When Helen Watsonâs birthday rolled around last Saturday (Nov. 21), she couldnât party like she was 100 â as she did five years ago, when she actually turned 100 â but the South Surrey senior wasnât complaining.
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âIt was very nice, everybody was so good to me,â Watson told Peace Arch News Monday (Nov. 23) of her 105th birthday celebration.
âIt was just fine the way it was.â
The COVID-19 pandemic firmly quashed any plans that may have otherwise been made to celebrate the occasion in the fashion it deserves.
Pandemic protocols months ago changed how family visits could take place for Watson, and earlier this month â after restrictions were ramped-up due to the ongoing surge in cases â the visits were halted altogether, in the name of safety.
âNobodyâs allowed in right now, and thatâs OK with us,â Watsonâs son, Larry, said last week. âI understand that theyâre very strict there. Iâm glad theyâre doing that because itâs for the safety of everyone there.â
Larry said he and his wife had shifted how they visit some time ago, to standing at a safe distance outside his momâs window and speaking to her over the phone. They could see and hear each other more clearly than through the Plexiglas screen that had to separate them inside, he explained, and âit seems like a better visit.â
The 79-year-old said itâs difficult to sum his motherâs life up in just a few lines. Words that describe her have long included artist, independent and feisty.
Now, the description also includes âsurvivor of two global pandemics,â as Watson was three years old when the Spanish Flu struck in 1918.
âHer parents were affected by it, her father, he went deaf from it,â Larry said.
Larry said his mom is âvery surprised⊠and maybe a little upsetâ about the current pandemic, âbecause she canât see her family.â
âThatâs the hard part for her, that she doesnât get to see anybody.â
When Watson first joined the ranks of centenarian in 2015, she welcomed a PAN reporter into her home, sharing a snippet of her creative side and just a few of the countless memories and experiences she has had â from an early childhood in Saskatchewan, to seeing her first airplane, to meeting her husband while working at St. Paulâs Hospital in Vancouver, to travelling solo around the province and into the U.S. into her early nineties.
âI did everything,â she said at the time.
âShe wasnât scared to go out and do things,â her son said Monday.
The family marked Watsonâs first 100 years by publishing a book of photos, and this year, made her a blanket to take the chill off. Theyâre looking forward to days when they can have a proper visit.
âHopefully everything will be OK in six months or so and her family can get back in and see her.â
tholmes@peacearchnews.com
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