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Postcard Stories – The Last List

3 Words: believer, flavourful, lists
150 Word Limit

He had lists for everything. His entire day; his life, was bound by them. From lists detailing when each scheduled maintenance was due on their auto, to grocery lists. It drove Janice crazy.

Janice hated to complain about this seemingly harmless habit as the meals that were the result of the careful grocery lists he planned out, were quite flavourful. She also never had any issues with her car either. Jack always made sure of that. Her husband was a believer in staying on top of things. Was that really something to fault him for?

This time though, Jack had gone too far.

As Janice held his latest list in her hands, the one she had found in his pants pocket while doing HIS laundry, she read the two columns that topped the page.

Her Faults. Her strengths.

Under Jack’s list, Janice started her own.

To do:
File for divorce

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posted by Lawrence in Postcard Stories and have Comments (2)

Of Kings and Coles – A Valentines Day Poem

Last November, I launched a short story entitled The Nude. With that story, I bundled an erotic poem which was only available to read for those that purchased a copy of that short. Now, that poem is available to read for free this Valentines day.

The first draft of this poem was first written almost 5 years ago, but after many changes, I released this version below late last fall. The title is inspired by some of my jazz favorites.  Cole Porter, Nat King Cole and Natalie Cole.

The story itself,  is inspired by … well, let’s just say deep passionate love by the fireplace on a wintry night, not unlike the setting of one of my favorite songs, Baby It’s Cold Outside by Louis Jordan and Ella Fitzgerald – without the gosh.

So picture being snowed in, a cottage in the middle of nowhere, candle lights and the crackle of a warm fireplace, and an old record on the phono; cuddled under the blankets on the floor in front of those bright flames, lost in each other’s gaze.

Enjoy, and Happy Valentines Day.

Read last years Valentines post here.

~

Of Kings and Coles

Music sings of Kings and Coles
Loves unseen; love foretold
Winters night light with snow
Streets silent; still, no where to go

Fingers linger under cover
Softly, smoothly, they gently discover
Bodies warm, curled perfect; tight
All is dark but winters light
And flickering embers of fireplace coals
Reflected in eyes of obsessions souls

With conviction I indulge in loves cuisine
Her naked flesh, desires caffeine
Reaching depths of her body, and in between
Natures intention for an arctic scene

Look into my eyes in fires light
Vow every end, sings your goodnight
Place your hand upon my heart
It’s rhythmic pulse, your beauties art
It beats for you, your tender touch
The smell of your hair, your smile and such
Take me places, in dreams not seen
So I may sleep, dreaming where I’ve been

Take my hand from your thigh
Draw me close, in passions high
Grasp me; hold me tight, I come into
In my arms; surrender, as I breathe you

Tonight our passions have been told
Now to have, now to hold
Warm with sweat from winter’s cold
Bodies formed to soul mates mould

I’ve dreamt awhile the girl in you
With beating hearts enchanted view
Would find alive the boy in me
Our flesh inline, our sprits free

Close your weary eyes my sweet
So I may admire your peaceful sleep
I’ll long for the moment your eyes return
To stare in me eternal, by the fireside burn

Until morning my love, kiss me tight
With soft, subtle lips gentle goodnight
Then quietly whisper in my naked ear
‘I love. I’ll love you – forever my dear’

The phono ends to not a sound
But the drum of beating hearts abound
And the crackling embers of music’s souls
Of Kings and Queens, of Kings and Coles

© Copyright 2005-2010 Lawrence Thomas

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posted by Lawrence in Love,Poetry,Romance and have Comments (3)

The Final Assignment

My First University Class. My inspiration. My friends.

Originally posted Aug 3, 2008 @ 16:44

At the start of every class, we re-configure the tables and chairs so that they form a square around the room. It enables us to see each others face, instead of the back of one anothers heads. To feel their voices against our hearts, instead of lost in the high ceilings before their muttered translations make it to the back of the classroom.

The room disappears as one by one, my classmates share with the group, stories they have written about their childhoods. We laugh at a couple, a few trigger memories of our own past, and some even bring us to tears. They inspire me with their courage as they take our hands, and lead us into their minds; sharing with us their passions, their fears, and even their deepest, darkest secrets. The stories are kept brief, but coming down from their high is often like stepping out of a dream.

I was in grade seven when I wrote my first novel. It’s un-edited, hand written, double sided on lined foolscap paper. Some of the words barely readable through watermarks and fading over the past 22 years, but there it is, staring back to me. One of the earliest signs that a writer was alive inside of me.

Even though I didn’t write another story after that middle school novel, I still continued writing poetry when the right kind of love or infatuation inspired it. It would be another 15 years before I would spend any serious amount of time writing again. In fact, it was shortly after I ended a relationship that lasted most of my twenties. The guy who once thought he had love and his life figured out, now had no direction; no place to go. The future was as wide open as the spaces I longed to travel. A new chapter of my life had begun.

Creative juices flowing on Herkimer.

Shortly after that part of my life ended, I moved into an old radiated heat home on the 2nd floor of a Herkimer St four-plex in Hamilton’s west end. It was a perfect spot, complete with an inviting roof top deck off of my living room. The apartment needed some paint, but it wasn’t long before it felt like home.
Financially, I wasn’t rally prepared to incur all the debt load bachelorhood would bring with it, but my cash situation, or lack there of, just gave me another motive to write.

The neighborhood was beautiful. Rich with skyward trees that had seen nearly as much life as my 92 year old grandfather; if not more. Stately homes that were constantly being renovated to perfection by their visionary owners who seen beauty outside the tired condition some of those homes were in.

I could walk everywhere. Bars, bakeries, popular breakfast spots, art galleries, busy parks, and trails. The community was a very creative spot amongst these city boundaries.

Ironically enough, my new neighbor in apartment three was a writer. A real one who actually got paid to write for a living. It wasn’t long after I moved in, that he loaded my shelves with piles of books he had obviously spent a lot of time with, from Strunken White, to the Art of Interviewing.

Not only did my new mentor equip me with my own library of writing periodicals, but he lent me folders full of various samples of what he had accomplished over his career. Outside a passion for writing however, we also shared a love for music and it was actually what we talked about most during my three years in Apartment two.

Apartment three was always around. He was retired, hadn’t written in years, and he had the biggest collection of music I had ever seen with milk crates full of CD’s. He knew so much about music, and talked so passionately about the topic, that I often wondered why he hadn’t taken up writing for a music magazine.

A shot of Herkimer St.

Money was at a premium those first six months, so I knew I needed to find cheap entertainment, and a way to make extra cash. There were lots of things you could do by simply walking there, and Hamilton wasn’t lacking things to write about that summer.

Our professional hockey team, The Bulldogs, were in the Calder Cup, our football Ti-Cats were ready to go for another season, and the World Cycling Championship was also in town.

The Bulldogs were making history in the Calder Cup playoffs. It was game 7 and my friend and I had upper bowl seats to a sold out winner takes all showdown at Copps Colliseum. It was a losing battle for the home team, but the energy and excitement in the stadium that night had me up writing all night.

Other than a local poetry contest many years ago, or the Junior Press club as a child, I had otherwise never sent my writing off for submission. Naïve to the rules of publication, I gave it a shot. The following week, my article was published both on the Bulldogs website in its entirety, and a condensed version in the Hamilton Spectator. My first two publications as a writer. Ironically enough, my childhood novel and my first story to find print, were both about a professional hockey championship in Hamilton.

Hockey Night in Hamilton

Not since my minor hockey days, had I been as excited about anything as I was that morning. It was like carrying around the championship trophy on Super Saturday. A feeling I wondered if I would ever duplicate in my adult life. Seeing my name atop an article in a paper I once saw bundles of everyday piled up at the curb after school, was one of the greatest feelings of accomplishment I had experienced in a very long time.

Of course, I bought quite a few copies, and it was all I could do to avoid staring at the sports section lying open on the passenger seat on my way to work, or on my desk at the office; and from admiring the center screen link on the homepage of the Bulldogs website to my story.

I was addicted to the feeling now, and I knew that this was something I had to make happen more often. So, I set out about town to find my next source of inspiration. Oddly enough, I found it once again in the form of Hamilton sports.
I had tickets to that days Ti-Cats pre-season opener, and by mid-day the following afternoon, my second story was now written. Exactly a week from the day I had my first story published, my second was now staring back at me, and once again, a half dozen copies occupied my passenger seat.

I continued to submit a story each week for the next month, but my streak had ended at two. I wrote about the World Cycling Championship, and about a couple of other things that were going on around town, but whether it was because I didn’t know much about the topics I had tried to tackle, or that my luck had just run out, I was brought back to the reality of being a novice writer. It would be another year before my voice would find a place in print again.

Before the highway.

I worked full-time for the local cable company and although I loved my job most days, there weren’t many moments I didn’t think about writing. There were so many ideas floating around in my head, but never enough time to write; at least for publication. There were still many things to inspire me around the city, including some memorable moments spent amongst the natives and tree sitters involved in the fight to save Red Hill Valley.

I did write. I had gotten in the habit of always carrying some sort of note pad or voice recording device with me to at least capture my thoughts, but I was never able to find the time to make something out of those scraps of paper.

Earlier into my second year in Apartment two, I started having some troubles at work. It was probably the best thing that ever happened to me as a writer, as those tough times brought me to ride the train every day for a few months. Those daily commutes were what inadvertently brought me to enroll at McMaster.

It was a few weeks before a new school year was about to begin, and suddenly I found myself wanting to enroll full-time at University. I had no idea what I would take, or how I would pay for classes seeing as though I was still paying for the time I spent at Sheridan Arts, but I had always dreamed of going to University. Suddenly I was thinking about a new beginning.

School quickly started back in, the smell of September was in the air, and as I stared outside the bus window; back packs, and IPods, and lunch bags, I pictured myself walking those downtown streets, waiting with bus pass in hand, for my ride west to the McMaster campus.

I wrote in my journal every day on the train to and from work, and it wasn’t long before I found the meaning behind those though times. I was writing again. Albeit random thoughts, but it had been a long time since I felt the kind of inner peace, that I did those fall months.

Not only was I writing again, but I was also keeping a journal for the first time since high school. Before long, I had filled two or three of them.

Another thing happened that fall as well. I had caught the University bug and although things at work were a lot better, taking classes was still on my mind.

I was back to driving into work again everyday, and I had returned to my hectic lifestyle. Come the new year however, I would finally be taking my first University course; Introduction to Writing and Publication. And so my journey through the Writing Certificate program began.

Although I was very nervous that first night, my teacher and classmates made this new adventure seem right. This was where I was supposed to be. I was finding my voice, although I quickly seen that I had a lot of room to grow as a writer.

That same spring I enrolled in another course – Developing Sensual and Erotic Writing Styles. We had a lot of laughs during those classes, and we were all making each other sweat by the end of the term. The final night, our teacher brought up the idea of putting a chapbook together for an upcoming literary fair in Hamilton, so a handful of us put pen to paper and in the fall, we were selling our short stories and signing copies of our books. If seeing your name in print wasn’t addictive enough, having someone catch up to you on the street to sign your book was a fantasy come true. All those years of practicing my signature in science class, were finally paying off.

I had just started seeing a woman around the time we published our erotic chapbook, and a short story was born out of that early romance. It evolved into a fairy tale style story of our lives as they progressed along, and as we formed into a couple. The written account is yet to find its closing chapters, but the real life fairy tale came complete with a wedding, a beautiful baby girl, and one on the way.

That December, I had taken my new love up to a winter resort amongst her childhood home town. I brought the dog, and even the cat was aboard our tiny coupe; the whole family. On New Years Eve, in front of a warm fire with the world outside covered in snow, I pulled out my guitar, a couple of loose sheets of paper with the words to a song I had written for her, and through those words, I asked her to marry me.

The new year had just begun, and it was already proving to be a very hectic one. My fiancé had encouraged me to take a course I had been dreaming of enrolling in; Writing for Children. She knew I had been wanting to study under this teacher, and that I feared he might be retiring soon.

I volunteered one evening a week, school the next, and I had homework almost every night. My wife to be had already moved in, and one night I returned form volunteering to find a parenting magazine on our bed. We were going to have a baby. That news couldn’t’ have come at a more opportune time, and now I had a child to write about that winter semester.

It was a very exciting time all around. The class was everything I dreamed and more, and we had had our first ultrasound to make it all official; we were going to be parents.

Amongst all of that, we were also planning our wedding; right down to designing, printing, and cutting our own invitations. We were even making our own envelopes. Did I mention we were house hunting too?

With everything that was going on in our lives, that winter semester came and went before I knew it. As always, most of the class, including the teacher, walked over to the local watering hole for a couple of pints to close out the term. When I returned home that night, I climbed into bed and whispered into my wife’s ear. “Thank you, hun.”

“For what”, she replied half asleep?

“Bob retired.”

In May that spring we were married, by the end of June we were moved in to our new home, and we were due to have our first baby mid September.

I enrolled in my second 3-day novel writing contest in as many years that Labor Day weekend, and my theme this time around of course, was my pending role as a father.

The three day writing weekend was going well, and the words were flowing easily. I had dreamed of becoming a father forever, and years of anticipation exploded onto my laptop screen as if those words had been dying to be expressed.

My wife had left me alone for the weekend to write. It was now Monday morning, and the better part of this day had to be spent finishing up last details. I had a tight schedule planned so that by late afternoon, I could start editing in time for the midnight deadline.

At about 8:30am that morning, I received a call from my wife; her water had broke, and suddenly the excitement and anticipation began. After a long 24 hour labor, our first child was born.

While my wife and baby were sleeping later that day, I snuck down to the cafeteria for some lunch with my laptop in hand. Even though the 3-day novel contest was over, I added another chapter to my story. I was in the cafeteria an hour or so, exhausted from very little sleep, and still overwhelmed from everything that just took place; grasping the fact that I was now a father. I realized as I described the miracle that I had just witnessed, that my story needed this ending. It wouldn’t have been complete, without my little girl entering this world.

As I collect my final thoughts on the closing of this program, I reflect back at what truly started it all. You could say it all began when I found a home that awoke the writer in me; the place where I was published for the first, second, and third time. Where I found myself, and started my family. The truth is though, that McMaster is where I have truly found my voice.

I have fallen in love with this place, as well as the teachers and students I have met during my time spent here. The opportunities that have come out of this experience have been endless. I have met so many wonderful, passionate people over the course of the last three years. A handful of my classmates and I, even formed a writers group. We have been together over two years now. We are friends, we help each other network, email the group contest info and writing related events, and share our excitement with one another when we get published. We attend book signings, and awards nights. Email our work to the group to critique, or bring it to the meeting to work shop. We have dinners and drinks together, and we share our lives and our dreams. We have monthly postcard story challenges, complete with little dollar store prizes for first to third place.

All of this has become possible through courses at Mac and I wonder what the future of writers in the greater Hamilton area will hold, now that the writing certificate has run its course.

There are many things that are special about this program, and yes, maybe these same qualities will carry into classes I take at other institutions. Maybes it’s because this is the only place I have studied writing outside of high school, that I have become so attached to this Main St East building.

I thrive on being surrounded by passionate and open minded spirits, and each semester I am inspired just being in the presents of others who share the same dreams and desires. We connect on levels I wouldn’t’ have thought possible amongst a group of perfect strangers. You learn more about these people in ten weeks, than you will some friends in an entire lifetime. Even the shy, reserved, less confident students, are pouring their hearts out by the final class. It’s amazing how you can grow in ten short weeks. Not just as a writer, but as a person.

I write in my journal during the 15 to 20 minute trip on the number 2 to class every Thursday. I conjure up lives for the people that occupy the standing room only bus. I stop at the Skydragon Centre for a large coffee and an organic snack on my way to the downtown centre, and on the bus ride home, I usually just relax with a good book to unwind.

I know I will take more writing courses, but Mac and those I have shared time with over the past few years will always hold a special place in my heart. I love the Continuing Education building. Break time dashes to Tim Horton’s, exploring a downtown I have had no reason to otherwise visit, or getting up in front of my peers and freeing my voice.

It’s week 10. In a few hours, the last class will begin. When the final seconds call to closeout this semester, all that will be left of this program amongst those old courtroom walls, are faded voices, and the stories they once told.

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posted by Lawrence in Human Interest,Miscelaneous,On The Road,Self-Discovery and have Comment (1)

Postcard Stories – My Valentine

Word Limit: 150 Words or less
Three Words: breakfast, frizzy, temptation
Title: Leading me into Temptation

Even as Claire looked into the mirror at her frizzy hair and pillow indented face, she couldn’t help but smile, thinking about the events of the past twelve hours.

The evening was one she had dreamt of from the moment Jake caught her eye. They had also danced for the first time that same night, and it was in his arms where she immediately fell in love.

It was now two years later, and all the temptation leading up to last night came flooding through her thoughts, as she stared into her peaceful blue eyes in Jakes bathroom mirror. She had not known this kind of happiness, this kind of contentment, in a long time.

Claire let Jacobs robe fall off her slender, tanned, naked body, and slipped back under the covers. She didn’t want this perfect night to end.

Suddenly, the sweet smell of breakfast. Heart-shaped pancakes.

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posted by Lawrence in Love,Postcard Stories,Romance and have Comments (3)

Love is Forever

Splashing my freshly shaven face, I looked up into a faded mirror. Grasping the outer edges of the water basin, I stepped into my reflection. I removed one hand briefly to run my fingers through my sodden hair, and then I leaned in to take a closer look. Into my weary eyes, I searched desperately for the man that I once saw staring back at me. I clenched the basin tighter, lowered my head and I realized that I don’t like the image the mirror revealed anymore. My eyes had once been so full of dreams; full of passion. They expressed a lust for life and everything it had to offer. Now their vision discolored, infatuations and a lifetime of aspirations all but forgotten.

For the better part of my twenties, Elaine’s soft blue eyes had been the last image I had seen before falling asleep. Many cold nights her warm figure curled into me, as I lay awake searching endlessly for answers, and many mornings I awoke to the same lost and lonely reflection of my tired eyes staring back at me.

I spent so much time searching my heart for the grounds of my unhappiness, that I hadn’t allowed myself to appreciate the little things that made her so special. My uncertainties really had nothing to do with her. I did love her, but for some reason, I was not content with what we had together.

I tried desperately to push her away, because having her hate me seemed so much easier than letting her go. As I stood disappointed, staring into that mirror’s image, I could see how much trying to push her away was slowly breaking her. Yet, even with how hard I tried to distance myself from her, she still remained by my side. I suddenly appreciate that she couldn’t hate me; she didn’t have it in her heart.

As I rummaged through my thoughts, gaping into that murky basin drain, I realized I had to let her go.

One last dinner together, final thoughts passed as we drove about a winding countryside, and as the colors of autumn leaves change, so did the seasons of our lives together. Somehow I had never found her more beautiful than I did that moment.

As I rested my eyes in hers, I took her hand and looking into her soul, and told her one last time that I loved her. Even with how hard it was to say goodbye, we both know that it was the right thing to do.

Maybe we had been holding on to the memories of so many years ago, or quite possibly we were fearful of being alone. Maybe we worried about hurting one another? Perhaps we were really afraid of living because neither of us could honesty say that’s what we were doing those final months – at least not the lives we had both dreamed of.

In those final moments, I realized that no matter how much I loved Elaine, my dreams would always live somewhere in my heart. I knew that if I didn’t start to listen to the desperate cries deep within me, that in being afraid to live, those dreams and the passions my soul lived to feel, were slowly dying.

I truly believe it’s our unhappiness with ourselves that questions the fate of a relationship. The problem is we either don’t know it, or simply don’t know what we are unhappy with.

Many years have gone by now, and since moving on, I have felt my heart thank me for finally giving the thoughts that circled hopelessly through my soul, the opportunity to live. I have felt the inner peace of not being afraid of life anymore.

As I look up, I see the reflection of a man once more full of life; full of passions; a man with not only dreams, but visions that have been realized. I have felt the sometimes painful, yet magical infatuations of love again. I have allowed myself to be inspired by the wisdom life offers us when we not only yearn for more from it, but do something about getting more out of it.

Regrets, I don’t believe in them, but I certainly wish we didn’t have to hurt the ones we love searching for who we are and what it is we want from this journey.

Even when a relationship is not meant to be, it’s hard not to continue caring for someone in some way, for everything they were to you and for what they taught you about love, life, and especially about yourself. I hope Elaine knows I will never forget the way she looked into my eyes when she said she loved me. To be loved in that way by anyone, is the greatest gift life will ever share with us.

In the end, with our painful expressions of separation, we didn’t do or say anything to make that moment one we would later regret. We both knew those final words would last in our hearts forever.

Breaking up is always a painful memory, yet by ending that part of our lives with a smile and by expressing how much those past years meant to us, the last feelings we shared weren’t full of anger or hatred; just the one thing that kept us together through it all – Love.

No matter whether a relationship ends through infidelity, a difference of opinion, or simply different dream paths, one of the many things my time with Elaine taught me, is that in the end, whether you want it to or not, love lives on somewhere in the heart, and always will.

Elaine was the first woman I ever loved, and for understanding me, always believing in me, and for loving me through it all (even those cold lonely nights when I couldn’t find it in my own heart to love myself), a part of me will love her forever. I will never forget how wonderful it felt, to be loved the way she loved me.

Copyright © 2008-2010 Lawrence Thomas

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Did you say Calder Cup, or Stanley Cup?

What Game 7 of the Calder Cup Finals meant to all that have, all that are, and all that will be, children of the City of Hamilton.
- by Larry Thomas Pattison, Jr.

My Ticket to Game 7

Hockey Night in Hamilton.

At least that’s how it looked in the opening pages of a 100 page story I wrote as a young child. The story was about an NHL franchise in Hamilton. Of course right. That was every hockey playing kids dream wasn’t it? To have an NHL team in their hometown?

Last night, the images I painted all those years ago became clearer.

Sure, this isn’t the NHL. We are not the Edmonton Oilers or the Montreal Canadiens. They are not the Minnesota Wild, and it definitely wasn’t the Stanley Cup we seen hoisted above the heads of the Houston Aeros. Or was it?

Growing up here, the dream of an NHL team in Hamilton was never far from your mind. After all, when Copps was built in the 80′s, it was said to be our ticket to the Big Leagues. “The future home of the NHL” they said – Have we ever really gotten over those promises?

As I watch these young kids sitting in front of me, I here one chant the words that were so much a part of my childhood – And I heard it amongst the 17,000 + fans shouting “GO Dogs GO!”

“Let’s Go Lawfield, Let’s GO!”

That was me and my teamates 18 years ago watching the Hamilton Kilty Bees at Mountain Arena – B.C.(Before Copps). I too was a graduate of the Lawfield Arena tradition and I imagine now what it would have been like to be (17 kids and their coaches and parents) attending a Calder Cup game 7 back then?

As I walked up the steps to my seat, and walking ‘up’ only for the second time since the Bulldogs have been in Hamilton, I look out over the railing, into the dark crowd. I stand there for a moment and take this all in. White Thundersticks waving everywhere. The music thumping, the lights pulling your eyes around the arena. It was the most beautiful thing I have ever seen in Hamilton. 17,428 screaming Hamiltonians taking in a little bit of history.

Hamilton for the most part, has been more of a football city to me. I remember as a child, the whole family, cousins and aunts and uncles, all packed in my Uncles Ti-Cat bus to see our beloved Cats. But, no matter how much I loved, and still love CFL football, I am a hockey person at heart.

I played hockey 7 days a week as a child. At least 2 ice hockey games, 2 practices, nighttime street or driveway hockey, ball hockey or hand hockey in our basements,  and in the evenings, it was Hockey Night in Canada.

We learned about getting a long with others, playing as a team, we learned about friendship. We learned about winning and losing. We learned about life.

Photo courtesy of Robert Giulekas

As I stood and listened to Hamilton native Jaime Harris sing the national anthems, I looked around in awe. This is what Hamilton has waited for, for so long. This is what hockey in Hamilton was supposed to be, and as O’ Canada came to an end, and the crowd erupted, I felt goose bumps fill my soul.

I pictured myself out on that ice. Helmut held at my heart, kicking my feet out one at a time, admiring the Canadian flag, and then skating around that ice as the crowd cheered the start of something every hockey fan dreams of – Game 7 of a professional finals game in your hometown.

Then, coming back to reality, I looked around at the kids taking in this game. In their eyes I could see the same dream transpiring in their minds. Isn’t that what a professional sports team in any city is really all about – the children and giving them something to dream about. Something to strive for. Whether it be becoming a professional sports player, or just a champion in general, this was what dreams were made of.

My grandfather and I attended the big 6 to 3 win over the Binghamton Senators in the Conference finals. It was the first time he had ever been to Copps Colliseum. He doesn’t watch as much hockey as he used to, but he made it a point to watch an NHL game the night before our evening out, to get in the spirit of the game. After all, it wasn’t just a Bulldogs game, it was the Calder Cup playoffs.

We arrived about 45 minutes before the game started. The arena was still empty for the most part. The teams were having their pre-game skate, and my grandfather talked about what hockey used to be in Hamilton. He talked about the Hamilton Forum, and he talked about listening to hockey in general with Foster Hewitt at the mic.

He talked with great passion about the game. A side of my grandfather I never knew about. I didn’t even know he liked hockey, although I do remember him attending my games as a kid.

I realize now, that that night out with my grandfather, the first hockey game ever at Copps Coliseum with my father, the Bruins and Islanders pre-season game with my then best friend, are the stories I will be telling my children one day – and hopefully there are many more wonderful stories to come.

There is only one thing that was missing from last nights game though, which me and my grandfather seen a lot of that night we were there – a Hamilton Bulldogs goal. I would have loved to have seen the excitement in the eyes of those fans, and to have felt the energy of 17,000+ people going wild because their hometown team just scored. I have this feeling deep down in my heart though, that there is plenty of this to come. I don’t know what, but I think it’s going to be magical.

Last night wasn’t the best game we seen the Bulldogs play by far, but then again, the Aeros never really let us play our game. I overheard someone state just that fact last night, but I was glad he backed it up with just how amazing the Dogs were to watch when they were on their game – we definitely seen some amazing hockey games in Hamilton this year.

It’s time to let go of our strong feelings towards those promises made so many years ago.

It’s time we opened our eyes to just how great AHL hockey is. The players are up and coming stars, they go back and forth to our favorite NHL teams all the time, and some of them are even stars of the Stanley Cups we watch each year. This years Conn Smythe Trophy winner Jean-Sebastien Giguere of the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, is just one example of a graduate of the AHL. Not to mention, Hamilton’s own Georges Laraque. Or, how about watching Marcel Hossa, or Mariusz Czerkawski this year?

Photo courtesy of Robert Giulekas

I can feel it. Last night’s game 7 is the start of something great for Hamilton. I think something happened between those 17,428 fans last night at Copps Coliseum. We once again became a hockey town. We experienced the longest game in AHL playoff history in Game 2 of the Calder Cup, and last night, we seen the largest crowd in AHL playoff history.

Game 7, 17,428 fans, and “The good ‘ol hockey game.” – All in your hometown.

It doesn’t get any better than this. O.k. A win would have topped it all off, but when you really step back and look at what Hamilton was just a part of, we did.

I am sad to say goodbye to the Oilers, but I look forward to the future of Hamilton hockey. I am happy to have been part of history tonight though, and being the new home of the Montreal Canadiens prospect team.

GO Dogs GO! – And good luck Edmonton. Thanks for everything you have done for Hamilton. We will remember these past years fondly.

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posted by Lawrence in Childhood,Hockey,Human Interest,Published Articles,Sports and have No Comments