Category Archives: Random Musing

Poem of the Week: Fog by Dorianne Laux

The first of us must have looked up at the night agog,
so many stars, so much light falling down, the bugs
back then big as fists, so many rivers and ponds clogged
with fish we skewered them on sticks, made a fire, bred dogs
from wolves to keep us warm, safe, pines wrapped in fog
or morning mist, the sheep braying beside us, groggy,
their bellies filled with wet grass, the feral pigs become hogs
in a pen, cloven hooves slathered in mud. We built jagged
fences to keep what we didn’t want out, what we did, in, logs
were dragged through a field by horses, a house rose, mugs
placed on a shelf, a table set with plates. Then the nagging
began: Who left the feedbag in the rain? Who forgot to plug
the hole with a rag? The children grew, little quagmires
we sank into. We fed them, scrubbed them, raised them, rang
a bell for supper, school, for the one who died, the soggy
earth taking her back, the others running unaware, tagging
each other in the dusk, calling out numbers. But still the vague
unrest in the dark looking up at the moon, the old dog wagging
his flea-laden tail, barking for no reason they could tell, zagging
off like an uncle, drunk on busthead whiskey, back into the trees.

Thanks to Alison Mcghee for kindly curating the poems that are posted here.

For more information on Dorianne Laux, please click here: http://www.doriannelaux.com/index.html

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/pages/Alison-McGhee/119862491361265?ref=ts

Blog: alisonmcghee.com/blog

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UBC Hospice Controversy

Maybe it is because my mother and family benefited from the services of a hospice when she was dying that I feel sensitive about the controversy surrounding the proposed building of a hospice on UBC’s campus.  The predominantly Chinese residents of a nearby condominium have strongly opposed the proposed site saying having death so near their homes will make it difficult for them to remain in their residence.

In January the university held an open house which gave residents the opportunity to publicly air their concerns. The controversy that ensued  led to the postponement of the proposal until UBC had the opportunity to further evaluate and research the residents’ concerns. There was some speculation that residents’ concerns were based on the fear that a nearby hospice would topple their property value.

Subsequent research by the University has  shown that property values in areas where hospices have been built have, in fact, increased significantly (Canuck Place Childrens’ Hospice and a hospice in the Downtown Eastside have both increased well over 100%) thereby debunking the notion that the development of the hospice would compromise people’s investments.

So how do we talk about this without the conversation devolving into cultural misunderstanding and hostility?  So the only way I can talk about it is from my own experience in personal terms.

Prior to my own mother dying, death was a black hole of a topic. I had no experience with it and from what I understood or had witnessed it was largely something people went and did somewhere else.  Dying to me was scary.  But then one day to your shock you find out that someone you know and love is dying and it suddenly becomes a part of your life.

I became familiar with hospice services when we discovered that it was the very best place a person can be aside from their own home when they’re on their last journey in life. Hospice care is the most humane, loving, comfortable form of care a person with life ending illness can receive. It’s designed to allow a person to die with dignity while also accomm0dating the needs of their family. Hospices are often in beautiful locations that try as best as possible to recreate a home-like atmosphere. The volunteers and staff are trained to embrace the dying as a stage of life  we will all pass through and not as a disease that separates us from the living.

One of the ironies of life is that I actually felt quite  alive during my mom’s stay in the hospice. Since then I have come to understand that the fabric of life is in constant flux right up until we draw our last breath. When you understand time is short everything becomes electric and infused with meaning even the most mundane things. To have the honour to be able to have this part of a person’s life take place in an amazingly supportive, beautiful, gentle and yes, inspiring environment was something that I will remember for the rest of my life. My mother deserved this.

Death isn’t an easy thing. But my mother and the hospice taught me that it’s an integral part of life. I would never compare dying to cultural differences because dying is simply a stage in life. But it’s one that we’ve been taught to set apart. I think as a society we need to embrace the difficult and the different. If we always turn away or segregate differences then I don’t really believe we can function as a truly humane and civil society.

What if I said I didn’t want people with physical challenges to live near me? Or people who dressed differently than myself? I’m not sure where this leads us as a civil society. But I don’t think it’s good.

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Sad Songs

Don’t Un-break My Heart

We all have those moments where you feel that little tinge of sadness welling up inside. It starts somewhere in your belly, crawls up to your heart, (which actually hurts) then moves up your neck to behind your eyes. You’re going to cry. But if you wanted to fight it at this point you could and suddenly the process is reversed. You stop that sad thought, you swallow back those tears, the sadness moves back down, un-breaking your heart somewhere along the way and the fist that lives in your belly dissipates. Voila! You’ve saved yourself from a nice big self-pitying cry.

Play It Again Sam

Then there are those other times when you can’t stop the process. Instead of stepping back, you step forward, toward iTunes where you desperately look for that band, that song that’s going to lead you to the edge of wreckless, heart-wrenching sadness. You see the song, you load it up, all the while holding back your tears until you can really let it rip. Wait here it comes, it’s starting up, the first notes, you’re done. The tears quickly turn into sobs.The ball in your stomach gets bigger, your throat constricts, your heart truly has broken in half and your eyes are blinded by gigantic salty tears. That’s it. You reach over and play the song again and again. ..

How Much Sadder Can a Song Actually Get When it’s Called “Sorrow”?

I have a lot of songs that take me there but the one that’s really doing it for me right now is Sorry by The National. If you’re up for it, have a listen here and have a good cry yourself. Better yet, tell me what song brings you to the edge so I can increase my cathartic moments.

The great thing about really letting yourself go to pieces is that it actually helps reverse the sadness process. Suddenly you’ve given yourself over so much  that you actually have nothing left. This is when you switch tunes…maybe Foster the People Pumped up Kicks will help you get a groove on in your day.

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When I Grow Up I’m Going To Be…???

PSSST, SHE’S PRINCESS MATERIAL

When I was a little girl I thought I would grow up to be a princess but in retrospect I realize this was more my mother ‘s dream than mine.  It also became clear that she was the only one who thought I was princess material. My brothers and sisters were repulsed by the  notion of ‘me as princess’ and actively discouraged it with various techniques known to families as ‘sibling torture’. This was enough to convince me to pursue another course so I chose the next best thing to princess which was that I would become a ‘stewardess’.  The position seemed to have a kind of elegant gravitas that I was drawn to and my mother told me it was almost the same thing as being part of the ‘jetset’ as she called it.

SERVING OTHERS WAS NOT SUITED TO MY DISPOSITION

But then reality set in and I realized that being a stewardess required flying and serving others neither of which suited my disposition. I suffered from terrible motion sickness and preferred being served rather than serving.

SHE’S GOING TO BE A MOVIE STAR!

So I set my sights with my mother’s approval on becoming a ‘dancer/actress/ movie star’. Why not?. I enrolled in ballet class, took theatre in high school and auditioned for every theatre production possible.But the best laid plans are often put to rest when no real talent exists and when  Mrs. Gigg’s, my ballet teacher,  sunk her treacherous, spidery hands into my ample waistline and declared (loudly)  to the class that I was ‘doughy’., my dreams flew out the window.So  I picked myself off the floor and eagerly set my sites on the role of ‘serious actress’. Continue reading

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The Ultimate Dog Tease: Ridiculously cute dog video

This video was passed around my Facebook page and it’s one of the cutest dog videos I’ve ever seen.

As a disclaimer, however, and having learned my lesson from the John Cleese posting, this video might be old, it may have been made in the 90’s and it could have been ’emailed’ at one time…but dang it, it’s cute, so emjoy.

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Poem of the Week: The Lake Isle of Innisfree – William Butler Yeats


I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made;
Nine bean rows will I have there, a hive for the honeybee,
And live alone in the bee-loud glade.

And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,
Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;
There midnight’s all a-glimmer, and noon a purple glow,
And evening full of the linnet’s wings.

I will arise and go now, for always night and day
I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements gray,
I hear it in the deep heart’s core.


For more information on Yeats, please click here: http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/117

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/pages/Alison-McGhee/119862491361265?ref=ts

This poem was passed on to me by Blog: alisonmcghee.com/blog

Manuscript Critique Service:
http://alisonmcghee.com/manuscript.html

Many thanks to Alison for her curation.

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Vancouver Bike Lane Nazi

Here we go. Another joke. This is very entertaining.

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Restrepo:Tim Hetherington & Sebastian Junger

Restrepo, directed by war photo journalist and director Tim Hetherington and Sebastian Junger, is a feature length documentary that captures the everyday life of an American platoon embedded in a remote outpost in the formidable Korengal Valley in Afghanistan. Hetherington and Junger spent a year capturing the every day life of 15 soldiers.

Restrepo is a raw and  powerful account of men living in war.  The directors don’t allow political agenda or ego to stand in the way of getting as close to the truth as possible. They simply turned on their cameras, often in incredibly dangerous situations, and showed us how and by whom this war is being fought. Continue reading

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My Nasty Web of Easter Lies

It’s funny how you can convince yourself you’re right in the face of evidence to the contrary. It makes me realize just why the French may have gotten confused during the German occupation. Nothing looked normal, nothing was normal therefore everything was normal, hence A okay. This same type of situation happened to me recently. Let me tell you what happened.

It started with my sister saying she was surprising her husband for his 40th birthday with a romantic weekend away to San Francisco. Because we usually have a family dinner over the holiday weekend this was going to be tricky. Continue reading

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This is not a joke blog but dang it this is funny: 12 of the finest (unintentional) double-entendres aired on British TV & Radio

1. Pat Glenn, weightlifting commentator – “And this is Gregoriava from
Bulgaria. I saw her snatch this morning and it was amazing!”

2. New Zealand Rugby Commentator – “Andrew Mehrtens loves it when Daryl
Gibson comes inside of him.”

3. Ted Walsh – Horse Racing Commentator – “This is really a lovely
horse. I once rode her mother.”

4. Harry Carpenter at the Oxford-Cambridge boat race 1977 – “Ah, isn’t
that nice. The wife of the Cambridge President is kissing the Cox of the
Oxford crew.”

5. US PGA Commentator – “One of the reasons Arnie (Arnold Palmer) is
playing so well is that, before each tee shot, his wife takes out his
balls and kisses them …..

Oh my god!! What have I just said??”

6. Carenza Lewis about finding food in the Middle Ages on ‘Time Team
Live’ said: “You’d eat beaver if you could get it.”

7. A female news anchor who, the day after it was supposed to have
snowed and didn’t, turned to the weatherman and asked, “So Bob, where’s
that eight inches you promised me last night?” Not only did HE have to
leave the set, but half the crew did too, because they were laughing so
hard!

8. Steve Ryder covering the US Masters: “Ballesteros felt much better
today after a 69 yesterday.”

9. Clair Frisby talking about a jumbo hot dog on Look North said:
“There’s nothing like a big hot sausage inside you on a cold night like
this.”

10 Mike Hallett discussing missed snooker shots on Sky Sports: “Stephen
Hendry jumps on Steve Davis’s misses every chance he gets.”

11. Michael Buerk on watching Phillipa Forrester cuddle up to a male
astronomer for warmth during BBC1’s UK eclipse coverage remarked: “They
seem cold out there, they’re rubbing each other and he’s only come in
his shorts.”

12. Ken Brown commentating on golfer Nick Faldo and his caddie Fanny
Sunneson lining-up shots at the Scottish Open: “Some weeks Nick likes to
use Fanny, other weeks he prefers to do it by himself.”

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