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Social Science General

Safe Haven

The Possibility of Sanctuary in an Unsafe World

by (author) Larry Gaudet

Publisher
Random House of Canada
Initial publish date
Aug 2008
Category
General, General, General
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780679313847
    Publish Date
    Aug 2008
    List Price
    $21.00

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Description

“Forgive the assumptions I’m about to make. I’m sure they say much more about me than you. You have a dream of sanctuary too” (p. 21).

“Sanctuary” is a beautiful word: philosophically rich, culturally intriguing and evocative of so much we cherish — protection, safety, contemplation, solitude. But lurking at the edges of this bright concept are some very dark associations: fear, paranoia, the slamming of gates to exclude the threat of other-ness. Whatever the word means to each of us, and whatever our ancestral legacies, the yearning for sanctuary is a malady we all share to varying degrees, a quest that is both our birthright and our affliction.

These are the assertions of award-winning author Larry Gaudet in Safe Haven, an unorthodox and highly engaging work of imaginative non-fiction. Sure to resonate with anyone who has dreamt of escaping from the pressures of the workaday world — that is, all of us — this book is a highly personal, funny and unflinchingly honest investigation of the power and allure of the idea of sanctuary.

Safe Haven begins and ends in the soft fog of coastal Nova Scotia, taking side trips into the ruined shrines of ancient Greece (with a fictional Bayou-born international spy serving as tour guide), journeying by rail through the frozen vistas and forlorn social realities of Canada’s north and dipping into Gaudet’s own Acadian heritage of displacement.

Booking a year for this project, Gaudet moved with his wife, Alison, and their two small boys to a newly constructed barn by the sea in the fictionally named community of Foggy Cove. His intent: to chart the meaning of sanctuary through the ages, using his family’s solitude as an idyllic jumping-off point. But the project becomes far more complicated than he’d envisioned, and far less idyllic. Envying his children who can oversee uncomplicated imaginary civilizations in a sandbox, Gaudet cannot shake the awareness that he is complicit in the very iniquities from which he seeks to shelter his family, from the environmental toll of their septic tank on this ecologically sensitive land, to the wince of a lobster he is about to boil for dinner. He must also contend with the guilt he feels for having hijacked his wife and children, potentially for naught. As Alison’s desire to return to the comforts and stimuli of urban life grows with every month spent in isolation, Gaudet knows their idyllic days in Foggy Cove are numbered.

In his search for the diverse meanings of sanctuary, Gaudet illuminates the dysfunctions and hidden costs of the way we live — and challenges us to find ways to bring down the walls that keep so many of us estranged from our own experiences. Safe Haven is an entertaining and illuminating romp through the fog-shrouded territory of sanctuary through ages and mythologies, guided by an engaging author who is not afraid to shine the light directly on his own fallable and highly likeable self.

About the author

Larry Gaudet has published seven books, including two non-fiction bestsellers and two critically acclaimed novels. His corporate work over twenty-five–plus years spans branding, venture financing, speechwriting, investor relations, and marketing strategy. His scriptwriting through his 300 Dead Cattle subsidiary includes projects with Universal Cable, NBC, Highway Bingo, and Chernin. He has received Canada’s highest journalism awards and recognition from branding juries internationally. His community work has included providing counsel to Doctors Without Borders (MSF); the Kingsburg Coastal Conservancy; an art therapy institute in Hangzhou, China; and the Art Canada Institute. He’s a Dalhousie graduate with a diploma from the Canadian Securities Institute. He lives in Nova Scotia, Canada.

Larry Gaudet's profile page

Excerpt: Safe Haven: The Possibility of Sanctuary in an Unsafe World (by (author) Larry Gaudet)

Sanctuary in the fog (Ghosting)

Foggy Cove, June ­2006

In my travels, I’ve developed a fondness for older neighbourhoods that celebrate the diffuse and unseen, the spooky both planned and improvised. The French Quarter. The Dorobanti in Bucharest. Venice. ­Vieux-­Montréal. Even when I’m moving inside a tourist throng, I’m still the willing pawn on a grid of haunting streets and alleys, soaking up the orchestrated melancholia in the shadows and whispers between cobblestone and gable. I’m attracted to the gestures that keep strangers on the outside, ­flat-­footed before the imposing facade, or too intimidated to knock on the towering bronze doors. More than once I’ve peered through ­wrought-­iron gates into courtyards obscured by foliage and lattice, imagining a weathered marble shrine or a caged exotic bird talking to itself in complete sentences. I’ve studied ­half-­hidden entrances that seduce the eye only to repel it, leaving me to wonder: Who’s in there? What are they doing? Why am I out ­here?

Whether I’m on the outside looking in, or the inside looking out, I’m in love with mystery itself, the idea that within everything and everyone there are hidden meanings, and conflicting meanings, too, and things that just never add up, no matter how many clues to the puzzle you have. I don’t know exactly what triggered my obsession to buy land and build a home in Foggy Cove. The mystery still beguiles and indeed engulfs me, not just as a mind game, but as a physical force that shapes life here. A seaside village in southeastern Nova Scotia along the North Atlantic coast, Foggy Cove is often shrouded in the ambiguous conditions of coastal fog, the mythic substance of ghosts, the inspiration for a thousand clichés on the human tendency to orient toward inward horizons when there’s nowhere else to gaze. And that’s just what I’m doing this morning as I lie awake in ­bed.

Here, in our barn by the sea, we’re a nuclear family enclosed within itself, expecting summer to arrive any day now and finally warm things up. The fire went out hours ago; it’s chilly in our loft bedroom. I’m assuming (but can’t yet verify) that small dramas are unfolding outdoors in the fog: spiderwebs thickened to visibility by heavy dew; an intrepid family of deer in the field, munching on clover; a trio of blue jays in a fight at the bird feeder. Someone is likely walking a dog along the beach or the cliffs, intending to pick up the mail on the way back, having determined that this time the dog will not escape into the house before its muddied belly gets rinsed with the hose and dried in the sun, should the sun ever appear again, which seems very unlikely right ­now.

Everyone else in our house is asleep, oblivious to the clouds on the ground around us, the air uniformly congested with condensation made from heat rising off the land, the evaporating water seeking a home in the sky but temporarily manifest as fog in our midst. Water can’t be stopped. It goes where it needs to, when it’s tired of hanging around, creating fog blindness. Fog reminds me that our bodies are nearly all water. Maybe walking through fog, as so many of us who live here like to do, breathing it in deeply, speaks to an unconscious desire to connect with our distant amphibian past when we were gilled water creatures in search of land, backbone, lungs, a down comforter like the one covering me now. Through the loft windows I can’t even make out the silhouette of our apple trees down below the house, only fifty feet away. The world outside appears like the one behind my eyelids: a shimmering grey surface. So why even make the effort to keep my eyes open? I dig deeper into the comforter, also conscious of the soft pyjama flannel on my skin. Cozy bliss. As womb-like as it gets. Why move? Ever ­again . . .

Still, as much as I love fog, it has taken me a few years to learn how to gaze with unclenched teeth and unsweating palms into the visual nothingness that greets me here on so many mornings and can muck up the view for days on end. As a cataract over my watchable world, fog channels the hungry eye through veils in the air that come and go, and always come again, softening edges, distorting depth and sound, hiding things. I’ve observed people vacationing in our village for the first time who, in their experience of persistent fog, present symptoms of a panic attack, an anxiety disorder. It’s as if they see a conspiracy behind the weather: something or someone is out to get them from behind the wall of meteorological vagueness. Or worse: maybe there’s nothing there at all. A foggy day disarms the defence mechanisms that provide immunity from the risks of prolonged ­self-­awareness, and that can be disquieting. I personally don’t know many people who go on vacation for the purpose of tunnelling into the darker corners or less travelled pathways of their ­psyche.

Alison’s feet seek out mine as she turns toward me. Cold feet. I thought she’d got into bed with heavy socks on, but she seems to have lost them in the night. The message encrypted in her toes is established bedroom code in our house: I’m supposed to get up and start a fire. But in this dialogue between feet, I respond sullenly. I have no intention of getting up yet. I’m wiped. As she is. As everyone is. We arrived in Halifax last night after a ­two-­hour flight from Toronto, then we drove two more hours in rainy darkness and arrived in time for dinner at Alison’s parents’ house next door. The evening featured our two young boys acting out the part of ­runaway-­train engines, chugging and tooting around the furniture. Only deep dishes of ice cream curtailed the meltdown caused by a derailment after ­four-­year-­old Theo missed a signal and collided with Jackson, his ­six-­year-­old brother. The incident happened in a quadrant where the invisible tracks weren’t supposed to intersect. Back at our place, in the final minutes before bedtime, it seemed unwise to insist that the boys, after such a long day of travelling, be required to wash the vanilla streaks off their faces. They’re sleeping everything off, and good for ­them.

Ignoring the prodding of my wife’s toes, I close my eyes and try to recapture that luxurious feeling that comes with being sheltered in a space of one’s own making. I am protected here, and happy doing the protecting, as a father, husband, neighbour, alert to my good fortune, listening for any source of danger, no matter how insanely remote the threat. My vigilance scares me. I’d sleep with an axe, stick pins in voodoo dolls or clench prayer beads if I knew it would keep us safe here or anywhere else.

The foghorn sounds again: an extended brooding note, like a million owls in symphonic ­lockstep.

I love the sounds of nature. Pheasants squawking. The thrum of hummingbird wings. The wind teasing out ditties from within leaves and branches. The acoustical variations that result from collisions of tidal water and land mass. But foghorn music resonates deeper with me. It feels like nature invested with a human spirit. It gives meaning to fog, not only protecting ships from being wrecked on shoals, but assuring those of us onshore that there’s always something or someone out there: we are not alone. The foghorns in our vicinity are positioned on remote islands and headlands, and echo fantastically. Sonic fragments bounce here and there and overlap one another, like the distortion of an electric guitar tweaked by a reverb pedal. The foghorn functions like a heart, thumping for an essential purpose, reassuringly steady. It’s a voice like many voices in Foggy Cove: an echo with distant origins. Or possibly a homing device for those who have fled here for one reason or another. Sometimes, however, there’s another voice in the mix, similar to a foghorn. It’s a sound with more grit, lower on the scale, hollow and uneven, unpredictable, like an injured monster moaning in its lair. A monster that can’t carry a tune. This sound, I’ve been told, is produced by tides swirling into crevices on the headlands. But no one around here speaks authoritatively to that claim. It’s Mother Earth speaking, ­absolutely–­too eerie for my liking. I feel I’m being stalked, not soothed, by the incomprehensibly large forces all around ­me.

“Honey, I’m freezing.” Alison is finally drawn to ­words.

I don’t even pretend to snore. A dead giveaway of ­wake­fulness.

She’s layered up in fleece and flannel, an elaborate getup she dons each night here with the seriousness of a high priestess, in the belief that more is better when it comes to producing body ­heat.

“Larry?” She shrugs her body into ­mine.

When I make no response, she turns away in a ­mini-­huff. With her back to me, the silence is too pregnant. She’s calling my bluff, my extreme stillness alerting her to the possum act. There’s no way I can win at this. I’m going to have to get up and make a new fire. Of course, I could simply turn up the electric baseboard ­heaters–­but that would be the triumph of sense over sensibility. I give up the ­game.

“Could you put the water on for the coffee?” she ­asks.

Last night we went to bed listening to the foghorn, the rain patter on the roof, the wind and whitecaps scouring the cliffs. The wood stove murmured with ­high-­tech efficiency, the incineration of old maple making the place all toasty while the greenhouse gases escaped into the blustery night. As the fire created a torment of shadows, I lay there drowsily content. In my final seconds of wakefulness, my thoughts were of the eternal tomorrow resident in my imagination: waking up to a calm blue sea, a temperate summer morning, the beaches fattened up with sand returned from its winter home in the deep waters of the bay, the air peaty with seaweed, the army of tourists absent for a while longer and nothing on the schedule but chopping firewood or watching our boys invest their toy bulldozers with the power to regrade the ­landscape.

But now morning is here again, and with it the burden of ­clarity.

Two years ago, our family embarked on an adventure in Nova Scotia. That’s not quite true. We were dragged by me into a rural existence in a remote village by the sea, despite palpable reluctance in strategic ­decision-­making quarters, notably Alison’s. This move was instigated by my untested fantasies about the merits of solitude, if not total isolation from the big bad world. The idea was to vacate our condominium in downtown Toronto, leave our lives and friends behind for a year and move to the cottage we had recently built in Nova Scotia, near the great heritage town of Lunenburg, ninety kilometres south of ­Halifax.

We made it through the year in Nova Scotia in one familial piece, and we’ve returned again for the summer, not as residents but as seasonal visitors. There was much about our year in Nova Scotia that surprised me. Much that confused and, at times, unhinged me. There were many days I felt fragmented, in psychological disarray, standing outside my body looking in, unable to concentrate, frozen by inter­ior storms that seemed to come out of nowhere. There were beautiful moments, as was expected for the sticker price. But who remembers those with the same ­vividness?

When we decided to buy land here, Alison’s parents, Stan and Vivian, needed a retirement home. So we went ­fifty-­fifty on a property and created two deeds to reflect the division of ownership. There were only three homes on the drumlin hill that winds lazily through the Foggy Cove basin; now there are fifteen, including our two places. In theory, we’d moved to paradise, our property located in a 250-­year-­old fishing and farming village (a series of villages, actually) of weathered capes and ancient barns, a good number of which have either been restored or built fairly recently, in tasteful deference to the muse of heritage preservation. Our home, a ­grey-­cedar-­shingled structure, is well anchored in an old sheep pasture at the end of a gravel road that meanders along the contours of the drumlin ridge toward the coast; it pretends to be a barn but doesn’t entirely succeed because of the immodest wall of ­sea-­facing windows, the antithesis of blunt Nova Scotian thriftiness. We have captured, to borrow from the jargon of ­real-­estate agents, the boldest ocean views. From inside, our place seems like one big window, an instrument for viewing, floating high on the lot, boatlike. We’re behind and above wetlands of mature alders and waves of dune grass that flow to the beach, flanked by two imposing headlands of dark spruce that jut far out into the sea, creating a protected bay where, in the warmer months, and in many colder ones, you can hear the waves collapsing in deep sand, or watch lobster boats groaning along, in a diesel funk, their trap bunches plopping off the stern. In good weather, when the windows are open in the great room, the screens in place, it seems we’re living in a cavernous, bugless porch. And the windows go way up too, with huge transoms topping the ­double-­hungs across a ­thirty-­foot facade that’s oriented northeast toward the ocean. The effect is ­passive-­aggressive solar: all the light you would ever need, theoreti­c­ally, although fog undermines that ­theory.

We designed the house ourselves. It was meant to be a simple structure: a gabled barn, insulated for ­year-­round use. We ­hand-­drew the floor plan and elevations. Our builder quietly corrected our errors, added new ideas and created the working plans. Recalling the ambition in that first drawing is always embarrassing. We didn’t know the first thing about how a house should be built. It’s mostly wood, this place. Framed, nailed, sanded, primed and painted by human hands. An ecologically sensitive architect would cringe at the waste in ­stud-­frame construction, the anachronism of shingles, pine floors, wood trim. The suggestion would be to source out prefab structural forms, holistically manufactured metal hybrids for the beams and window sashes, straw bale insulation, more green design strategies in general. There’d be talk of photovoltaic panels, chemical toilets, ­micro-­windmills and engineered floors made from recycled radioactive waste that magically looks like ­three-­hundred-­year-­old oak. In hindsight, we didn’t exactly hit the high points of ecological responsibility during construction. There were mounds of debris, now in a landfill. But I’ve conveniently come to terms with my horror. Amazing what tricks the mind can perform once the garbage bins are hauled away. We had a few good ideas, though, like insisting on the wooden storm doors that make the place look like a real barn.

Editorial Reviews

The exact nature of what this estimable writer offers matters less than the fact that he offers it at all – intelligently, vulnerably, often poetically. In so doing, he provides his readers with their own artful version of sanctuary – for me one of the most sacred of cocoons, the stimulations and entertainment of a fine book.” –The Globe and Mail
“An idiosyncratic work that combines personal memoir, history, and philosophical rumination.” –Walrus

"an ambitious, exuberant and beautifully crafted romp of a book that explores the history and philosophy of sanctuary" -Montreal Gazette
"a ruggedly philosophical, at time humorous..examination of sanctuary and a surprisingly self-critical portrait of one man's pursuit of this elusive ideal." -Halifax Chronicle-Herald

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