Category Archives: Random Musing

Elephant’s Orphan Project – David Sheldrick WIldlife Trust – AKA unbearably sweet video

Dame Daphne Sheldrick, founder of the DSWT, pioneered the milk formula and husbandry needed to successful hand-rear milk dependent orphan baby elephants.

These skills and Daphne’s knowledge have continued to develop over the years and been shared with keepers at the charity’s orphanage in Nairobi. To date, more than 140 elephant orphans have been successfully rehabilitated, all will eventually return to the wild where they belong.

This film provides an insight into what it is to be an orphan elephant rescued by the DSWT.

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Rick Mercer's take on insurance companies – Funny and true

 

You know when the comedians start joking about something it is usually a societal norm. Take a look at Rick Mercer’s October 9, 2013 insurance segment attached below. Click on the arrow on the right of his screen to go back to Oct. 9th. The title is “Insurance Brokers” -although it is really the insurance companies, not the brokers doing this. I will argue that insurance brokers align individual clients with insurance companies trying to get their customers the best policy. The brokers themselves are not responsible for what these giant corporations do to their policyholders.
 
This is a post from my sister Jokelee’s blog. She fought and won a long battle against her insurer and has written a book to assist others.
To order my book from my website go to: http://www.deniedbenefitclaims.com

 

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Minutiae #2: The Importance of Red Beads

ImageI have beads that I like to wear. Big, bold, red beads. There is nothing about them that is shy. I like the way they cling to my neck, just so, not quite a choker. I stand straighter when I wear them. I swagger when I walk, sashaying down the hall, hips swinging, lips painted dark red, a sound track playing in my head, something smoky and jazzy. They make me feel irrepressibly fashionable, maybe even a little French, Dutch definitely. I love these beads. They’re my transformative beads.

I went skating the other day and I remember removing them from my neck and placing them in a shirt and putting them down. And when I came home I knew instantly that I didn’t have them. Panic paralyzed me. I felt like screaming because I knew they were gone.  Bereft. I never really knew what that word meant until I felt it and then I knew. Bereft. I was bereft. My beads have not re-appeared. I don’t think they will. They have been blown into the universe to serve on someone else’s neck.

My mom wore those the last time I took her to the cancer clinic. I watched as she got weighed in. Her formerly statuesque self small and shrunken. She leaned against the scale to keep upright. I saw those red beads glisten in the light and I remembered better times when she had worn them. Those netter times when she wore smart shirts with the buttons left open just so and big belts around her then womanly waist, sexy, with red beads around her neck.  We came home from the clinic and she announced to everyone who passed her from the car port to her apartment that she was dying. And someone brought us a bottle of wine and we drank it while she  wore those large bright red beads. Those happy beads. I loved those beads.

 

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Minutiae #1 – Happiness

I think it’s the small things that matter. Life is less the big strokes than it is the smaller ones sometimes even the tiniest of moments that fill you with inexplicable laughter or happiness. I think of them as minutiae – small, tiny, jewels that reverberate through you for longer than the moment they are uttered.

These were my small things this week:
Minutiae #1
Speed skating practice takes place at dinner hour so I’m always hungry. I arrive early where I usually meet my speed skating compatriot Cristian. He’s hungry too. We talk mostly about cake. Butter creams, mocha, chocolate, we take a dip into pie (apple but lemon meringue trumps all pie) and then we veer back to cake. Beautiful, rich, creamy delicious cake. This week when I arrived he looked at me and screamed “CAKE” and then I screamed “CAKE” and then we killed ourselves laughing. That was it. I love that he is a kid and that our age difference means nothing because in these moments we’re both kids.

Minutiae #2

My sister of Don Quixote fame saves animals too. I haven’t talked to her for a while because she’s been away. But then this week there was an email with the subject line “Hoi” and first sentence – “Bees three days ago elephants today.” That was it. And it made me laugh and laugh and it filled me up with something more – one tiny small step for something I care about. I love that it’s the first thing she communicates to me in weeks. Sisterly morse code.

Minutiae #3
Dave tells me Mount Etna has erupted and we’re both in awe because we have seen Mount Etna and a small piece of her volcanic matter was carried home with us when we visited Sicily this spring. But more importantly, the moment he announced it I jumped up and told him exactly what volcanic eruptions do to the stock and flow of carbon in the atmosphere. I’m not sure who was more shocked me or him. But the shock/awe/weirdness made us both laugh uproariously. What the hell? English/artsy girl can learn science.

Minutiae #4
I had a realization this week that I LOVE my climate change course and I’m forever grateful that I am slowly overcoming my fear of not being able to understand science. And now this whole cool new world has been opened up to me and I see the world in a different way. Thanks world!

Minutiae #5
When people pop into your life out of the blue who are extraordinarily generous. As though they’re popping in to say, keep going, nudging you, reminding you that you are on the right path. And it’s the feeling that you’re seen. Wow, now that feels good. Generosity. It’s as important to receive as it is to give. Dave had this happen to him this week and I had it happen. And it feels good.

Minutiae #6
That Hannavas Nirom my London niece likes me enough to say she hopes we can celebrate our birthdays together some day. And I hope so too.

Minutiae #7

Probably the world knew that Bob Barker was an animal rights activist but I didn’t. And how cool was that, that he donated generously of his time and $1 million of his own money to help three elephants in Toronto’s zoo to go to a better home at the PAWS sanctuary in California.

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iWorry campaign #1Every15 Minutes is Killed for the Ivory Trade

Jisupportp11oin us for the iworry International March for Elephants on Friday October 4th.

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Why Join iWorry?

Last year up to 36,000 elephants were killed for their ivory. 1 life lost every 15 minutes.
At the current rate of poaching African Elephants could face extinction in the wild by 2025.

Join us as we peacefully march in 15 cities around the world on Friday 4th October.
You can also show your support by joining the digital march for elephants.

Support the DSWT’s iworry campaign and be a part of a global effort to protect and preserve elephants.

The iworry campaign was created by The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust (DSWT) and exists to raise global awareness to the devastating impact the illegal ivory trade is having on elephant populations. Launched in September 2012, the campaign has attracted worldwide backing calling for a complete ban on the illegal trade in ivory.

As a field based organisation, the DSWT works on the front line to protect wildlife and prevent the suffering and killing of wild animals. Recognising the need for greater global awareness of the illegal wildlife trade in ivory, which is claiming the lives of 36,000 elephants annually, the DSWT launched iworry in 2012. The campaign is based on the premise that everyone has a stake in conserving elephants and that we must come together if we are to successfully educate and inform people as to the existence of the illegal ivory trade, the devastating toll it is having on elephant populations and through that, call on governments from around the world to take proactive steps to tackle this illicit trade and save elephants.

Sharing the evidence of poaching witnessed by DSWT teams in the field, iworry utilises social media, petitions, imagery, the press and public marches to create an awareness of the existence of the ivory trade and its impacts. The loss of elephants in the wild, an iconic, intelligent and social species, would not only make the world a lesser place, it would have serious environmental and economic repercussions. The iworry campaign calls on world governments to make the illicit ivory trade and wildlife crime a priority issue, to make a financial commitment to security enforcement and to impose a complete ban on all ivory sales.

Why March?

The International March for Elephants has been organised by The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust (DSWT) through their iworry campaign and will be taking place in 15 cities across the globe in the single largest demonstration of awareness for the species.

The ivory trade is an international problem and one which must be recognized by Governments worldwide if we are to see any changes.

Join your local city March and stand in solidarity with elephants.

Sign up
to one of our fifteen official marches:

Arusha
Bangkok
Buenos Aires
Cape Town
Edinburgh
London
Los Angeles
Melbourne
Munich
Nairobi*
New York City
Rome
Toronto
Washington DC
Wellington

*Please note – due to recent events which took place in Nairobi from 21/09 – 24/09 we have decided to cancel the International March for Elephants in Nairobi. We will hold a vigil for those who so tragically lost their lives in the attacks and also for the elephants who continue to fall victim to the ivory trade. This will be held on the day of the March October 4th at the Nairobi Nursery. More info at: http://www.dswt.org

The peaceful marches will be concluding at Government Buildings where we will hand over a letter carrying the voice of thousands of people, calling for stricter penalties and urgent global change.

Email us to register if you are not a Facebook user
.

Elephant Masks

To make it clear exactly what we are marching for on Friday 4th October, we have produced an Official DSWT Elephant Mask for you to print off and wear to show your support. Please see here for a step-by-step on how to secure your Official DSWT Elephant Mask.

Placards

For those who are attending the march and would like to bring along your own placard, we advise that these are produced A1/A2 size with the following phrases:

‘Say NO to ivory’
‘Stop the ivory trade. Save the elephant’
‘Elephant Extinction 2025 – Not on our watch’
‘Join the fight to Save Elephants iworry.org’

We do not condone any offensive text and/or imagery on any placards. This is a peaceful march and all aspects will reflect this.

To download all this material, please visit http://www.iworry.org/

Promotional Material

Download the iworry poster

Get Involved

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I am letting you go for the simple reason that you are heavy

photo-82
Do you ever have those moments when the universe seems to be talking to you? In my case it was a sign written at a yoga studio that I go to. I hadn’t noticed it before but there it was – saying the very thing I had been thinking about for awhile now.

In my last yoga practice we were asked in that very “yoga-esque of ways” to devote our intention to some thing or someone and though normally I am not one to take these kinds of things too seriously, I found myself drawn to the ‘ask’ so I drew a deep breath in and I felt myself take in the light, and as I blew out I sent my intention to someone I love, someone who often lives in life’sshadows hoping that the light I felt would ease her burden of heaviness, that has her moving in endless sad circles.

And then later when I was skating, we were practicing an exercise where we spread our arms wide, like giant birds, an exercise that felt beautiful and exhilarating, and as I spread my arms and picked up speed, I thought of her again and thought, “Come on, ride with me. Let me take you to a lighter, better place. Let go of the heaviness that shackles your life. Reach beyond your pain. Ride on my wings.” And for a moment I believed it was possible.

And I think of the word castles I build, small messages, occasionally long letters, emoticons,anything to help the battle against hopelessness. And secretly I hope it strikes just the right nerve, brings back just the best memory or motivation for letting go.

But I know this to be true. When I struggled but in a very different way, I remember my mother, saying, “I see sadness being written on your face.” “Shock tactic”, I thought. And I looked in the mirror trying to see what she saw. But it was only when I wasn’t looking for it that I saw it. Walking by a store window and seeing that hardness, that sadness fixed on my face and I could see that it had begun to settle. More was coming my way.And then I knew what she was talking about. And I knew I had a decision to make. Left or right? Backwards or forwards? I had to choose. But I have been a luckier person so this was simpler for me.

And I think about this person that I love so much, and I think about our little word castles, if only it was so easy that I could rebuild the saddest parts of her life with a new word castle, if only I could carry her on my wings like a super god and take her away to be finally fixed and happy, if only I could blow the brightest of my very best intentions her way, and say, there, I pronounce you fixed and all the bad and heavy things that have happened to you are gone. They are gone. But I can’t. I can’t write you into wellness, or wish you there or love you there. Like everyone else who has walked in life’s darkest shadows, you have to do it yourself. Let the heavy things go. One small step. Let the heavy things go.

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The Story of Inge, Our Friendship and Overcoming Quirks

When you meet her you’ll first notice the accent. European certainly, English – not quite, German, a hint. A mix of continental European and then you find out later that her accent is a mix of German until she was eleven and then from eleven on a mixture of British and Irish English. Raised by others in a faraway land. Though we never dwell too much on that. Only in the early days of our friendship did we sometimes talk about the train that took her and her sister away to safety by the people who had, she says, ‘Treated us so poorly’. 

I gravitated towards her because I had left my family when I picked up and moved across the country leaving me constantly in search of a made-up family. Because I am made up of air and not earth, I gravitate upwards, flighty, and people like her give me weight, keep me rooted, still allowing me to fly but not too far away.  I loved her accent first. Then I loved how we would sit in her living room, the large rubber plant that she had rescued dividing the living room and us, until we talked until dark, sharing stories and secrets and silent tears at things lost and never found again. The age difference between us never matters – I have never met a more contemporary contemporary, a more agile mind, someone interested deeply in everything, with a formidable memory, an excellent sense of humour and a great love of books and art.

Before I settled into married life, I used to host open dinners, dinners where everyone who had nowhere to go on a Sunday night was welcome to join in a family dinner. It started small and then upwards of 25 people would arrive with dogs and friends of friends. Everyone cooked and everyone cleaned. When I invited my friend she said “But won’t I be too old?” and I said “Not at all – these dinners are like salons, you’ll fit in perfectly and so she came bringing samples of her artwork. And I remember sitting next to her in my living room where we had dragged tables together so we could sit family style – and she sat next to me – I pushed my fork into the brussel sprout and met with nothing but resistance. It seemed I had forgotten to cook them. She chuckled in that way she chuckles, that makes me chuckle, and then we both chuckled and continued on. And once when she couldn’t make it everyone asked, “Where is she?” because she was missed. But friendships were made at these dinners and she became fast and good friends with my good friend Joanne and the three of us have become our own little family of sorts.

My mother and my friend danced around each other a bit. My mother sad that I had up and left her and planted myself across the country where I grew another family of sorts, my friend being a centrepiece of that arrangement – it hurt her but she never said anything. They were as different as night and day. My mother, the fun-loving woman, silly, given to circular arguments and occasional prejudices, weighed by the disappointments of her own life,  but reaching always reaching for the stars anyways, and my friend, an intellectual, leftwing proponent of human rights and leftwing politics, weighed down by the disappearances of important people in her life and yet somehow they bonded over soap operas – something I am thankful to soap operas for to this day.

So this is just a little story of friendship. As most people who know me are aware, I am telephone adverse. My friend has her ‘quirks’ as well but not talking on the phone isn’t one of them.  My phone ‘quirk’ creates problems, or at least I realize now that it does. A year ago my friend said to me on the phone after we had mixed up a date, that there was no point in her overcoming her quirks, and indicated that somehow it was all too late. But there was time for me and I needed to get over my quirk now. “Fix yourself.”she said.  So I did. Or I am. I’m trying anyways. It has taken some effort (but really, not really, I just had to do it) and now I phone my friend quite regularly.  And proudly, very proudly she says, “You used to phone your mother every day, didn’t you.?” And I say, ” Yes, yes I did.” And now I phone her every week. Because I love her and because I can overcome these things.

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An Ode to Books and Bookstores and I don’t mean Amazon

I’ve been thinking quite a bit lately about books and bookstores and how they’ve influenced my life. I was a  young adult at a time when publishing and bookstores, book tours, and author readings were glamorous and how thrilling it was to learn that a bookstore like Books on Bastion in Nanaimo, BC had the brazen good guts to invite big and not so big  authors to its little town to share the beautiful world of stories and ideas. How this was a time that being in a room with people, listening to an author speak or read was thrilling. Because at its essence the world of ideas has the capacity to change your life,  your mind, introduce you to impossibly exotic cultures, people, thoughts, and propositions. And how lucky we are to live in place where we can openly celebrate these things. 

Once upon a time I worked at a place called Arsenal Pulp Press – an LGBT press with a knack for alternative cookbooks and other incredibly rich books. Books whose ideas helped break down barriers, which when you read some of their resurrected classics, made you thankful to live on the shoulders of others who have fought for the freedoms we take for granted. And living in a country where we have a conservative government with a penchant for censorship, secrecy, muzzling of ideas, lack of support for the arts, I always worry what’s next on the agenda. 

The world of ideas, of books, of people talking to people, the notion of the salon, where we enrich and enliven each other through this vigorous and emboldened exchange is important. Does it require a bookstore? Can it be replaced by the Amazon’s of the world? I don’t think so.

Why? Because not everything in life is intentional. And not everything is solved by an algorithm that tells you that if you like this, you’ll also like this. Walking into a bookstore like Elliott Bay or Duthies (now closed or Blackberry Books  – also closed or Book Warehouse – also closed) and meeting someone who has devoted their life to the world of books, who knows writers and genres, who can excitedly tell you that this book is amazing, this one was more like this, than like that, this book changed my life. The potential is enormous. The world of ideas excitedly passed on from one person to another is invaluable. The exchange, person to person is vital.  

There is no online bookstore that can replace a conversation between people. There is no online bookstores and big box bookstore (Costco) that can replace the wealth of knowledge of people who have worked in a venerable profession for years, passionately acquiring that deep seated knowledge of culture and literature that is vital to a healthy democratic society. 

Those are my thoughts on books for today. Support your local bookstore if you still have one. The world of ideas is not something we should lose.

 

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Here’s to Cake! Conversations with My Niece

imagesI was chatting with my niece the other day, in the most modern of ways, on Whatsapp. She lives in London and I live in Vancouver. She is the person who saved my life by Skyping the entire 3 hours of the Oscars for me when we had no cable and we discovered too late that not everything is streamed live at which point I thought I might die. So I shall remain forever in her debt as the Oscars is one of my greatest, guiltiest pleasures.

Yesterday’s conversation touched on a little bit of everything: books – her – John Irving – me – American Gods by Neil Gaimon – followed by the awesome-ness of David Foster Wallace to English jerks who stand nice girls up – topped by aunty who had a history of dating nothing but jerks, topping niece-y pie by relating story of having a chair pulled out from under her in front of a group of people to the guy who went to the video store and didn’t come back for three days -at this point I felt like I was doing a bit of story topping but fabulous niece responded simply by saying it looked like she had a lot of great things to look forward to, and off to the Syrian war we went.

War sucks and is unnecessary, she says. I agree. Like Iraq, everything is framed by Iraq for me. A big fake war. But also really real. And it occurs to me how young she would have been when that started. And off we went to Kosovo. And we mutually decide that the world is complicated. Yes, very complicated indeed. And she wants to know why it’s not more simple. like cake. Cake or no cake?. Ya, I agree. But secretly I feel my heart skip that little beat of excitement at seeing in her that ability to distill the world in a certain way. Incisive, I think and I like how she uses words sometimes, words that suddenly make you see and then I realize that her mother, my sister, has instilled in her, passing through her own body to her daughter’s, that love of words, that passion for books and the ability to witness, and shape life like art.

So we continue – “Cake or no cake?”
I say “let’s have cake! Here’s to Cake.”
She says: “Always! Cheers! Here Here Cake!
I say “Kampai”
and she “Salute”
and then finally me because Aunty likes to have the last word “Let them eat cake! Prost”
And then, in that most modern of ways, we emoticon each other to death. Our symbol of celebration and love for each other.

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So You Think You’re Covered. The Insurance Industry Rip-off

My sister Jokelee wrote this book which will officially launch September 14. She was in a car accident over 12 years ago, maybe more now. The car accident changed her life. It ended her career and left her with a debilitating pain disorder, followed by a diagnosis of incurable cancer, followed by rheumatoid arthritis.  The book has been a long time in the making but she wanted to write it to help other people avoid the pitfalls she encountered in dealing with insurers. Her story is a hair razing, crazy story. Think Kafka. And yet she persisted and doggedly continued her battles on numerous fronts. But these are just a matter of facts of history. Of things. It doesn’t say much about who she is.

So this is who she is if you’re interested. This is how she rolls. Imagine this. Imagine a big woman, not a physically big woman, but a large woman in spirit. Arms as wide as the sky, riding a horse, rolling over the hills, careening through the forests, intrepidly riding down the Champs Elysee, arms wide, spirit big, carrying with her, her unique style of chivalry, fighting windmills, taking the world and everyone in as she moves through life. We ride on her wings, her sense of generosity, of life, of the importance of now, arms wide, skyward, she embraces those she encounters and makes everyone feel like they belong, that they’re seen and for sure they’re invited to share a meal. How many people tonight? Oh 20. I met someone at the liquor store, the bakery, I invited the mother then I invited the father and then I thought what the hell, I might as well invite the family, arms wide open, where ever she goes, skyward,  her sense of justice finely tuned – she will tell you when you are wrong, she will fight you if you are unkind, she will warn you, against your will, if she thinks you’re in trouble. She saves animals, birds, cats, dogs. She is the sister of How Birdie Was Almost Saved By a Spatula fame.  She will wrestle you if she thinks it’s necessary and she will also pick you up when you’re down. She rides through town in that storm of generosity and the knowledge that all she has is now.She is the only person my mother felt safe with when she was sick. You’ll drop me she said to me. Where’s your sister? I want your sister.

What are you doing? I’ll ask. Skiing. What about your arthritis?. I’m only going to live once. What are you doing? I ask again. Dancing. I”ll only live once. I’m learning everything about opera, art, German, I want to speak German, Spanish, I’m learning piano. She soars upwards, skywards , her arms wide open, heart always looking to get fuller and fuller.That’s Jokelee. That’s how she rolls.

About her book:

So You Think You’re Covered!
The Insurance Industry Rip-Off

Surviving the Fight for Long-Term
Disability Benefits

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