And Now the Waltz (C'est La Vie) - Slade
This is a story I wrote a very long time ago and I am ready to share it now to coincide with the 30th anniversary of my brother's passing, June 4th, 1984.
Ron Sdraulig: Another Time, Another Place
“Another time,
another place. We’ll be together again.”
from: And Now the
Waltz (C’est La Vie) by Slade 1984
This is about a young man who had the courage to save
the life of someone else but could not save his own. This is about the bravest
person I have ever known. This is about my brother, Ron Sdraulig.
Thursday, March 21st, 1974. It was the middle of the school March Break
and in Thunder Bay, Ontario there was snow on the ground still. The roads were clear and the weather was
warming. We were taking a family
trip-Mom (Livia, 32), Sandra (13), myself (Gigi, 12), Ron (11) and Linda
(10). Although I am not sure why, on
this occasion we had an extra passenger: Mom's friend Jenny. I am not sure how this came about because
Jenny was not one of my Mom’s closest friends. In fact, I still know very
little about her. Maybe just the adult company, for Jenny never took the wheel
to drive.
Linda, Sandra and I holding onto Ron |
Mom had planned to get away early
in the morning for the eight-hour drive to Minneapolis and then on to
Rochester, Minnesota, but it was almost noon before we left the house. My Mom
was notoriously late, she had the best of intentions but I think there was just
too much on her mind and she often forget. She forgot appointments, things she
had to do, where she put her car keys. We were late for everything – that’s
just the way it was. Mom would have benefited greatly from writing herself
reminders – if she could remember where she left her lists. She was also very
fastidious and the house had to be neat and tidy before we left, so that when
we returned we would enjoy it rather than worry about having to clean. After a
long trip we could come home and relax.
So even though we left late from the house, Mom still had a few errands to run and we had to make a quick stop to switch cars with Nonno (our grandfather). We took his 1966 Pontiac and left him the loaner we had. Mom had hit a deer on a previous trip stateside and our old Meteor was being repaired. Then we were off on what I considered to be an adventure despite the fact that we had made this very trip on a fairly regular basis. Mom's brother and his family lived in a Minneapolis suburb, so we got to visit our cousins, but the primary reason for the trips was cancer treatment and check ups for Ron, who had Hodgkins Disease.
So even though we left late from the house, Mom still had a few errands to run and we had to make a quick stop to switch cars with Nonno (our grandfather). We took his 1966 Pontiac and left him the loaner we had. Mom had hit a deer on a previous trip stateside and our old Meteor was being repaired. Then we were off on what I considered to be an adventure despite the fact that we had made this very trip on a fairly regular basis. Mom's brother and his family lived in a Minneapolis suburb, so we got to visit our cousins, but the primary reason for the trips was cancer treatment and check ups for Ron, who had Hodgkins Disease.
It was Boxing Day
1972, just before his 9th birthday, when Mom first noticed the large egg shaped
lump on his neck. As children, we knew
he was sick but cancer wasn’t so commonplace back then, and we did not
associate death with his having to go to the hospital all the time. We did not experience his hospital stays or
his pain, because all his treatment occurred at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester.
We stayed home with various caregivers.
We went as a family only for check-ups that fell on school breaks, as it
was on this March day.
Dante and Livia Sdraulig Jan. 8, 1960 |
My mom’s parents were a very big part of our lives – my paternal
grandparents were still in Italy. What I didn’t realize then, was that her
parents were both a source of comfort and anxiety and stress at the same time. We
often heard Mom and Nonna (grandmother) arguing, and once I asked why they
fought so much. “Because we love each other” is the answer I got. Love, it
seems now had very little to do with it. Nonna didn’t approve of my dad’s side
of the family and the marriage…and us children? She also blamed my father for the
accident that killed both him and her son. As a matter of fact, it seems that
Nonna approved of very little that my Mom did. There certainly was a
one-sidedness when it came to the parents supporting the remaining son and
daughter. The son, his wife and family wanted for nothing. It is just another
testament to the strength and courage of my Mother that she obviously passed on
to her children. Strong, honourable character.
With the last of the errands completed, we crossed the
set of railroad tracks where I mistakenly believed my dad was killed. Perhaps
because of the pain it caused her, perhaps because we never asked, but Mom
never really talked about Dad. I knew nothing of his personality, his height,
his character, his likes, dislikes, habits, hobbies. One framed picture was on
the bookshelf. The same picture that adorned his mausoleum. I knew how he died and that my parents were in
love. That’s about it. We visited his final resting place often but never went
to the scene of his death. So the tracks that intersected Thunder Bay between
the twinned cities of Port Arthur and Fort William were not were my Dad
breathed his last breath. Instead, the crossing was nearer the Port Arthur
waterfront on Clavet Street.
All together! Linda, Mom, me, Ron, Sandra |
We
didn’t make the rest of the trip.
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