November 21, 2006

Things That Make Me Go 'OW'


In honour of my recent ailment, I have decided to compile a working list of things that cause me stress. Feel free to make mention of glaring oversights, or to suggest things I may not have considered.


  • Credit Cards (specifically, the needing of in order to make reservations at fancy-pants hotels in other cities for foreign dignitaries)
  • MY BOSS
  • MY JOB
  • My parents
  • Denis #@?&*%# Bouchard
  • Reimbursement forms
  • Petty Cash Claims
  • Anything attached to a policy, requirement, or code of conduct at the University of Ottawa
  • Natalia Leshchenko. Delightful in person, very well-dressed, but a touch high-maintenance

October 28, 2006

I'm Going to Hell, and You Can't Stop Me!


No, really. And don't try to tell me I'm not, either. I'm going to hell. I deserve it. Why? Because instead of getting my ass out of bed and joining the action against the war in Afghanistan today, I... forgot. I forgot the time. I forgot the place. I forgot that today I could enjoy the rare opportunity to make manifest some of my deepest and most formative values. It's not okay, it is a big deal, and I'm not being overdramatic. You forget to buy milk. You forget to change the fucking toilet paper. You don't forget peace. A world of war, or a world in which I do nothing, not even my very least, to prevent war and the spread of violence, is my own personal Hell.

On the flip side... I'm still going to Hell. I know a lot of people disagree with my ideas. There is quite a bit of support out there for this war, and I'm still coming to terms with the idea of speaking out against something that implicates so much effort and sacrifice and so many human lives, including those of a great many people I care about personally. This being said, I cannot support this war. I cannot support any war, but this one is contentious. I'm not anti-nationalist, and I'm not a pacifist. I don't believe that the reasons that each soldier chooses to fight are invalid, and I do support the banner ideals behind this war. Nonetheless, I don't support this war.

Up until now I've been worried that my reasons were not strong enough, that I needed to come up with something more substantive to justify speaking out against Canada's involvement in Afghanistan. I was wrong. I have three justifications, or at least, three main justifications, for speaking out.

  1. The costs. Be they human, social, economic, or moral, the costs of this war are astronomical. For the United States this war has cost one tanked economy, countless children 'left behind', a great many human lives, and an immense number of missed or lost opportunities to create progress through technological, educational, and medical programming. For Canada, this war has cost lives, social programs aimed at promoting the health and status of the poor, the disabled, the marginalized, and women, and the last vestiges of a respectable international reputation. This doesn't even begin to compare to the costs being borne by the people of Afghanistan, where reports indicate that quality of life has declined in many regions from the standard under the Taliban. I could go on, and on, and on.
  2. Responsibility. By taking up the war in Afghanistan, Canada is letting the U.S. off the hook, both internationally and domestically. The war on Iraq was a bit of a circular wag the dog - it left the Bush administration with something to show for its unending War on Everything for a time, but soon the same heat that had been coming off of Afghanistan for months began to make Iraq fester as well. George W. Bush likes to start things he can't finish. Either that, or he just gets bored with things, and doesn't want to finish. The man is good at destroying, but not so great when it comes to creating - failed attempts at rebuilding in Afghanistan, in Iraq, failed attempts at improving the American education system - show me something that Bush has actually seen through, from start to finish, with a progressive, constructive result, and I... well, I won't stop criticizing, but I'll at least give him what little positive credit he deserves. Anyway, all that to say... by stepping into the U.S. role in Afghanistan we've basically let the U.S. and the Bush administration off the hook. They made a great big mess, and now we're haphazardly sweeping it up, letting them save face domestically, by ducking out of one of many unending wars, and internationally, by refocusing the world's attention from failures in Afghanistan to yet another pressure point on the axis of evil. Which brings me to my third justification...
  3. Enabling. The U.S. military is designed to support two theatres of war, one major, one minor. The major, at the moment, is Iraq. The minor was Afghanistan, until that started getting a little too ugly for Bush's liking. Now, with Canada happily stepping in from second string, the U.S. military is free to take on its exciting new conquest, Iran. We're not helping to rebuild the world piece by piece. We're not creating a model by which other failed states can rescue themselves. We're not making strides towards world peace. All we are doing is enabling the Bush administration to start yet another war that it will not finish, that will accomplish little or nothing, that will leave yet another state in shambles, yet another people raped, broken, diseased, dying, and in a state of volatile insecurity. Good on us.


So there. That's what I've got. I feel quite comfortable with it. So maybe it means I'm going to Hell. Fine. I only wish you'd join me.

October 01, 2006

Is it Really Worth Saying the Things You Think You Should Say?



There are a lot of things that I want to say. A lot of things. The problem, or the hesitancy, is... well... I'm afraid. I'm afraid of the consequences of these things I want to say. Not because I think these things might hurt anyone, or because I think they may incite anger towards me. No, I'm afraid of what I will have to do if I say these things and life goes on as if I had never said them.

I suppose it's fear of rejection that's really keeping me at bay. What happens if, when I tell these people how concerned I am, they shrug it off, and nothing changes? How do you ask someone to make you a priority in their life? If they don't, how do you go on from there? It's not like I've never been cut out before, and it's not as though I've never done the same, but I don't know if in these particular cases I will be able to handle the losses and the pain it is going to entail. Well, that's a lie. Of course I can take it. I've survived much worse. But I don't want to!

I don't want to lose these friends, or to just sit by and let the distance increase. Of course, if I say nothing, I will just stand here, watching it happen, knowing I did nothing to change it. If I say the things I want to say, and the distance continues to increase... I can say that I tried. But I think that's bullshit. Who cares if I tried? I certainly won't, not if I'm still losing things that are very important to me. God damn. This is shitty...

August 31, 2006

A Close One



Okay, so I'm not going to tell you all about how I was a prostitute for a day, because by now all but the *counts on fingers with squinty eyes rolled up as if peering into brain* four of you have heard it already. The rest of you will have to wait. Hopefully not two months. I woke this morning to discover I had not yet been dropped from April's blogroll. I am, however, dangerously overdue, so hear goes!

I recently spent some time with the 'rents in London Town. One particular day left me inspired to write. Why I didn't write then I cannot tell you. Yes I can. Because I was on vacation. And I've been overworked all summer because of my own inability to push back. But that's been rectified. But I was tired, alright?

Anyway, yes. Inspired to write. Actually I think there may have been a few such days, but I can't remember them very well, and the ideas coming out of this particular day have come full circle, so again, here goes.

It was a pretty typical Sarah-in-London day... Sarah sleeps in, Sarah gets up shortly before mother leaves, Sarah has some breakfast, Sarah retires to couch to read, father takes mother to work/school, father comes home and cooks something for dinner. While father is cooking dinner (I think this may have been okra day, which would explain my impromptu irritability)I was suddenly overcome with a bad case of the fidgets. This was definitely not the I've-been-in-the-same-place-doing-nothing-too-long kind of fidget. Because I hadn't been. Nor was it the I-need-work-off-some-excess-energy kind of fidget, as a) I was pretty active on this particular trip home, and b) after the hellish stretch of work, work, moving, and more work I had just endured I definitely had no excess of energy. No, this was more the what-the-hell-is-wrong-with-my-environment kind of fidget.

And now, a little personal history: When my brother and I were children we used to liken our mother to Danny Tanner. Remember Danny Tanner? Of course you do! Who doesn't remember Danny Tanner? Well, I must tell you, Danny Tanner couldn't hold a candle to my mother. When that woman wanted something clean you had better be sure that not so much as speck was missed by your duster or a thread was hanging out of your underwear drawer. I once made the mistake of thinking I would get away with shoving all my blocks into my closet and closing the door. For the four years until we moved out of that house my mother would check the closet after I cleaned my room. So yes, mother of my childhood. Neat freak. You might think that explains a lot about me. You'd be mostly right. And also a little wrong.

Somewhere along the way my mother changes. After we moved to the store she stopped badgering me about the state of my room - although that may have had more to do with me than her. It took a long while, and it certainly intensified before dying away, but it did. It just up and disappeared. Perhaps it was a reordering of priorities after a multitude of family crises. Perhaps it was a natural relaxation after my brother and I moved out. Hell, maybe she just got tired of trying to be like her older sister after forty-some-odd years. Whatever it was, she dropped the need for neatness like you would a vase you got from your third-cousin when you graduated high school that's too hideous to keep within fifty feet of your home and too much of a cruel joke to pass on to an unsuspecting acquaintance. No looking back.

Good God where the hell am I going with this?

Oh right. End of history lesson.

So these days, if you were to surprise my mother with a visit (while she was still asleep, of course, because despite not caring about the everyday, the woman can still save face in ten seconds flat) you would find what appears to be the aftermath of an explosion of kitsch, bad taste, and pennysavers strewn about the living room. This of course, causes serious offense to my clean-lined, tucked away, bookshelves and big art sensibility.

So on okra day, after sufficiently tiring out my eyes with a great book, I managed to let the state of my mother's living room work me up into quite a state. There was some silent what-the-fucking and some not so silent complaining at my dad, and it took all I could muster not to tear down everything in my mother's carefully constructed world. I asked my dad what he would do to fix the space, but quickly dismissed him when he basically suggested that we rearrange the dead and dying sofa set and bring back the dining table so the space would look exactly as it had for oh so many years. If my mother and I can agree on nothing, at least we both believe that there's no sense going back to having things the way they were if that way didn't work before.

What ultimately stopped me from pitching half the contents of the room in the trash was a realization that I had just stepped into the same fury for control that made my mother seem so scary for so many years. As one would hope, as an adult I've come to understand my mother and many of her mad behaviours much better than I could have hoped to as a child or teenager. I've even managed to forgive much of her tyranny now, knowing how easily one might become that tyrant. There's no question that my mother has passed on a lot of her defining traits to me. The crazy, the control issues, the propensity for volatile flipouts... sigh... What would we be without them? Although it might have been easier, perhaps less painful to have a mother who was not a nut... I did. An now, knowing that I'm a nut, I'm definitely grateful to have her with me. If there's anyone who will ever understand all the things I've kept from the world, anyone whose mistakes I can learn from, anyone whose faults I can call my own, it's definitely my mom.

June 25, 2006

Whatup?


Hey, it's me.

Just calling to see if you wanna
hang out, ride bikes,
do nothing til we're blue in the face.

Mom could make rice chips
and we could drink limeade
and things could be simple again.

We could make noises
and grow avocados
and swing from the rafters and sing.

When we grew weary we'd collapse onto couches
and drink memories of summer days in.

When we grew tired we'd retreat to the backyard
and lay our heads close to the ground.

The trees and the sky
would wish us good night
and you would be with me again.

May 26, 2006

(The Long Awaited) Something Like a Chameleon Parte Deux: Why Learning to be Properly Socialized Has Convinced Me That I am Innately Evil



Okay. So you did not hold me to it very long. I told you too. There's a good chance I would not have felt the compulsion to post today had it not been for the daily increasing salience of the threat of being dropped from April's blogroll. Also, I've more or less forgotten what I actually included in "Something Like a Chameleon." This post, therefore, might end up a mix of things, might segue with a complete lack of style and grace into new things that I think I'd like to tell you, dear readers.

And I'm spent. Maybe I'll continue this at work? No. I'll go rinse my bowl and get a pear, and then try again.

I rinsed my spoon as well. And contemplated putting away my iron. And noted that we should dump out the salt and pepper shakers because Joanne, possibly evil landlady, sanded the wall behind them while they were still sitting in their spot on the stove, probably filling them with gross toxic wall dust.

Okay, so why am I evil. Something about being an elitist bitch. Something about little moments of thinking I'm better than people. No, that's not even it. That I figured out without socializing. It's being able to turn on and off. To pretend that I am something that I am not, that I know I am not, fully aware that I am imitating the people around me only in the interest of extracting something from them. I can't quite identify what it is that I want, what I'm trying to get, but I know that it's something innocent and unsavoury all at once. Something that makes me think there's something deeply twisted and dangerous inside my mind.

I'd go on, but the mentor just called. Off to be dutiful. I'll tell you about it later.

April 17, 2006

Something Like a Chameleon



Of course, my relationship with people is quite different. In all honesty there are very few people with whom I feel comfortable, very few instances in which I feel that the people around me are congruous, or counterbalanced, or complementary to myself. Most of the time I feel alien, apart from other people. This, of course, is when I break out the wallflower version of myself, or even worse, the socializing version of myself.

Imagine, if you will, a documentary narrative running through your head every time you find yourself in a group larger than four or so people. When I wallflower, at least I get to be that narrative. Everything I hear and see I may register where I will, observing natural people in their normal environment from my quiet little corner. When I socialize, however, the narrative keeps running, and I become subject. The narrative, of course, knows that I fake, that I play at being a real person, and hearing it run through my head I struggle against the urge to tense inside and retreat.

***

Maybe? Maybe not? I have noticed, as of late, that I have a bit of a knack for blending in. Not wallflowery, disappearing blending in, although I think I do a fair bit of that, but the inconspicuous, seeming like I should to be precisely where I am sort of blending in. Perhaps I give myself too much credit, but I cannot remember, ever, feeling as though I had stepped into the wrong space.

I do not know what or why this feeling is. In every city, on every continent, I feel as though I have never moved, as though the thousands of kilometres were nothing more than a change in scenery, a faint wash on the foreground of my life. Nothing moves around me, you see, only inside me. There are worlds inside me.

April 09, 2006

{Posting About [Nothing} to Post About]


I mean really. It's not as though there has been a lack excitement in my life in the past five or so weeks. It's not as though I've told anyone about all the excitement. It's not as though there's any legitimate reason I haven't written about all the adventures I've had as of late. I mean, I could try the I've been really busy with school and work and all the other things that make up my life excuse, except that, although I truly have been very busy, I've also been procrastinating to excess. In fact, this post is really just me, procrastinating again, and yet not writing any of the more interesting things I have to tell all *squints at ceiling while counting on fingers* five of you. So here are the posts that you should be getting out of me in the next few weeks:

  • Something Like a Chameleon
  • Something Like a Chameleon Parte Deux: Why Learning to be Properly Socialized Has Convinced Me That I am Innately Evil
  • What's Brown, Happy, and Legal All Over?


Okay. So that's only three. There should be more. There is definitely more to be told. But three posts is a decent amount to catch up on. Hold me to it. Seriously. If not, so much of my oddness will just sublimate into nonexistence, and sublimated oddness is really just missed opportunities to enjoy life.

Oh, and I was going to dedicate an entire post to that time that I almost died at the Met. See. It's already going! Hold me to it people!

And why I'm so terrible at expressing myself vocally! Seriously people, this is gold! Just passing you by!

March 01, 2006

So C'mon Fatso


Happy March, World!

Today is a day. A big day. A day that marks many a thing. Many a thing for many a person. I am one such person, and today does, indeed, mark many a thing for me.

Things that today, being a big day, a March First kind of day, marks for me:
  • the beginning of the March to June stretch, my favourite time of year, a time of transition and moderate humidity and absolute prettiness and nostalgia
  • the end of my second last month as a twenty-nothing
  • the official beginning of Sarah having less than two months of her big fat smelly undergrad left
  • the point at which the countdown to New York becomes panicky-scary


That's enough of that for now.

This month, if what I think I can feel is true, is going to be a good month. A good, goofy month. Go now. Be good.

February 24, 2006

Take Me Out at the Dreams



The smell in the air, the blue of the building, the dark, wet gray of the pavement below. There was a humid wind that carried the scent of the rain and the clouds to me, buffeting my cheeks and stirring my heart.

The kites in the sky, crashing, soaring, falling, and flying, while strings of glass and sand cut through the sky 'til we were sore and bloody. The shouts of children, the shouts of men, the sweet smell of the rain in the humid spring air. Oh the sweet smell of rain.

I wore blue linen and lace, the smell of fresh linen and starch about me. The breeze made me shiver as I watched the world move over a ledge, watching reds and blues cut through the brilliant green and grey below.

You were young, I was younger. No one ever knew.

When you crept up behind me my brooding soul was lulled. When you caught my shoulders my heart jumped back and my breath caught against a knot in my throat. A shock, a gasp, and a lifetime passed in that one moment.

We've moved away from those worlds, to new and unusual places. You were never there, and you never will be more. I will always look back, on grey days when warm winds soothe my passionate soul, and remember for one day that I loved.

February 23, 2006

The "Shut Up, Graham" Trifecta



Note: The "Shut Up, Graham" Trifecta is not actually included in this post, but one day I will needlepoint it, and you will understand.

I've been tagged by Miss April, and so, here goes!

Four jobs I have had:
  • Research Assistant to Dominique Arel, School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa
  • Assistant Co-ordinator, Chair of Ukrainian Studies, University of Ottawa
  • Project Officer, Outreach, Social Development Canada
  • Child Labourer, Park's Variety


Four movies I could watch over and over:
  • I (Heart) Huckabees
  • Monsoon Wedding
  • A Very Long Engagement (or anything directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet, really)
  • Igby Goes Down


Four books I could read over and over:
  • Jane Urquhart's The Stone Carvers
  • Robert Cormier's The Chocolate Wars
  • Sherri S. Tepper's The Gate to Women's Country
  • Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden


Places I have lived:
  • London
  • Ottawa


Four places I have been on vacation:
I've only really been on vacation once, in Chicago, but some of this might count.
  • Pakistan (Islamabad, Lahore, Wazeerabad, Karachi)
  • Chicago
  • Montréal
  • Toronto


Four websites I visit daily:
Are you kidding me? The only thing I do on a daily basis is brush my teeth! If I did have any sort of regular internet habits, the following would be included therein.

  • Feria Films
  • Environment Canada
  • The Globe and Mail
  • Girls Are Pretty


Four favourite foods:
  • Palaak (Spinach), especially with paneer (a very, very mild, unripened cheese)
  • Samosain
  • Daal Chawal (Lentils and Rice)
  • Spaghetti al Pomodoro


Four favourite non-alcoholic drinks:
  • Water, bitches!
  • Limeade
  • Grape Juice
  • Orange Juice, with pulp


Four favourite musicians:
Yeah, some of them are bands, I know. My favourite music often comes from bands, so you'll just have to accept it.

  • Paul Simon
  • Ella Fitzgerald
  • Coldplay
  • The Kaiser Chiefs


Four places I would like to be right now:
  • The Amazon Rainforest, without the constant conflict and threat of deforestation
  • Roma!
  • Buenos Aires
  • London


Last four books I read:
Thank you, Children's Lit.
  • Louisa May Alcott's Little Women
  • J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan
  • E.B. White's Charlotte's Web
  • C.S. Lewis' The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe


Last four movies I have seen:
  • Proof
  • Shaun of the Dead
  • Elizabethtown
  • Matchpoint


What's on my desk right now:
I'm at my parent's house, but I think what's on my desk at home is far more entertaining, so that's what you're getting!
  • Rubber ducky bubble dispenser (affectionately refered to as "Bubble Duck") from Canada's Wonderland
  • Plastic ostrich figurine from Chels
  • Popple's Mug that I've had since infancy, containing an assortment of pens, highlighters, scissors, etc, as well as several floppy pencils from Ruth
  • Painted tile from Cuba, via Emily
  • Bowie, the cat, most likely
  • A whole lot of stationery and documents for work and school
  • A stack of books that I haven't read and don't really want to, beneath a glass vase, containing a pink silk scarf, unless I put the scarf away, in which case, just a glass vase
  • Several photos of friends and family from London
  • Assorted computer equipment
  • A CD containing footage from Darfur, which I've never watched
  • An "Out, Out, Damned Spot!" eraser, which Chels brought back from a trip to Stratford


Tagging: Chelsea, Ciara, Ben (who I don't think reads here, but what the hell)

January 28, 2006

Two in One Month? Too Soon!


Never!
I couldn't decide what I wanted to do now that I have finished mi composición de español. So what did I decide to do? I decided to post, that's what. Of course, I don't really have anything of interest to say today. Nope. Nada. I don't so much as have one of those inane philosophical ramblings in which I say a lot of things that no one can decipher and never quite come across the point that I set out to make and subsequently stimulate no reflection or desire to comment, indeed, nothing but a little WTF?ing, in my readers.

I do, however, have a very important recommendation for all of you. Go find Beck's Satan Gave Me a Taco, and listen to it. Listen to it well, my friends, for you will be amused.

January 26, 2006

Maybe it's the Sunshine



WHEEEEEEEEE!!!

I seem to be in an almost interminably good mood these days. Note: I emphasize almost in the preceding sentence, as my mood has turned to crabbish a few times this week, and I seem particularly to be taking it out on poor Miss Andrea. Even the election of that Neanderthalic excuse for a political party has not got me down.

Maybe it's the longer days. Maybe it's the good many people whom I enjoy but have not seen in far too long surrounding me again. Maybe it's the incrementally increasing control I have over my education. Maybe it's the courses I enjoy governing my education. Maybe it's me finally learning to insist on my own sanity.

Whatever it is, there's always a little inkling, a nagging fear that it's about to come crashing down again. I'm trying to be more careful, more diligent, more responsible this time. It would be nice to keep coasting this way, but I know that's not in the cards for Sarah. We'll just have to take it at a trotting pace and hope there's no need for sprints, but be ready for them if they come.

Good little turtle.

Confused enough now?