Throwback Thursday – #tbt – I Miss America (March 2009)

Happy (?) Fourth of July.

I think I’ve mentioned that Shea’s and my “mini protest’ after Trump was elected was deciding not to go to the USA – mostly because of him but also because I just found the USA to be increasingly at odds with my personal values in general – from the gun violence to the overt displays of religion to the general ignorance of much of the population.  (I think I’ve told the story of meeting a guy from Montana in Mexico and him not knowing where Saskatchewan was – even though our borders literally touch!)

Anyhow, we didn’t go to the US a lot but we had visited a handful of times over the years including everywhere from North Dakota to Hawaii so deciding to boycott an entire country does rule out opportunities to explore some of the most interesting, unique places and landscapes on earth.

The photo above is from a trip to one of those places – Las Vegas – which we got to for a weekend in 2009 and where my “twenty bucks a day max” gambling limit led to me hitting a pretty decent (relatively) jackpot!

Oh well – hopefully in 2020, the US will be back on our “Yes Fly” list. 😉

Ten Things I’m Thinking About Lately

  1. Hand dryers and noise pollution (especially in libraries)
  2. How we’re always saying goodbye to people we love without realising it. (h/t to JB on FB)
  3. How come Photos on my Macbook stopped showing recently uploaded photos a month ago even though I can see all my latest photos when I log in to Photos through iCloud?
  4. How no company should *ever* be allowed to name their product something generic like “Photos” if they ever want people to be able to find solutions to their problems.
  5. How could I ever get mad at Sasha for making up “recipes” of all the shampoos while in the tub when I used to do the same thing myself as a kid?  (But did she have to add a whole bag of expensive epsom salts in her mix???)
  6. I wonder if my parents thought I was wasting my time with all of my focus on computers growing up and now those skills are a large part of my current job.  So why do I have those same worries about my kids doing things differently than when I was a kid when they might be learning future skills too?  (Watching iPad videos and playing XBox One are life skills, right?)
  7. Ian Noe.
  8. When a voice-to-text phone message at work says “We’re looking for opportunities in vagina” and I still get a chuckle from the oldest joke that exists about Regina, Saskatchewan.
  9. How I’m against censorship but I self-censored the joke I was actually going to make in that last bullet point.
  10. What other things I believe strongly that I might be wrong or lying to myself about.

Bohemian Rhapsody (2018) and Live Aid (1985) Scene Comparison

This is pretty cool!

 

Music Monday – “Well, Canada’s been good to us/We’ve a living and a home/We’ve all got central heating air/And most are on the phone/I’m a citizen of both countries/And very proud to be/For the thistle and the maple leaf/Are the emblems of the free”

Happy Canada Day!

I recently re-discovered this photo of myself and four other four Canadians on exchange to the University College of Ripon & York St. John (say that three times fast!) in 1995.

I can’t remember the impetus for our fashion choice – maybe at a dance or for the new student orientation? – but anyhow, we all decided to dress as Canadians (and yes, we all had plaid in our wardrobes though one of the cooler exchange students decided to go with leather!)

Anyhow, this was in the cassette days and I still remember going to a nearby pawn shop when I first arrived in York as a priority was to get a radio/alarm for school.  I think I paid ten pounds for a great one that even had dual cassette capabilities but then realised I didn’t have any good tapes to play in it.

Luckily, Tyler who was my fellow exchange student on the far left in the photo above had a few mix tapes – Tragically Hip, Blue Rodeo, Spirit of the West – and since I had a decent cassette player, was able to make copies of them all.

I listened to those tapes non-stop (and my sister mailed me a few to supplement my meagre collection) but Spirit of the West was probably the band that defined the trip for me more than any other – to the degree that I had printed out the lyrics to “Home For A Rest” and posted them on my dorm room door.

Anyhow, there’s lots of SOTW songs I could post today but this one feels right – it’s about Scottish people abroad but could also easily apply in reverse to a Scottish/Irish/English kid from the prairies visiting northern England, not too far from Scotland.

I Could Probably Turn This Entire Blog Into Cute Photos of Sasha Camping

Saturday Snap – A Girl and Her Best Friend

Friday Fun Link – More Initials!

Congrats to Shea on becoming a Certified Diabetic Educator – an incredible amount of hard work paid off (and not just because it adds to an already impressive list of credentials after her name!)

Throwback Thursday – #tbt – First & Last Day of School (September 2018/June 2019)

The last day of school is the perfect day for Throwback Thursday.

I love how Sasha’s face changes from resignation and uncertainty in the first picture to utter joy and relief in the second.

(And even Pace’s near-teenaged face has a hint of smile to it today compared to September as well!) 🙂


Goodbye to Our Babysitter (and Some Thoughts On A Lucky Life)

When I did my ten part series on the things that have been major factors in making me who I am today, I thought about finishing with a post about a few things – liberals tend to think in terms of “privilege”, right wingers might think of it as “hard work”, the superstitious might just call it “luck” – but wherever those things intersect, I have been very fortunate throughout my life with numerous lucky breaks, coincidences and happenstances combining to help me get where I am as much as any other factor in my life.

Of course, it all starts with the privilege stuff – that I was born in Canada, am male, am white, am from a middle class family.  Heck, speaking of family, that my ancestors, not just through the past 10,000 years of humanity but really, back through the first single celled organisms *all* managed to reproduce to create a new generation that’s ultimately the biggest factor in my being here.

Or the fact that I’m fortunate that I have a strong family support system – Shea and I and our kids have four parents/grandparents who are all still alive and, for the most part, in decent health which pays off in everything from having people who support us in a variety of ways up to and including something as simple as being able to watch our kids when other babysitting options aren’t available (more on that below.)

I don’t know – maybe it’s just the human need to create patterns because many of these things might not seem lucky or fortunate if they hadn’t happened at all.

But I keep thinking of various things that have at least seemed lucky in my life – jobs that have fallen into my lap just when I needed, being picked for an England Exchange in undergrad, being accepted for grad school after I’d taken a fairly brave/stupid step of quitting a job I’d become quite frustrated at without any real “Plan B”.  Even something silly – when we got to Li’l London in Ontario, I thought it was very handy that there was an Avis Rental outlet literally at the gates to the University just a few blocks from our apartment that we could easily access when needed since we didn’t take a vehicle with us.  Then, just as I finished the year, a sign went up that this location was being closed.  Lucky indeed!

We’ve had great luck with daycares/babysitters over the years as well – even getting into a decent daycare is a huge challenge then the first daycare centre we were in was *very* generous to us, charging us a daily rate instead of a monthly one when Shea had a variable part-time schedule which saved us hundreds and probably thousands over the years.  Then, when they opened a second location for older kids that was closer to our house and more convenient, it was right when Pace was at an age when he was eligible to move and he got to go into a brand new centre with new toys, furniture and pretty much everything else.  Then, when Pace started kindergarten, a lady only a few doors down had a spot open in her home daycare.  This made it easier for him to get to school plus there happened to be three other boys who were Pace’s age already there so he got to hang out with kids who are still some of his best friends to this day.

Sasha followed a similar path – the same daycare as Pace while still in diapers then their satellite location closer to our house for older pre-schoolers then moving to that home daycare as she started kindergarten and just as Pace started staying home more having taken the “Home Alone” course.

Now that Pace has also taken the babysitting course, we were tossing the idea around of pulling Sasha from the home daycare and having both kids at home starting this summer.  We were feeling guilty about pulling Sasha out but our babysitter made the decision for us announcing that she had decided to retire and was putting her house up for sale.

We’d known this day would be coming but not when so again, the timing felt absolutely perfect.  Sasha had her last full day at her home daycare today and starting next week when school’s out will be using a mixture of staying home with her brother (with mom and dad home at noon to check they haven’t killed each other), going to her old daycare centre if Pace is busy and can’t babysit or summer visits to her grandparents.

Anyhow, which is all a long way to say “Thank-you Judy and enjoy the retirement!”

“Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

Tragedies like this simply don’t need to happen. Please give if you can…