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The Canadian Looks at the American

Some thoughts on a strange relationship...

By Kendall Defoe Published 4 months ago 5 min read
Together?

“Nice, nice, very nice;

Nice, nice, very nice;

Nice, nice, very nice –

So many different people

In the same device.” –

“Cat’s Cradle” (Kurt Vonnegut)

Hello,

Well, here we are with one more new – or not so new – president down below, and a soon-to-be announced prime minister up here. We observe you more than you observe us, but I think this may change. I did not want this letter to be locked into our present age (it would be better if I could write something that some curious reader in the future to read and enjoy), but certain facts must be included here: there is now a trade war between our two nations that may drive up prices on both sides of our friendly border (and we are keeping our dollars at home); one PM resigned, replaced by a man who saved us with his work running national banks both here and abroad. And we are stare and look at your twists and turns with concern.

There has been a lot of talk about the differences between our nations, not enough talk about what we share: the friendly border mentioned earlier; a main language (yes, even in Quebec); certain sports and hobbies, etc. And I still find that this may be the most important point to share: we are not going anywhere and have to face up to certain facts about who we are.

Am I still optimistic enough to believe that we can be united (if not politically, at least in spirit)? Perhaps I am. My belief is based on our history and histories, and the fact that we really do have no choice. Our bonds are strong and refuse to be ignored.

*

Now, about that title…

This was taken as a tribute to an essay written by James Baldwin, one of your finest writers. In his essay collection entitled, “Nobody Knows My Name”, there is a reprint of an article entitled “The Black Boy Looks at the White Boy”. It actually concludes the book, and it was one that is too perfect to ignore as I decided to write my own essay. In this 1961 piece for Esquire magazine, Baldwin studies and analyzes his relationship with another American writer, Norman Mailer, author of the same essays on American life that made both men famous. The article caught my attention at a time when I was just beginning to read and consider the messages of both writers, and I am grateful for that line as inspiration for my own work.

It was not only the title that proved to be useful. To my great surprise when I reread it years later, Baldwin’s relationship to a fellow writer attempting to understand his place in the nation and the world had many similarities to our own relationship with your nation. There is a mutual respect and understanding of the other’s role and responsibilities, even if it is not always clear what the other side would like to achieve. There are parallels of the experience of history and life. And there is a sense of equality between them (race and culture are tied together, with Baldwin’s African American heritage providing an interesting contrast to Mailer’s Jewish American experience). No matter how determined certain outside forces seemed to be to divide them, they managed to see themselves in the other.

It was not always a pleasant view in that mirror. Interest often ran only in one direction (guess who looks closer at whom when they bothered to look at all). The louder and more demonstrative Mailer often shocks the less confident Baldwin with his pronouncements, behaviour and criticisms. “No one is more dangerous than he who imagines himself pure in heart,” Baldwin writes, and this explains why his friendship with Mailer was always going to be difficult. He also writes that white men “believe the world is theirs,” while black men make themselves up as they go along. It is all about the roles they are either forced to take or have chosen for themselves. Surprisingly, their friendship remained intact, even as they maintained a respectful distance from each other as they wrote and reviewed the other’s work. They had no choice but to share that orbit and see what came next.

Now, does any of this remind you of another relationship?

*

This is right time to say that we do not hate you… at least, not all of you. We have a relationship that is too deep and too long to end because one particular leader is much more interested in playing the game just for himself instead of the entire team. On our side, we are trying to decide on a new leader and a new way forward with our economy, education, environment and political life. And it seems as though many of you understand how we feel. I watch many online videos where Americans are exposed to other cultures and realize that the world does not revolve around them; it can actually evolve without them.

This must be very hard for you. It does explain many things about your nation that many countries around the world simply do not understand. You often seem to vote against your own self-interests; you have opinions about privacy and rights that openly contradict the basic tenets of your laws and constitution; you apply your own reasoning to situations and places where wiser voices with more experience should be heard.

I know that you are a young nation, and that you have also been quite successful in many ways. You have not had a history of empires rising and falling. You have faced attack, but not a grand invasion that threatened your very being. You have made mistakes and had great losses that have affected your sense of nationhood.

There is still hope.

Perhaps there should be more moments where we do take a closer look at each other and understand that it is often not just a stranger’s face when we look in that mirror.

“Our problem right now is that we're so specialized that if the lights go out, there are a huge number of people who are not going to know what to do. But within every dystopia there's a little utopia.”

-Margaret Atwood

A Tough Fit

*

Thank you for reading!

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You can find more poems, stories, and articles by Kendall Defoe on my Vocal profile. I complain, argue, provoke and create...just like everybody else.

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About the Creator

Kendall Defoe

Teacher, reader, writer, dreamer... I am a college instructor who cannot stop letting his thoughts end up on the page. No AI. No Fake Work. It's all me...

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Comments (5)

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  • Anthony Scott4 months ago

    Very nice advice ❤️

  • Gene Lass4 months ago

    I've heard and seen a number of comments similar to the one about the world not revolving around Americans. There have also been comments made for decades about how Americans act abroad, sometimes leading to stereotypes as one also sees about any country. Sometimes you see studies supporting those stereotypes, other times they dispel them. To the point, the main comment is that Americans don't know enough about other countries. I saw a well-written article written here on Vocal about two months ago, by an American who has been living in a remote Asian country, that noted that according to American news, nothing happens in some of those countries ever that anyone needs to know about. They're just not important. He said this implying the opposite, that every country, every person is important. And it's true. The average American can't find Luxembourg on a map, or identify all of the countries that used to be Soviet republics, or all the countries in Africa or Asia. Why? Aside from a high school or college geography test, we don't have to. Ever. It will never affect our lives. Sadly, at the same time, a lot of Americans probably can't identify each U.S. state on a map. It can be a challenge, particularly with the big square ones and the tiny New England ones. Why? Because if you're in Texas, California, or Illinois, who gives a shit where Rhode Island is? Rhode Island's key role is as the answer to a common trivia question: What is the smallest state? If you're not from that region, there's no other reason to know where it is, you'll likely never go there. The same applies to countries around the world. The average American will likely live his or her entire life never meeting anyone from Luxembourg, Belgium, Finland, Uruguay, and a host of other countries, nor will they travel there. We might go elsewhere, or meet someone from there who's here on business or vacation, but that's it. If the country doesn't produce something we consume regularly, like chocolate, phones, liquor, cheese, wine, or fabric, we could go our entire lives without being affected by what's going on in much of the world. To be fair, the reverse is also true. Ask someone in another country to name all 50 states, or point out where Montana is on a map. Are you sure it's not Wyoming? How about the New England states? Probably not. And for the same reason. You know New York, Chicago, Las Vegas, New Orleans, Los Angeles, and Miami from TV. You can probably find California, Texas, and Florida on a map because those are easy. Otherwise, you're screwed.

  • JBaz4 months ago

    Did you begin penning this months ago? I ask because this has it that Carney has not been elected as of yet. Either way the thought and statement are still relevant ( unfortunately). Well said and this seems to prove the more things change the more they stay the same.

  • Leslie Writes4 months ago

    Working for a global company, I came face to face with this realization. “[…] Americans are exposed to other cultures and realize that the world does not revolve around them; it can actually evolve without them.” Damn right! We are in some serious trouble right now. I’m trying to keep my fighting spirit and optimism. Thank you for sharing this 🇨🇦 🇺🇸

  • Stephanie Hoogstad4 months ago

    Perhaps part of our problem is that we have an inflated ego from being considered such a “great nation” and a “world power” even from such an early age. Perhaps we did not truly earn those titles before we received them. I don’t know; I’m just postulating here. I should also say that I’m afraid that cooperation between our countries might yet still be beyond our reach so long as our president (whom I did not vote for) is still in office. He is the kind where it’s entirely his way or nothing at all, so this trade war might go on for quite some time. I don’t know, maybe if Canada sticks to its guns, it might teach him a lesson about how tariffs can negatively affect the country that enacts them—but I’m just afraid that he won’t care. Regardless, well done on the article, and thank you for at least trying to bridge the gap.

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