Live Update

Between this week’s conference, taking care of my aunt, and the change in the weather, it’s been a strange couple of weeks. Things are always different when you’re not at home, and I was only back from vacation for a couple of days before leaving again. Once you’re back, you need to play catch-up with your own life, try to talk to friends you haven’t seen in a month, get back into the groove of the regular day, find time to read—all things I haven’t done much of since I got back.

Weather changing always makes me slightly melancholy. Perhaps because it’s a concrete example of time passing, of things moving so fast that it’s important to slow down and breath every now and again. After being forced to leave my last job, a topic I’ve been over about a bajillion times since I started this darn blog, my whole world just changed. I was no longer the “BMOC” and have sort of started again, sat back and tried to not be so angry that it all happened. It’s the bane of my existence, dealing with things in life that are sort of thrown at me, things like the disease, things like getting “reorganized” out of the job I thought I was pretty darn good at, things like losing my mum, that sometimes I find it hard to take control of my own life. Perhaps that’s why I needed to go away this summer. In retrospect, it was so healthy to spend some time by myself, even if now everything is back to normal and I’m forgetting I was even gone in the first place.

#43 An Audience of Chairs

An Audience of Chairs, Joan Clark’s magnificient novel, is one of the best books I’ve read all year. I read it while in Lake Winnipeg on vacation and almost finished the entire book in one sitting. The book follows the life of Moranna MacKenzie, a wild, precocious child who grows up to “Mad Mory”, a woman living alone in Cape Breton in her father’s semi-abandoned farmhouse.

The novel tells the story of Moranna and her battle with mental illness, in the form of manic depression, although the disease is never qualified. As Moranna falls in love, gets married and has two beautiful girls, her life starts to come apart at the seams. She can no longer handle being either a mother or a wife and slips into a deep psychosis.

Her husband takes the children away and Moranna spends the next thirty years trying to find them. It’s a beautiful tale of love, loss, and motherhood, one that made me cry at the end because of its simple message of forgiveness. Joan Clark is a rare gem in Canadian fiction, her writing reminds me of both Margaret Laurence and Hugh MacLennan, both in its richness and its ability to create characters with deep tragic, yet still human, flaws. I read Clark’s Eiriksdottir last year and also enjoyed it, and am on a quest now to read Latitudes of Melt, because I think it too will be a wonderful novel.

Thunder! Lightning! Celebrity Sighting!

My RRBF picked me up from work today (summer hours, yay!), as I spent the night with my aunt who just had surgery. We decided to go out for lunch (how decadent!) and went to Utopia, a favourite haunt of mine on College Street. They have yummy, yummy vegetarian food.

The RRBF played Brantford last night at the Ford Plant, but I can’t remember the name of the festival. Oh, the life of a rock star. Annywaaay. We sat down and shortly thereafter George Stromboloupolous came in and started talking shop with some fellow sitting right beside us eating a salad.

Ah, to be an artist and to always be able to have a lazy lunch on a Friday afternoon. Oh, but wait, he’s actually locked out right now, and it’s probably not even his choice to be having a lazy lunch on a Friday afternoon.

Okay, now it’s time for me to get back to my aunty. Oh! And did I mention there’s crazy thunder and lightning in Toronto right now? No? Well, there is. I love it.

Bad Disease Day #4869

Today I feel bad. Not just the usual under-the-weather, low energy, tired-beyond-tired way I usually feel, but low-down and dirty bad. There’s no reason for it. I don’t have a rash (whew!); the meds aren’t making my stomach particularly upset; I’m not travelling; I just feel terrible. Instead of trying to make it through the work day, I gave up the ghost and left a half-hour early, which is unlike me. For days like this, I use the all encompassing ‘Bad Disease Day’ to describe them. When there’s nothing wrong except that I have a disease and it’s wreaking havoc on my system, it’s really all I cling to, a basic understanding of what might possibly be wrong, and a reason to sit around at home watching bad television. Hello Coronation Street!

Popwatch

I’m addicted to Popwatch, EW’s blog. And I couldn’t agree more with their take on the latest season of Six Feet Under. That show pains me, but that doesn’t stop me from watching it—once I start, I find it hard to stop, and I’ve seen every single other episode. But seriously, hasn’t anyone ever heard of therapy? And Brenda’s in training to become a therapist, couldn’t she just say to everyone, including herself, “Let’s all go on some Prozac until we make it through, it’s only one more episode.” Sigh.

Say It Isn’t So

Shucks, you go away for a couple of days to come back to find that they’re making your all-time favourite book into a movie. Now, if there’s anyone I might think about sort of maybe trusting into making a movie of Kerouac’s On the Road it would be Francis Ford Coppola. And that he’s teamed up with Walter Salles, who made the amazingly wonderful The Motorcycle Diaries, I feel a bit better about it, but dream teams have gone wrong before. Cough. Anyone remember the absolutely terrible A.I.?

Annnywaay. It’s hard to make road movies at the best of times, Easy Rider being the obvious exception. And as of 2001, when the project was first tossed about, Brad Pitt was attached to star. Um, he’s the hottest fellow in the world, which means he’s too hot to play Dean Moriarty, and I have a hard time thinking he could pull it off—not to downplay his talent at all, but you know what I mean, he’s too pretty. And how would the hip-jazz loving language of Kerouac’s book translate to the cynical age we live in now? The idea of the beat generation, with their constant craving for that sweet spot that’s almost impossible to define, being captured on the big screen seems almost the opposite of what should happen.

Who knows. Maybe it won’t suck. And maybe I’ll lose 20 pounds by tomorrow.

Um, No JCrew, They Aren’t

Aren’t these the ugliest jeans you’ve ever seen? And they are so not worth $275.00 USD. And this is coming from a girl who reads the JCrew catalogue the second it arrives in her mailbox. All I can say is “Ew”: these jeans are as smelly as the dirty hippie who sat upwind of me my last night in Ireland, ruining my only drink with his bad BO every time he lifted up his arms to embrace his equally smelly, dread-locked hippie girlfriend.

And before you say anything, I used to be a hippie-type myself. I have a totally embarrassing tattoo of a peace sign lying on a bed of daisies. No, I’m not lying. How could anything that embarrassing be anything but true?

The Bionic Hip Kicks Ass

Yes, I’m swearing a lot in these posts I’m plowing through tonight, but it must be said exactly this way: my new bionic hip kicks some serious ass.

I walked for three weeks in Europe. That’s 21 days of traipsing through cities, peering at ruins, standing in front of art at galleries, and finding my way around foreign places. And I had no pain. There was a bit of a struggle because my muscles aren’t in the greatest shape, but no joint pain.

In the months after surgery, I have resumed normal activity in the sense that I’ve recovered so much of my mobility. Things I never thought I would or could do again, I’m now doing on a regular basis: enjoying an 8-hour walk, sitting cross legged and chatting with a girlfriend, dancing to Irish music at the pub, jumping up and down at my RRBF’s show, enjoying a weekend at Hillside, and feeling normal, even if it’s just until the rash returns or my stomach churns up the last meal, but it’s something anyway. And I’ll take the small victories for now.

Heh.

Couldn’t someone in Paula Abdul’s camp update this photo? It honestly looks like it’s from the mid-80s, which isn’t so bad considering the amount of plastic surgery I’m sure she’s had in the last decade or two. But then again, it makes me laugh every time I read a fake “news” item on the imdb and the use it.