Pike Lake, my great-great grandfather, whom built that White House in the background (my house).
Disoriented, I lay—hands folded atop one another in an “X” on my forehead—belly down on the floor. Immediately, Jeff climbs atop - feels so good. Down he comes — head bump,
head bump.
He knows.
Eventually, my fretting turns to a well of powerful tears. Memories flood with feelings unspeakable; full bodied, rich in colours — of ancestors. The loss. So much loss. In such little time. What’s left?
Jeff
I picture:
A sauna stove perched atop the ice. Small pile of wood and birch bark beside. I haul load after load of water into the tank. Once warm, what else to do but bathe?
March 1st, 1987--2010
And, it all makes sense.
The tears continue to deepen, pour out; “prompts pain, regret.”
And so I bathe,
Pouring warm water upon my naked body. On a brisk spring-like day (+2 degrees).
No walls to hold the heat
No roof
Forever, I warm that stove,
for all eternity
as it sinks deeper,
and deeper
into the ice
This recollection stems from the very beginning of what I now refer to as the “Preservation Project.”
For the Lakehead University Visual Arts graduate show at the Thunder Bay Art Gallery in 2010, on the gallery wall, I projected myself bathing. To complement, I installed a sauna stove door where inside a video played (with sound), documenting the “sauna” preparation.
Stove crackling,
All I could do, was bathe.
{originally published on November 10, 2021 on our previous website}