Ralph

A close-up photo of a man holding a baby under an apple tree. The man has long grey and black hair and a braided beard. He is wearing a purple hat and a blue T-shirt, and holding the baby who is wearing a white summer shirt with pale blue trim.
Ralph holding my then three-month-old son, Taliesin.

It was a cloudy day in a November of my childhood when Uncle Ralph gave me my first carving tools. Of course, he wasn’t called ‘uncle’ yet, at the time, but never mind. I was probably about ten, and it was a rough time in my childhood, for a lot of reasons. If I’m remembering the correct occasion, he arrived without Auntie Lidia, alone on his motorcycle, round leather riding goggles pinching in the top of his hair while the rest of it flew out behind him. Even his beard flew along beside him as he rode down our driveway. He’d come by for my birthday, and I remember his wonderfully long brown eyebrows and much longer braided beard leaning down to me with a most beautiful leather bag held out in his dark hands that always looked more weathered than you might expect for a man his age. "Here. Got you this.” He said, and opened the bag to show me all the different types of tools he’d packed into it.

I remember thinking how annoying it was that he said he’d ‘got’ it for me, when it was clearly his own bag. Eventually I realized the gift had been much more special for having been his own bag, than if he’d just bought me something at a store. It was a piece of his heart. And he’d given that gift to me at a time I needed not only to be seen, but to have an outlet for my pain. I suppose Uncle Ralph’s outlet was creativity—often with carving—so he gave that to me.

Uncle Ralph was always carving. We’d be sitting at the beach and he’d pull out his pocket-knife and just start whittling a piece of driftwood. He even seemed to sometimes have a little carving in his pocket, which he’d randomly start working on, as we sat somewhere. The parents of our community built a playground for our new school, and of course Ralph was one of them. He carved a driftwood log into a horse that became burnished by a couple generations of children who rode to our adventures at recess. Ralph gave us adventure. He was a printmaker, as well, and once did a project with the older kids at school, where he taught them to make self-portraits in relief out of cardboard, and then together with them built a cardboard bus, in the windows of which the kids put their cardboard selves. Then he laid a giant paper on the bus, and drove a steam roller over it to make a print! I’m a printmaker too, now, and I don’t have to tell you why.

When I got married, Uncle Ralph carved a wedding bowl for me, and he stood up to sing for me and Markus. He welcomed Markus into his life without any hesitation or awkwardness. Just treated him like family, instantly. After we moved back to my home island, and spent more time with our family, here, and as Markus’ beard got longer and longer, I once suggested Markus might braid it like Ralph’s. “No. That’s his thing,” Markus replied. Uncle Ralph is so cool his style is untouchable. And yet he’s one of the most open and accepting people you could meet.

He loved children. Not in the way that fawning adults often seem to ‘love children’, with affection and concern and more than a little superiority. Uncle Ralph related to children as if they were equals. That might mean he said somewhat inappropriate things, at times, leaving us staring blankly, where his bald humour bewildered us. But it also made us feel seen. He had four of his own children, and eventually a bunch of grand-children, but he still had time and acceptance for all of us hangers-on.

When my son Taliesin was little, he had a knit yellow toque with ear-flaps ending in long braided strings and tassels. He quite correctly identified that this was the sort of hat Uncle Ralph would wear, and used to dress up in that hat, sometimes with colourful vests and scarves, and call himself Uncle Ralph. When Tali was turning five, and had been digging away at a hole near the driveway he called his ‘mine,’ Uncle Ralph and Auntie Lidia arrived with yet another unexpectedly perfect birthday gift: A shovel. He’d bought my son a small, light-weight, but very functional shovel, and carved TALI into the handle, in ornate capital letters. Tali’s own shovel, for his own mine. One year, Tali only invited four people to his birthday: Jon and Rika (similarly unique and close adopted family of ours), and Uncle Ralph and Auntie Lidia. Tali stipulated that Uncle Ralph must bring his guitar. So he did.

A young boy stands in a small hole in the dirt, holding a shovel in his hand, and surrounded by strewn pieces of wood. A man with a grey beard and long hair stands with a short grey-haired woman, looking at the boy as he describes the "mining work" he is doing.
Uncle Ralph and Auntie Lidia getting a tour of Taliesin's mine.

Uncle Ralph could be very loud and very quiet. At that small child’s birthday party he sat very quietly noodling on his guitar, creating a beautiful environment for our celebration. At other times he could be loud and even abrasive; shouting and joking and laughing, playing baseball, drinking beer, and dancing and dancing like you could never imagine his long hair tamed; his hands and legs quiet, or his face not wild. But also at a party—a big party—he was a safe place to go to. Often he’d be down by his creek, sat down by his makeshift barbecue, tending to his special salmon that everyone back up at the house was waiting for. I used to just go sit down there with him, quietly. Often it was just the two of us, maybe with an auntie or another kid. And he’d tell us about his plans and projects; the fish that were circling in a pool of the creek; any number of his amazing inventions. Or maybe he’d just sit carving, and then eventually hand us a beautifully decorated stick. We loved him.

Ralph became ‘uncle’ to us, really by word of mouth. He was one of a small group of cherished friends of my parents with whom we spent a lot of time, growing up. And at some point Gail told us she’d like us to call her Auntie. It felt like a gift, so I called her Auntie Gail, proudly. Then one day Lidia mentioned that if Gail was my auntie, then surely she was too, so, by extension, Ralph became my uncle. He never needed or asked for that name, but he also took to it like it had always been. I guess because it always was.

One day I was leading a class back from a forest adventure near Ralph and Lidia’s home, and I looked over their fence as we passed, to see him sitting on a chair in his yard, whittling. “Hi Uncle Ralph!” I called over the fence, and he looked up and smiled, as about a dozen of the kids I was with hurried over, hands and chins pulled up onto his fence, and shouted, “hi Uncle Ralph!!!” He just kept smiling, like this was nothing out of the ordinary, at all.

His hands kept working at the wood on his lap, as his eyes smiled out from his mess of hair and brows, and his lips called out the musical tone of his reply: “Helloo!”

It was maybe five or six years ago that I first knew he didn’t recognize me. I’d known he had dementia for quite a while, but it always seemed like a minor thing. He covered it up well, joking about his mistakes, and acting like they just didn’t matter. Maybe they didn’t; we knew him well enough to not feel too lost in the confusion, and we covered up for him, too. But that day at the store, I went up and gave him a hug, and I could see in his eyes that he was hugging me because it was the appropriate thing to do, not because he knew who I was. “Hi Uncle Ralph,” I said, and he answered, “can’t find where I parked my car.” He hadn’t driven for years, but he went on to describe a car he also hadn’t owned for years. I figured he’d walked down to the store, and when he started asking for Lidia, I knew he was scared, and just hoped Lidia was on her way to pick him up.

Lidia was the great love of Ralph’s life. I know from my own experience that living with a person like Ralph is adventurous and beautiful, and also challenging. And too, his love is profound. Maybe like a child’s love for his mother is profound. And in moments of uncertainty, Lidia was Ralph’s touchstone. This past Christmas, the last time I visited Ralph and Lidia before he went to hospital, Uncle Ralph wanted to leave the house he’d lived in for over forty years to ‘go home,’ but despite his confusion, he still spoke to Lidia as though he knew her. No matter where his mind went, she was at the foundation of his sense of security.

Just before Ralph died, lying small and thin and quiet, his feeble knees bent under the hospital blanket and his mostly white hair pulled back into a ponytail, he struggled to breathe even shallowly, but once in a while he shuddered, opened his eyes, and looked into Lidia’s, where she sat in front of him.

A few days later, after Ralph’s family had all gathered around and said goodbye, after his mind had carried its trove of stories and inventions to some other place, and his body had left the world we live in, I attended a paddle-making workshop that I’d signed up for many months before. We’d been tasked with finding some kind of learning or self-discovering in the experience of carving our paddles from 2×6 cut blanks. And although I struggle with following directions, I didn’t have to look for meaning, that day, because Uncle Ralph was there with me. As I pulled the draw-knife, manipulated the small plane, and eventually sanded my paddle to a nice smooth object, I felt enormous gratitude for this man who first inspired me to carve, but more than that, I realized that I was using carving to heal from the loss of him. In living, he gave me the tools to heal from his death.

Goodbye, Uncle Ralph.

He would say, ‘hey, bye.’

Remembering Lyn van Lidth de Jeude

A woman with long straight white hair in a dark brown knee-length sweater and black pants, stands looking down and smiling at a golden retriever, who is also smiling, sitting on her feet, where she stands in her garden. There are forget-me-not flowers all around her feet, and in her hands she is holding a bouquet of raspberry-pink and violet rhododendron flowers, and parsley leaves.
Lyn in her garden with her dog, Kalea.

Our mother and life partner, a lover of song and beauty. A singer, a gardener, wife, mother, grandmother, friend, teacher, and creator and spreader of love, died peacefully on September 18th 2024, five months after receiving her brain tumour diagnosis.

Lyn van Lidth de Jeude helped raise countless children in her 40 year career as an early childhood educator, infant development consultant, and music therapist. Through her dedication and constant love for every child in her care, Lyn worked tirelessly to ensure that they all started off with a strong foundation.

While you may not have guessed it, Lyn was born in Daytona Beach Florida, and a piece of her identity was her deep ranching roots in the Black Hills of South Dakota. Her father Horatio Ham, an engineer, moved the family of 5 kids many times until the final move north to West Vancouver. Once here, Lyn attended West Van High and Capilano College ending with a degree in music therapy.

Music was always a fundamental part of her life. From her many many years with the Vancouver folk song society to her participation in Bowen Island choirs (the Madrigals, Song Roots, and the Community Choir). She also instilled the love of music in her children and shared her songs whenever she could.

Lyn and her husband Everhard moved to Bowen Island in 1978. As she engaged in life with her young family, Lyn quickly grew to love her community and developed deep friendships, choosing to see her friends as family and treating them as such.

In 1993, the family moved to the interior, where Lyn worked as a music therapist and infant development consultant in Kamloops. Lyn and Everhard returned to Bowen Island in 2006, where Lyn again joined the Bowen Children's Centre, with a desire to give back to her own community.

Throughout her life it was most important to love, help, and respect people who needed it. From volunteering at the Nook or the Recycling Depot, the Garden Club or the Conservancy, or delivering food for the Legion, or the countless other community endeavours, Lyn loved to help.

She is survived by her family and many, many friends.

Shortly before she died, Lyn dictated the following message, which she asked us to pass on to her loved ones after her death:

For the people I love,
My time is finished, now. I would like you to know how much you mean to me. I have appreciated the connections and love we’ve shared. I hope you will continue to find beauty in the world.
Lyn

A beautiful woman with long straight white-blond hair sits on a porch, playing a small acoustic guitar. She's looking down at her fingers forming the chord. She's wearing a pale lilac dress and a pair of glasses. It's a sunny day.
Lyn playing guitar on her own porch.

More links, videos and photos for those who might want to spend some time remembering the beauty that was Lyn:

Obituary from the Vancouver Folksong Society: Remembering Lyn van Lidth de Jeude

A man with short stand-up brown hair in a plaid shirt sits holding a baby on his lap, and she's holding a dolly on her own lap. He is smiling at the camera; she is laughing and pointing at the camera. Wearing a little white baby dress.
Lyn on her father's lap.
A black and white photo of a band on stage. Woman on left plays bass violin, woman in the middle is Lyn and stands not singing at a microphone, waiting as the man on the right, with a large acoustic guitar, appears to be taking a solo. Lyn is wearing a loud printed dress, 60's style.
Lyn performing with her band in the late 60's.
A young woman in a blue jacket is riding a horse in the wind on a beach with large ocean waves crashing in the background.
Lyn in the early 1970's
A woman in a white printed blouse and dark orange pants sits on a low seat in a living room, singing and playing guitar. She has long brown hair falling down her shoulders and back, and is pregnant.
Lyn, pregnant with Emily in 1975.
A woman holds a young child on her lap, reading a book. THey are both visibly laughing because they are reading Little Bear's Visit, the child's favourite book.
Lyn reading Emily's favourite story, where the gnome loses his shoes and they come to find him! Watch Lyn reading a funny catalogue with her grandson, here: https://youtu.be/WBWCPy9LpXM
A woman sits on a dock with seaside bluffs in the background. She is laughing at the camera, and holding a little laughing boy ontop of their big fluffy dog.
Lyn, baby Adrian, and Chis Chila.
A wild-looking yard with a line full of laundry on the left and a makeshift shed on the right. In the shed, a man and woman stand slaughtering two rabbits, which are hanging from strings at the edge of the shed. The man is handing the kidneys to the couple's black fluffy dog, who is sitting politely, waiting.
Lyn and Everhard on their first homestead, slaughtering rabbits. Everhard is feeding the kidneys to Chis Chila.
A woman with short grey and white hair stands on a handmade footbridge in the Swiss alps, smiling at the camera because the love of her life is behind it.
Lyn in Switzerland, smiling at the love of her life, Everhard, behind the camera. 1999
A man and a woman in winter clothing and hats, standing in cross-country skis on a snow-covered frozen lake.
Lyn and Everhard skiing in the interior.
A woman stands bending over her two grandchildren, hugging them. Her long white hair tumbles down over them both. The boy has long brown hair and looks safe and happy under her hair, where she's kissing his head. The girl, with long blond hair, is peeking out from her grandmother's white hair, and smiling.
Lyn's love for her grandchildren was perfect. This photo was taken at her retirement party. Watch Lyn singing traditional Canadian folksongs with her granddaughter's class, here: https://youtu.be/LQ7VeLUyZz8
A woman in a large garden stands on a tall folding ladder, measuring a huge sunflower, that was over 13 feet tall. It hangs over her and the flower is bigger than her head.
Lyn measuring her award-winning sunflower that was over 13 feet tall!
A woman standing singing at a microphone, with a beautiful open smile!
Lyn singing a traditional ballad at the Princeton Traditional Music Festival. Watch Lyn singing at the PTMF, here: https://youtu.be/VrBNiLGm_0Q
A man with short dark blond hair and a very short beard, wearing a black cartoon t-shirt and a blue ribbon, stands with his arm around his mother. She is shorter than he is, and has long straight white hair, glasses, and is wearing a pink sleeveless shirt. They are both smiling happily.
Adrian and Lyn on Adrian's 40th birthday.
A man with a short grey and white beard and glasses sits smiling in a pale yellow collared shirt, looking to the left. A woman with long white hair pulled back looks at him with her hand held partially in front of her face. She is smiling and really her whole face beams with love and affection for this man, who is her husband.
Everhard and Lyn at friends' wedding celebration.
A woman sits at the front of a canoe, paddling. She has long white hair pulled back into a bun, and is paddling on her left side. The man who took the photo, from the back of the canoe, was her husband and the love of her life.
Lyn paddling in BC's interior. Photo by Everhard.
A scene with an orange Kobota tractor hauling a black utility trailer with foot-high sides. A young long-haired man in a grey hoodie is driving the tractor, but turned to the camera, smiling. In the trailer an adult man with short dark blond hair, jeans, and a grey sweater, is smiling, with his hands holding a smiling golden retriever. A woman in a blue rain jacket with long straight white hair stands at the side of the trailer, and is lifting the dog's floppy ears up so it looks like she's flying. This is a happy family portrait on a work day.
Adrian, Lyn and Taliesin with the happiest dog in the world, Kalea.
Two woman are partially obscured by a large red currant bush, where they are harvesting berries. They are leaning, heads close together. The woman on the left has dark brown hair pulled into a bun, and the woman on the right has white hair pulled into a bun.
Emily and Lyn harvesting red currants together.