What can I say about David Gower?
He was an atheist, but he wasn’t afraid of opposing
views. He was a philosopher who was
respectful of others. David was a true
skeptic. He would actually listen to
what you thought, and actually cared why you thought it. If he thought something different, he was
always willing to discuss, but not disparage.
David Gower loved the truth.
David sought to understand his world, and the people within
it. He was a thinker who didn’t believe
that the true answers were necessarily the easy answers. He was a poet whose work deserves
recognition, and who – in the times I saw him perform – never failed to draw an
enthusiastic response.
David loved the outdoors.
Years ago, when we all had more time, we would go on hikes along places
like the Caledon Rail Trail and the Bruce Trail. Sometimes these were also excuses for long
conversations, but the reality is that David really loved to be outdoors. He enjoyed camping, campfires, and seeing the
stars.
The last time I actually saw David, we met at a pub off
Yonge Street to have a beer, a meal, and just to catch up. It was amazing how quickly we could pick up
threads left dangling from a year or more ago.
That was about a year ago, because, with a young child, and running back
and forth between two households, I just didn’t have the time – or I thought
I didn’t have the time – to see him more.
I wish now I had found that time.
In all of our talks, though, it was very clear that he
loved, and was proud of, his immediate family.
He spoke of them with genuine respect and affection. Simon, Sarah, Justin, and Nigel, and especially his
wife, Frankie. David was human. He was subject to the same irritations,
doubts, and regrets that we all are. But
he never regretted the course of his life, and he was thankful for who he got
to share it with. We talked a lot about
life, and relationships, over the course of the years, and that never
varied.
What can I say about David Gower? He was as intelligent, as open-minded, and as
loving as anyone I have ever met. I am
better for having known him, and I will miss him.
(The photo was taken by his sister-in-law, Alison Groves, a last campfire that he sadly did not make.)
(The photo was taken by his sister-in-law, Alison Groves, a last campfire that he sadly did not make.)
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