Wednesday, December 30, 2009

London Town

Another chapter in my globe-trotting adventures begins today! I'm sitting in the airport lounge, soaking up the free wireless and unlimited coffee (thanks for the pass, Dad) and hoping for a good seat-neighbour on the red-eye to Heathrow. It'll be three days in London with Priscilla, Becca, and Alex, and then off to Northern Ireland to hang out with Grannie and Auntie Moyra. It's going to be planes, trains, and automobiles. I haven't the foggiest what we're going to do in London, but I am prepared to be dazzled and delighted.
It has been lovely to be home. Got to see nearly everyone and have been eating far too many desserts.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Yule Be Sorry

Home for Christmas! It's been pretty relaxed, lots of reading and hanging out with friends and family. We went out carolling in the neighbourhood on Christmas Eve with a few of the gang (viz. Diane and her brother, Alex, Becca), which was lovely. Most people had never had carollers at the door before, but everyone was appreciative. Even the lady who answered the bell in her bathrobe seemed moderately happy to see us, if a bit discombobulated.
Today, Boopsie and I went skating and out to see Sherlock Holmes. It is not Holmes as we have thought of him, the ascetic and nerdy logician, but a Holmes who is all into fightin' and drinkin' and not so much womanizing as unrequitin'.
The next few days I'm planning on doing some concentrated relaxation before flying to London for New Year's. Currently I'm doing a re-read of Gods Behaving Badly, Marie Phillips' extremely funny bit of "where are they now" fiction, wherein the Greek pantheon is low on power and sharing a moldy house in New York. Eros as a born-again Christian is especially good - "I wish the Virgin Mary was my mother!"

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Whoa

Vampires probably don't sneeze, do they? They don't need to breathe, so they have no reason to ever sneeze. For some reason this is blowing my mind.

Monday, December 07, 2009

I'm Home?

I think Jaime and I have found our apartment. Looking to hand in the application tomorrow and we'll see how it goes. If we get it, it would be my first time living in a brick building, which would be lovely. It's got really nice classic features and the layout is excellent - it's a long apartment, so everyone feels s/he has his/her own space. I also feel like I ought to live with a human being again soon, before it is too late. Having swine flu or whatever it was earlier this year was an excellent reminder of how unpleasant it can be to be on your own, particularly for days upon days. And I think Jaime and I will be good roommates. We are both out a lot, for one thing, but when we are around we get along well. We also have a lot of friends in common, so it will be very nice to have a place where we can host people! There's enough space for a keyboard and a guitar... I predict sing-alongs! Will also have to test out the living room to see whether it is big enough to train capoeira. I suspect it is. Hooray!

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Magical Montreal

Just back from a lovely Saturday and Sunday in Montreal, since Boopsie needed her winter clothes and they were all at my place. We did some shopping, watched New Moon with her roommates (and laughed and laughed), went out for lunch, all the usual fun things. It was extremely nice, and Boopsie and her roommates continue to be lovely young women.
ORYC's Friday concert went well, I think. Coventry Carol was especially good. We got one of those little "ahh" moments at the end of it, where the audience doesn't start clapping right away. That is how you can tell you've nailed a piece. I've also met a new favourite piece: Joubert's setting of There Is No Rose. It is insanely gorgeous and has a really interesting alto line. Check it out on Youtube, complete with a choir of wee Brits.
Don't know what work has in store this week. Last week was a little frustrating, but had some good moments, too. I guess that's all you can really ask for in a job: 1. humane working conditions; 2. material that interests you; 3. enough good moments to make it worthwhile. The job is not grand and world-changing so far, but then I am an incrementalist at heart; leading a popular uprising is quite outside my skill set, and revolutions are so messy.
I've finally set a doctor's appointment to discuss the arthritis I was diagnosed with in the summer. "Terrified" is a reasonable descriptor of my feelings toward this appointment. Some preliminary Google-fu suggests that my form of arthritis could be hallux limitus or hallux rigidus. If that is what I have, the nightmare scenario involves cutting out the entire ball joint of the foot and just sort of letting things flop around for the rest of your natural life. I understand this is more for geriatric patients, though, and so I hope and pray for a quick shot of cortisone to the foot and an "enjoy your running and capoeira, but choose better footwear in future" as I exit the outpatient clinic. God, I hope so.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Concerts!

Ottawa is going to be hosting a GREAT MANY holiday concerts in the next few weeks. To wit: November 24: Capital Chamber Choir sings in the Parliament foyer at noon. November 27: Ottawa Regional Youth Choir sings at Southminster United Church (corner of Bank and Aylmer). A variety of Christmas carols. December 12: Capital Chamber Choir's presentation of Imant Raminsh's Magnificat and a variety of carols arranged by Canadian composers. All Saints Anglican (corner of Chapel and Laurier). December 13: Ottawa Regional Youth Choir sings at Fanfair, noon at the NAC. There are seriously even more than this. I just can't remember them right now. WILL UPDATE.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

A Most Marvelous Weekend

Told you I'd be back. Work was pretty quiet this week (again). Wednesday was Remembrance Day, so we federal leeches did not work. Tuesday, the cubicles around me were unoccupied due to swine flu, trips to India and Florida (or South Carolina?), and working from home. It was a little creepy.
But the weekend was amazing, for this weekend Colleen came to visit me, and we were our usual fabulous selves in various locations around Ottawa. We did cocktails with Justin on Friday night and then went dancing, where we learned that we are old and that Ottawa guys are totally not smooth. Have you ever seen someone do the old "stretchin' around this gal!" move while leaning on a bar? I have now. I asked him whether he was lost, and gave him a fake name before we vamoosed. Anyway. Saturday we went rock climbing, at which Colleen totally kicked my butt but then she is more experienced, i.e. she is secretly a gecko or something. Then it was pizza for dinner and out for a wine tasting at Jacob's. Colleen was impressed at the number of straight male friends I have. Don't quite know where I got them all, but they're good people and can stick around! Sunday was brunch and shopping and laziness. That brings us to where we are now, post-choir-practice and nearly ready for another week. Plunging back in!

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Posting Again!

OK. I'm back, for real this time. I am going to aim for weekly posts, because writing gives me purpose, or at least forces me to account for the purposeless periods. See you Sunday?

Sunday, July 05, 2009

Montreal

One of the other nice things I've done since coming back was go to Montreal a lot, once for capoeira and three (?) times to see the Boopsie. We bummed around in our usual way, babbling like crazy, watching Repo: The Genetic Opera, and eating vegan food at Aux Vivres. I had missed her very much while I was travelling, but she carried on perfectly well without me! She's found a very lovely walk-up to move into in September with three of her school friends. I am very impressed with her roomies so far: they are smart, funny, responsible young women and they are even nice to dorky policy analysts who threaten to crash on their couch all the time in the fall. Way to go! I cannot wait to have her back on this side of the continent in September.

Family Ties

My family and our dear friend Queensie/Ruth came out to visit me early last month. We attended my convocation, where I got to show off the fam to a bunch of my uni friends. Glinski has requested that my parents adopt him. The convocation speaker was, unfortunately, tedious beyond belief (old media is dead! Did you know?!), but other than that it was a nice ceremony. There were a lot of us taking the extra two or three semesters to graduate, which was nice because I got to cheer lots of people I knew across the stage. I took Thursday off work and we toured around Ottawa, looking at the Art of Papal Rome exhibit at the National Gallery (well worth the time, although we were a little Pieta'ed out by the end). Ruth returned to her native New Jersey, and the rest of us spent the weekend in Wakefield, canoeing and walking around at Lac Philippe and eating absolutely wonderful food at the Moulin Wakefield. Happy days indeed.

Bicycle Commuting

At the office, on June 2, to be precise, I had what I think will be a formative experience: I got my bike stolen. This was a bike I'd bought off Jacob for a very good price, and it was without a doubt the highest quality bike I'd ever owned, a 2002 Kona Cinder Cone. Very light, great shocks, and well-maintained. We'd gone out for a day in Gatineau Park, just shredding up the trails like nobody's business (well, it was pretty good for my first day, at least) and I'd resolved to make mountain biking a part of my lifestyle. The following Monday, I walked out of the office clad in my biking gear, ready for a relaxing jaunt home, only to discover that my bike was nowhere to be seen. I will long remember the unpleasantness of having to walk home, in one's nerdy running tights, sadly clutching a now-useless helmet. And I don't think it was my fault, is the thing: my combination lock was, admittedly, kind of shitty, but the ring where my bike was parked had been sawn through.
This experience has opened up new worlds of righteous indignation to me. At my building, people who cycle to work as their form of transportation are forced, effectively, to leave their personal property outside all day, unattended and completely unsupervised, as the security cameras don't even capture most of the racks on the south side of the building. Two e-mails to the facilities people haven't gotten them to remove the sawn-through ring on the rack. The bike storage situation means that people who make a choice to cycle to work - a lifestyle that reduces greenhouse gas emissions and I'd bet health care costs as well - are not being offered the same services as employees who drive to work and have a nice cozy parking garage in the basement, which cyclists are forbidden to use. We would be dangerous coming down the ramp, you see, and could get in the way. My favourite argument against letting cyclists put their bikes in the parking garage is that by permitting this, the government building could find itself competing with private bicycle storage providers in the area. Why, that would be preposterous! That would be like the government running a parking garage when there is a perfectly good privately owned parking garage right across the street!
As it is, my new and fabulous replacement mountain bike is not going anywhere near my place of work, and I'm going to purchase a beater for commuting. This doesn't actually reduce the risk of theft, since bike theft seems to take place mostly at random, but does reduce the financial impact of replacing bikes. As people become more aware of sustainability and environmental issues, as well as the advantages of an active lifestyle, I think more and more employees will place a premium on a bicycle-friendly workplace. I'm certainly learning to.

She's Baaack

It's been an awfully long time since my last update, and a lot has happened. I had a fabulous trip to the Caribbean, Argentina, and Tucson. If you'd like to read more about it, you can check out my travel blog. I got to spend time with one of my dearest friends and attend the wedding of another, celebrate my grandmother's Significant Birthday, and get to know people and places I'll never forget. I also learned the joys of setting your schedule according to your own whims (don't think I'll ever really recover from that discovery) and of spending lots and lots of time in the great outdoors. Since coming back to Ottawa, I've picked up more or less where I left off, singing with ORYC and training capoeira, but minus Carleton and plus work. Yes, I've started work as a real employee, at the same office where I had my co-op placement last year. It is going fairly well so far, and I have managed to outlast my director general, who is leaving for another assignment on Monday (the DG is my boss' boss, for those unfamiliar with the ranking system of Canadian government departments). Sometimes I feel a little under-employed, just because I haven't got people yelling at me about tight deadlines, but I've got a few files on my desk, and they are all really interesting to me, so that is a good thing. There are lots of good things.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

What.

In preparation for the backpacking trip starting next week, I'm listening to some Argentinean radio online. I was hoping to practice my Spanish, but instead I am confronted with a show called Los Clasicos playing the B-52s' Good Stuff. I have, however, learned from Dad's comment on a ten-minute weather report that it seems to be typical of Spanish-speaking countries to spin out any verbal interaction into a long conversation. To which I say, dandy, I've got time!

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Sisyphus

It is my belief that few tasks in the universe are more crushing in their Sisyphean futility than the shovelling of the top layer of loose snow from its underlying layer of compacted snow, under skies threatening more snow, in January, in Canada. To sum up: pah.
The past few weeks have been, on average, much more pleasant than that incident. A bunch of friends went out for my birthday this Saturday and had a pretty good time and made some pretty stupid faces for my camera. Said photos will not be posted here, as some of my friends likely wish to have jobs or be married someday. However, they will live in my hard drive, or "infamy".
Most of my time is devoted to squaring away the administrative and logistical details of both my travels and my life. A few solid days in the library with my language tapes has improved my Spanish - it is admittedly woeful, but consider that a few weeks ago I knew no Spanish that was not from a Taco Bell commercial, the beginning of that Offspring song, or La Madrastra ("Contestame! Contestame!").
It isn't all quiet library time around here, though. Both of my parents are jetting around trying to help out my grandmothers. Dad's out of town seeing to his Mum in Northern Ireland. In a few weeks, Mom will be going to see her mother in Arizona. Grannie is starting to have memory problems, and Grandma is laid up at my aunt's place with valley fever, or coccidioidomycosis, a respiratory infection caused by a fungus that lives in the desert. While my aunt and uncle go on a long-planned (and super-cool-sounding) trip to Antarctica at the end of the month, Mom will go hang out with Grandma as she recovers. My grandmothers are both incredible ladies; they are both well into their eighties (Mom's mom turns the big 9-0 in March) and both live on their own. Last year, Grandma bowled a far better score than I could ever hope to, and Grannie continues to garden with enthusiasm. They both have a wealth of stories and love, and it is sad to see them getting a little older and more frail every year. But time marches on regardless, just as certainly as there will be more snow on our driveway next week. We all do the best we can.