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What's the Music All About?
Uncle
Ian sat so still listening to records, reading, drinking water. When
nine-year-old MICHAEL STONE was with Ian, he had enough space to think
about the world in new ways. I
was nine years old and it was after school—a snowy Tuesday in January
1983. The sidewalk was covered in salt and ice, and the three women at
the corner were wearing sandals, hospital-issue green pants, and only
one had a coat—maroon, stained, and far too small. She recognized me and
ushered me over the slippery streetcar tracks and into what was the
main foyer of Canada’s largest mental health institution, 999 Queen
Street West in downtown Toronto. I thought I heard he’s waiting for you but the woman was also mumbling something else to the streetcar driver, her pointed cigarette holding up the traffic for me. I
made my way through the main hallway where the nurses buzzed me in and I
took the stairs to the second foyer in the northwest ward, the only
ward with hallways that were clean. The green paint was peeling from the
walls by the washroom and the metal corners of the drywall were
cracked. I found my uncle waiting on a blue chair, smoking under an
oversized clock. I wondered if he’d been waiting in that spot all day.
His thin right leg was crossed over his left and then wrapped all the
way around his ankle, as if his legs were made of string. He got up
quickly and walked me to another smoking lounge, this one with a stereo
and meditation supplies. The windows were filthy.
“It’s snowy,” I said. “I know. I see it too, Michael. Here, help me with the records.” I pushed two milk-crates of records against the stereo cabinet and lifted out the worn copy of The Beatles’ White Album with the name Ian written on its blank white cover, and a copy of the Bhagavad Gita,
which my uncle referred to as “yoga.” Above the stereo were two cartons
of cigarettes, a collection of wasted lighters, a lamp with no bulb,
and a book called the Dhammapada.
I had no idea who the Buddha was but it didn’t matter; everything my
uncle read seemed true. True, not because he told me it was true, but
because he wanted me to think about it. “Did you get a new book?” I asked, sounding out the word, dha-ma-pa-da. “It’s used. It’s new but it’s used.” “What is it?” “It’s used, yeah it’s used. But actually it’s really ancient. Really used. But it’s also new. It’s always new.” “What is it?” “It’s the teachings of the Buddha. When we finish the Gita,
we’ll read it. Maybe the Buddha is clearer about not being asleep. His
basic stance is that if you can let go of what you are holding on to too
tightly, things will be a lot more peaceful.”
Ian put on the White Album,
placed an ashtray on the lefthand speaker, and announced, “This side is
the drums and bass.” We angled our blue chairs to face the left
speaker. Then he lit a cigarette (there was no incense allowed in the
hospital) and balanced the cigarette on the rim of the burned plastic
ashtray. The trail of smoke rose toward the ceiling lights. Ten or
fifteen other patients were sitting in the room with us but I only
noticed Ian. It felt like we’d been here since I was born. I felt normal
here. I liked watching him. He sat so still listening to records,
reading, drinking water. He always wanted to know what I thought and it
made me feel like what I thought mattered. When I sat there with him I
had enough space to think. Sometimes I could actually see the thoughts
themselves lifting off of a giant unrolled banner of language and then
when I had a thought I could see it go all the way down again, down onto
the same dark ribbon. As
the music began we watched the rising smoke ripple into shapes above
the speaker. Every drumbeat created a break in the smoke stream and the
bass line made circles. Visible sound. We listened to the whole record
like this. The
doctors left us alone because Ian could get all the ward’s in-patients
perfectly still for an hour. Whenever I saw Dr. Walker he winked and
asked me how old I was. I saw him doing some computation in his eyes but
I had no clue what he thought. My grandmother had told him I’d be
coming to visit Ian more regularly after school.
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