Bound for Glory
* * *
It started with a phone call. A birthday greeting from my friend V.
V n’ me been through this ceremony many times before. I met V in grammar school, roughly fifty
years ago. A friggin’ half-century
ago! Amazing to contemplate on many
levels.
Anyway, long story short, I was bemoaning the fact that the
few friends left standing in my corner of the world weren’t all that enthused
about burning midnight oil. V asked:
“Why not come to Toronto ?”
Why not indeed?
And so it came to pass that I had me a Toronto adventure...
* * *
Tell your story
Roll the truth around your head
Bound for glory
I ain't getting out of this bed
The sun comes struggling on
Yesterday's dead and gone
Tell your story
Put the night back in your veins
Bound for glory
I ain't coming to again
The sun comes struggling on
Yesterday's dead and gone
And I feel I'm bound for glory
Dreaming in a cowboy song
I feel I'm bound for glory
Can you feel it?
Bound for glory!
Can you feel it?
Glory bound!
Can you feel it?
Bound for glory!
Tell your story
Roll the truth around your head
Bound for glory
I ain't getting out of this bed
The sun comes struggling on
Yesterday's dead and gone
And I feel I'm bound for glory
Dreaming in a cowboy song
I feel I'm bound for glory
Can you feel it?
Bound for glory!
Can you feel it?
Glory bound!
Can you feel it?
Bound for glory!
* * *
Some people believe that language is best taught by the
“immersion method.” I kinda get it. If you want a lesson to stick, make the
learning an intense experience.
It came to pass that I just had me an “immersion method”
experience.
I arrived in Toronto
on Thursday afternoon. V and I took off
walking. We walked for hours. Wolfed down amazing tacos and cool beers at a
nondescript street side taqueria. Peeked
into countless shops and galleries. Paused
to refresh at an open air cafe.
We walked a lot. Walked
so much, in fact, that the tendons in my left foot self-destructed.
Dined that evening at an upscale, white linen
establishment. Drank many glasses of
fine wine.
Woke determined to experience an urban cycling
adventure. Had said adventure. Loved it.
Chicken grilled expertly.
More fine wines. Subway ride to
concert in the city. Tedeschi Trucks
Bands rocks my world. Tendons in left
foot screaming in agony. Good vibes
trump everything.
Next day: Stratford
Festival. Drive for hours to view a
presentation of “Much Ado About Nothing” in the town of Stratford ,
a bucolic village situated on the banks of the (you guessed it...) Avon River . What an amazing venue! The Stratford Festival folks are celebrating
their 60th season! Me? I celebrated my first.
I was overwhelmed by heartache in the last act, as Benedick
and Beatrice found their bliss. It
grieved me that I had not had the presence of mind to treat my parents to a
holiday in Stratford
decades ago. My parents, you see, fell
in love while playing the roles of Romeo and Juliet in the Lithuanian National
Theater. They would have loved the
Stratford Festival.
Grilled steaks. And
by grilled I mean grilled to perfection.
Fine wines. Room filled with
music and good conversation.
Wake to adventure.
Haul the bikes through the subway stations. Two graying gits acting giddy. Cycling for hours through hidden Edens and intriguing
cityscapes.
And...well...yeah...there was a spill. A consequence of carelessness. Got no complaints, though. Saw a lot.
Experienced a lot. Learned a lot.
Loved it all.
Another white linen experience. Fine food.
Fine wine. Fine day. Fine friendship.
All good.
Beyond good.
Truly fine.
Came home one day early.
Didn’t think I could survive another day.
* * *