Wisdoms
I am indebted to my Métis kin that created a space in their lives and experiences for me to come to an understanding of Métis experiences in/with/through the city. In order for people to share in such a way trust is so deeply important. Trust is built through creating and maintaining safe places where thoughts and feelings are received so gingerly as to not deter anyone from sharing and growing. Although I am the primary researcher of this inquiry, I spent a lot of time listening and receiving in the best way I knew how. I would share last even if it meant not sharing my photos. This was important to me as I knew this might be build trust. From the first moments that potential kins contacted me I was being influenced. The interactions provided reflections which later contributed the wisdoms of this work. Influences, as I understand, are moments of potential fusion, moments where I get caught by a story, feeling, or thought that lingers with me and does not pass until I have acknowledged and invested energy into having a relationship with it. Influences flow from and through relationships; they commingle together in the moments of shared dialogue, and they too, commingle off the page; they interact and are relational to one another. As influences flow through relationships and are worn in our lived experiences, they become widsoms (Makokis., et al. 2020). As Lee Maracle (2015) articulates so beautifully, “our medicine is gathered from experience of our falls from the path from the discoveries of the medicines that revitalize the remembering required of us to return to our responsibilities and hold up the knowledge gained from those historical moments” (p. 12). Wisdoms help us to understand our experiences, to discern miyo pimatisiwin – how to live a good life.
The wisdoms that are shared here are guided and held responsible to the original research questions — how do Métis individuals born and raised in urban environments re-construct, affirm, and express their Métis self-understandings in the city; how do our self-understandings situate within a collective?; how do they contribute to individual and collective well-being?; do these self-understandings enable us to live well and flourish in the city? The lynchpin of this work addresses how Métis individuals, born and raised in urban environments, express their Métis self-understandings. I have walked with these questions in my mind and heart; the wisdoms articulated are what the stories have told me in relation to these important questions.
The wisdoms that are shared in the following sections begin with the learnings from the research inquiry, then from ni’wahkoomowak (my relatives). After those sections, I share my learnings through a relational understanding, while keeping in mind these are not separate categories but are all interconnected. I know that wisdoms are tied to responsibilities; to be wise is to know how you can contribute good to the world. The first gathering presented responsibilities to me; even though this was intimidating, it is part of ethical research. The last section of the dissertation gives voice to how I might walk with these wisdoms and enact responsibilities that I have been given in this process. There is a deep desire to do good by the kin and this inquiry, but also to do good by the Métis community that I have grown up in.
I am reminded of a dream I had a few months ago. I was on a stage, giving a presentation on orality, when I looked into the crowd, I saw my dad and Reg standing together smiling at me. My dad had a bright light surrounding him, he adorned his usual big smile — I sensed he was proud of me.
I don’t claim to know everything about becoming Métis, or Métis history, all I am claiming here is how I came to understand myself and the questions through the stories of those that sat with me each month. Their stories have become medicine enabling me to move through this world in a way that honours who we are, and what might be a possible shared future. I have had much time to think about the wisdoms but I find myself trying to wear them in; much like a new pair of shoes, they are not yet comfortable as time and practice are still needed. I find myself, at times, overwhelmed in thinking of the responsibility that comes with knowing what must come next…much like I felt at the beginning of this inquiry, not sure what exactly to do or how to do it…I am still trying to figure these things out. I move forward though thinking that there is something at stake if I do not try to wear these wisdoms, I need to wear them for our past loved ones who sacrificed so much, for the present and future.