LASS AKA A
crack in my wall
We are dancing. Eight of us.
Women. Wearing matching sunglasses and smiles. A huge disco ball spins overhead
splashing random shards of silvery light everywhere and the thudding beat of
far-to-loud music reverberates right through to our very bones but somehow I am
finding this alien (to me) environment as welcome and warming as the first rays
of the summer’s sun. There is no way to speak to each other with the DJ’s
speakers turned up so high but our gyrating bodies and joyful grins easily
communicate our thoughts: we are happy. As one song ends and another starts we re-adjust
our positions with respect to each other but none of us even think of leaving
the dance floor.
Little connects me to any of them; they all work, present or past tense, in the same building as I do but I seldom see any of them on even a weekly basis, am certainly not friends with them, at all, but rather acquaintances, barely, or even less. Their ages range from early 30’s to late 60’s. I just started work there this past year while some have been retired for ages. All, really, that I have in common is that I chose to come away on this annual mystery-destination weekend getaway together with them.
Belleville. I was
disappointed a few hours ago when it was announced that that was where we’d be
going; just another small town with a large highway running by and huge box
stores and fast food restaurants dominating the generic landscape.
And only eight women had
signed up to go. Another disappointment.
Yet after a long drive
crammed altogether in a couple of cars, a few drinks crammed altogether in one
of the hotel rooms, a shared meal crammed altogether in a restaurant booth, and
now, this, a visit to a run-down dive of a night club, the sense of belonging
that I am starting to feel is enthralling.
I didn’t want to be uprooted from the community I had been living in before. I didn’t want to have to move/live/work here. I resented so much having to be in a new town that I have stubbornly resisted making any new friends, and, despite being frequently included in staff parties and more intimate private TGIF’s I have succeeded in never spending a whole weekend here, in not becoming a part of any part of the community. My life has been straightforward this past year, filled with work, daily routines, weekends away. It has been easy, relaxing, and without a doubt completely stress-free. (But has it been, an inner voice questions, fulfilling? Have you been living life to the fullest? Have you been making the most of each day? I shush this voice, ignore it, tell myself that I am happy with the unencumbered simplicity of it all.)
You can make me move here, I
have been shouting to the universe, but you can’t make me like it.
But as we are predominately
over-sharers - I as guilty of this as several of them - and as we have in the
past few hours divulged to each other, some virtual strangers, a smattering of
the details of our daily lives, we are all fast becoming, if not friends
exactly, then allies at least.
And the music shifts again and
we dance on.
Most of the club’s clientele
are far younger than us. Cardable. Several of the girls are grossly obese but,
given the short skimpy outfits they are wearing, apparently not lacking in
self-confidence. Their hair is died all manner of shades and they display with
pride generous amounts of cleavage and exotic tattoos decorating other large
expanses of exposed skin. I have no idea what they, regulars I must assume,
think of us, here, invading their bar. Do we look as odd to them as they do to
us? We are each dressed in our nicest jeans and what we thought a few hours ago
were fancy tops, but, which, here, beside their high heeled knee boots and
almost non-existent flashy dresses, must look incredibly sedate, almost dour.
There is some sort of
promotion going on. Free drinks are being given out along with t-shirts, sunglasses,
and other paraphernalia all adorned with the alcohol’s brand name. I expect one
is only supposed to receive a single freebee, but we, giddy as kids at a
birthday party, have each collected all of the gifts and are delighting in them
with the same fascination once associated with loot bags. That explains our
matching sunglasses.
Our matching smiles and the
spring to our steps are not quite as easy to explain. How can this simple
weekend away have so suddenly shockingly liberated us and how can such
liberation have so easily led to such exuberance? It is more than merely the
few drinks we have had, or stepping out of our regular habits, or even starting
to connect to each other, but, rather, I can only assume, the cumulative effect
of all of the above. As I fumble for a word to describe the shared freedom and
fun we are experiencing two of our group climb onto the stage and dance
together showing off their moves for the crowd below and they, silly sunglasses
and all, perfectly express, for me at least, our collective abandon.
And this is still only Friday
night.
As the weekend wends on it
simply becomes more and more delightful. We are a small enough group to do
everything together and so we do; long hikes, coffee shop stops, shopping,
winery tours, and more. In between we gather inside in the hotel’s lounge in a
cluster of easy chairs around a fake fireplace or outside on deck chairs by the
pool chatting and eating and planning what to do next.
It is, I finally decide,
irrelevant where we are. The mystery part of our destination barely matters. We
could have decided to stay in a hotel in our home town. What is important is
how we have actively chosen to spend this time together. When we go hiking we
all go (though one woman gets terrible blisters) and when we go shopping we all
do so (though shopping is really not my cup of tea) and in between we chat,
altogether or in smaller groups or often just in pairs as we walk from place to
place.
And we talk and talk and
talk.
One woman tells me of her
first grandchild (the details don’t matter) and I reciprocate with telling her
about my first son (again the details don’t matter) and we stop and look at
each other almost unaware of where we are – though the spot of sidewalk on
which we were standing will be etched in my memory forever - and though our
stories are almost symmetrical opposites of each other they pull us together,
like magnets, and the first successful stitch in the fabric of this next
chapter of life is finally tightened. This sharing, this bonding with another
woman who I am suddenly certain will become a new friend, is as potent as a
first kiss between new lovers.
I am starting to fail at not
becoming a member of the community. And it doesn’t feel like failure at all.
I still don’t know by the end
of the weekend what LASS stands for; Ladies of Arnprior Secondary School?
Liberated And Spontaneous Souls? But it doesn’t matter. I know already that I
will sign up again next year because maybe, just maybe, the weekend away has
cracked the wall I had erected around myself, a crack just big enough to let
the first new root sneak through and start to take hold. Maybe, just maybe, I
will find a way to fit in here after all.
And as a postscript, when I
next connect with my youngest son, who is paying his way through university by
running mystery-destination drinking tours to engineering students, I learn
that the last mystery-destination tour that he ran was to the very same bar
that I had visited with the teachers on my mystery-destination trip. ‘There was
a promotion going on that night too,’ he reminisces. And the treads in my life
are forming a pattern that is undeniable.