Showing posts with label Fall 2019. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fall 2019. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

This n that

I had this idea in my mind for how it should look.
And I knew who had experience reading my mind.

So after I had a truck full of cedar boughs, spikey fern leaves, assorted pine branches and 4 strands of battery operated fairy lights, I called Terry.


























And yes.
She knew exactly what I wanted.
And yes.
She could do it.
In 20 minutes.












































































































































Supplying Ter with the raw materials to create something beautiful transported me straight back to Billie's Country days. When, as a 26 year old brand new mom and shop co-owner, I'd meet creative strangers who'd buy supplies from the craft side of the store. I'd ask them what they were making, could they bring their finished 'thing' back so I could see... and if it was good quality, I'd hire them to teach in our classrooms. Eventually I had a team of 16 talented, artistic, friendly, helpful teachers/friends who taught thousands of classes over the years.

I'd bring in new products/supplies from our wholesalers or trade shows and let them have at er. I loved watching them design, paint, assemble, create, teach.

And watching Terry take a truck full of dead branches and create a masterpiece in the middle of our boardroom table just filled me with all the feels. I am so proud of her and grateful that I'm her friend. That I can call her with a 'crafting help' message and I know she's got my back.


It could be argued that this centrepiece was a bit over-the-top considering we were eating pizza on plastic plates.


























Pffft.
Go big.
Or go bigger.
With centerpieces and hair.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

On Saturday afternoon I went for a walk.
I turned left out of my mom's driveway and walked down into the dip before starting my trek up the hill.

There, at the bottom of the hill, soaking wet, in the middle of the sidewalk, was a year book from Johnston Heights Jr. Sec. It looked suspiciously like mine. So I picked it up.
Yup.
Mine.
Here.
In the middle of the sidewalk, a couple blocks from my mom's house.

I turned around and walked back to the house.
"You won't believe what I just found," I said to mom who was sitting in her chair in her front room.
We tossed around some ideas as to how it could've got there, but really, it was a mystery.
(I had looked at my box of memory things (baby books, year books, wedding album, etc) only 6 days earlier - and thought I'd moved the box from the garage to the basement. HOW had this annual end up out there in the wild?)

I went for a hill walk, thinking of scenarios, but just couldn't figure it out.

When I got back, an hour later, my mom called me back into her front parlour.
"Funny thing..." she started. "A couple days ago, I was driving to the mail box and I remember hearing a thump and thinking that something had fallen off my car. But I didn't stop or look..."

"Ahhhhh. That's it! I put my box of personal things on your trunk. I was going to move it downstairs. But I guess I forgot... "

"Yeah, that's seems right. It was definitely more than just one year book that fell off my car. It felt like a box..."

"Hmmm. That's a slice of my history, gone. Those annuals, the kids' baby books. Photographs taken by photographers. Wedding album. Notes and letters and journals from a past era... I won't get that back. I had pared it all down to the most important keepsakes and put it all in one box. I guess it's all gone. Can't revisit it again..."

"Well," mom said. "it's probably for the best."

~~~~~~~~~~~

On my drive to church, I let a few tears escape but planned to have a good wail later that night at the lake. The sermon was about joy. And the verse he referenced was that annoying one in James "Consider it all joy when trials and tribulations come your way ... blah blah blah... because ... something something character."

Was I having another character-building experience?
Really?
Am I so lacking in it, that I need another go at it?
What?
Is this a 'let it go' lesson?
Is this a 'in-light-of-eternity-your-box-of-memories-doesn't-matter' thing?
Did I not learn that lesson back in 2012 when another slice of my history was stolen when my house was robbed?

Oy vey.

World's slowest learner, here.

I just wanted to shake my fist at someone but there was no point.


After church I met Val for supper and we commiserated about the lost bits of our past. And she shared about her friend who's ex (dad to her kids) had committed suicide last week. And who's dad died of cancer a few days later.

YEAH OK
I need to shut up about my stuff.

We left the restaurant and went to the mall.
Where I bought $100 of Purdy's Chocolates.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

On Sunday evening, I met Karm at Clearbrook MB at 6:15 pm.
We were there for their monthly Hymn Sing evening service. It started at 7, but everyone was there shortly after 6. In anticipation.

There were no seats. No parking spots.
CRAZY.

Can I just say something?
There is something very very Holy about being amongst a couple hundred very old Mennonites who have gathered to worship. They sing, loudly, with all their hearts, in harmony. And it is beautiful. And moving.

Seeing it was December, almost all the songs were Christmas carols. But then, after about half n hour, the choir and congregation sang "Here we are to worship"... and I looked around to the men and women around me, who were singing with conviction. They were worshipping.

And it occurred to me, that these folks, these singers, these men and women, all over 70, and likely in their 80's and 90's, lived through the war. And had stories similar to my Omi and everyone's Omi. They had to flee Russia by retreating with the Nazi's across Europe with NOTHING. Loved ones were executed, relatives were sent to the gulag, and those lucky to escape, ran with nothing.

And here they were. Worshipping God in this country where they raised their families and built their homes in peace.

And I bet a lot of them left a whole lot more behind than one curated keepsake memory box.

OK.
I won't whine about my lost Dear Jane letters.


Perspective is everything.


The final two songs of the evening undid me.
A duet by two men (one had just turned 90, the other was Brian Doerksen's dad, Harry, probably in his 80's)
























You can watch it here:

https://livestream.com/clearbrookmbchurch/events/8926881/videos/199962923
They start singing at 1:25: 00

And after that?
The Hallelujah Chorus.

The director invited anyone who wanted to, to join the choir.
Watching dozens of peoples go forward, eagerly, to sing was heart-warming. And amazing. I didn't grow up around men who sang. Not my dad, my bro, my ex, my kids. So to watch men, enthusiastically participate in singing, was just awesome.

And hearing the men's voices? Was the best thing ever.
So much depth and weight and richness with their strong voices acting as a foundation for the music to dance on top of throughout the building.






So very grateful for my heritage.
So thankful that my grandparents sacrificed their things and risked their lives to come here.

I live a damn fine life because of them.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Three things I'm thankful for:

1. Dinners/evenings with so many friends this past week. (Julie on Wed, the Milestones crew on Thursday, Book Club group on Monday, Heather on Tuesday...) I am lucky/blessed/tired. :) Quality 'together time' is my love language, obvs.

2. Christmas cards. OH. MY. GOODNESS. I got three in the past 24 hours that were filled with so many kind/lovely/tear-inducing words. Gahhhh. My love language is defo words.

3. Was at my sister's, gettin my hair did, and while I'm sitting under a dryer with a hole-y shower cap on, and strands of hair dripping with a thick bleach solution, she brings me this:



A glass of water and frozen peanut butter balls.

I am so loved.

Food is definitely my love language.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Shalom friends,
xo

Saturday, December 7, 2019

First Week of December

Saw a couple movies this week:

On Monday after work, I met Maureen at the A & W in Walnut Grove for supper, then drove over to the Colossus to see Last Christmas.

























Two suburban moms on a night out in the burbs, seeing a Hallmark-type romantic seasonal movie. We talked about kids and Christmas. A lovely, safe, predictable evening.

On Tuesday after work, I drove into Vancouver, picked up Kim on Commercial, drove along Hastings and Pender to get to the downtown theatre, passing THOUSANDS of homeless people (which hurts my heart, makes my stomach feel sick and my eyes water) only to find out there were no parking spaces in the mall's underground lot. Not a single spot. So we ended up back on the street, driving around in ever-widening circles looking for a place to park. Ten minutes after our movie started (well, not the movie, but all the ads and trailers) we found a spot in a lot next to an alley. And as I parked, my headlights illuminated a young woman, next to the dumpster, with her back to us, doing something she wasn't proud of. I whispered, "please. please. please. make better choices." She is someone's daughter and I ached with her mom.

Kim was worried about my truck and it's contents in that lot, so I took all my belongings with me into the theatre. We fell into our seats just as Dark Waters was starting.

























I love movies like this.
Based on real life/true stories.
Shows that make you think, nudge you, make you feel uncomfortable.
Stories that stick with you long after the day is done.

I left the theatre having an opinion on DuPont, teflon, self-regulating industries, and the power of a single voice.

“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing,” British statesman and philosopher Edmund Burke once wrote. That shout-out for righteous action is as true today as it was 200 years ago. And it’s also very much at the heart of this grimly earnest film.

As we walked back to my truck, Kim was chanting, 'please let the windows not be smashed. please let the windows not be smashed. please let the windows not be smashed.'
They weren't. But there, in the path of my headlights was a young man. Back to us. Doing something with drugs that made me just so sad.

As is our usual M.O, we ended up at McDonalds for McFlurry's. We went to the one on Main + Terminal. And as I turned into the lot, we both sighed deeply at all the homeless men next to the building, congregating around the doors. In the past, we've bought cheeseburgers and muffins for women near the door, but I didn't notice any females in the crowd. My heavy heart was feeling so very overburdened.

We entered from the rear back door and as we made our way to the front, we passed at least a dozen men, passed out on benches, in booths, on tables, with all their stuff beside them. Two men were sorting through their belongings, spreading everything out on the tables and floor. We were the only two women in the building.

We got our snacks, made our way to an unoccupied area, and talked.

What should our/my response be?
What could I do to make a difference? A difference to all those homeless people on Hastings? The hungry/lost people at McDonalds? The people who damage themselves beside that dumpster in the back alley off Pender? What can I do about corporations like DuPont who manufacture products that make us sick, pollute our planet and kill our wildstock? What can I do about pedophiles who're released from prison, even though everyone in law enforcement knows they are still dangerous? What can I do about people who're lonely, depressed, trafficked, addicted, hurt, unemployed, feeling hopeless, have a received a terrible diagnosis? What can I do?

Oy.
Am I wasting my life?

Am I supposed to DO something?
What?


~~~~~~~~~~

On Wednesday morning I led devos at work. Third time this year. I was determined not to do/say anything deep or personal because we all don't need Jane falling apart again when she's at the front of that room.
:)

I read a Christmas story:
https://www.oocities.org/gr8faith_2000/CosmicChristmas.htm
(Gabriel sounded like Jane. God sounded like a deep-throated, Jane, shouting. And Satan sounded like sneery Jane with a wraspy sore throat.) I will never have a future in doing voice-over work.

Then read a prayer:







































... and we all survived with our tear ducts in tact.

After work, seeing it wasn't raining (YAY), LangleyKim and I walked the seawall from Olympic Village to Granville Island to see Vancouver's latest art installation: the Spinning Chandelier.


























Poor woman.
She was the recipient of much gushing of words and whooshing of thoughts as we walked. :)

We walked the length of the underbelly of Granville Street Bridge, from 4th to the edge of the island.



























We asked a few folks where the chandelier was, and no one had a hot clue what we were talking about.




























We DID see some festive light attractions, regardless...


































































And then when we got to the ferry dock, we found the light, w a y over there, on the other side of the water. THE OTHER SIDE.

So we walked back, the way we came, (it took an hour)



























... got into my truck, and drove over.
Took a few tries to cross the correct bridge, find the right street and parallel park (again), but eventually we found it.







































It's lovely.


























And we were lucky to be able to see it spin a couple times.
Unexpectedly fun.













































































There has been outrage against this hanging light.
"That money could have been spent on the homeless."
"Waste of money. People are starving."
"I could have found more worthwhile things to spend that money on."



























I am not outraged.
I am delighted that something quite magical is brightening up a dark under-the-bridge street in Vancouver.
I am glad it is BEAUTIFUL and not fluorescent.
I am encouraged that this is privately funded by a business which will be picking up all the costs.
I will proudly photograph it often.
(As opposed to this jelly bean art thing that I took one picture of:)


















I know.
Tuesday night I was aching about the poverty-stricken and on Wednesday night I'm going on about a pretty light.

Maybe it's OK to appreciate/be encouraged by art and beauty while mucking about in the ugly-side of life?


Speaking of beauty, my mom has been decorating:



















































































































... and speaking of the ugly side of life: Four separate packages, delivered on three different days have been stolen from her front porch.

:(


Three things I'm thankful for:

1. Cultus Lake Christmas Tree Trunks:





























2. Co-workers who love to bake.
This is a Romanian brioche with walnuts and cocoa.

























3. Three December birthdays this week. Cake, pizza and more cake.

4. Tweets like this that punch me in the feels.

5. Articles like this.

6. Blog posts like this.

7. Sermons like this one. Everything's going to be alright.

Shalom, friends,
xo

Monday, December 2, 2019

Goodbye, November

It's that time again.
Transfer my 30 year old tree collection from the closet under the stairs to the file cabinet at work.








































And this year, the creative and french teams did something a little different...
We invited everyone in the building to celebrate the launch of the Winter Focus Famille magazine and enjoy those french treats that Elisabeth and Anne made earlier in the week.




























And while they were in our space, we encouraged everyone to grab some chalk and do a Christmas doodle on our blackboard. My team started it off:










































































































And then they came:





















































































































































































































































Twas a fun "Creative Christmas Coffee Break". Our department of introverts did well.
:)
I am so, so proud of the people I work with. So much talent. Integrity. Creativity. Depth.


Evenings have been fun:






















THIS? IS A GREAT MOVIE.
(I loved it.
And the friends I saw it with.)

(By the way, there's a documentary on Netflix about Carroll Shelby that's a good follow-up to this film.)

I had a few dinners out; with Patricia and Marg on Tuesday, with Ter on Wednesday, with my mom on Thursday and with Sue and Laurel on Friday. And on Sunday, I was invited to celebrate the American Thanksgiving with Maxine's gang:



























































































































































































































































































































































































Three things I'm thankful for:

1. Friends who like to eat. Haha. Oh my goodness. SO much good food this week.

2. November is over.

3. Heated seats in my truck.

4. This: