Tell us about a time when you felt out of place!

Tell us about a time when you felt out of place!

I think it would be much easier to tell you about a time when I felt as if I was in my proper place. There were so few of them. As for the original question – Tell us about a time when you felt out of place – I think that a time should be replaced by the many times. Learning languages has always been more of a pain than a pleasure, for me, anyway. In the Basque Country, Northern Spain, at first with my parents, and then on my own. Sitting at the table or standing in the kitchen, listening to people chattering away in Spanish some days, in Basque, on other occasions. I was reduced to interpreting looks, smiles, scowls, meaningless sounds … how could I have felt that I was in my proper place? Etiquette – I knew nothing about their etiquette. Culture – I knew nothing about their culture and they knew even less about mine. I lived in a world where waves of sound battered at my body and I stood there, a rock on a seemingly deserted linguistic beach, being gradually worn down by the endless waves and the eroding tides. How could I have felt anything but ‘out of place’?

The same thing happened when I became immersed in French culture. I spent some time in the South of France, in an area where Provencal was still spoken. Between the two languages and the differing accents, I was lost, lost, lost.

Something similar happened when I came to Canada. Here, it wasn’t the language that baffled me, but the culture. I remember trying to learn to skate. My cousin played Junior “B” hockey and volunteered to teach me. Well, I learned very slowly (a) to keep my balance and (b) to move forwards very slowly. However, I couldn’t skate back wards and I couldn’t stop. In spite of that, I decided to try and play hockey. The park close to where I lived in Toronto had a frozen area where the little kids played shinny. I asked if I could join in. After three falls and a total inability to stick handle in any known fashion, they stuck me in goal. I used the goalie’s stick to try and stand up. After the third or fourth goal, one five or six year old whisked up to me, stopped in a sideways shower of ice, and said “Sir, please sir, you’re allowed to use the stick to stop the puck, you know.” I retired from ice hockey soon after that, and from skating. I did learn to cross-country ski, though. I also earned the name Wapiti (white-tailed deer) long before I saw one or knew what it meant.

And that is all just scratching the surface. I could say more, so much more. But I’ll control myself.

2 thoughts on “Tell us about a time when you felt out of place!

  1. Jon Masters's avatar

    Hi Roger,

    I read your posts and your comments on Wycliffe life and times strike a familiar chord. However I have one observation on the above-mentioned post to say Wapiti is usually used for Elk, not White Tailed Deer – at least in Alberta.

    Enjoying the last fine days of a long and warm (though too dry) summer, and hope you are too.

    Regards, Jon.

    Jon Masters P.Eng., C.Eng., MICE
    18-26123 Twp Rd 511,
    Spruce Grove, AB,
    Canada. T7Y 1B9

    Phone or text: 780-913-2991


    Liked by 1 person

    • rogermoorepoet's avatar

      Fascinating, Jon. We use it down here for the little white tails. Just another linguistic and cultural twist. As for the boarding school details – I went to four of them – might not have been Wycliffe, though the Griffin Hunting gives a lot away. You know too much!

      Like

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