The Hamilton Spectator

Unanswered prayers, and life’s unexpected things

I hope my children can find their own personal moment of silence

- THOMAS FROESE

The young lady was my heart’s desire. She was my longtime prayer. This, when I was a much younger version of myself.

It was on the 11th day of the 11th month when her letter arrived. She wrote briefly and dispassion­ately. Her words drained the room of colour. The relationsh­ip would die. And that was that.

I found it odd to receive the news on Remembranc­e Day. I still find it odd. I might as well have been standing in the middle of London on Nov. 11, 1919, the first-ever Remembranc­e Day, one year after the so-called Great War ended.

The trams and motors and horses had all suddenly stopped. A man removed his hat. Others bowed. An old soldier stood at attention. A woman wiped a tear. Everyone was still. This is how The Guardian of 98 years ago reports that 11:11 moment.

The UK newspaper reports that “a hush had spread over the whole city and become so pronounced as to impress one with a sense of audibility. It was a silence which was almost pain. And the spirit of memory brooded over it all.”

This is how I felt holding that letter. In this I’m no different than anyone who’s known loss. No different, also, from anyone who’s fully and profoundly thankful for unanswered prayers. Because it’s through unanswered prayers when finer and unexpected things can be born.

Anything I’ve ever written about my wife, who came along years later, or our children, or our travels, are among these finer things in my own life.

Now whenever I see 11:11 on my phone, or clock radio, or just on the screen of my mind, I’m reminded of it, the colour and largeness of a family given, a surprising life born of a dead seed in the cold ground.

In this, 11:11 has become a symbol for me, not unlike a poppy. My oldest daughter recently saw that I had one, several, in fact, for each of the kids. Experienci­ng her first November 11th in Canada, she’d never seen a plastic poppy. “What’s that?” she asked.

I explained and she remembered, of course, her internatio­nal school in Uganda, with its British curriculum, taught her about the real, blood-red poppies in Flanders. The children know other war remembranc­es, having seen the Book of Remembranc­es in Ottawa, for example, listing Canada’s war dead.

My daughter and I talked more, about John McCrae’s poem, and I too remembered, if “remembered” is still the right word. Somme. Verdun. Passchenda­ele. So many battles. So many other wars. So many men and women and children with unanswered prayers to remember, even if their only and desperate prayer was to live another day.

This is why we remember. Their sacrifices benefit us today. We honour our forefather­s and foremother­s who helped give us peace. We have symbols. We explain these important matters to our children. We remember even when it’s hard to remember in the amnesia and hurry of life in a privileged nation largely removed from war.

But then there’s this other war, the sort of war that, it seems to me, is closer to our common, daily experience­s. It’s the sort that I experience­d on that Nov. 11.

Often it’s a war for survival and self-interest, of getting ahead, and power. Interestin­gly and sadly, it’s often fought under the flag of family or tribe or nation. Or maybe this other war is a more honest struggle for acceptance. For love.

However you see it, sinners and saints alike fight it. Because it’s war inside our own spirits. Really, it’s a war to become human. Or at least more fully human. More whole. More at peace in our own skin, so that, with any luck, we’ll give a measure of peace to the world out there.

That unanswered prayer held in my hands that Remembranc­e Day helped me understand some of this. My hope is that my children will know something similar: some death or loss or wilderness experience, and, from this, find their own personal moment of silence, their own meaningful symbols.

Not to wish anyone undue pain in a world that already has enough of that. But to wish some mystery, and some wonder, and a precious stone to unearth in the fathoms of it.

Thomas Froese writes about fatherhood, travel and life. Find him at www.thomasfroe­s.com

Because it’s war inside our own spirits. Really, it’s a war to become human. Or at least more fully human.

 ?? THOMAS FROESE ?? The Book of Remembranc­e from the First World War in the Peace Tower of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. The first of seven Books of Remembranc­e honouring Canadians fallen in various wars, it lists more than 60,000 names of Canadians who died in battle from 1914-1918.
THOMAS FROESE The Book of Remembranc­e from the First World War in the Peace Tower of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. The first of seven Books of Remembranc­e honouring Canadians fallen in various wars, it lists more than 60,000 names of Canadians who died in battle from 1914-1918.
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