
or is this giant bubble santa scene terribly, terribly creepy? Peeping Tom Santa.
This is what it looked like when we drove by yesterday. Today it was all deflated and flat on the ground. Natural causes, or neighbour with a bb gun?
...when you leave shopping for "one of those funky scarves talented people make for their friends" for your mother to the last minute. It's beautiful, and it was more than 100 bucks.
This is what happens when you tell your hairdresser to "be creative." My online peeps tell me it's very Run Lola Run. I have to say, I'd rather be dashing through a desperate pomo narrative than rolling down the 401 to the city of my youth. But I'll take it.
entire institution whose library I use to read/work when I'm here is an entirely NO SMOKING zone. This results in the crazy image of people in scrubs, little head coverings and all, standing across the street, smoking and talking on their cells, at the entrance to... a huge cemetary. (A cemetary across the the hospital? Ironic enough to start with). I really wanted to take a picture of the smokers, but thought that would be a little too voyeuristic, tracking them beaten back as far as they can be.


I have this folk art painting of Trudeau on the wall next to my desk. You can't tell in this image, but the flaky things around the edges are shredded money -- $2 and $5 bills -- and it's painted on a hunk of wood.
This is the breathtaking landscape. 
complexity of the marriage project, having Sydney sink to her knee with a bouquet of flowers and propose to Mo: Will you do me the honour of paradoxically reinscribing and destabilizing hegemonic discourse with me?"
Before my first date with F, when I was fussing about what to wear, my wry wise 8 y.o. friend Amelia firmly cooed at me, "He has a motorcycle? Oh, you're going to end up with him -- you always end up with the guy with the motorcycle."


and the patchwork of email and online links. Between my treo, the gmail, ramshackle sympatico email, wifi --- I'm still in my world, but hovering above it.
Silver Cross mother, the woman designated to stand infor every parent who'd lost a child in combat.
A rose in my mailbox, notes on post-its in invisible ink on my TA office door, scraps of poetry.
Even the most porous girl has some boundaries. But F does joke about the subversity with which I greet even the most "missionary vanilla" of heteronormative acts, from bed to handing over one of his shirts to a hotel staffer for cleaning.
"It was the most stunning part of the trip. Unfortunately I got lost when the sun set more quickly then I expected but I simply found a rock to sit on and watched the moon rise. I figured as soon as they missed me for dinner they would come looking. Every couple of minutes I would give a shout hello and turn my flashlight on. I was actually found by another Bedouin guide who insisted on giving me a welcome tea while he called my guys on his cell to come and get me. It was actually very peaceful and I would go back there in a minute. The bad news was my camera did not like all of the sand and it is now frozen open. (grrr) I will have to try and get it fixed in Amman."
Of course, Freud thought the MOST unheimlich was female genitalia, "this unheimlich place that is the entrance to the former Heim of all human beings, to the place where each of us lived once upon a time and in the beginning."
and Stef also forwarded this great pic of her meeting her bio-daughter, Hope. A tremendous gift, those eggs, and Hope's parents are overjoyed... and there she is, floating out there, watermark niece, tracked against the vividness of the other four and the other little girls in my edges. So many stories to be lived full.
a barista will do a much less makeshift job than I will. And I like the social process of coffee procurement -- my morning chat with Alan and Evelyn at Moonbean is part of what grounds me in my neighbourhood.
me this morning and told me it was snowing in Ottawa... this is the interlude where fall is really gone and winter hasn't set in yet, and it was a full-voiced and warm weekend.
Warm and crisp at the same time. It's only 5:00 and the sun is sinking quickly, but the light is astonishing.
nesty. Banana bread baking in the oven (a nod to Matt, who is my God of the Spatula), laundry churning, dishwasher chugging, list assembled for production of various meals over the weekend, including a chunk of my extended family for brunch on Sunday. (Youngest sisters, their mom, S's guy, his kids). F on his way after work, still toting his cold.
I was completely enamoured of the sea dragons -- tiny filmy flying creatures that seem part plant, part animal, almost translucent, completely hypnotizing. I'd never seen them before. Couldn't quite capture them with my camera phone, but you can see the orangey little outline in the background here. You can see the essence, anyway.
very PRESENT. F laughed about the metaphoric nature of them for us this weekend -- lumpy with fatigue and illness, but with a hidden store of roe. We did enjoy each other despite the malaise -- a good thing.
the PNW habitat tank also made an impression. So cartoony, so sireny. It IS my place, that part of the world. I miss the glowing purple starfish and the salmon that jump right out of the water A and I saw kayaking off Quadra Island. Need to have my paddle in that sea again soon.
I wore them last night on a really datey date, with my betsey johnston black silk dress and a lot of girly attitude. Had a sublime time.
I never ate a raw one until a couple of years ago -- my ex was horrified by seafood in its most aggressive form (she shuddered for years everytime she thought about the "lobster massacre" in PEI that literally made her turn pale and flee the scene). Oysters just weren't on the menu. I could smuggle smoked ones into dinner party appetizers (which she avoided), or eat the occasional baked one on the west coast, but no slurping of the briney juice. I ate my first raw one on my first mid-breakup date, and have been pursuing them with some vehemence on the right occasions since. I indulged in a bunch at a great vaguely-south-american restaurant in Portland the night before I came home, sitting at the crowded bar, talking to a guy who wanted me to go hear jazz with him. Such a CateSelf I hadn't ever imagined.
stalled, no clear story. I turned onto my street, and there was an ambulance blocking the road, a paramedic ferrying a woman with a big gash on her head out of one of the stores on the street level of my building. I opened the door to my building, and there was a big sign from another resident that someone had tried to break into their loft at 4:30 a.m., that their dogs had scared them off, beseeching the rest of us to be careful about who we let into the building (note that these signs disappeared quickly, which irked me -- I want this community grapevine). Edges of chaos.
so genderqueer flirty and funny and moving. Her stage presence is bigger than Alison’s – her medium is oral telling, and in the Q&A after she quite nonplussed Alison with some arch banter about Alison’s long, buffed fingers with the carefully trimmed nails. Alison was so touching, the narrative around the images about her father coming to life as she read slowly, giving us time to savour the graphics huge on screen behind her.