JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, June 28, 2025

A life well lived

by

Brian Lewis
1110 days ago
20220614

Grow­ing up in Bel­mont in the 60s and 70s, my fond­est mem­o­ries are of a strong com­mu­ni­ty, fam­i­ly and ex­tend­ed fam­i­ly val­ues and spir­it. While you were aware of so­cio-eco­nom­ic chal­lenges and con­straints, the strong sense of neigh­bour­hood and neigh­bours act­ed as a check and bal­ance.

Car­ni­val, ca­lyp­so, steel­band and so­cial ac­tivism re­flect­ed the Zeit­geist.

No ob­sta­cle or chal­lenge was seen as in­sur­mount­able. This is not to say that every­thing was “hunky-do­ry.” No! Not by any stretch of the imag­i­na­tion.

“But mak­ing do with what you have,” “be­ing nei­ther a bor­row­er nor a lender is” and “eat lit­tle and live long,” were all in­to­na­tions and gen­er­al rules.

Sin­gle-par­ent moth­ers, in par­tic­u­lar, ruled their roost with iron fists and un­bend­ing moth­erisms. They were both fa­thers and moth­ers and didn’t shirk their dou­ble roles, un­flinch­ing.

“Spare the rod and spoil the child” was rule num­ber one and rules num­bers two to ten were all re­ferred to as rule num­ber one. “Don’t hang your hat where your hand can’t reach,” “drunk or sober mind your busi­ness,” “blood runs thick­er than wa­ter,” and “speak your truth and speak it quick.”

On more than one oc­ca­sion I have said or writ­ten about the joy of grow­ing up with a sin­gle par­ent in Bel­mont. I have made no se­cret of the love, re­spect and ad­mi­ra­tion I have for the two women who cared for my broth­ers Garth and Sean, sis­ter Ar­lene and I—shaped us—nur­tured us in­to the hu­man be­ings we are.

And might I add the many in­di­vid­u­als, too many to name for whom, Jen­nifer Lewis nee Sa­landy was a sec­ond moth­er, aun­tie and granny. Be­tween my moth­er and her sec­ond moth­er Beryl “Aun­tie B” Carmicheal (Yes! rel­a­tive of Stoke­ly Carmichael and Aun­tie B’s broth­er Os­car Sealy). The num­ber three Bed­ford Lane, Bel­mont clan was nur­tured. Old school vibes and val­ues blend­ed in with the re­al­i­ty of the times.

The 60s and 70s were chang­ing, rev­o­lu­tion­ary and trans­for­ma­tion­al times in T&T. In­de­pen­dence, Black Pow­er, Civ­il rights...Car­ni­val, ca­lyp­so and steel­band meant dif­fer­ent things to dif­fer­ent seg­ments of the so­ci­ety. You ei­ther stood for some­thing or not. You ei­ther had the courage and fear­less­ness to stand up and be count­ed or not.

The pass­ing of my moth­er Jen­nifer Lewis on the morn­ing of Wednes­day, June 8, 2022—there are no words that I can write or say that can ad­e­quate­ly ex­press the raw pain and ‘heart­bro­ken­ness’. But my broth­ers and sis­ter and I—our chil­dren—are com­fort­ed by the truth that in fight­ing against the odds, in be­ing in­domitable, our moth­er’s call­ing and pur­pose were lived and com­plet­ed.

The world has changed. T&T has changed. But the im­por­tance of par­ent­ing be it sin­gle, two-par­ent fam­i­ly or ex­tend­ed fam­i­ly is still in­valu­able. The im­por­tance of com­mu­ni­ty and neigh­bour­hood is still price­less. If T&T has lost its way it’s be­cause as a so­ci­ety and com­mu­ni­ty, we have and con­tin­ue to place mon­ey, the ac­qui­si­tion and hold­ing on to it, as the be-all and end-all. More im­por­tant than fam­i­ly, par­ent­ing and com­mu­ni­ty. Sin­gle-mind­ed ma­te­ri­al­ism and con­sumerism have fos­tered a deep pro­found self-con­tempt for what mat­ters most.

There are those who al­lege the old school and tra­di­tion­al way is no longer rel­e­vant. What was once good par­ent­ing is now viewed as men­tal, emo­tion­al and phys­i­cal abuse. There are so many con­flict­ing the­o­ries and schol­ar­ly pa­pers about what is good or not so good.

Hard-line and hard-core par­ent­ing and guardian­ship are no longer the things.

Who knows what are the an­swers to the many per­ceived and re­al ills and chal­lenges fac­ing T&T in this post-COVID-19 era.

But those of us who face the re­al­i­ty of griev­ing and say­ing good­bye to old-school par­ents and grand­par­ents. The pas­sage of time will not dim the mem­o­ry of the per­se­ver­ance, de­ter­mi­na­tion and ded­i­ca­tion of their love.

Los­ing a moth­er is one of the deep­est sor­rows a heart can know. Some­one told me a few days ago—or that should be re­mind­ed me—that a moth­er is a son’s, first love.

Rest in peace mom­my, granny, and aun­tie. We love you. You are our hero. We will miss you. Thank you for mak­ing us who we are. Your un­con­di­tion­al love saw us through many of life’s ups and downs. A life well-lived.

A moth­er’s love mat­ters.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored

Today's
Guardian

Publications

Hardbargain Primary School’s Poolmatee Bachoo, right, receives a donation of books from Trinre’s human resource and administration manager Simone Aguilera-Hay.

Hardbargain Primary School’s Poolmatee Bachoo, right, receives a donation of books from Trinre’s human resource and administration manager Simone Aguilera-Hay.

Hardbargain Primary School’s Poolmatee Bachoo, right, receives a donation of books from Trinre’s human resource and administration manager Simone Aguilera-Hay.

Hardbargain Primary School’s Poolmatee Bachoo, right, receives a donation of books from Trinre’s human resource and administration manager Simone Aguilera-Hay.

Trinre donates books to Hardbargain Govt

Yesterday
DADA & Projects member Marielle Forbes, from left, architect Sean Leonard; Aripo Community Council vice president Harold Diaz; Aripo Community Council president James Valentine; Nigel Moses; DADA & projects director Valerie Taylor, artist Dean Arlen, DADA & Projects director Adele Todd and DADA & projects programme assistant Vatika Lalchan after the launch of a treehouse at the Aripo Community Centre.

DADA & Projects member Marielle Forbes, from left, architect Sean Leonard; Aripo Community Council vice president Harold Diaz; Aripo Community Council president James Valentine; Nigel Moses; DADA & projects director Valerie Taylor, artist Dean Arlen, DADA & Projects director Adele Todd and DADA & projects programme assistant Vatika Lalchan after the launch of a treehouse at the Aripo Community Centre.

MARIELA BRUZUAL

DADA & Projects member Marielle Forbes, from left, architect Sean Leonard; Aripo Community Council vice president Harold Diaz; Aripo Community Council president James Valentine; Nigel Moses; DADA & projects director Valerie Taylor, artist Dean Arlen, DADA & Projects director Adele Todd and DADA & projects programme assistant Vatika Lalchan after the launch of a treehouse at the Aripo Community Centre.

DADA & Projects member Marielle Forbes, from left, architect Sean Leonard; Aripo Community Council vice president Harold Diaz; Aripo Community Council president James Valentine; Nigel Moses; DADA & projects director Valerie Taylor, artist Dean Arlen, DADA & Projects director Adele Todd and DADA & projects programme assistant Vatika Lalchan after the launch of a treehouse at the Aripo Community Centre.

MARIELA BRUZUAL

Aripo treehouse showcases art and design

Yesterday
Cuatrista Richard Nurse

Cuatrista Richard Nurse

Cuatrista Richard Nurse

Cuatrista Richard Nurse

‘Timeless’ golden music from Louis and the Lynx

Yesterday
Amrit Samaroo, middle row right, performing during the South Carolina Festival of Steel with South Carolina University’s CalypSamba.

Amrit Samaroo, middle row right, performing during the South Carolina Festival of Steel with South Carolina University’s CalypSamba.

Amrit Samaroo, middle row right, performing during the South Carolina Festival of Steel with South Carolina University’s CalypSamba.

Amrit Samaroo, middle row right, performing during the South Carolina Festival of Steel with South Carolina University’s CalypSamba.

Amrit Samaroo completes South Carolina steelpan residency

3 days ago