“Numb” – U2
“Numb” – U2
Sasha recently presented us with this piece of artwork which required us to very delicately sit her down and have her talk us through some of her artistic choices.
The blue hair, the dangly gold earrings, the check-mark smile and oh, by the way, what is that picture on the front of the shirt?
“It’s a rainbow with two pots of gold!”
Of course, honey, that’s exactly what your mother and I thought it was. 🙂
James Holzhauer hasn’t caught Ken Jennings in terms of number of victories in a row but he’s setting records for most money won per game which is arguably a more impressive achievement?
His secret?
Studying easy-to-read introductory books on a wide variety of subjects at the children’s library!
So I’ve finished my ten-part series on the various things that have contributed to how I became the person that I am. Some of the entries were stronger than others – more insightful and less narrative “I did this and then this and then this” but overall, they’ve been useful for me to consider those myriad factors that have led to who I am today.
To recap:
When I started this list, I brainstormed some potential ideas so I thought it’d be interesting to add some of those to this entry without long narratives.
Some of the other ideas I considered:
Who knows? Maybe I’ll expand this series someday!
And I haven’t done this in forever but if there’s anyone out there, still reading, why not leave a comment (or send me a private message) with your own list of five or ten or however many things have made you who you are?
SPOILERS!
Shea and I went to the Sask NDP’s Coronation Park Nomination Meeting tonight and it was wilder than we ever expected – over 400 rowdy people crammed into Thom Collegiate’s auditorium to hear from three candidates – April Bourgeois, Noor Burki, and Chris Gust – and choose the person who will represent our home constituency in the next provincial election.
Shea’d picked her candidate ahead of time but I legitimately hadn’t decided who I was going to vote for as there were things I liked about all three of them. (As is often the case in contests of this type, you end up wishing you could put all candidates in a blender to combine the best qualities of each.)
But, since shoving human beings into large blenders is illegal, I decided I’d go to the meeting and make my decision based on their presentations, their shows of support as well as the impression I got from any pre-meeting contacts I had with the candidate or their teams as well as what I could find out about them via social media and online.
Another interesting thing to think about in contests of this type is the “constituencies within a constituency” and where candidates might draw the bulk of their support from – people who share a connection via their line of work or their involvement in the labour movement or their ethnicity or where they grew up or where they went to school or their community profile or where they volunteer or from former neighbours and so on.
For that reason, it wasn’t 100% certain but it was pretty clear that there was a large presence of people from Noor’s ethnic community at the meeting which seemed like it might make the final result a foregone conclusion before we even got out of the registration line.
Still, my understanding is that something similar happened in another recent nomination contest where one minority candidate had a lot of visible support but he ended up losing because many of those people were not resident in the constituency and only there for support but ineligible to vote.
But in the end, that wasn’t the case this time. The votes were counted and Noor Burki was chosen as the next Sask NDP candidate for Regina Coronation Park!
Anyhow, I can’t do a post like this without creating a list so here’s…
10 Random Thoughts From The Regina Coronation Park Nomination MeetingÂ
The best part of seeing a big tentpole movie on opening weekend is that you can go on the Internet again without fear of seeing SPOILERS: