University was very much an extension of college. Not of Haileybury; that had been like an extension of high school. More like Cambrian. Western treated their students like adults. It’s your education, they said. Make of it what you will. Study, or not; show up, or not; it’s up to you. It’s not our job to hold your hand. I was far more comfortable in that environment than I had been in Haileybury’s strict regimen. But I was older then than I was, an emerging adult.
I stacked all my classes in the morning, leaving my afternoons free for research and homework and study. Having to get up in the morning forced me to go to bed at night. I reviewed my notes daily. I actually liked my chosen subjects. That was a surprise. I’d never enjoyed the subject matter of my classes. This was something different, something I could sink my teeth into.
Granted, I was not in Engineering; I
was in Social Sciences, taking Classical History, Sociology, Economics and
Archaeology. It was a breath of fresh air. I loved ancient history, myths,
cultural studies, and the rediscovery and unravelling of long-forgotten, buried
secrets, and had for years. Sound like D&D? You bet your ass it does.
D&D opened up a world of interests and mystery to me, much as it did from
most people I’ve talked to who played it. Not one of them had any interest in
joining a cult, conducting Satan rituals, hiding out in sewers stalking
imaginary monsters (thanks Mazes and Monsters); they all became well-read, most
attending higher education, some even becoming engineers.
I did dabble with computer programming but dropped it after a few classes. Those classes were all about learning to use an abacus and how to “program” Kraft Dinner in 25 lines or less. I thought it was ridiculous at the time, but I see now what they were getting at. Had I stuck it out, I might have been a millionaire. The timing was right. It was the mid-80s and computer programming was in its infancy. I doubt that I would have, though. I had no passion for it. Code and algorithms rang cold. I probably would have ended up hating it and failing had I stuck with it. Mind you, I did predict the future as I watched it unfold. I wondered why we needed VCRs when TVs were motherboards. I wondered why we needed cable subscriptions when anyone could reach out into the Ethernet to retrieve “whatever,” so why couldn’t anyone watch whatever they wanted whenever they wanted. These ideas of mine hadn’t arrived yet then, but they evolved over time. There was connection speed and data issues to work out, something I’d have never been able to do, but the ideas sparked within me. I suppose those same ideas sparked in a lot of heads, not just mine. But I was more interested in social science and books and movies and the arts and women than I was in code.
There was a pretty blonde sitting
next to me in Classical History. There was Sharron Martin, sister of Garry
Martin. There was Alison Tilly. I ventured forth tentatively. I asked them if
they’d like to go for coffee. I asked them if they’d like to meet at the pub
for a drink, sometime. Either I was too subtle, or they just weren’t
interested. Most girls I knew then were younger than me, and I was beginning to
lose my hair (it was a big hair era, for both men and women, don’t forget), and
that had begun to sap my self-confidence, despite Doug’s advice to me about a
woman’s worth (see earlier memories). I was not an athlete. I was a bit
introverted. I was bookish. Altogether, I lacked confidence, especially when it
came to women.
And I likely spent too much time in
the university pub and in the bars weekends. I smoked, but a lot of people
still smoked then. I was drinking far less than I had, already sick of
hangovers. But a good habit is hard to break, and as I’ve said before, I’d long
ago begun to associate booze and bars with fun with friends. A stupid mistake.
It was the friends that made it fun. Without them, being in bars was dull,
fraught with loneliness and depression.
Luckily, I had friends. I always
seemed to have friends then. There was Matt Hait and Jak Yassar Nino in my
house, there was Jeff Chevrier and Walter Hohman at Fanshaw. There were a
couple others I met in classes.
My first friend in London was Matt, that is to say he was the first person I met in London, aside from Jamie, but enough about Jamie for now. Matt and I played chess. Matt convinced me to get a membership at the gym. He gave me the guided tour of London’s best dives and its emerging underground. Matt was not one for dance bars. And he took me to Toronto a couple times when we had his sister’s wreck at our disposal, to Kensington and to Yonge, to College and Bathurst, to Queen St W, to the Horseshoe, to Sneaky Dees, to God knows where else. It was all a blur of backbeat and bass, of mods and mosh pits.
You knew this would ultimately
become a tale about alcohol, didn’t you? Of course you did.
He was especially eager to show me
the Ceeps (the CPR Tavern), his favourite bar in London. It could be the oldest
tavern in London. Opened in 1890, it had long since become a university watering
hole by the time I arrived. No one ever went there for the ambiance, there was
never any entertainment aside from MTV, but it was the only bar I’d ever been
in that encouraged its patrons to etch their names, hometown, and the date into
the aged wooden tabletops. The Ceeps led to seedy little basement and attic
bars that hosted some of the best and worst punk bands I’d ever seen. Those
seedy little bars inevitably led to the raves, little after-hours parties in
basements and in loading bays. But not before street meat, souvlaki on a bun.
My favourite was the FIRE STOP. It
was a small bar, black as night and decorated in all manner of red. Chicago
blues men graced the stage. Old men. Grey haired and fat and by far the best
players I’ve ever heard. The FIRE STOP also had the hottest wings I’d ever had
the misfortune to order. They came with a free first pitcher. Because they knew
you’d be ordering more.
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