Monday, December 2, 2013

5 Reasons Not to Ask your Married 30-Something Friend if She is Having Children

Something started the day after I got married – people warned me that it would happen – and it’s not that I didn’t believe them, it’s more one of those things like child birth – people can tell you until your ears bleed, but until you experience it for yourself, you can’t quite understand how true it is, and how bothersome it might in fact become.

The thing I am referring to is my apparent freakdom in being a married 30-something, with a house, a good job, and a dog – and no children. To those of you who have been here, like I said – it’s not that I didn’t believe you - it’s that I didn’t really understand how deeply frustrating peoples questions can become.

To one nosy person who would not let up, I finally used a friend’s recommended response “Whatever happens happens”, nonchalantly with a shrug of the shoulders. This should have been the end of it – right? Oh no – this was taken as a cue to continue fishing by stating that’s what they had said when they were trying. Does that mean you’re trying? I finally said “Well, it’s kind of an awkward question” and got up and left. I thought that would be the end of it, but this person still takes the opportunity to remark every single time anything to do with babies comes up.

For this reason I have decided to do something I normally don’t do here. I’m making a Top Reasons List. Here are the top 5 reasons you shouldn’t ask if someone is going to have kids.

1. It is none of your business – if it is your business, your friend/acquaintance/family member… will tell you.

2. If you don’t know the person well enough to know if they are interested in having kids, you probably don’t know them well enough to know all the reasons that question might be terribly painful or awkward for them to answer – Are you prepared for that person to respond with any of the following responses?:

a. We’ve been trying really long time with no luck
b. We can’t have kids
c. I’ve had an abortion
d. I’ve had a miscarriage (or several)

If your answer to any of these is “No” – then DON’T ASK. Chances are the person you are talking to is too polite to make you feel uncomfortable by responding in any of these ways – so why don’t you return the favour?

3. Not all 30 something women want kids. Just because I enjoy the smell of a new baby’s head, or coo at a cute baby photo does not mean I want my own, or maybe just not yet. We are not broken vessels because of this.

4. Asking is rarely going to be appreciated by the party whose privacy you are invading. In my experience most women have one of two responses to repeatedly being asked if they are going to have children – annoyance at being repeatedly asked or sadness at being reminded of something that might be difficult for them to deal with. Maybe there are childless 30 something women out there who feel differently, but I don’t think I know them and I certainly haven’t heard from them on this topic.

5. It is none of your business. I’m saying it again because it bares repeating.It is none of your business. Got it?

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

My heart breaks...

I've had to stop watching the news over the last couple years. I hate being uninformed, and not knowing about the important things going on in the world - people often look at me with amazement when they realize I haven't heard about a school shooting in some US State, or missed the fact that Rob Ford admitted to smoking crack. But the truth is that my heart just breaks too easily. I've realized that anything truly earth shattering will eventually make its way to me. Most of my Facebook Friends are fairly like-minded to me - and I use them as news filters. They post the huge news items, or the really interesting discoveries for me to read - and I don't have to read about all the other shitty things that have gone on in the world on any given day.

If you know me through work you might think that I have a really thick skin. Depending on the interaction we've had, you may even think I am the kind of person who goes home and kicks kittens for fun. Don't get me wrong, I don't go around blasting my coworkers - but I do expect people to do their jobs properly (or at the very least take ownership of their errors), and I do expect people in other departments to respect my staff and the challenges they face. I will respectfully, but without sugar coating, tell you the truth. This is a skill I have honed at work - and it is one of my strengths as a leader. Anyway, this is not a post about my strengths and weaknesses at work (if it was, I could definitely tell you about a few weaknesses as well). The point is, that people who know me through work, might not understand, or even believe that on the inside I am human goo.

The people who see the real me, or rather the whole me, could tell you that I've been known to disintegrate over a sappy Kleenex commercial - if I had a catch phrase, it would be "I'm not crying - my eyes are just watering." When it comes to human suffering, or even human triumph, I will cry at the drop of a hat. The triumph part is ok - I can live with the fact that I will cry watching contestants make it onto "So You Think You Can Dance" - there is something incredible about getting to see that moment when a person sees their dreams become a very real possibility. What I find more challenging is the other side of that coin - the side where I become inconsolable over injustice, the side that can't fathom a world where Tibetans are tortured for their beliefs, the kind of world where rapists are referred to as "Clumsy Don Juan's" and victims are vilified for wearing short skirts.

I can't count the number of times growing up that my mother had to remind me "It's not your tragedy - stop trying to own it." I have the ability to empathize with almost any situation - I can feel other people's pain. I'm not saying that if you experienced some terrible tragedy, that I know how you feel - but I can certainly imagine how I would feel in that circumstance. My heart breaks for you.

So Monday, as we drove home from the cabin, with CBC on the radio and heard over and over again about the massive human tragedy in that happened in the Philippines this weekend, I cried. I cried a lot. I cried when they talked about the 17 year old living in Canada who hadn't heard from her family. I cried when the little old lady got the news on Facebook that her son and his family were alright. I cried as I listened to the screams of terror recorded for radio play - it reminded me of September 11th, because I was at work that day and we listened to the whole awful thing play out on the radio.

Beyond the tears, I hold these tragedies in my heart. I try not to make them mine, and to understand that I am separate from them - but I always have to temper that with the knowledge that I can't separate myself to the point of apathy. It's a fine line. I try to close out the unecessary heartbreak, by ignoring mainstream news media as much as possible.

So what can I do? I can help the Red Cross put a band aid on it by donating some money - which I will do. I can remind myself how lucky I am to live somewhere that typhoons, and most other natural disasters, don't devastate lives. Whenever I am tempted to complain as the thermostat dips lower and lower this winter I can remind myself of how lucky I am that all I have to contend with is really shitty weather. I know all that is trite, and that it doesn't do a stitch to help the people whose lives have been devastated - but at the very least it shows some respect for the fact that by comparison I have very little to complain about.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Atwood Aftermath

So, just in case you didn’t read my last post – Margaret Atwood was here last month. Like many other things in life, much anticipation was met with a somewhat anticlimactic outcome. I’m not sure it realistically could have come out any other way. Before she even appeared several announcements were made indicating that she was on a very tight schedule, as we would be leaving to go directly to the RWB for the world premier ballet adaption of the Handmaid’s Tale – after all, that was the reason she was in Winnipeg. Terry MacLeod would do a public interview for an hour. Directly afterwards she would sign books – as many copies of MaddAddam as you wanted, but only one of her other books. No chit chat. Period.

Our books were taken from us ahead of time so the page to be signed could be marked, and the inscription written out for her on a sticky note. When I finally arrived at the signing table I debated whether or not to say anything. I finally managed something along the lines of “Your writing has meant a lot to me.” She smiled politely and said thank you. So I managed to be trite, but not stupid – which I frankly think is nearly as bad, and certainly more boring. But whatever… what did I expect? To have a riveting conversation with her, become pen pals and have her offer to mentor me as a writer?

Onward and upward, right? Right.

If I want to make something come of my writing, impressing Margaret Atwood is not likely the way it’s going to happen anyway – writing more would probably be a good start. Alice Munroe’s recent win of the Nobel Prize for literature has got me thinking about short stories. A short story is an undervalued medium – so much has to be said in such a small framework. At the same time it is not as daunting to set out to write a short story. Also, setting out to write a novel when you haven’t even managed a short story seems akin to saying you want to fly, when you are barely shuffling along with proper footsteps.
What better way to get started, but to start writing short stories and getting them out there. So here you go – it’s a first attempt,and the more I read it the less I like it - but I have to just suck it up and put something out there - so be kind, but constructive criticism is certainly welcome.

Untitled

This place is stifling sometimes. Grey. Grey walls, grey floor, grey ceiling – broken only by the odd shock of colour. The lime green velour arm chair, subdued shades of blue and purple floral in the bed spread. These are leftovers from before – placed here, just in case, but never intended to be used again. I wish they had thought to hang a picture on the wall. I have a vague memory, like a shadow in the far corner of my mind – if I focus all my energy on remembering, the edges become slightly less blurred – a warm hand in mine, sun on my skin, a faint spray of water across my face. If I quiet my mind, a difficult task when all you have are your own thoughts, I can hear a faint high pitched sound from shadows that circle overhead. When I am still to the point where I can no longer feel my chest move slightly up and down as my breath does its work to keep my organs alive, I can feel something hot, comforting and ever moving beneath my bare feet, as though the ground was alive that day. There is a boy with shaggy blond hair, playing in the malleable ground in front of me. This is the only picture I have of life before this place.

Everything I need somehow exists here – shelves stocked with sustenance, both physical and mental. Years ago she taught me how to use the tool with the circular blade to remove the top from containers, in order to extract food. I have no recollection of being taught to decipher the inscriptions in the many books that line the walls. I’ve read them all more times than I can count, and the ones I like best even more often. It’s hard for me to imagine the worlds that they depict – but then it is hard for me to imagine a time when it was safe to leave this place. She used to ask me, when I finished one, what did I think about it. I was never sure which ones told about things that were true, and which ones told things that were made up. I’d ask her “Is there really such a thing as a lion? A giant beast with a golden mane, teeth like jagged stone spires that could rip a man to shreds and a roar so powerful the sound of it would shake the earth?” And she would smile and nod in confirmation – “There was once such a beast, but it stopped existing a very long time ago. There are no more.” Then a few days later I would ask “Was there really a boy who never grew up? Who flew from Neverland to visit Wendy, and bring her back with him to be his mother while he had adventures with other boys?” And she would tell me there was never such a boy – that this story was made up by a man, who wrote it down so that other people could read the story. I had trouble deciphering what was real, and what was made up. It was good that I got through most of the books before the day she left.

She’d been talking for a while about the time before – about how I’d had a father, and how he’d taken us to a place called a “beach”. We’d pack food and eat outside – that was called a picnic. In books when people looked the way she did when she talked about the beach, the books called the look “joyful”. I don’t think that I have ever felt joyful. There is nothing in this place that makes me feel the way she does when she remembers the time before. I wish I remembered more about the time before, so I could feel joyful too.

“Mother?” I asked one day, when she was telling me about the beach.
“Yes?”
“Was there a boy too?”
Her face fell ever so slightly as she spoke, “There was once…” she trailed off.
“Where is he now?”
“With your father.”
“Where is that?”
“I don’t know exactly – outside maybe. But probably not. If he was outside, he would have come to find us when it was safe to come out.”
“Where else then?”
“Maybe heaven.” Her eyes are wet, but I don’t understand why. My eyes are only wet when I fall and hurt myself.
“What’s heaven? Did you bite your lip? Why are your eyes wet?”
“When your eyes are wet it is called ‘crying’.” She explains – I remember crying from books, but it makes more sense now. “I am crying because heaven is where people go when they die, and we can’t see or talk to them here on earth anymore. It makes me sad that I can’t talk to your father because I loved him. He was my best friend.”

A few sleeps later she decides that it is time to see if “outside” is safe. Outside is where we lived before – I don’t really understand why it stopped being safe. Mother says it’s because of “war”, but I don’t really know what that means because she won’t explain. Some of my books talk about war – it’s where there is lots of fighting and people die (OH! That’s when people go to heaven!) – usually the fighting is because men can’t agree on an idea (I don’t know why it is always men who can’t agree – where are all the women when they decide to have war? It seems like they are still dying, and the children too, even though they don’t get to decide about the fighting. Maybe they could make the men stop fighting if the men would listen to them?) but in the books the war always ends, and some people went to heaven, but many people stayed and it becomes safe again. So I don’t understand why we have to be here instead of outside. Mother usually answers all my questions, but when I ask about the war she has a look I don’t understand. I know that I don’t like the look, so I don’t like to make it happen.

So, mother is going outside. Then she will decide if I can come too, and she will come back. I am not to leave until she comes back.

Many sleeps pass, but mother doesn’t come back. Now when I think about mother, my face feels the way hers looked when I asked about the war. It’s not a good feeling, so I try not to think about her.

Thirty seven sleeps after mother left, I woke up with blood on my legs. It is very strange because normally when there is blood, the skin is scraped away and it stings. This time all my skin is not scraped and nothing stings.

In our place – my place – there are two areas. One is where we sleep, read, make food and do most things. One is much smaller – it is where there is water. Water is in the toilet, the sink and in the shower. Mother said we don’t know how much water there will be, so the shower is only for once every thirty sleeps.

I decide I should use some water to clean the blood. It hasn’t been 30 sleeps since the last time I used the shower, but I will use it anyway. Now there is only one of me here, so I can use the shower a little more. I clean away the blood that has begun to dry on the inside of my legs – I was right, there is no place where my skin is broken underneath. Where did the blood come from?
After I have dried off, I am sitting in just my skin, reading a book about a man who is not really man, but really a vampire – vampire’s drink people’s blood instead of eating food. I forgot to ask mother if vampires are real. They seem like they might be, but I hope that they are not – that’s when I noticed there is more blood on my legs and also a little on the floor where I am sitting. I realize that it is coming from the hole that leads inside of me. I am afraid a little – I have read in books where a person bleeds so much they go to heaven. Then I think that in heaven I might not be all by myself and I feel something tingly and nice in my stomach and chest when I think that.

I have three towels, so I take the one I dried off with, and cut it into strips around one and half inches wide by four inches long, and I press one to the hole. I don’t know if it will stop the bleeding – but I don’t know if I want it to. I just think that I don’t want the blood to get everywhere.

It keeps going for 5 sleeps – every day there is a little less – then it stops completely as though it never happened and I cry.
I go back to normal, only now there is no one to talk to even. I keep reading the book about the man who is not a man – the first time I read it was scary, but now I just think it is sad.

When my stomach tells me to, I open a can and eat something. I sleep a lot. More than I did when mother was still here. I think more than I did when mother was here. I never really thought before about trying to leave our place, but now I think about it all the time. If I leave and the war is still the war, then maybe I can get hurt and go to heaven. If the war is not the war, maybe there are other people? Maybe mother is there, but can’t find her way back to our place. Maybe she found the beach and is too joyful to come back. If I could find her there we could both be joyful together.

I finish the vampire book, and decide to read my favourite book again – even though I have read it more than all the other books. It is a book about a boy who has a very unhappy life, until one day someone comes and tells him that he can make magic. After that he leaves his sad life alone, and goes to a school with many other children who can also make magic. This story is so long that it had to be separated into seven books. The seventh is the one I read again and again, because once you get through all the sadness, just when you think that all hope is lost, you get to see that in the end the boy gets to be happy. I never asked mother if that one was real, but that was on purpose because I don’t want to know if it is not. I like to believe that someday someone might come tell me that I will get to leave this place and go to school with other boys and girls. I even wish that I could go on adventures, terribly hard and sad ones, and fight in a war for something I believed in – because even though those things are terrible, at least they are something. At least I could choose to be brave, or to run away. To choose anything would be better than to have no choices at all.

Twenty nine sleeps later the bleeding starts again.

After that I start to notice small changes – I am starting to feel more like mother – softer and rounder in some areas, hair begins to appear in others.

This time the bleeding lasts six days. Every night I wash out the pieces of towel and start over.

I begin to stare at the moving part of the wall, that mother left through. What do they call it in books? A door? In my mind I make up a million scenarios about what might be on the other side.

One night I have a dream about going through the door. On the other side I have to get through a castle where a vampire lives, and the stairs keep swinging around, changing their direction. There are men with guns and gas masks running through the halls. Just when I think I am about to make it out of the castle, a small explosion takes me off course. I run in the opposite direction, into a room where a waiting lion eats me alive.

I wake up drenched in sweat and my eyes are wet, but I am not actually hurt.

Now when I stare at the door I can’t help but feel the jaws of the lion closing around my flesh. I try to do everything I can to distract myself from it. I read for hours, wash the bed linens in the sink, like mother taught me. I count the new hairs appearing under my arms. There are eight of them now. I think about where mother might have gone, and I feel a new feeling – anger. I run in place for a bit – mother always said it was the best thing to do when I felt something I wanted to stop feeling. It usually worked, but not today. I decide to take a shower – mostly to spite mother and her rules. Then I eat six different cans of food – we are not supposed to eat more than three a day, to make sure they last.

I go back to get number seven, even though my stomach feels like a small man is punching it from the inside. I reach in to extract the can and my hand bumps the brick behind it, but rather than scrape my knuckle, there is give and the brick slides back a little. Now rather than the can, my hand has a new target – the corner of the brick. I close my fingers around its rough edges, there is not a lot of space to get any purchase from, so I dig my nails in a little and pull. The brick hesitates a little but slides heavily out of place. It’s dark in the cupboard and I have trouble seeing what might be behind the brick, so I reach my hand into the small empty space it has left behind. My fingers close around something cool and hard. A small metal box slides into the light.

Inside the box there is a small stack of paper – each paper is folded to make a sort of case, with more paper inside. On the outside there is a name, and some other numbers and words. Most fascinating though is the upper right hand corner, where there is a picture of a woman’s face. She is what I have always pictured when a book describes a woman as handsome, and wears something very ornate in her hair on the top of her head. I wonder why her picture appears here, what she has to do with the papers inside.

After thoroughly examining the cases I remove the papers from inside. There is a type of writing I have never seen before – fluid and scrolling, unlike the uniform letters inside books. I have trouble deciphering it.

Nov. 15, 2020

Dearest Emily,

I have now been at the training barracks in Salt Lake City for 17 days. I have barely had two minutes to sit down other than to eat a meal. Training is intense, and I am afraid of what is to come. We hear rumors from the frontline in British Columbia that inhumane acts are committed every day – I have heard of unspeakable atrocities, which I cannot repeat here – and I am afraid. The Northern forces are said to be pushing further South every day.
I’m sorry for this communication to be so short. I will write again as soon as possible. Until then take care of Violet and Aidan, and stay safe. If the fighting comes too near, move to the place we’ve made ready, and do not come out until I have come for you.

All my love,
Michael

***

Dec. 28, 2020

Dearest Emily,

Christmas has come and gone, and what a miserable one it has been. Not only am I far away from my family, but I have received news that we will be deployed to the frontline in British Columbia tomorrow. I pray every day for an end to this war – sometimes I can barely recollect what it is we are fighting for. The other men in my platoon are good men, and I am glad to have them here with me. I can’t say much more, and even if I could I’m sure the Bureau of Censorship would black out much of what I wrote.
Be prepared to go soon. It’s time to make sure you have everything you need.

All my love,
Michael

***

Mar. 1, 2021

Emily,

It is my dearest hope to see you again someday – but hope is nearly dead in my heart. The things I have seen have broken me in ways I cannot describe. I’m not sure you would even know me if you saw me pass you in the street tomorrow. Hope is a dangerous thing to hold onto – I have very nearly let go.

All my love,
Michael

***

Feb. 17, 2021

Emily – take the children and go. Hopefully you have done so before this letter arrives.
M.

***

That was the last communication. Were Emily and Michael my mother and father? Was Aidan the boy I had the faint memory of?

More than ever, I want to open the door – my stomach starts to churn when I think of what might be on the other side. More than ever, I am frozen with fear.

Twenty seven sleeps later the bleeding starts again, and I am still locked in time staring at the door. I am no longer afraid of the bleeding, but I have also given up hoping that it might take me to heaven.

One night I am woken from my sleep by a deep rumbling noise. As I shake the sleep from my mind I realize I can no longer hear it. Did I dream it? I wait a few minutes, my ears straining, my eyes closed in the dark. Then it starts again. I think it is coming from above me. It lasts a minute and then stops again. When it starts again it sounds nearer. Now there is another sound – faint, barely there. Is it the sound of human voices? Slowly they grow louder – “just a little bit further now”, “we’re almost there”. I have never been more terrified and more hopeful in my life. Someone is coming for me.

The door rattles, and bangs open. All I can see against the blinding light streaming through the opening is the silhouette of a man.




Sunday, September 15, 2013

Um, hello Ms. Atwood – you write good…

Atwood. She’s coming…

I have been a reader and writer since I was a little girl. They are the two things in my life that have just always come naturally to me. I don’t remember learning to read. As far as my mind is aware, I’ve just always been able to do it. I love books like some people love religion – they feed me. They are to be respected and treated with reverence. They have the power to change your entire way of viewing life. Over the years there have been four instances where a book has changed something fundamental in me – they’ve altered me so profoundly that they have left scars on my heart. I have a scar on my right thumb, right below the nail, from my best friend’s first car, where it scraped off my skin one afternoon while I was trying to get a very stiff hood release to pull up. Whenever I look at that scar I am flooded with happy memories of trips we took in that car – I remember singing to Sublime at the tops of our lungs, I feel the warmth of summer nights spent driving around aimlessly, I feel the icy January mornings waiting for heat to start coming through the vents. Those are the kind of scars these four books left on me – the kind that make you instantly remember how you felt in a particular moment. Two of those books were written by Margaret Atwood.

When I was 15 I read The Robber Bride – it was the first time I’d read one of her novels. It was also the first time I remember reading more than just the words on the page. I felt like I’d discovered a jewel she’d hidden between the lines for me to find. In short, the story is about a group of women who have little in common other than their love/loathing of the female antagonist, Zenia. At one point in each of their lives she has gained their trust and even their love, only to betray them by stealing their men. You want to hate her – it’s easy to hate her. But real relationships are never that simple and my revelation was this: the women who lost their men to her were in terrible relationships with men they shouldn’t have been with. The one relationship Zenia never succeeds in completly destroying, is the only one in which the man is likely right for his female partner. In removing these men from their lives (or in attempting to, in the one case) Zenia had not only forced them out of these negative relationships, but she’d also forged a bond between the other women that they would not have had otherwise. In essence she created a situation that allowed them to access the most important and valuable relationships of their lives. To this day this book reminds me that relationships are more complex than we can ever really know from the outside, and that when things go wrong the answers are never black and white. It’s easy to vilify the person who committed the most glaring wrong – but there is always more to the story.

A few years later, after I’d moved from Manitoba to Ontario, I read Margaret Laurence’s The Diviners. I felt a connection to this prairie born author, who had also move to Ontario – I felt as though her words were my Canadian birthright – telling the tale of the Scottish families (like mine) who had settled in the prairies. For the first time I felt like I’d stumbled across an author who not only inspired me, but made me believe that even a girl from the prairies could become one of Canada’s most celebrated authors. She described Canada, and Manitoba, in a way that I could only someday aspire to live up to. It may sound small, but in many ways this might be the most important gift any book could have given me.

In my early 20s, while I was living in Japan, my mom sent me a copy of Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible. The inscription she’d penned in the front cover said something along the lines of “A story about adventures far from home – may yours be just as growing, but not nearly as dangerous. Love, mom”. I’ve heard that it took Kingsolver something like 20 years to write this book – which wouldn’t surprise me given the depth of the plot and character development. Each chapter tells the story of one of the women of the Price family, dragged to the Congo on the verge of civil war, by their religious zealot, preacher father. Needless to say, things do no go well for them. To properly sum up how I feel about this book, and the lessons it taught me would be impossible. I will keep it to the two most important ideas I took away:

First - Our perspective of right and wrong is all relative to our experiences in life – or as it is so aptly put by Kingsolver herself: “Everything you know is right can be wrong in a different place.” Traveling in India really helped drive this home for me, because so many times I had to question my core beliefs about what was “right”.

Second - Pain, sorrow, suffering and fear are as necessary to human growth as fire is to a forest. Without being pushed to our outer limits we can never truly know the strength we hold inside – they carve out a sense of our own capability that we might never otherwise be aware of. So when life is joyful, not only can we truly appreciate it, but we can know in our hearts that we have the strength to battle through the inevitable pain that some new day will bring – and we will come out the other side a new incarnation of ourselves.

Atwood’s The Year of the Flood was the most recent book to have this kind of lasting impact on me. It is the second book in her recently completed Maddaddam trilogy. It was the first one I read in the series, and so far my favourite of the three (although I’m not quite half way through the final book, so I suppose I may feel differently by the time I am done) – the first two books happen more or less congruently and are different aspects of the same timeline, the third brings the two together, and hopefully provides us some closure on the story. Atwood has branded this genre of writing as “speculative fiction”, differing from “science fiction” in that it describes a future very much routed in a possible outcome of our current state. The genius of these books is the plausibility of the bone chilling future Atwood paints for us. The detail is stunning – down to the practices of the new religions that emerge, and the scientific meddling in all aspects of our lives to “improve” the way we live. Nothing is spared: food, cosmetics, clothing, sex – all engineered to deliver optimal results with minimal effort.

Food, and the many ways in which we’ve perverted it, is a recurring theme in the Maddaddam trilogy. From the prolific fast food chain “SecretBurger” (reminiscent of Soilent Green), to the 20% real fish, fish fingers served in the high school cafeteria, we are inundated with images of how distorted food has become. I was standing in line at Ikea for lunch one afternoon, when I was struck by the depth of the impact this story had on me. We were all herded into metal railed corrals, placidly staring around, while holding trays or pushing food carts meant to allow us to stack and carry many trays, waiting to be fed cheaply and quickly – and I watched in horror as person after person walked by carrying plates of brownish grey food, devoid of any colour save the lingon berry jelly for the spongy Swedish meatballs. It was so reminiscent of the way Atwood describes the food industry in her story, that I felt a wave of panic.

My worst fear is that someday we will view Atwood as a prophet, and not just a talented writer with a wild imagination. I wish I could send a copy of these three books to all the major world leaders with a note. The note would read “It’s not too late to change course!” But they’d probably see me in the same way the wealthy and powerful of Atwood’s world view environmentalists and those who believe in real food – a fringe lunatic.

The reason I’m telling you all this is because Margaret Atwood is coming to Winnipeg next month. The thought of meeting her both thrills and petrifies me. I’m going to meet the woman who penned two of the most impactful books I’ve ever read. I want to tell her all this, but somehow the words I say out loud never live up to the ones that run through my head – not to mention I’ll probably have no more than a minute or two as I hand her my books to sign to sum up the impact she has had on my heart. I want to tell her that part of the reason I love and respect her writing so much is because sometimes she writes books I love, and sometimes she writes books I hate (She has written 22 novels, 15 books of poetry, 11 works of nonfiction, and 7 children’s stories according to the information inside my copy of Maddaddam) – I have started Alias Grace no less than 5 times and have never been able to get more than about 50 pages in – because I think this shows how diverse her writing truly is. There’s probably someone out there who loves Alias Grace and hates The Year of the Flood.

When I was in University, I had a friend named John, who I worked with at Blockbuster video. John felt about the Tragically Hip the way I feel about Atwood. He’d grown up in Kingston, but they were famous and long gone by the time he was old enough to realize any of this. One day he was walking down the street, past the house where the guitar player’s parents still lived – and there he was, sitting on the porch playing “Grace Too”. John finally had his chance to express the impact their music had had on him. He took a breath, gathered his courage, walked up to the porch, looked his idol straight in the eye and said “Hey man. That’s Grace Too.” – “Yup” the guitar player responded as he continued to play. John turned and walked away, and as he went he thought to himself “That’s Grace Too???!!! – REALLY?? REALLY?? He knows it’s Grace Too – he wrote the fucking song!!!” I wonder if John ever really forgave himself for missing what might have been his one opportunity to tell this man what his art had meant to him.

Of course, in the grand scheme of life there are worse things than getting tongue tied in front of someone you deeply respect – but that doesn’t stop me from fearing the same fate. “Um, hello Ms. Atwood – you write good…”

Thursday, September 12, 2013

The year's last, loveliest smile

Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall. - F. Scott Fitzgerald

What is it about September that feels so promising? I love September - everything about it. I love the crisp in the air, the pumpkin spice lates, fuzzy wool socks with boots, the deep rich jewel tones... there is nothing that is not great about September.

When you start to really think about it, September should be sad and depressing... another summer is over, cold weather is moving in, the trees and other greenery begin to die, summer holidays are at close and we are all returning to our school/work routines. Even those of us who do not get entire summers off know that nothing much gets done during the summer... or should I say, nothing new gets started during the summer. There are too many people away at any given time to consider new projects.
So again, I ask: Why is it that despite all this, September is so full of promise?

It could be that those years between 5 and 18 have so engrained us that we will always see September as the month the new year actually begins. Maybe we like our routines and the daily grind more than we care to admit? Maybe, if you are like me, you just love that “back to school” feeling that new adventures are around the corner.

I have to say that summer 2013 was really good to me. Sean and I spent 3 weeks traveling in Italy and France. My first real travel in Europe – I say “real” because I was in Germany when I was 15 for gymnastics, and didn’t actually see much more than the insides of gyms and stadiums; in 2002 I met up with some girlfriends in England and also spent time in Scotland – but they don’t really consider themselves part of continental Europe. What an unreal trip… I live a charmed life.

August brought my Nan’s 90th birthday – you wouldn’t believe she was 90. She’s got more love and more joy in a few strands of her white hair than most people are lucky enough to experience in a whole life time. My whole family came in from Ontario, the US, etc. It’s so rare that I get to see my whole family – we have our moments, but I was lucky enough to be raised side by side with my cousins at our family cabin in the summers, so I can say with complete honesty that I really, truly love spending time with them. I wonder what it must be like for my Nan to look around and see this enormous group of people (she has 14 grandkids, and there are a LOT of great-grandkids these days), and know that if it weren’t for her, none of them would be here.

Last, but certainly not least, my best friend got married. We’ve been friends since we were 10 years old and seeing her get married was one of the highlights of my adult life. She’s said for a long time now that she was happy in her long term partnership, and didn’t want to get married. So when she called me last spring and told me she was going to ask him to marry her, I was more than a little surprised. It was a whole month of wedding events, with the shower, bachelorette and then the wedding. They had a beautiful celebration at her family cabin, the last weekend of August.

So, like I said, this summer has been great – busy, full of fun and celebration. But the truth is that no matter how wonderful any summer may have been, I still feel a sense of excitement when the air starts to cool and I know fall is coming. I happily pull out my sweaters, tights, boots and scarves and I curse the days that are too warm to wear them. I secretly hope for highs of 15 degrees for the day. I start dreaming of baking apple pies and sipping cider.

Fall holds my heart... it snuggles me in fuzzy wool, and comforts me with delicious, spicy flavours and it wraps it all up in a stunning jewel toned bow.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

India and Beyond

"Everything you are sure is right, can be wrong in another place." - Barbara Kingsolver, The Poisonwood Bible


In my last post "Oh the Places You'll Go" I talked about all the reasons getting older, and embracing change, has been a great experience for me. The one thing I have struggled to hang onto, is the ability to travel. Travel, more than any other thing in my life, has shaped who I am today. There is something about having to squat over a hole in the ground to pee that makes you fee like you can do anything. But as I acquire more of the things that make up my life today (house, dog, two cats, etc), it gets harder and harder to do that kind of traveling. To tell the truth, my husband and I have been spoiled - for us traveling isn't a week on a beach somewhere (although that is awesome in its own way too), it's dedicating a chunk of time to immersing yourself in a foreign culture.

The year after I finished University I found myself floundering. The thought of trying to find a "career" scared the life out of me. So I found the perfect hiding place - I moved to Japan for a year to teach English. While I thought I was playing hide and seek with my future, it turned out I was actually being introduced to the first incarnation of my adult self. All by myself, on the other side of the world, I fell in love with being afraid. Does that sound strange? It's the kind of fear some people get bungee jumping or whitewater rafting - the kind of fear you feel when you are pushing yourself to your limits. Sometimes it is nice to settle in and feel comfortable, but if there is one thing I know for sure about myself it's that I will never be happy in a life that doesn't scare me a little bit.

At the end of a year I decided to come home to Winnipeg. People often asked me, if I loved Japan so much, why did I come home. There are so many reasons, and honestly I probably still don't understand all of them - I had a job I loved, my own apartment, a great boyfriend and some really good friends. In a way, I was running again - my boyfriend was talking about marriage, which I wasn't at all ready for. I was also starting to realize that I could spend my whole life in Japan, become fluent in the language, know the culture as well as the one I grew up in, and they would still always see me as a Canadian living in Japan. Or maybe, it was that I would always see myself as a Canadian living in Japan - either way, I wasn't ready to commit for life.

Ironically, within a six months of coming home I met the man I did eventually marry (Many years later). He had just spent 3 months traveling Europe by himself and also loved to travel. We shortly began planning, what will probably always be, the trip of my life. In the summer of 2007 we spent 4 months traveling India and South East Asia.

We landed in Delhi in early May and it was already 30 degrees at 6 in the morning. Just the heat was overwhelming, never mind the crowds, the smell, the cows, the stares. Even Indian people want to know, why India? I've said it many times, but India is a place of extreme contradictions. Yes, there are some extreme negatives that you will experience in India - but even those will push you to consider who you are when faced with the worst of life. On the other hand you will meet the most amazing people, eat the most amazing food, see the most amazing sites. I stood no more than 10 feet from the Dalai Lama, saw the Taj Mahal, and Mount Everest, went fishing in the Ganges, hiked in the foothills of the Himalayas, took a row boat at dawn down the Ganges in Varanasi - so I guess I would ask, why not India? Even the seemingly negative experiences, for the most part, I wouldn't trade for anything. We rode a bus with vinyl seats and no air conditioning for 12 hours, through the desert; my husband had to have minor surgery in a hospital that looked like something out of a World War One movie; and yes, I stepped in cow poo - many times. India was exhausting - because whether it's amazing or awful, it always takes all of your energy to truly experience life in India. The picture above, taken in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), tells the whole story - I am exhausted, but also happier than I can put into words.

After two months in India we were ready for some relaxation - so the whirlwind trip to Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam that we had originally planned, turned into a month and a half in Thailand (most of which was spent reading in various hammocks by the ocean) and a couple weeks in Cambodia. Even that had it's ups and downs - we had to walk across the border into Cambodia, and in doing so were threatened by the Cambodian mafia (yup, that's right, Cambodian mafia). A bomb went off a block from our hotel in Phnom Penh - and one of the hotel staff members laughingly told us the crime had been perpetrated by Pol Pot, the former Cambodian leader who committed mass genocide against his own people. We saw Angkor Wat and the Killing Fields - so I guess you could say Cambodia is just as contradictory as India. Then we went back to Thailand, where we got engaged one night on a beach in Koh Lanta - and spent even more time reading in hammocks.

Traveling, more than anything else I've experienced in life, has taught me that sometimes you have to suck it up and take the good with the bad. Because if you let every frightening or upsetting experience get you down, you'd miss out on all the amazing things that are out there waiting for you.

It's been 6 years, and we are finally planning our next adventure - this July Sean and I will spend 3 weeks in Italy and France. I find the closer we get, the more I'm starting to get that feeling I fell in love with so long ago in Japan - that feeling of fear and excitement, at the possibilities that are opened up by the unknown. Aside from the food, the thing I am most looking forward to is the possibility that anything could happen, and whether it is ugly or beautiful it will be one more amazing travel story to add to the collection.


For more pictures from India, click here

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Oh, the places you'll go

"Take a single step, followed by another. Don't look too far out into the future, and don't look too far back either. Stay centered in the present moment as best you can." - Anonymous

I've been having a lot of moments lately. I don't know how to describe them exactly. When I was in my 20s, every so often I'd have a brief moment where I felt myself growing into someone different, someone more adult. In those moments I felt as though a window had appeared and I could see the future, coming nearer, on the other side. Sometimes those moments were scary, but mostly they were reassuring. They told me that even though I didn't quite know where I was heading, that I was on a path - or sometimes bushwhacking, but I was heading in the "right" direction.

These days my “windows” look more like giant, wide open, patio doors. I am straddling the threshold - I can feel myself transitioning into a new era, and I can see my friends going there alongside me. Ten years ago, I was only ready to peer fleetingly through those windows. Looking back, I can see that they all opened in their own time, as I was ready.

This morning, when an old friend posted on Facebook that she was in her last year of her nursing degree, I had a moment - but this one was a little more retrospective. I paused to think about the kids we all were 10 years ago and I felt awed at all we had accomplished. I think about that ragtag group of kids, who were all exploring the depths of our newfound freedom - who were more interested in a fun friday night, than a solid plan for the future (as every 23 year old should be)... it seems amazing to me that we've all come so far. My 20s were an incredibly fun, sorrowful, exciting and growing decade - I have sometimes feared the loss of this. I have the most incredible memories from that time. Now we are young professionals, husbands, wives, parents, homeowners and a million other things I knew we'd become - and yet never understood how that might come to be. And the most interesting part? All those adult things, like office jobs, marriages, divorces, children, houses - I always thought that as I acquired them I would become less myself, more tied down by them. I always thought that I had to get my living in while I still could. But the incredible truth I have discovered is that if you choose your life, on your own terms, then you will define those choices, the good and the bad. They will make you more "you" than I could ever have imagined back then.


Thursday, February 7, 2013

I Heart Winnipeg

I had to leave Winnipeg for a fairly long time, and go literally to the other side of the globe, to figure out that I loved it. Honestly, I don’t think I could have ever figured this out without having left. I would have spent my whole life wishing I’d gone somewhere more metropolitan or more exotic. There are people like my best friend, who have lived here their whole lives and know that they will live and die Winnipegers – and they wouldn’t want it any other way. I would never have been one of those people. So I'm glad I left - and I'm really glad that I eventually had the sense to come home.

Come February it starts getting harder and harder to remember why I love this city. The snow is no longer fluffy, white and romantic, but rather grey-brown and salt stains have begun ruining all your shoes; the wind chill has made what could almost be a tolerable temperature intolerable for more days than we should be able to count – but we do count. Talk to most Winnipegers in February or March and at some point in the conversation they will almost inevitably say something along the lines of “Can you believe it, 30 straight days below -30 degrees with the wind chill?” There is inevitably at least one day every winter where you get out of your car/off the bus, with a toque pulled down just below your eyebrows, a scarf pulled up to the tops of your cheeks, while your eyelashes freeze together and you think “What the fuck? Why did my ancestors travel half way around the world and stop here???”

The truth is that the misery we go through every winter is part of what binds us together – we all have it in common. We go through it together. We come out the other side, each spring, like soldiers home from battle – bonded together through a shared experience. And we feel that much stronger for it. Let’s face it, we look down on people that complain about minus 15. We’ve earned that right.

Winnipeg suffers from short man syndrome – forever jumping up and down yelling “Look at me! I’m a real city too!” It’s endearing – though unnecessary. We are what we are. We don’t have freeways, and we drive like maniacs. We have only just acquired some of the major US retailers that other Canadian cities have had for years. We are renowned (at least in Winnipeg) for our love of a good bargain. We have Transcona – and where would we be if we didn’t have Transcona to make fun of? Every small man needs a little brother to pick on.

So what do we have? We have incredibly short commutes by comparison with most other cities in the world. We have some of the best and most varied food cultures of any city of been in. We have the Weakerthans, who have written some of my favourite words about this city )“My city's still breathing (but barely it's true) through buildings gone missing like teeth.”) We have the West End Cultural Centre, where you can see burgeoning artists and long established ones at a reasonable price. We have a very real art scene, although you might have to dig a little to find it – it’s there, I promise. We have cottage country, usually at a pretty reasonable drive from the city for a weekend getaway. And speaking of cottage country – we have some pretty incredible summers. And we make the most of them – there’s a festival of some sort at almost any point from the time the weather gets warm (not to mention Festival du Voyageur right in the middle of the winter, when we need it most).

The longer I type this list of things I love about Winnipeg, the longer it gets. This post could go on and on.
I read this article “Nine ways to experience Winnipeg” this morning and it reminded me that some of the things we do have are pretty unique. I don’t agree with everything the author has to say – but it made me laugh, made me feel proud of this city – and usually come February I need something like this to remind me about the lengthy list of things that make me proud to be a Winnipeger. Best of all, it reminded me that there are things about Winnipeg I still haven’t experienced. It made me want to do all of the things he listed – so I’m going to. It might take me a year, because some are very decidedly winter or summer activities, but I’m going to try them all. I may even redo some of the ones I’ve already tried. As with any relationship, no matter how loving, it is always important to keep trying, learning about new things to love and revisiting the tried and true classics that made you fall in love in the first place.

If you are from Winnipeg, what is your one “must do” or “must see”? Maybe I’ll give it a try. And if anything interesting comes of these little journeys I’ll let you know.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

What's in a Name?

What’s in a name? – Frankly, everything.

If you’ve ever read my blog before, you’ve probably noticed that it’s been renamed – oh, and it looks pretty different. Why have I gone to the drastic lengths of completely reinventing the look and feel of my blog? Well, a few reasons.

For the first one I’m going to refer you back to my last blog post “My Resignation” – it seems a bit repetitive to rewrite what’s already there.

The bottom line is that I just didn't think "Junk Food Junkie" spoke at all to where I want to go with this blog.

So why “Acquiring the Words”? One of my favourite books of all time is the Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver. If you haven’t read it, don’t walk – run, to your nearest book seller or library and get yourself a copy. It is brilliant. The new name of my blog comes from a quote I have added as the sub header (scroll up – or just keep reading) “Listen. To live is to be marked. To live is to change, to acquire the words of a story, and that is the only celebration we mortals really know. In perfect stillness, frankly, I've only found sorrow.” You may have noticed that my blog is no longer about my food reformation. One of my co-workers pointed out that these days it’s more about revelation than reformation. So true. I want this blog to be somewhere I come to spill my guts. I want it to be the place where I put down the words I acquire while celebrating my story.

As for the format, I really just wanted something a little cleaner looking.

So, what do you think? Good choice? Bad Choice?

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

My Resignation

I quit.

That’s right, I quit. I am done participating in the culture of body shaming that has engulfed us. A while back I started feeling disgusted with magazine covers that scream things like “This year’s best and worst beach bodies” – There’s no winning in these types of magazines. Leeann Rimes and Tara Reid are dangerously thin, while Snooki and Christina Aguilera are ballooning out of control. We should all aspire to have Scarlett Johansson’s perfect ass. Anything more, or less, is simply unacceptable.

I’ve caught myself thinking things like “She’s really pretty even though she’s big.” Or “She’d be really pretty if she lost some weight.” – um, if you can tell she “would be” really pretty, why is that you think she isn’t now??? Oh, and how about that’s kind of the pot calling the kettle black Shawn? But I wasn’t exempt from my own hateful thoughts. In fact, I was their most frequent victim.

It’s even tempting as a size 12 – that’s right, I’m putting it on the internet, I’m a size 12 – to participate in the abundance of skinny girl hate that is out there. After all, real women have curves, right? NO – real women come in all shapes and sizes. It’s not your place to tell someone else that they should have a different body type in order to be “real”.

Let’s not forget the men here either – I can’t say whether or not the pressure on men is as great, worse, or less than it is for women. Does it really matter? Men are also victims of fat shaming in our culture – I’ve seen it firsthand. In my experience, people seem to have less issue with telling a man he is overweight or just commenting on his weight in general.

It’s been coming together in my head over the last while, that this type of thinking is just so fucked up. Then yesterday my friend Jen Selk posted this blog (Secrets and Lies)I debated whether or not writing this post was piggy backing, or copying her in some way. But I think she’d agree with me that it’s time that we all take a stand, and say that we banish fat shaming, skinny shaming or any other kind of body judgment from our way of thinking. To do that we need to talk about the fact that it is happening.

You can argue that it’s not healthy to be overweight, although according to some of my more recent reading this is not a hard and fast fact (I haven’t done enough research in this area that I’m willing to argue this point right now) – but when did we decide that our physical health was so much more important than our emotional health? Almost every woman I know (and some of the men) has spent an overwhelming amount of time beating herself up because she didn’t fit into some ideal body shape she has pre-set in her mind. We spend unbelievable amounts of time talking about our latest plans to eat healthier, lose weight, be the picture we see in our heads of what we should look like. How is that healthy??? I’ve spent a huge amount of my life being unhappy and stressed about my weight. How has that made my life better in any way? It hasn’t. I could weigh the ideal 110 lbs and still beat the shit out of myself emotionally – but people would tell me how great I looked, and then I’d be happy right? Right?

Who are we to ever tell someone else that who they are, how they look, or anything else about themselves is not up to our standards? Know a fat person? Get off their back – because if there is one thing I can guarantee you, it’s that your “caring” comments about their physical wellbeing have never done them even a little bit of good. What they have done is tell your loved one that you would love them that much more if they could just look the way you would like them to – now that may not be what you’ve intended– but I promise that this is what they are hearing. I’ve been guilty of doing this with hubby. I’ve had moments where I think, what would I do if at 50 he had a heart attack and left me alone, or with a couple of kids? (and again – hello pot, the kettle is calling and he would like his black coat back) – the thought of being without him for any reason breaks my heart. So what if he has a heart attack because he lives a life of stress, trying to live up to the expectations of his harpy of a wife? Or leaves me because I’ve been subtly telling him for years that I don’t love him unconditionally? What your loved one needs to know is that you love them. Period. There is no weight clause in your relationship (any relationship, parent/child, husband/wife, friends, relatives, whoever).

Finally, I’m renaming my blog – because even though I still agree with the heart of why I set it up (yes, I still think that over processing food is a plague), I don’t think the title is reflective of where I am now, and who I want to be – or what I want this blog to be about. I’m not sure what to call it though – thoughts?

Thursday, January 17, 2013

The Things We Carry With Us

With the holidays just behind us I've been thinking a lot about family traditions, how many of ours have disappeared over the years. I've been missing things like family Sunday night dinner and church on Christmas eve. As time has passed and I've gotten decidedly more agnostic, a divorce, two remarriages (my parents', not mine) a cross country move, an international relocation and an eventual return to the city where I grew up, all compounded by family spread out across the continent have resulted in a firm wall of time having been erected between me and the family traditions of my youth. These days we don't even spend Christmas in the same city two years in a row, so Christmas traditions are hard to establish.

Lately I find myself searching for those few, slim connections to my youth. Aside from my family, there are only a few people who've known me since I was young. It takes a lot of effort to carry things and people with us through the years, and I've moved around so much that I have shed a lot of things along the way. So many people have come and gone, some for the best and some I miss dearly. The people who are still there are the ones I've loved enough to carry through the years, but who have also loved me enough to pick me up and carry me when necessary. I feel lucky to have them.

All this has gotten me thinking about the other things that have been important enough to heap into suitcases and bring with me through the years. There is a copy of the Velveteen Rabbit my Great Aunt gave me years ago, with gorgeous illustrations. There is an ice cream cone shaped whistle from Dairy Queen, from the night we went in after hours with a friend who worked there, and made our own sundaes. There are a lot of old pictures, and a few old letters. There is a tulip pressed between the pages of my University Year Book, that reminds me of my last day as a student and how wide open life felt that day. Perhaps the lightest thing, the one that has gone with me absolutely every place I've ever traveled, is music. I don't remember when I first realized that a great song could make my heart swell just like falling in love does, but for years now it has been my comfort, my warm blanket, my sunny summer day, my cruel lover, my compassionate friend.

When I was around fifteen my mom and her then boyfriend, now husband, took my brother and I on a trip to Toronto. We saw a lot of amazing things on that trip, and I decided that someday I was going to live there. The thing that stands out most from that week was a concert they took us to at the Molson Amphitheater. This is one of my all time favorite summer music venues. It is an outdoor stage, set in a bowl of seats, which you can pay top dollar to have, or you can pay less to sit in the grassy area above the seats. You can bring a blanket and a picnic and lie on the grass watching the stars while listening to one of your favorite bands. That week we saw Blue Rodeo, who are in my opinion one of the quintessential Canadian bands of the last 25 years. I was in love. I can remember sitting in our family room playing "Dark Angel" on repeat on the stereo. Not their best song, but what can I say, I was something of a melancholy/romantic teenager. At least I grew out of it... what's Greg Keelor's excuse? Just kidding Greg, I love you.

I had some guy friends who were in a band - one of whom I was totally head over heals for - and we used to go watch them play at a local coffee house (hey, it was the 90s, that's what we did). Listening to them play "Side of the Road" is still one of my favorite memories from that time.

Two years later we moved to a small Ontario town just 45 minutes from Toronto (the closest I ever came to living there, which is ok). My parents built a beautiful house in the middle of the forest at the end of a dirt road. I can remember pulling up to the house after night out with friends, on many occasions, the house glowing and warm, and Blue Rodeo playing on the stereo so loudly I could hear it from the driveway. It was the sound track of our lives back then. I knew my family was inside waiting for me.

Fast forward nearly two decades, a million miles, and more changes than I could possibly put down on paper - and one of the few bands my husband and I both love equally is Blue Rodeo. Our first dance at our wedding was "Rebel" (it's more romantic than it sounds). Last night we went to see them for the third time (together). I realized while we were sitting there, holding hands like two kids in puppy love, that they are the one big tradition I have carried with me all these years. Someday my kids will pull up to the house, late at night, hear Blue Rodeo blaring on the stereo, and know that their parents are inside dancing.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

You are not required to complete this task...

“You are not required to complete this task, but you are not free to withdraw from it.” – The Talmud

When I was a teenager I loved filling notebooks with quotes I came across. I don’t quite remember what qualified a quote to make it into one of my compilations, but it likely just had to strike me as interesting or thoughtful in some way. Many of these little quips are long forgotten – I still have most of the notebooks (Because I have some minor hording tendencies, according to hubs. I contend that one wooden trunk full of nostalgia does not a hoarder make – but that’s another post for another time), but this one has stuck in my head over the years. At the time when I jotted it down, I attributed its source to the Talmud. I have never read the Talmud, so I’m not sure how it crossed my path, but a quick search of the internet confirms that at the very least the words are associated with Judaism. I remember reading this quote to my mother, who asked “What does it mean?” and at the time I assumed that was because she didn’t get it. Looking back she likely just wanted to know what I thought it meant.

I don’t know the context of the quote in the larger body in which is resides (if you do, I’d love to hear about it). To me, this quote has always been the most basic and beautiful description of everything we go through in this life. On a small scale it is about all those tasks that we deal with on a daily basis – you don’t have to write that report, finish that project or improve that nagging thing in your life, but chances are that not taking care of those things means they will just hang around and haunt you. On a larger scale it speaks to me about living life – you can withdraw from your life in a variety of ways: drugs, alcohol, depression, isolating yourself, or even killing yourself – and in these ways you can refuse to complete the task of living your life, and yet you cannot avoid the fact that certain tasks have been laid out before you and they will never go away until you choose to tackle them.

Seven years ago my friend Peter took his own life. Just typing the words is more difficult than I can put into words. He was kind, smart, quiet in his words, and yet forceful and present in his music. He was also sad, and struggled with the tasks laid out before him. We all knew he was going through an incredibly tough time. By the time that January rolled around our group had begun to drift. I hadn’t seen him in a while. I can still remember that phone call… the choked sound of your voice when you told me. I can remember being surprised by an old friend’s angry shouting, cursing him – but of course he was angry. Now it seems like the most rational response.

It’s been seven years – so when I came home last night and saw your post of Facebook, that you were going to our old place to raise a glass, I guess I shouldn’t have been so surprised that it had slipped my mind. We’ve gone together every year, until yesterday. I felt guilty… not because I’ve moved on, Peter and I were never as good of friends, but because I’d left you to go by yourself.

So how is it that I can believe that Peter did not withdraw from the task at hand? Well, for one thing, his departure didn’t make his painful situation disappear – it sent his pain like shrapnel to wound his friends and family. We still carry the pieces that tore into us - and we are assigned our own part in his tasks to work through. I also don’t believe that death is the end. I do believe we are reincarnated and that we carry our unfinished business with us, and are given the opportunity to continue working on unraveling the knots that belong to us. I hope with all my heart that this time around you are happier, and feel more equipped to take on the task that is living. But more than that I hope my friends who did not attempt to withdraw are able to heal the holes you left behind.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Running, writting and other "Resolutions"

I’ve mentioned in previous posts that I do not believe in New Year’s resolutions. I believe that people can only truly make significant change when they are ready. That said, maybe for some leaving one year behind and starting “fresh” in a new year is the push they need to make those changes. Despite my resistance to resolutions I can’t help but find myself thinking about things I’d like to do differently at this time of year. It used to be that September provided this definition in my life – the changing of the calendar year was so much less significant than the changing of the school year. Maybe I just don’t want to call them resolutions, because we all know how easily we all discard our resolutions.

I managed to shift my thinking regarding weight a few years ago when I started this blog – I really did begin to believe that healthy eating was about healthy living, and not about being skinny. When I think back, that all started just after the New Year, two years ago. The biggest change of all has slowly crept in on me over the last few months. For the first time ever I can say (and mean it) that I really love my body. This is where I live – no matter where I go there is no escaping that. It is of no benefit to me to walk around hating my home.

These days hubs and I are still very conscientious about the contents of the food we consume. With the exception of condiments, we do not buy prepackaged foods. My mission from two years ago was a total success. It reframed our thinking about how we spend our food dollars and what we consume. Even though we don’t make our own mayonnaise from scratch, we do still take the time to read the ingredients and ensure we are buying one with a short list, and recognizable ingredients. So maybe I did make a "resolution" and keep it - I just didn't call it that.

In my last post I wrote about my car accident on the way to the cabin earlier this week. I said I’d keep you posted as I took stock of my life and set some new goals accordingly. So I asked myself the most obvious question I could think of – If you had died in that accident, what would you most regret never having done? It may seem a bit morbid, but it immediately popped a thought into my head. Well, two, but I’m not ready to talk about one of them just yet. The truth is that none of my regrets would have anything to do with eating that extra piece of chocolate, or enjoying those amazing meals with my family in Raleigh over Christmas. They don’t have to do with exercising more or weighing less. I didn’t even think for a second about those extra 10 minutes I spend in bed every morning instead of doing my hair. They had nothing to do with having more money or nicer things. My job, which I do not like very much at all, didn’t even flicker across my mind. I know none of this is revelatory – we are constantly seeing trite quotes about how in the end none of these things will matter - and yet I do spend a tremendous amount of time and energy thinking about these things every day. The truth is I probably still will, and in some cases I should. I want to be healthier and feel happier in my job, I guess I just need to recognize that there are things that I hold dearer in my heart.

Ok, so I’m sure you’d like to hear about the thing I DID think of – I’d regret never having attempted to publish a novel. I wrote one about 10 years ago, which I love and am very proud of; but it will never see the light of day, because that story belongs to me and I do not feel the need to share it. But I would truly regret never having tried to write something and put it out into the world.

So why don’t I write anymore? Okay, well to be fair I do – I scribble things down all the time- bits of blog posts that may or may not ever see the light of day, pieces of stories that come to me out of thin air, character descriptions that live in the shadows of my thoughts. Then there are the million and one things that never even make it onto paper because I was at work, or on the bus , or out for dinner, or just simply didn’t have any means to record them. Aha! There’s the key – the means to record them, and moreover, not lose them! Almost every note book, phone book, sketch book, electronic device, etc. I’ve ever owned has some piece of this puzzle scribbled in the margins.

It’s so obvious – I need somewhere I can store these thoughts at a moment’s notice, where they can all be found in one place and reassembled easily – yeesh, I need a laptop (or maybe a netbook for portability?). Ok, so my goal for January is to obtain something small that I can type on (keyboard, not screen) – those are really my only requirements.

Oh, and as to my New Year’s resolution for 2013 – I’m going to take up running. I’ll let you know how that goes ;)

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

A Deep Fried, Southern Christmas, and a Very Happy New Year!

I hope you all had as good an end to 2012/beginning to 2013 as I have had. We spent Christmas in Raleigh, NC with my mom, step-dad, 2 brothers and my grandmother. I feel like I've done nothing but eat for a week and a half. My family has dubbed Christmas in Raleigh "Pig-fest"... for weeks beforehand my husband, brother and dad no.2 exchange emails planing what they will cook and when they will cook these things. This year there was talk of roasting a whole pig... this year it was only talk, but I anticipate that by the next time we get down there they will have worked out the logistics. Instead all we managed were lobster tails, prime rib, home maid onion rings, turkey dinner, honey baked ham, scalloped potatoes... and those are just the highlights. I come by my love of food very honestly.

I love my family, I love spending time with them... unlike some people I don't dread spending the holidays with my parents & siblings. I actually look forward to it, for months. While the boys are busy planing all the food, I am usually hunting down Christmas gifts and making lists of things that can be purchased on the cheep in the States. Don't get me wrong, it's not without it's moments - by the end of the week I'm usually feeling overfed and in desperate need of alone time, but all in all I love Christmas in Raleigh.

So by the time we left on the 29th to head back to the frozen arctic (aka: the Canadian Prairies) I was feeling tired, spoiled, stuffed and ready to head home. My parents should feel very proud of themselves - they've managed to raise kids who like being with them, but feel no desire to live in their basement.

Hubs has two full weeks off over Christmas so he planned a few days skiing in Montana with a buddy, and left just a few hours after we got off the plane to drive out there. I, unfortunately do not get the same kind of holiday time he does and have to be back at work tomorrow. So I planned a weekend with some friends at our family cabin. I woke up Sunday and was eager to get on the road. My plan was to pick up the dog from my mother-in-law's place and be out there with enough time to have a few precious solitary hours. You know what they say about the best laid plans... By the time I did everything I needed to do and actually got out of the city it was almost two hours later than I'd planned. The roads were a bit snow covered but seemed okay. I was about 45 minutes away from the cabin when I hit a patch of ice and the car started to slide across the highway, I did my best to bring the car back but it just slid in the opposite direction. I didn't have time to feel afraid as the car slid off the road and into the ditch. All I had time to think about was not hitting a tree. The car slowed to a stop with the front and back ends wedged between the slopes on either side of the ditch. I took a deep breath, did a mental check that I was uninjured and then turned to check on the dog. Luckily he was in his kennel and was also fine. He was looking at me like "What the heck was that???". I got out of the car to get my bearings... just as a truck drove by. Yup, must have seen me go off the road, and just drove on by. To top it off I was in the 100 km stretch of the highway where I got absolutely no cell reception.

I got out of the car to check out the situation. As luck would have it I seemed to have hit the ditch right at the end of someone's driveway. I put the dog on his leash and walked to the farm house. I was greeted by the kindest family, who offered me coffee and invited me to join their game of Yahtzee while their daughter fetched her dad from the pasture. In all I was there about an hour, chatting with their little grandsons about their school and helping them count their dice scores. Eventually we pulled my car out of the ditch and they had me on my way. The last 40 minutes of the drive I wavered between feeling totally shaken up, and feeling overwhelmingly grateful. When my friends arrived about and hour and a half later I couldn't have been happier to see them.

Sometimes we need to be reminded to take some time and reflect on our lives. As the seasons change, and in particular at New Year's we are reminded that our lives are advancing and that it might be time to take stock of where we are. Sometimes it takes something less natural, like careening off the road and miraculously landing in a snow bank totally unharmed, just before being taken in by and cared for by total strangers. Needless to say I've been reminded, duly, in the last few days to stop and look around my life. I'm not really sure what that means just yet... but I'll keep you posted. Right now I'm just waiting for hubby to get home on Friday so I can give him the biggest hug ever.