Music Monday – “If god takes you/He leaves a huge footprint of love/And kindness behind/Which is where you once stood.”

One last Christmas song (okay, two in one clip – lucky you!)  After watching this, you should immediately go buy the Hawksley Workman Christmas album.  He just released a re-recorded, more acoustic version of the album but I prefer the original.

(Oh, and I should make an admission.  Even though I’m an atheist, I do have a soft spot for songs that manage to integrate religion and religious themes in an unobtrusive and gentle fashion if that makes sense.  Probably not.  But I really like both of these songs, especially the first one in the clip below…)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Y5viG31X-A

Reasons Greetings!

On December 25, people around the world celebrate the birth of a man whose ideas not only changed the world but revolutionized it.

Although the man’s religious beliefs evolved and changed over time, that doesn’t change the fact that he is widely regarded as one of the most influential people to ever have lived.

I can only imagine what type of world we would live in if more people chose to live with the values he embodied – questioning the status quo, a quest for the one truth and indeed, the very nature of the world that surrounds us.

And like all great stories we know, an apple plays an integral part! 😉

Happy Birthday Sir Isaac Newton!

Saturday Snap – Pace Recites “The Night Before Christmas” (With Some Help From Daddy)

This is actually from last Christmas but I thought it was appropriate to put up this year, especially since my “Saturday Snap” falls on Christmas Eve.  (If Pace’s variations on the original aren’t drastic enough for you, there’s also this.)

Friday Fun Link – The Story of “Fairytale of New York”

It’s one of the most remarkable Christmas songs of all-time as well as my personal favourite (but did it make its writers rich as some think a hit Christmas song inevitably does?)

Here’s the first in a six-part story of how it came to be (the other five parts should come up as you finish each segment)…

Fortuna, North Dakota

In addition to web-based options, there are numerous businesses in communities just across the US-Canada border which have found a sideline in accepting parcels on behalf of Canadian clients who want items that can’t be shipped outside of the United States.

Today, we visited the local bar in Fortuna, North Dakota (pop: 22) to retrieve one such parcel for the grand sum of $2 Canadian.

(Okay, we also had to pay for gas – and if you’re being niggly, also our time – to make the two-hour round trip from Weyburn.  But still a pretty good deal if you have no other options!)

Love Actually – Which Couple Actually Stays Together The Longest? (And Other Christmas Traditions)

Entertainment Weekly has a poll on which of the many inter-connected couples in my favourite Christmas movie, “Love, Actually” actually stays together the longest with Jamie and Aurelia (the writer and his assistant) currently with a comfortable lead of 40% of votes cast.  They did independently decide to learn each others’ language so that’s some pretty big commitment anyhow!

I watch “Love, Actually” every Christmas season and that’s one of my main traditions.  We recently had friends over for supper and the conversation turned to other Christmas traditions we had – either as kids or now that we’re adults with families of our own.

Here’s a few…

– in my family growing up, one person (usually one of the kids but not always) would hand out the presents one-by-one with everybody taking time to watch each present being opened.  (It was a shock to the system to take in my first Christmas at Shea’s house where they do much more of an “every man for himself” approach!)

– Santa presents are left in front of the tree already opened/assembled/batteries installed.

– when I was a teenager in Indian Head and for a few years after I graduated, our neighbour across the street (who had two boys of his own) would organize a road hockey tournament that would draw 20-30 people on Boxing Day.  Afterward, we’d go to their basement for food, hot chocolate (and after a few years, beer!) and to watch the latest Don Cherry video one of them inevitably received for Christmas followed by a screening of “Slapshot”.

– I’m not sure when the Christmas Day nap in the afternoon became a tradition but probably sometime after “having Bailey’s while opening presents” also became part of the tradition.  😉

– I listen to “Fairytale of New York”, pretty much on repeat, through the whole month of December (although “White Wine in the Sun” is quickly replacing it as my go-to melancholy/joyous Christmas favourite.)

– speaking of music, a big part of my childhood was visiting my grandma’s house where she always had a great collection of classic Christmas-themed records that were fun to listen to.

– Christmas stocking contents varied each year but you could count on a Christmas orange, the storybook box of Lifesavers and a pair or socks.

– Growing up, my sister and I were allowed to open one present on Christmas Eve though, hand-selected by an adult, it usually turned out to be pyjamas, some other type of clothing or a very simple toy.

– Grandma T.’s got a new one going with Pace that blends Christmas, Thanksgiving and uhm, poop.  Her Christmas/Thanksgiving turkeys seems to magically leave chocolate “droppings” around the house in the days leading up to Christmas for Pace to find and eat.

– I always loved (and still do love) any Christmas parties leading up to Christmas – whether it was through the service clubs my mom and dad belonged to or other community ones or whatever.  I have especially fond memories of the ones where there was carol singing (and if you ever see me at a church during Christmas, the chance to sing carols will pretty much be the only reason I’m there.  In fact, a highlight of my life was taking in a carol service at the York Minster when I was in England in 1995 right before I came home for Christmas.)

I feel like I’m missing lots but those are a few off the top of my head…

Top Tech Trends for 2012

I love this time of year for all the “Best of the Year”-type lists that come out.  And one of my absolute favourites of these type of lists are the “Top Tech Trends for the Coming Year” ones.

For 2012, a writer for Mashable.com is predicting the following as the big trends:

  • Touch Computing
  • Social Gestures
  • NFC and Mobile Payments
  • Beyond the iPad
  • TV Everywhere
  • Voice Control
  • Spatial Gestures
  • Second-screen experiences
  • Flexible screens
  • HTML5

Pretty exciting.  I’ve said it before but I love living in the future!  (In fact, going further into the future, IBM is predicting mind-reading computers within five years – although they may be cheating a bit since that technology is already in its infancy!)

Music Monday – “I was following the pack/All swallowed in their coats/Their scarves of red/Tied ’round their throats/To keep their little heads/From falling in the snow”

There’s a whole sub-genre of songs that aren’t technically Christmas songs but get identified as such because they mention winter or snow or even Christmas in passing (Joni Mitchell’s “River” being the most famous example.)

Below is a recent song that I think is also gaining favour as an non-Christmasy seasonal favourite.

This is a particularly ingenious interpretation:

A Few Last Minute Christmas Links

Saturday Snap – Small Santa

“Santa” makes an unannounced visit to deliver presents (toys gathered from his room into one of his pillow cases) to Shea and I:

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