This house we call a home nestles between towering pines and fir.
It’s 25 years old now, built by the knowing hand of a 72 year-old bachelor Swede. Sure, there are creaks to it and it’s drafty in winter but the view from the front window is exhilarating and we love it here.
We put latticework around the edges of the deck two summers back and a new set of stairs. The living room boasts a new laminate floor and we tore out shelving, repainted and put in a new wood stove. Just lately we tackled the kitchen. There are no creaks to the floor now, it’s brighter and the appliances are new.
Slowly, one step at a time, we’ve made it ours. There’s something to the process of claiming a thing and refitting it to your personal specs that expands you. Within the wood and tile and paint we’ve applied there’s a part of us and we feel it like arms around us.
It’s all been a terrific challenge. I’ve never been a tool guy. In the home where I grew up I was never taught to use them. Instead, I was labeled careless and inefficient and left to lug and carry and trundle tools, supplies and garbage. They claimed my manual dexterity was limited and never allowed me to try. The men, they said, would do the real work.
Even as a kid I understood how easily judgment sits beneath the veil of humor. It hurt every time. The male in me wanted to express himself in a masculine way but I was never allowed.
When I failed shop in Grade 8, I was belittled and laughed at. Then I was punished. I made an ashtray that was supposed to have been a bowl. I built a bird house that was crooked and uneven at the edges. Everything I tried to do was made more difficult by the judgment I knew was to follow. My adopted family came from farmer stock and using tools came as easily as walking. To them I was an oddity, a deprived sort, sad and unproductive.
When I left them the work I turned to was manual. I lifted things. I carried things. Because I had only ever finished Grade 9 there weren’t a lot of choices for me and if I thought of training for a trade, it was quickly dismissed by the echo of the judgment I’d grown up with. Instead, I learned to labour for a living. I learned to grunt and strain and bend my back to unchallenging work that seldom offered any hope of taking me anywhere.
I went to work for a demolition company when I was in my late teens. They were tearing down an old brick factory and then reusing the stone to build apartments in a retro look that was considered new in 1975. The work was hard and heavy. I slung a 35 pound sledge hammer eight hours a day taking down walls and foundations. Then I sorted and toted bricks in a wheelbarrow.
Later I worked for a forestry company cutting deadfall. We’d buck up the trees the winds had blown over into eight foot lengths with a chain saw. Then we’d hoist the logs to our shoulders and walk them uphill to a spot where the skidders could get to them to cart them off.
In each of those jobs and the others like them, there was anger in me, bitter and hard and inescapable. I was able to do that work because the echo of those voices from my childhood drove me. Every time I lifted an impossible load or swung a sledge or axe or iron bar I was striking back, using the masculine energy they’d denied me the opportunity to use. It took a lot of years before I came to realize how fruitless it all was.
It took coming here and working side by side with my woman. It took bending to work knowing that I am not confounded by tools only unfamiliar with them. It took someone loving me as a man and allowing me to be all of that rampant, inconsistent energy, to learn how to build something.
See, we don’t teach anybody anything by saying no. We don’t allow anybody to become all that they might possibly become by not allowing them to try.
We don’t nurture through judgment and we don’t love through denunciation. Instead, the tools we use to help build a life are gentle in the hands and easy on the soul. She knows that, my Debra.
So this house we build is solid. It stands on a staunch foundation. It contains within it the kitsch and curios of our journeys, the heart and soul of us.
We build it, day by day, piece by piece and I watch it reaching upward for the sky.
When I was a boy growing up in my home community of Attawapiskat on the James Bay coast, I was deathly afraid of looking at the full moon.



When I was a boy growing up in my home community of Attawapiskat on the James Bay coast, I was deathly afraid of looking at the full moon.
I grew up...
I’m happy to see the ongoing support and assistance in our northern remote communities to help our people cope with so many lifelong and generational issues...