Page 211 - UWI MEMORY BOOK
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Memories
Memory 1
Freshman’s week was a blast, attending every party, every night, for free food and beverage. At the end of the week I did a round-the-island tour, learned to drink Red Stripe beer, cultivated a lasting taste for Jamaican cuisine and indulged in Jerk anything and Jerk everything. I even developed some culinary skills, never having cooked before leaving home. The highlight of Freshman’s week was the request by a fellow student to exchange dates to the ball – he was short and she was tall whilst my date and I were evenly matched for height, if nothing else. He was denied!
Memory 2
Squatters Rights.I got into medical school, on the backs of benefactors spread across the region, as a UWI open scholar. The grant was based on a three-year programme. Any financial challenge was aborted by the institution of squatting. Signed out of Chancellor after term one. Moved from Block D to B. My roommate served in hall. Living on leftovers became the norm. Highlights: i) Elected block rep on the hall committee. ii) Vacation squatting in a balcony room. Adjoining room occupied by a paying student. It afforded weekend entertainment including candle light dinner, cooked on his two-burner hot plate, and Dubonnet wine.
Memory 3
Missing Child. My first born, Nicole, arrived shortly after second MB. She was an early developer walking at 7 months. She had her fair share of palymates in our Lily Way, Mona Heights neighborhood. She always ran out to greet me when I got home. One day, this did not happen and the child could not be found. Our fear was that a neighbour, an unstable woman, had captured her! However, guided by Jah, we drove down Hope Road and found her calmly standing at a bus stop holding on to a completely strange woman.
Life Highlights
Immense role of my “illiterate” late mother in shaping our lives.
Trinidad’s First consensual organ donor corneal transplant in 1986.
The tremendous respect my wife, Sonja, commands among family and friends
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