired
jars of chutney
and salsa. I’m trying to plan meals
to use
up
whatever
I can. I do love
cumin,
but why did I buy the
lifetime
supply
size
of
it? How did I get
all these
mustard containers?
Honey
mustard, Dijon,
sweet
onion and
something
now branded
as “Classic Yellow”.
Give
the
whole
French’s
marketing
team
hefty
Christmas bonuses,
I say! And
then
there’s
my apparent
fear
of running out of a certain
breakfast
food. If
I throw an oatmeal
party, will anybody
come?
Still
four months to go. I’ve
lived
in twenty-three
different
places
as an adult. By god, this may be
the
first
move
for
which I’m not frantically stuffing odds and ends
into garbage
bags
at 3 a.m. on moving day. I tell
myself
I’ll be
ready
this time.
In
may ways,
I’m ready
now.
2 comments:
Saw your post on twitter and had to comment.
I lived in downtown Vancouver most of my adult life. Loved it at first, then became confused and mad at what I saw happening to the city and my friends. People in the gay community around me seemed to get more into the drugs and booze which then brought on depression and desperation. And although I wasn’t into that scene, the so called scene seemed to be slowly dying, the ceiling seemed low career wise and I found myself fighting depression.
So after years of this and having spent vacations in Europe that I loved and enabled me to make new friends and start new work that seems to have endless possibilities so I took the leap and quietly left Vancouver.
Years later, much happier and cannot imagine spending anymore time in Vancouver.
Life is far better, my money doesn’t get eaten up by rent, more travel, more opportunities.
Now when friends from Vancouver message me, I see another side and one that doesn’t seem to be changing. Every single message from a friend in the city there is unhappy, unsure what to do to make a better life for themselves and also seem to lack any ambition and are just hoping for the best in the future.
I think you are making the right decisions, well thought out and positive.
Best of luck!
Thanks you so much for the comment! Sometimes on my more jaded days, I compare Vancouver to the Greek Sirens who lured sailors with the beauty of their music, only to cause the men to shipwreck. Vancouver is so stunning, regularly making the top ten lists of most beautiful cities. Still, there has to be more to make it a healthy place to call home. I know that many people do end up happy here, but that doesn't seem to have been the case for you or me.
My life in Vancouver hasn't been influenced by the drugs and alcohol that may have taken down so many of your friends. I don't doubt that there is that influence; it's just that I had a very protective mindset upon moving here from Los Angeles after being in a relationship with a man who was an alcoholic and battled with drugs as well. And, while it's true that I was diagnosed with depression--technically while still living on the Sunshine Coast--a psychiatrist noted that I've likely been struggling with the condition since adolescence at least. I can't blame Vancouver for that, but I suppose many of the challenges I faced here--mostly around lack of connection--sent me spiralling further downward than many others might have gone.
Your comment does help affirm that it's not just me. No city can be a match for everyone. I am glad that you made the decision to leave and that things have worked out for the better for you. I hope for the same!
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