It's Friday?!

  1. This guy has the right idea. I'd stay in an airport too if I was getting free stuff!
  2. It's been confirmed, the great Hawking has accepted the position of Distinguished Research Chair from the Perimeter Institute and makes his first visit this summer! My dad is going to be so psyched.
  3. Local young women have taken a cue from Kevin and started booby-trapping their homes as the London Sleep-Watcher continues to creep around the city. It turned into a major topic of discussion in my class this morning because "Oh my god, he wears all black?!" Where's that scary old dude with the shovel when you need him?
  4. Join JM and I later as we will inevitabley get drunk and simu-blog about the rockin Geminis tonight! Yes, you heard correctly, Jason Priestley is hosting. Thankfully it's only an hour. Damn you AE Journalism!

And then Depeche Mode cried

Time to add another (atrocious) song to the 00s pop sampling 80s classics list. 

89 Depeche Mode's Personal Jesus
08 Hilary Duff's Reach Out

81 Soft Cell's Tainted Love
06 Rihanna's SOS

Feel free to cry/scream/throw a vase. Or, enjoy?

I, The Untidy

The last time I tried to clean my room, I was reduced to hunching on the floor using a mini screwdriver and tub of Shea Body Butter as hammers to nail a thick, cardboard sheet into the back of my particleboard three-shelf bookcase.  Loose pieces of paper surrounded me like forgotten confetti at a giant’s birthday party.  A neon orange Post-it (PRINT LAB NOTES; grandfather, John Wayne, circus dancer; H.P. Lovecraft?) clung to my sweating body as I canvassed the rough beige carpet on my hands and knees, searching for more effective makeshift tools.  I never found any.  I also abandoned the cleaning project.

When I was a child, it seemed that my friends’ parents used bedroom-cleaning as a punishment, to the effect of, “You can’t run around in the field or build that fort with your friends until you clean your room!”  My parents were not such disciplinarians, and I’ve never understood the fuss over the importance of tidy bedrooms.  Maybe it’s because they remind me of hotel rooms. 

Along with rooms in hospitals and insane asylums (though I think they now hold the more politically correct title of ‘mental health facilities’), hotel rooms must be some of the most impersonal bedrooms in existence.  And what is the common denominator of those three places?  They are public representations of personal spaces.

And so, I feel that there is something fake about pristinely tidy bedrooms.  When I encounter them I wonder what the people who live there are trying to hide.  I see desktops unblemished by jewellery, movie ticket stubs, CDs.  I see floors devoid of stray socks, empty water bottles, newspapers.  In a tidy room I see only surfaces and nothing deeper to hint at the person who spends the most private of moments there. 

My parents have always urged me to “never judge a book by its cover.” But I still peruse the aisles of Chapters and loudly proclaim that if romance novels want to be considered legitimate literature they should start by banishing those surrealistic, colour swirl covers featuring nipple-bearing characters.  And despite my parents’ best efforts, plus fifteen and a half years of education, I can’t help but qualify people based on appearance.  Sure, once I start to learn the details of a person I begin to disregard my initial assessment, but the person I only pass in the mall or on the street will always just be “That bulgy-eyed chick with spidery lashes that looked like a Tim Burton character.” 

Since I know others also make these judgments, I do not wish people to enter my bedroom and exclaim, “My, this bears a striking resemblance to the Marriot I just stayed in!”  I want them to see my room and think, “A very interesting person must live here.”  So while I like my room to be tidy because the minimalist aesthetic is pleasing, people can’t see how intriguing I am when all of my possessions are hidden.  Yes, it’s problematic to base who I am on what I own, but those are the things I have surrounded myself with and they reflect my interests.

I have also discovered that tidiness is hardly practical.  On occasion, I try to cleverly store everything in boxes and binders or behind curtains, like an old-timer hiding her treasures around her house.  This keeps my possessions out of sight so that people can’t access them, can’t know of their existence.  But like that old lady, I too am helpless to find these items when I need them. 

Maybe I’m just defending my dishevelled room so people won’t see it and assume I’m a disorganized slob.  Maybe this defence is undermining my argument that “tidy equals fake” by proving that my untidy room is just another façade.  And yet, my books are ordered on shelves from tallest on the outside, down to the shortest in the middle.  They look good, and the majority of the weight is distributed away from the vulnerable midsection.  DVDs and CDs are alphabetical by title and artist, respectively.  Shirts in my closest are arranged in order of increasing sleeve length.  I like to be in control so I implement organizational structures.  That’s just who I am.  Being that my bedroom is my personal space, it is a tool of expression, just like the clothes and movies it contains, and I can use this tool in two ways.

I can use my bedroom as a mask.  The surface would be white and smooth, the eyes bright yet emotionless, the lips painted red without smudges or bleeding colour.  Or, I can use my bedroom as a display window.  Various items would be scattered around the room with little title cards saying, “This is her real favourite movie,” and “Who needs this many Ziploc bags and Post-Its?!”

If I want to wear a mask every day, I must take care to never allow it to slide down as my face sweats with the guilt of lying.  I must track my lies so that I can retell them, create back stories, so I don’t accidentally say, “I was dancing to ‘Take On Me’ in my underwear last night!” when everyone thinks I’m a music snob who only likes jazz.  I’m always in such a rush that if I tidied my room every time someone might see it then I wouldn’t have time to search the internet for synthesizer-laden ‘80s tunes.  I try to avoid being fake because, if nothing else, it is a full-time job.  I have the attention span of a sugar-saturated youngster raised on video games, and a short term memory comparable to Leonard’s in Memento.  Being fake is hardly practical.

Of course, I cannot make so lofty a claim that I am entirely genuine, nor can I say that I have entirely given up on tidying my room.  I only hope that my untidy room does not turn into the façade I continue to argue against every time I look around at the personality-bearing array of items.

Vatican wishes White Album 'Happy 40th'

From the Globe and Mail yesterday:

The Vatican's newspaper has finally forgiven John Lennon for declaring that the Beatles were more famous than Jesus Christ, calling the remark a “boast” by a young man grappling with sudden fame.

The comment by Lennon to a London newspaper in 1966 infuriated Christians, particularly in the United States, some of whom burned Beatles' albums in huge pyres.

Concrete Love

Most people would probably think that it's stupid to build a library that looks like a concrete cave from the inside, but I take odd comfort in the gray, industrial walls and ceilings of the D.B Weldon Library. I love sitting on the main floor in the "comfy chairs" near the concrete pillars and looking up at the vast concrete waffle ceiling. I think it would be great fun to sit in one of those waffle sections if the ceiling was a wall or even a floor. Industrialism makes me feel studious. Elated. Invincible.  The all-business no-bullshit attitude of concrete structures makes me retaliate with creativity, with words to soften those unforgiving surfaces. Just think of all the ideas that have pooled in the waffle, just waiting to be explored.

 

Extra whipped cream, please.

Does everyone have a buddy?

Today I went on a field trip. Yes, a field trip. Around my own university campus with my 3000-level Arts and Entertainment Journalism class to look at public art.


At first, JM and I thought we would "get left behind by the group" along the way so we could write the thousands of words in essay due in the coming hours, days, weeks. But we employed the buddy system and took the tour. The pieces we looked at had surprisingly interesting back stories and it was nice to get out of the classroom, despite the numbness in our extremities that occurred. And who doesn't enjoy the occasional throwback to the days of elementary school? But it reminded me of some of the things I hate the most: looking like a tourist and doing group activities.


We were a small group. Maybe twenty people, tops. But as we travelled from art piece to art piece, an amorphous blob of chilly writers led by Catherine Elliot Shaw (the curator of Western's Macintosh Gallery), the only element missing that would have made us look even more like an adolescent tour group was brightly coloured lanyards with dangling cards identifying us as a unit. Or maybe matching t-shirts in bright colours, like they have for daycares. Or maybe a rope for all of us to be tied to so nobody would get lost…

To Speak the Words: 5 years 1 month 5 days ago

Four o’clock in the morning is a lie, an illusion, like infomercials and New Year’s resolutions, for the time looks as much like morning as the softly curving letters of cancer look like a gnawing and malicious disease, or as a draining coma feels like reviving sleep.

My transition from warm containment in the womb of sleep to jarring exposure in the open-air of full consciousness was slow to begin as I struggled to reach the strained whisper I could hear swirling in the ether above my body.  After many laboured breaths, I widened my eyes with a pop.  My eyebrows puckered in confusion, eyes refocusing to recognize the face mere inches from my own.  A face I knew should be familiar before it could be seen by my newly opened eyes.  My mother had been whispering. 

Surrounding her was not the welcoming reflection of sunshine on bare and chipped white walls, having penetrated my east-facing window.  Surrounding her was the absence of light, of colour, that I had seen hours before when I forced my body to rest.

Crouching at my bedside, the side of the bed I had been sleeping in since the last night in my crib, my mother hesitantly stroked my hair as one might comfort an abused foster child.  The corners of her mouth were up-turned, not in a smile so much as a grimace, forming a canoe burdened by curvy letters and about to overflow.  The empty spaces of our pupils aligned.  Hers harboured a story.  Not one of birth.  Not one of canoe trips on shiny lakes.  But on no other morning would this story have shocked me less.

“Grandpa died this morning…”

Watching as the canoe capsized, it was time for my first words.  It was time for me to whisper.

"It's because last night on the phone Adam and I said goodbye to him."

Don't Drink the Kool-Aid

Today marks the 30th anniversary of the Jonestown, Guyana cult suicide of over 900 Peoples Temple followers.

 

RUNNING TALLY FOR THE MONTH

11/04   

Obama elected first African-American President of the United States

Matthew Good's Live at Massey Hall released

11/11 

Bob Dylan concert

11/18 

Jonestown Massacre

11/22 

40th Anniversary of The Beatles The White Album (Visit the London Music Club Saturday night for The White Album Tribute Show!)

 

Who knew November 2008 would be so epic? And it's not over yet...

Disney, you slut! You genius, genius slut...

Love or hate the Walt Disney Company, you must at least acknowledge its incredible, albeit frightening, influence and adaptability. It can be a business genius, moving its pawns about with a maniacal laugh. Or it can be a whore on the corner who will do anything to turn a trick (or rather, an illusion).

 

It was recently brought to my attention that to accompany the "Anniversary" or "Platinum" editions of its classic animated films, Disney has gotten its teeny-bopper arsenal of musicians to record covers and music videos of famous songs from the films. I believe "blasphemy" is the word you want. Ah, but wait! This whore of a marketing scheme is undeniably genius, no matter how cringe-worthy it feels. In doing this, Disney is further cementing itself as a key figure in children's understanding of history, society and culture by bringing old songs and films to the new generation.

 

THE OFFENDERS 

Watch. Be horrified. Try not to get sucked in.


The Jungle Book

I Wan'na Be Like You - The Jonas Brothers


The Little Mermaid

Kiss The Girl - Ashley Tisdale I don't think cheek counts

Poor Unfortunate Souls - The Jonas Brothers

 

101 Dalmatians

Cruella De Vil - Selena Gomez This may be the worst


Sleeping Beauty

Once Upon A Dream - Emily Osment

 

…Plus there are some promises of "All new songs and music videos… And much more!"

 

Pardon the bias. I'm currently writing a research essay on colonialism in Pocahontas and The Jungle Book. I am NOT enjoying it. I've probably seen Pocahontas once before and I'm adamant about not liking it. I think the songs are sub-par. But I have been finding it quite hilarious. Of course, not the parts that are supposed to be funny if you're taking the movie seriously. It also might be the only Disney movie where the main characters don't get together (or stay together) at the end of the movie. Pochy stands on mini Pride Rock as leaves swirl Cinderella-style down to Smith's ship where he waves at her the way the natives wave to say goodbye. Nothing short of epic, but a seemingly unprecedented finale in these princess love extravaganzas.

Winter Weather

My hands are so dry right now that I feel like I could just rip the skin off the bones and muscle. The skin between my knuckles shines and almost feels smooth when I make a fist, but the rest of my hands are textured with each skin cell cracking without enough moisture. The joints of my fingers are covered in cement. Trying to stretch out the tightness, I keep tugging at the skin, hoping some hidden moisture in my fingertips will replenish it. But instead, it just makes me want to tear away the dead skin and forget this dryness all together. 

One Year Ago Today

2007

We Do This For Free

 

You do need to say it

I can't believe it if you don't

Because we're rarely on the same page

And you need to find the words on your own

 

No one is looking out for us

Or issuing do-overs

Everything that happens here

Goes straight into the books

 

I know loose ends make you uncomfortable

Well honey closure never was my strong suit

Things sure can get complicated

When there's no one to clean up your mess

 

Of course it would be great

But it could never work

Life doesn't translate well

That glass is thicker than you think


2008

Painting Lines of Silver

 

One

(It rolls quickly, no pleasantries, then disappears)

Two

(It lingers, disco ball reflections, then lets go)

One

Two

That's all I give you

Today.

The Last Avant-Garde?

We ran into Murray Jay Siskind at the supermarket. But his basket held generic food and drink, nonbrand items in plain white packages with simple labeling. There was a white can labeled CANNED PEACHES. There was a white package of bacon without a plastic window for viewing a representative slice. A jar of roasted nuts had a white wrapper bearing the words IRREGULAR PEANUTS... 
"This is the new austerity," he said. "Flavorless packaging. It appeals to me. I feel I'm not only saving money but contributing to some kind of spiritual concensus. It's like World War III. Everything is white. They'll take our bright colors away and use them in the war effort." (18)
- Don DeLillo White Noise

Afraid of Water

Today I was sitting in North Campus Building, enjoying the blue, cool autumn day, licking the whipped cream off the top of my Café Mocha. It was delicious.  But I kind of felt like a cliché. I thought about how I feel like I haven't made any progress since last year, but I feel like a lot of time has passed since then.

 

I'm standing in a wooded area, by the edge of a forest, and there's a pond in front of me. I can't see the bottom even though the water is clear, almost as if the pond has infinite depth. My feet are bare and I'm wearing a white bra and underwear. Right foot poised above the surface, I contemplate lowering it into the cool-looking water and finally knowing how it feels. Behind me, the background cycles at turbo-speed from daytime to nighttime... Through autumn, winter, spring, summer, autumn… Birds and clouds fly by, rain falls and turns into snow, flowers bloom and wilt. But I remain. Never dropping my foot to the water. Never dropping my foot to the ground.

From Barack to Bob

This may be the most historically epic week I have ever experienced.

 

Last Tuesday I stood in my campus restaurant and bar The Wave with 350 of my fellow students and watched Barack Obama become the 44th President of the United States.

 

Tonight I stood in the fifth row at the John Labatt Centre with Sam, Stuart, and Ted and watched Bob Dylan perform.

 

I am overwhelmed by this sudden onslaught of amazing.

 

The average age at the concert was probably 45-50. The rows on the floor were close together and went right up to the stage so we were really close. Dylan was on tonight. He was smiling, laughing, kicking his feet and wiggling his shoulders around. Lots of glorious harmonica and he played guitar in one song, something he rarely does anymore. After a thank-you he even joked with the crowd while introducing his band at the end of the show.  "Am I unintelligible? C'mon, be honest!"


SETLIST

Cat's In The Well

Love Minus Zero/No Limit

The Levee's Gonna Break

Spirit On The Water

Stuck Inside of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again

Masters of War

I'll Be Your Baby Tonight

John Brown

Beyond The Horizon

Highway 61 Revisited

Shooting Star

It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)

Under The Red Sky

Thunder On The Mountain

Ain't Talkin'

Like A Rolling Stone

All Along The Watchtower


I love you Bob Dylan.

Diner Tour of London: Stop Two

Across the road from the mall there is a gas station.  Behind the gas station there is a plaza.  In the plaza there is a diner.

The sky hung low with water weight, its colour reflecting the parched and dusty parking lot beneath my and Allycia’s Chuck Taylor clothed feet.  Thin but piercing wind penetrated our bodies through our exposed faces and hands, and the cars streamed through the intersection with haste to outrun the wind and reach their destinations before the sky fell any lower.

The only offering the front of the diner makes to the world is its own name, printed in blue cursive script on a dirt-speckled overhead sign that was once white.  Years of weather outside and cooking inside have left the windows slightly opaque and dull with a tinge of yellow.  The atrium was the size of a handicap bathroom stall, but newspaper distribution boxes and an ATM machine imposed on the space almost enough to completely block the entrance.

Immediately upon entry, Allycia and I were bombarded by saloon-like chatter.  Hearty laughs echoed towards us over the high-pitched sounds of animated storytelling.  The clunk and ring of metal on cheap plastic tabletops kept the beat.

Even though smoking has been banned in enclosed public spaces the air in the diner had a presence.  I could smell bacon cooking so perhaps the smoke and grease had slugged out from the kitchen and saturated the air in the restaurant.  A bar so low to the ground that it appeared to have been designed for children ran along the left wall leading back to the kitchen, two- and four-person booths sat to the right, and at the far right end were tables on a platform.  Aside from the seats at the bar there were only two available tables.

With so many people and constant cooking we had to tear our scarves and coats off as quickly as possible, tossing them into our booth.  As I slid onto the cracked brown imitation leather cushion I could feel the tension in my muscles dissolve into the thick fabric.  It felt like sitting on a soft-plastic coated marshmallow.

Almost as soon as we’d sat down a waitress trotted over to our table.  “Afternoon ladies, will it be breakfast or lunch today?”  She was wearing a monochromatic beige ensemble complete with an apron.  Her hair was dark brown, piled high on her head, and she wore make-up to match.  Her smiling lips were lined in dark brown and filled with a creamy, slightly lighter shade.  The layer of dark foundation made it difficult to place her age, but the crinkles by her eyes and the pucker in her lips suggested she was a smoker.  Her chin and cheeks stood strongly at severe angles and she was tall with broad shoulders, but she spoke with a rhythmic twang.  “Apple juice?  Good choice.  And you’ll be havin’ that JELLO with lotsa whipped cream, right?” She left our table with a smile and a wink.

Only on Sundays

When hot chocolate turns your stomach cold

The mixture is powder again

Coating the walls

Searching for its lost moisture

When hot chocolate leaves your mouth puckered

Lips are chapped

Constantly swallowing

To flush the taste of your tongue

When hot chocolate doesn't calm you

Tugging on your eyelashes

Scratching the back of your hand

Peering into the foam stained mug

The Secret Merits of Body Butter

I made the mistake of cleaning today. It started out innocently enough. Just some vacuuming and the tidying up of the millions of shoes Steph, Andrea and I own. Then it spread to my room. When I clean it creates a sort of snowball effect. I don't know if this is the way everyone cleans… But when I clean things have to get a whole lot messier before it looks like I've made any progress. All I wanted to do was organize my notes and desk area but I ended up beating the pulp out of my thumb. Which leads me to today's lesson:


Do not endeavor to fix something without the necessary tools.


Tonight I broke my bookcase by throwing a box of magazines at one of its shelves. It seems my dad's original handy work couldn't stand up to my arsenal of books. But I fixed it! Using a plastic mini screwdriver and a small tub of Shea Body Butter as hammers only to learn that Steph had a 3-hole punch that would have been much more effective.


The back of the case had come off so I needed to get the unit away from the wall to do my hammering. I was crouching on the floor in front of it and after being bombed with a framed picture of my friends and I at the beach I decided it was time to remove the potted plant from the top. I sat on the carpet surrounded by my bed, desk and bookcase with a barricade of loose paper forming a fourth wall. I wasn't getting out until the bookcase was fixed or I broke a digit trying. It was finally over after I hammered nine nails and my thumb into the cheap particle board which, despite its lack of substance, put up an admirable fight.  


I emerged from my brief foray into furniture repair with a couple of cuts and without the temporary use of my thumb, but I was victorious! And to avoid doing that again in the near future I'm going to be a lot nicer to my bookcase now.

It's all about me! Is it? Oh, I don't know

I find it difficult to have a definitive stance on a lot of issues.  Some people consider that to be “not really having an opinion.”  I don’t like fence-sitters, and it’s not much fun being one either.  If I sit on the fence I can never fully enjoy either side and, depending on what kind of fence it is, tears in my pants and puncture wounds in my butt will be all I’ll have to show for myself.  But I don’t think I’m fence-sitting.  I think I just understand that most situations are circumstantial and not black or white, wrong or right, fries or onion rings — I like to go to Harvey’s* and get both.

I once told my friend Stuart that I thought I was very opinionated and he challenged me to prove it by stating an opinion without qualifying it with exceptions.  I chose abortion, a topic that people generally speak very passionately about, clicking my laptop keys with more force than necessary to say that I was pro-choice.  But I found myself feeling uncomfortable without adding “…unless the people were just irresponsible.”  Now I say I’m anti-abortion but pro-choice (thanks Biden).

More recently, two friends and I got into a discussion of “to have children, or not to have children.”  One friend said he really wants to have kids because his father wasn’t very attentive to him so he wants to build forts and play ball with his kids.  The other friend isn’t very keen on children and doubts he’ll change his mind about wanting any, saying that “life could just be so much more fun without them.”  Again I found that my opinion wasn’t as straight forward as either of theirs. 

I’m very close to my parents, especially my mom, and I think it would be nice to have a family, but I have personal and career ambitions that would monopolize my time.  I don’t want to be 40 when I have kids and I don’t want to be 70 when my husband and I can get back to doing things just for us again.  I want to be a journalist.  I want to travel.  I want to be a travelling journalist!  And writers are not known to make superfluous amounts of money, which doesn’t bother me, but children are probably the only things to raise that are more expensive than thoroughbred horses.  And I don’t like horses.

Sometimes I tell myself that I have misgivings about wanting children because I fear I won’t be a good mother, or that I don’t want to resent my children because I didn’t get to do everything I wanted to do.  The fear hypothesis seems viable because I like to be good at everything I do; I need to be good at what I do.  The one about resentment makes sense because it always seems to be an issue when people are on Dr. Phil and they’ve made a mess of their families.  But the more I think about them, I feel that both reasons are so cliché that I want to have children and love it just to spite them.  But I think behaviour like that is what gets people into those bad Dr. Phil situations in the first place.  To state another cliché: it’s a vicious cycle.

But I keep going back to the one about resentment.  There is an undeniable hint of selfishness that draws me back to it like a nerd to Comic-Con.  I am I child.  I am selfish.  I want my time to myself, I want my future husband to myself, I want to be free to do what I please.  I don’t want to be accountable to anyone but myself.  When I graduate I’m finally going to start living my life and it is going to be all about me.  So maybe when I get a little older I’ll find some balance and know for sure that I want to have children.  Or, maybe I’ll still feel like a child myself and be okay with being kind of selfish.

*This refers both to the delicious fast food chain and the DC Comics character Two-Face. Sometimes I'm invited to his place for lunch.