Posted in February 2012

Five things for the week of February 27.

Here’s five things for the week of February 27.

1. [Thing] Cuppow. I heard of this through a friend on twitter this week, and immediately this product seemed like such a smart and practical innovation. But, then I realized how it’s probably straight out of Portlandia and only awesome hipsters can pull it off. I’m in no way close to being a hipster. Naturally, I’m in love with the idea, but worried about how I’d look with one. I don’t think I’ve been so distraught over a consumer decision since I debated buying Uggs for practicality reasons (hello, winter?) back in ’04 when all the “cool girls” wore them just ’cause. The Uggs were indeed purchased, so someday soon I’ll probably buy this too. Who doesn’t love cool + practical?

2. [Place] El Ateneo, Buenos Aries. I sooo want to go here. Known to be one of the most frequented bookstores in the world, it’s housed in an old theatre. The photos are phenomenal, and from a geo-cultural angle, it’s an amazing testament to how old spaces can be repurposed in really cool ways.

3. [TV] Happy EndingsThis show is somewhere in their second season, but I only just heard about it through a friend. I’ve shamelessly spent the last few days watching all of the previous episodes, and I’m hooked! It’s kind of like Friends, but it’s set in Chicago, and they do an outstanding job with dropping in cultural references a la Gilmore Girls. And, I totally relate to this show more than Friends, simply because of my age. Friends was funny when I was in junior high when it started, but it got way funnier once I re-watched it in my early 20′s. Anyway, check out Happy Endings so I have more people to talk with about how funny Max and Penny are!

4. [Movie] The Artist. Oh wow, this movie was amazing! You might think that a silent movie would bore you to tears (and for some folks, I’m sure it did) but I loved it. It was such a great homage to the 20′s / 30′s and had a great cast. Go see it! And, come on – it’s the Best Picture for 2012!
5. [TV]  Mad Men returns March 25th! The countdown is on for one of my favourite TV shows to return, and IMDB is hosting a really great featurette that will catch you up and remind you where things are since the show went on hiatus more than a year ago.
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The Month of Love: Meet my grandparents.

Nana & Grampy c. 2001

That was the look he always gave her. <3

When I was a kid, we’d visit my mom’s parents – Nana and Grampy – frequently. We typically did dinner with them once a week, and of course, we always attended church on Sunday mornings together. Their house acted as the back-up after school destination when no one was at our house. Whenever my parents weren’t available to play chauffeur, my Grampy would be there with his 1990-something blue pontiac grand prix. I remember that the passenger seat was always pulled all the way up to the front – not for someone’s long legs in the backseat, but so my Nana could touch the dashboard at all times! I guess that was her version of the “holy shit” bar.

Grampy would “chauffeur” me to and from my weekly piano lessons. The lessons were a gift from Nana and Grampy, because as Nana always said, I have “piano fingers”. I love remembering that Grampy could sit for ages in the car and be content to wait for me while listening to CBC Radio. I hated it as a kid – “It’s just talking!”, I would say incredulously later to my mom – but I love and appreciate my Grampy’s love for it now.

Nana would slip me $5 bills when Grampy wasn’t looking. She was a spoiler by nature and I came to secretly believe the bills were a reward for succeeding at our memory game that she and I would play. She had amazing collections of thimbles, miniature decorative shoes and Lilliput Lane houses on display around their house. And she’d change things slightly when you least expected it – swapping out two shoes or rearranging the houses – and then on my next visit, I would eagerly search for changes. She loved it when I noticed the changes.

Nana and Grampy had a traditional marriage. They met in 1949 and married in 1953. She was from a PEI farm family of ten, he was a worker’s son from Bridgewater, NS. They had two children, a boy and a girl (my mom!). Grampy was a minister, Nana a homemaker. Because of Grampy’s profession, they moved frequently. My memories of them begin when Grampy retired and they moved to New Glasgow to be closer to their daughter, my mom, and our family when I was very young. All of the memories I have of my Nana are from the house they owned just streets away from my parents place.

My Nana died suddenly of cancer in 2002. She was only 72 years old.

In the ten years since her death I have become incredibly aware of how young she was when she died.

New Years Eve c. 1978

New Years Eve, 1978

My most favourite memory of her isn’t the game we played or the $5 bills. It isn’t her cooking and baking, although both were the best kind. What I remember most, and my heart still melts to think of it, is the way my Grampy looked at her with all the love in the world. He called her “Budd” when he thought people weren’t listening. For many years I didn’t understand the chosen term of endearment. Later, I learned my grandmother’s full name was Margaret Gladys Budd Hebb. “Budd” was his special name for her and he alone used it. He used it with laughter, with ire and with much love. When I remember them together, I remember hearing Grampy call her “Budd” on so many occasions.

My grandparents were married for 48 years. That’s a tremendous achievement. If it wasn’t for her death, they’d have made it to 59 years this year.

There are so many things that I’ve learned from both of these people, including: a particularly strong spelling lesson on the word “different”, Grampy teaching me to make tea at the ripe age of 7 years old, and how to consistently stay 20 km below the speed limit while they accompanied my mom and I to dance competitions around the province. But the best lessons are the lessons of love, including the quiet moments when I could plainly see their love for each other – especially when he called her “Budd”.

Love doesn’t seem to last a lifetime anymore, and I like to joke that the situation for single 20-somethings is pretty bleak. I cannot fathom what it’s like to be with one person for the length of time my grandparents were together, but I greatly admire the love and respect they had for each other. Times have changed, norms are different. Maybe you’ll marry, maybe you wont, but you can’t deny that we’ll all fall in love at some point in our lives.

It’s the small things that make you realize how much one person loves and appreciates another person, and it’s the little tells, just like “Budd”, that I look for in the relationships I see between friends, family and loved ones.

I’m so happy I was able to experience a part of their love.

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Five things for the week of February 20.

Here’s what’s up for the week of February 20.

1. [Blog] Portugal decriminalised drugs, and it worked. I read a fascinating post over at Contrarian this week about the decriminalization process that Portugal undertook a decade ago. Well, the stats are in, and surprisingly enough, it worked! Addiction is down, and although the docs are happy, the do give the caveat that this probably isn’t the only factor at play. What a fascinating case study! This Forbes article states that drug abuse is down 50% ten years into the change.

2. [Article] Adulthood, Delayed. Did you know that the societal norms of adulthood are drastically shifting? A lot of the research is focused on the US, so the recession plays a bit role, but it’s already very clear that the Millennial generation isn’t like the previous generations. So, the question is, when exactly does Adulthood kick in? This Atlantic article says Millennials are at least 5 years behind, and the shift is most likely permanent. Heck, I’m 25 and I’m not sure I’ve crested “adulthood” … begs the question, what deems “adulthood”, anyway?

3. [Site] HitRecord Project by Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Who didn’t love JGL in 3rd Rock From the Sun or 500 Days of summer? One day Google brought me to HitRecord.org, and I learned about this amazing company that he founded about two years ago. The premise is online artistic collaboration and any of the projects that make a profit will split the returns between the company (re-investment) and the collaborators of the project. Check out JGL’s YouTube updates for more info, or just to listen to the sexy sound of his voice, for reals.

HitRecord.org

4.  [Fashion] Banana Republic Dress that I just had. to. have. I am supposed to be on a very strict self-imposed shopping ban, and mostly, I’m doing okay. I’ve stopped buying unnecessary items or making impulse purchases, and I limit actual clothing purchases to replacement items or items that I need (e.g., work pants). Need of course is relevant, and I think that’s how I came to own this amazing dress from BR today. I was actually on route to Sephora, but that’s another story. How could I pass up a wrap dress that was both on sale and was also amazing!? It fell into the “need” category on the basis that I buy dresses that fit and look good because they are hard to come by and they are literally my favourite thing to wear, because it involves only one choice and no matching tops and bottoms. I only own one other wrap dress (that I love) so I’m happy to own a new one that was not only on sale, but also was subject to another 25% reduction!

Good choice, right?!

5. [Happening] Family Day Holiday. It’s not a holiday where I am (Nova Scotia), but happy Family Day to all those in the provinces that do give this one as a freebie. I miss getting this as a day off now, as it’s the perfect holiday to get you through the winter slump. Nova Scotia keeps talking about adding a “Joe Howe” holiday at this time, but I think it’s mostly a pipe dream….

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The Month of Love: Chasing boys at a young age.

They say you can’t win if you’re not playing the game. Thus, I’ve had my share of bad dates.

Truthfully though, I don’t go looking for love because more than one wise person has told me that you’ll meet the right person when you stop looking for them.

So I’ve stopped looking.

I’m am however a romantic at heart, something that I think I grabbed onto a a early age. So, in keeping my promise to share a personal story of luuuve, I’ve dug into the recesses of my memory for a gem from my childhood.

Enjoy.

Yeah, that was probably what I looked like.

For every girl, boy trouble starts at a very young age. Remember the opening credits to “He’s Just Not That Into You”? Every little girl has some version of that moment where some little boy is mean to her, but really, he’s mean because he liiiiiiikes her.

Mothers spread this type of propoganda all the time. My mom was most definitely in on the gig.

However, I didn’t cry, scream, or pout when boys brought on the worst – the hair pulling, the teasing, the mean words. I guess my competitive nature manifested early. I took every interaction as an opportunity to win.

“Win?”, you ask.

Why yes of course, “Win.” It’s what I liked most as a child, to “win” at whatever competitive opportunity presented itself. Competitive opportunities like chasing boys around the elementary school yard.

No one seemed to get in my way when I was in pursuit of some poor pathetic boy my age. I’d make a game out of circling the playground at rapid speed. I’ll run and run until I had a hold of a shirt collar or shirt sleeve, and BAM! I’d pounce. Yep, full on kiss from me to him as soon as I could pin him down. Why I felt so compelled, I’m really not sure.

I have brief but hilarious memories of targeting one particular boy in the early days of elementary school. I look back and I laugh – I really don’t know how I did it, the chasing that is. It’s strangely out of character – I was never all that outgoing throughout the remainder of elementary school.

However, the attraction to this one partcular boy started at the bequest of our collective parents before we even knew what the school ground was. We were in the same swimming lessons. Oh what a way to make an introduction! “My lane or yours?” (More like, “Oh, those floaties really make your two piece look good!”)

We were in the same swimming lessons in the late 1980’s when parents liked to ensure that their kids were competent enough to survive a tidal wave and ensured this with mandatory swimming lessons at the local YMCA. Nowadays I’m sure parents drop off their children and only return at the tail end of class to collect them. (Don’t they all just nip out to the nearest coffee shop for a quiet moment of solace? This is what the mommy blogs tell me they just. must. do.)

But back in the good ol’ days, parents looked at the this opportunity as a spectator sport with the entertainment being their own children’s struggles. Luckily, I didn’t look too bad (remember, competitive spirit manifested early), and I was a literal fish in water from the moment my mom dared put me in the backyard pool when I was merely 2 years old. (I guess I was just at the lesson to ensure I was doing the doggy paddle correctly? Perfectionism is now perfectly explainable. Blame my mom.)

Anyway, the aforementioned young lad was also signed up for the same swimming lesson as I was and I have foggy memories, clouded by a chlorine haze, of being told that we were “cute” together. It’s those silly things parents say and then are followed up by aunties and uncles pinching cheeks at holiday gatherings while they ask cutsie questions like, “Soooooooooo, do you have a boyfriend?” in a singsongy voice. This must be the causal link to my torrid playground behaviour.

Don’t ask 5 year olds if they have a “boyfriend/girlfriend”! It’s asking for trouble! I clearly took these questions seriously, so seriously that I competitively charged the poor kid on the playground each day at recess for at least a year! Poor fellas. They didn’t know what was coming.

Point being, my lack of relationship awareness started early. Really early.

For what it’s worth, this wasn’t the only boy who caught my attention in elementary school. While others were making nice at the craft table, I pulled an Anne Shirley on a boy in the 6th grade. If that doesn’t spell L-O-V-E, I don’t know what does.

I’m pretty sure that the hometown grapevine has confirmed that my former YMCA date has made something of himself by settling down with a wife and has taken over his father’s business.

I however, remain single and will continue to not look for love.

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Five things for the week of February 13.

Here’s what up this week:

1.Census Data. Actually, this should be titled “Census o’ fun” because there were a ton of infographics released last week when the 2011 Statscan census data was released (and that’s fun, I swear). Here are a few of my favourites.

2. Kittens + Art = Cuuuuute. Have you seen these artworks yet? It’s a project that combines shelter kittens with art for a nice profit (and some great publicity). I’d buy one!

3. Bruce Cockburn. I’m seeing Bruce play live tonight in New Glasgow, NS. Tickets were a gift from me to mom for Christmas. Nothing is better than live music in a small venue, and I think Cockburn is one of those iconic Candians that if you have the chance to see them play live, you just can’t pass it up.

4. New DF, GF, SF Recipes. This is more of question/request. I’m always on the hunt for simple recipes that omit gluten, dairy, and most sugar, and also don’t add back weird substitutes. I tried this 2-ingredient fudge over the weekend, and it was pretty darn delicious. If you have any other suggestions, throw them my way!

5. LUSH in-store experience. I LOVE going to LUSH. Every time I visit, the staff are super helpful and seriously want to tell you how awesome the products are. Sure, it’s a bit much for some people, but I eat it up! I’m a diehard fan of their teatree toner, vanishing cream, herbalism cleanser, bar shampoos and American Cream conditioner. And, if you’re hard up for a salon appointment, there’s a good chance they’ll give you a freebie treatment in store! I’ve had everything from facials to hand massages to foot scrubs. All I can say is, I hope their staff earn more than minimum wage.

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