
Shea and I broke down and ordered Crave again after having it a few years ago but letting it slide. This show was a big reason why we wanted it (along with “Last of Us” which is our next binge)…
…there are signs that, for myself personally, it’s in a different phase compared to the heights of masking/social distancing/rapid testing that have been much of my (and society’s) approach for the past three years.

* I mostly mask when in crowds and/or as a sign of respect and understanding if I’m interacting with someone who’s wearing a mask. But otherwise, don’t mask as consistently as I did in the past in every store or whatever.
* I don’t wear an N-95 as often as I used to and often default to a surgical style mask (and yes, I’m aware of the differing views on the efficacy of both.)
* Shea and I recently had our first flight since March 2020. In fact, I would say our recent Mexico trip was a big turning point in how I feel about Covid – being in crowded airports, a full plane and then around hundreds of people at a resort (true, mostly outside but still…)
* noticing more and more locations that are removing Covid precautions (took a second to recognize why the check-out at Costco seemed so different a few months ago then realised it was because they’d taken down the plexi-glass that had lined their cash registers since soon after Covid hit!)
* I’ve organized vaccine clinics in partnership with the Sask Health Authority at multiple libraries around Regina since soon after vaccines were available. The last series I booked finishes at the end of March and my contact said it is unlikely they will be doing vaccine-specific clinics in the community going forward. These clinics have gone from lines that literally stretched around the library and into the parking lot to being very quiet.
* I had tears in my eyes when I got my first booster but when I got my fourth (at a clinic I organized!), it felt “normal” like getting a flu shot (and that’s likely what Covid boosters will become – an annual shot like a flu shot.)
* Weirdly, finally having Covid right before Christmas sort of felt like an inevitable way to “accept” Covid for lack of a better term. (One colleague described it as “ripping the band-aid off”.)
From my reading of legit sources online (not Uncle Fred on Facebook or r/conspiracy), I still know that repeated infections aren’t ideal and increase your risk for lowered immunity and other unknowable long-term complications so I’m still going to try to avoid getting it again if I can. But I’m going to keep recalibrating what it means to exist and live in a world where Covid is still around, still evolving and still causing ongoing health (and therefore economic) issues.
“Rebel Rebel” – David Bowie
https://twitter.com/imposter_edits/status/1630436668535652354?s=43&t=DRVuSkx9v_g3lycT0Db-KA

Chief Cadmus Delorme of Cowessess First Nation is one of, if not the most, high profile Indigenous leaders in Saskatchewan for his work in business, child welfare and much more. (Unfortunately, part of his high profile,including an interview for CBS’s “60 Minutes” show, is for very tragic reasons.)
Above is a pic of myself and my Union President talking to Chief Cadmus Delorme in the lobby just after he spoke at the recent CUPE convention. Near the end of his presentation, he all but admitted that he had just announced he won’t run for a third term as Chief of Cowessess First Nation, both to support his wife and spend more time with his family but also with an eye to his political future (to do politics in the “White Man Worldview” way as he puts it in his powerful presentation which you owe it to yourself to watch below.)
Given his comments and my personal interest (I thought I had even made a cryptic reference to hoping he might run for Sask NDP Leader during their most recent leadership race on this blog but can’t find it now), we chatted politics and he said all parties have approached him and depending on the topic, he leans left on some things, right on some things and is in the middle on some things so he has a lot of decisions to make but wouldn’t reveal more than that.
As an outside observer, I think he has two obvious options – run for the Federal Liberals (giving a loving gaze to Justin Trudeau during one of their previous meetings is a key punchline in his presentation), possibly in Ralph Goodale’s former Regina-Wascana riding or run for the Federal NDP, possibly against Andrew Scheer in Regina-Qu’Appelle. (In fact, my introductory comment to him was: “Is your friend Justin giving you French lessons by any chance?” because I’m subtle like that.)
Later in our chat, I couldn’t help but go into “political advisor” mode and gave him a suggestion (well, framed as a question) that I think would help his chances if he were to run (because I have such a great track record in that area having lost *way* more campaigns than I’ve won that I’ve been involved in!)
Anyhow, this was the second time I’ve heard his presentation in as many months with him having spoken at the RPL Staff Day in January. But he’s an awesome speaker with a great presentation – facts, emotions, humour – that’s worth a listen (especially knowing you might be hearing a future MP speak!)
I haven’t been doing the Wordle regularly like I used to but still occasionally do it.
And it recently occurred to me that if you have a regular “starting word” and you looked at an archive of all previous Wordle solutions, that would let you know if there was still a chance you might hit a “hole in one”.
My start word (which I don’t use every time but I’d say 90% of the time) is “TREAD” and it’s not on the list so who knows – might end up getting my second “hole in one” (the first was a total lucky guess!)

I’ve spent a few days at the CUPE Sask convention this week and I honestly thought it was my first time attending but turns out my Covid brain fog is real because I found a pic I took when I was there in 2015.
It’s of Sask Party Minister, Don Morgan, trying to be relatable to a less-than-friendly crowd by telling a story of how he was a CUPE member when he worked at a grocery store as a teenager. (Didn’t work and then, on top of that, he tried to cut library funding a few short years later threatening the livelihood of CUPE members across the province.)

Anyhow, I looked back in my journal and I can see why it’s not a strong memory – I got asked to sub in at the last minute for a registered delegate from our workplace who had been extended in a temporary position with CUPE HQ (and who I got to catch up with today) so I was basically there without a lot of thought or planning.
I need to get a more recent photo of the four most important women in my life!
Words can’t capture how much all four of them do in so many ways (yes even Sasha!) to make all of our lives better.


This Is Just To Say
I have drank
the diet ginger ale
that was in
the SV icebox
And which
might have
belonged
to you
Forgive me
if it was yours
I could not remember
If it was mine
(There are also a couple Coke Zeros in there that might be mine too – let me know if either the Diet Ginger Ale and/or the Coke Zeros belong to you and I’ll replace/keep my grubby hands off in future!)
J.
PS – Original poem (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/This_Is_Just_To_Say):
THIS IS JUST TO SAY
By: William Carlos Williams
I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox
and which
you were probably
saving
for breakfast
Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold[4]