Friday Fun Link – Counting to 100 in French With NYC Cabbie

 

Throwback Thursday – #tbt – Walk Through of Our Room at Moon Palace, Cancun (February 2018)

So in exactly one month, we’ll be on our way to Cancun…but who’s counting?

(Well, I guess I’m counting, especially since the weather’s been -40 recently!)

Anyhow, I finally got around to uploading another room walk-through video from our resort last year.

I always have intention to do something a bit more professional/polished on our holidays but never get around to it.

But a walk-through video is a pretty easy way to talk about a resort (though, when I watch some of the other walk-throughs I’ve done for resorts in Varadero, Cuba and Playa del Carmen, Mexico, I realise I also end up making a lot of the same observations.  “Look, this room has a safe and a TV!”)

Still, these are some of my most viewed videos so there’s gotta be an audience for this content.

(I know because I feel like I’ve watched every single video for the Hyatt Ziva Cancun that we’re going to in a month from a variety of room walk-through videos to vlogs to short clips of the Kids Club.)

Behind the Scenes in the Calgary Flames A/V Room

Not to turn this blog into “all Flames all the time” (er, suck it, Chiarelli) but came across this video and found it very interesting, especially the behind-the-scenes of switching the Kiss Cam! 😉

 

Calgary Flame’s Unexpected Run To The Top in 2019

Back in October as the NHL season began, I did a post about many of the reasons I was excited for the Flames 2018/2019 season.

Coming off a couple very disappointing years (and really, about 15 underwhelming years with only a couple exceptions – unexpected 2003/2004 Cup run, making the second round of playoffs in 2014/2015 – but otherwise missing the playoffs as often as they made them) my honest hope for this year was a team that was somewhere in the middle of the race for a playoff spot (say 4-6 out of 8 instead of what I’m usually used to – the Flames challenging for the eighth and final playoff spot in their conference but often ending up missing the playoffs by a point or two).

Instead, the Flames have been a revelation.

They’re the second best team in the entire NHL (interestingly, the team they lost the Cup to in 2004 is #1 and wouldn’t that be the hockey gods working their magic if we had a Cup final rematch fifteen years later?)

I won’t do a full list but the Flames have so many areas they’re dominating, at or near the top of various categories – most players with 50+ points, most come-from-behind victories, most short-handed goals, most points by a player who was traded to a new team, one of the highest power play percentages, best overtime record, *three* Flames currently hold the 1-3 spots in the +/= ratings and two more are in the Top Ten, most third period goals, etc. etc.

Johnny Gaudreau is currently second in league scoring over no-name scrubs like Sidney Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin and is in the conversation for the Hart Trophy for league MVP.  Captain Mark Giordano is a front-runner for Norris Trophy consideration and one of the only d-men to be a point-a-player game past the age of 35.  “Big Save Dave” Rittich started the year as a backup and has the team remembering another unheralded European goalie, Miikka Kiprusoff who joined the team in a backup role and grew to become a long-time starter and Vezina winner. Newly hired coach, Bill Peters is in the conversation for the Jack Adams coach of the year trophy.  Both Mikael Backlund *and* Elias Lindholm could make a case for the Selke Trophy for best defensive forward.

Every game has been must-watch right to the final buzzer whether the Flames are winning or losing since the Flames are winning in so many ways – close games, blow-outs, come-from-behind victories and more.  (To put a cherry on top of my fandom this year, they even announced the Flames will be playing the Jets in an outdoor stadium game in Regina next fall!!!)

It’s a strange feeling to be a fan of a team that’s so damn good (and with a very young core, a feeling I might even get used to for the next few years.)

Making it even more magical (if that’s possible) is the Flames’ long-time rivals, the Edmonton Oilers, are having a dumpster fire of a season with one superstar and a bunch of overpaid, underachieving players around him.  They’re making insanely bad trades, poor cap management decisions and so on.  How bad is it?  Out of all the players they could trade for in the NHL, they acquire the same guy who previously severely injured their superstar captain, a goon who was said to be happy about it when it happened!

Tonight is the Flames final game before the All-Star break and then a bye week so we won’t have Flames hockey for a couple weeks.  Luckily I’ve got a few games on the PVR I can re-watch if I need a fix! 🙂

Music Monday – “I am flesh and I am bone/Arise, ting ting, like glitter and gold”

Guest post by Shea who introduced me to this song/artist…

Glitter and Gold” – Barns Courtney

Secular Sunday – A dying man’s thoughts on stardust, a fortunate life, making the world a better place, and the randomness of it all.

Someone posted a link to this essay on FB and I wanted to repost the whole thing here as I thought it was very well-written and thought-provoking

Clarifying my final weeks

Journal entry by Erik Olin Wright — 

Yesterday, I had a bone marrow biopsy to see if there were any prospects at all of a rejuvenation of my bone marrow.  Alas, there is not. My bone marrow is virtually empty and what cells are there are to a significant extent blasts.  Dr. Michaelis told me that even if we were to wipe out the remaining blasts, I would be far too weak to even attempt another transplant.  A transplant is off the table, and a transplant was always the only prospect for a cure. The only thing that’s keeping me alive right now are blood transfusions of red blood cells and platelets.  All of my platelets and all of my red blood cells come from donors, from ordinary blood donations. Unfortunately, the way this disease works is that gradually my liver especially, to use Dr. Michaelis’ expression, chews up these transfusions, and you get increasingly less benefit from any given unit of blood.  And at some point, no benefit whatsoever.  You get a unit of blood, but your hemoglobin will not rise.  And when that happens, you basically cannot sustain life any longer.  So the scenario is basically when you approach that period–it doesn’t happen abruptly, it happens over the course of days and weeks–you sleep more and more, your body is getting less and less oxygen, 15 hours a day, 18, 20, 24; you’re not in a coma, you can be roused, have sweet words of love, maybe even more extended human communication than that.  But then eventually you just begin to sleep all the time and, I assume, fade away.  That would be the AML equivalent to dying in your sleep.  You just, at one point, sleep 24 hours a day and don’t wake up.  But there are other potential scenarios as well.  I have two infections, both of which could kill me, and those could blossom out of control and kill me one day to the next, blindsided.  The doctors are doing everything they can to manage the infections and I feel my fevers are under control and that basically that’s not likely to be the way that I die. But who knows. Maybe I’ll be surprised.  Marcia will update everybody when the time comes.

So, dear friends, what we’ve known for a while is in fact the case.  I have a very limited time left in this marvelous form of stardust which I’ve been talking about over the past few months. I don’t feel any dread.  I want to assure you that I don’t feel fear about this.  It seems very petty to complain about the eventual dissipation of my stardust back into the stardust of the cosmos after having lived 72 years in this extraordinary form of existence that very few molecules in the entire universe get to experience.  Indeed, to even use the word experience with respect to my stardust is amazing.  Atoms don’t have experiences.  They’re just stuff.  That’s all I really am is stuff.  But stuff so complexly organized across several thresholds of stuff-complexity, that it’s able to reflect upon its stuff-ness and what an extraordinary thing it has been to be alive and aware that it’s alive and aware that it’s aware that it’s alive. And from that complexity comes the love and beauty and meaning that constitutes the life I’ve lived. And to top it off, I’m in this massively privileged corner of this human stuff that’s managed against all odds to not live a life of fear and suffering from the cruelties of our civilization, that has never felt the fear of hunger, the fear of bodily insecurity in my neighborhoods, that has had the resources to raise my wonderful family, my children, in an environment where I think they too have felt physical security and the basic things you need to flourish.  So there you have it.  I am among the most advantaged, privileged, call it what you will, stardust in this immensely enormous universe for 72 years.  And so it will end.  But I knew that, at least from age 6.  This is a few years earlier than I’d hoped, but no complaints.  No complaints.  And I suppose, to carry on this reverie a little bit longer, I suppose to top it all off, sometime in my late teens to early twenties, I decided to take advantage of this extraordinary privilege that I had, not to live a life of self-indulgence but to create meaning for myself and others by trying to make the world a better place.  The particular way in which I did this of course is historically bounded by the intellectual currents and turmoil of the late 60s and early 70s.  I don’t think that means it should be thought of as merely an effect of that historical moment. I think my dogged attempt to revitalize the Marxist tradition and make it more deeply relevant to social justice and social transformation today is grounded in a scientifically valid understanding of how the world actually works.  But without being embedded in a social milieu where those ideas were debated and linked in both sensible and misguided ways to social movements, I would never have been able to pursue this particular set of ideas.  But I was enabled, and it’s made for an incredibly meaningful and intellectually exciting personal life. So no complaints. I will die in a few weeks, fulfilled.  Not happy that I’m dying, but deeply happy with the life I’ve lived, and the life I’ve been able to share with all of you.

One final thought on this meandering theme: in November of 2015, I was hit broadside by a car while biking.  It would have taken very little change in what actually happened to turn this from a significant injury into a death, from one moment to the next I could be here and gone. People sometimes speculate on what’s the best way to die: suddenly or in your sleep, bang you’re dead; or drawn out over an extended period of time.  For me the answer is unequivocal: the death I’m having is the death I would choose.  but there’s one other little nuance of this way of dying that I didn’t really understand beforehand.  Often when people talk in a medical context about dying, when the context is the kind of death I’m dying, drawn out, people talk about the trade off between quality of life and extension of life.  Well, what I’ve come to realize is that when you’re really sick, when the pain of your illness takes over your life, or even when, as was the case last night I had uncontrollable and really hurtful coughing that kept me up most of the night, when you’re no longer in your body in a comfortable way, that’s not just a question of quality of life, that is a question of life. Five weeks of living the way I felt last night when I was coughing uncontrollably is not just some trade off with two weeks of living without it.  Five weeks of living like that is not living.  So I’ve told the doctors that from here on out, my priority really is comfort.  Not being drugged so that I’m loopy and just feeling physically comfortable, I want to be mentally comfortable too.  I want to connect and be able to continue writing this blog til the end.  But my priority is to be present.  And then let the length be what it is.  It will end soon, hopefully it will last as long as possible, but only in the context of being truly alive.

Saturday Snap – A bit of a winter storm tonight meant…

…we basically had the rink to ourselves for public skating.  Pretty fun!

Friday Fun Link – Moose Jaw Engages In A Battle of the “Meese”

In a province where we take pride in our large roadside attractions, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan has long prided itself on having the world’s largest moose.

Except that a few years ago, those dirty bastard Norwegians have raised the ante(lers) by erecting a moose statue that is Max the Moose (by 31 cm) compared to Moose Jaw’s Mac the Moose.

Moose Jaw suffered this grand indignity for a few years but now the issue has risen again and, drawing international attention, Moose Jaw’s politicians and citizens are investigating ways to regain the crown.

 

 

(Shockingly, given Saskatchewan’s reputation for hunting, the idea to simply go and shoot Norway’s moose has not been proposed as far as I know!) 😉

Throwback Thursday – #tbt – Read (June 2010)

Pace modeling my new Friends of VPL “read” cap that we got on a three week vacation to BC a few years back…

“It Smells Like Piss Water and the Starch From Noodles Boiling”

So after a month or so of pretty heavy holiday season indulgence with a variety of  delicious craft beers, I’ve switched to this delightful “dad beer” for the foreseeable future.

Yum?