Saturday, December 30, 2006

More Singapore


Well, no tours for me. Everything shut down for lunch and the two o'clock batch not gettting back until six, and the concierge won't store my laptop.Walking tours are not much fun lugging this heavy mother about. So no help for it I guess. Find a place where I can buy a beer and and put-put away on the box for a couple of hours. Got some pictures to work on. Even found an unguarded wireless port there for a few moments, but those seem to dry up pretty quick. I'll be glad when I can get to Puttaparthi and just take my little portable harddrive in to the shop. I try to carry this thing around as little as possible


Singapore is pretty and clean, the people I've had reason to speak to have all been impecably polite. Still don't hesitate for a minute to rip you off if they can. That beer I ordered for $8.00 on the restaurant menu ended up costing $12.68 at the till. Might still be a reasonable place to stay, asked a guy at the smoking place around the corner how much it cost to rent an apartment, $300, $400 he said. Still would rather be in India. Things are more out in the open there.



Well, low battery warning, so I'm off now.

Friday, December 29, 2006


Dec 30


Singapore

Ah Blessed warmth. Not too hot, just right.

Bought myself some Internet time.

Haven't seen much of Singapore yet. From what I can see from my hotel room they do seem to like large pastel coloured high rises. A couple pictures from the street in front of the hotel. They advertise as being on the edge of the historical district. Looks sort of what India could look like if they ever cleaned up, put down some asphalt and reclaimed the sidewalks. I have to check out by noon but my bus to the airport doesn't come until five so I think I will stash my bags go for a little Maybe a boat ride. Got a place down in the lobby selling tours.


Dec 29

Singapore

I like this business of breaking for an honest to God lie down. My poor cracked coccyx just does not like twenty hours of sitting. Thirteen to Seoul, an hour and a half to drag my bags through Korea's security then back on the plane again. Really felt like we were “Inching-on” from there, another six hours to Singapore. My bus to the airport leaves at five ten tomorrow, can't keep the room past two so I guess I'll just stash my bags and take my camera out for a tour. Interesting neighborhood. Arab Street. Little India isn't too far away. Will see if I can find a bookshop and some triple A batteries.

Couldn't get the hotel Internet connection going so I guess I'll publish this from a cafe somewhere out there in the neighborhood tomorrow.

So now for that bed.



Just a little bit South of Nome

Dec 28:

Dusk is catching up with us, high, high up here in air, heading over the Pacific to Seoul. I'm deliberately sozzled, because this first bit over the Pacific is so darned long.

Leaving behind a lot of questionable shit. My youngest son has not acknowledgedly my existence, so much as by a Christmas card or email since his marriage this fall to a woman I merely dislike, (nowhere near as strong as hate.) What more can you say about a broad who scams me for $2250 then tries to dye my hair brown for her wedding. (Don't ask, I don't understand it either.) The son I asked to attempt to function as a go between made a lot of promises and then bailed. My extremely pregnant daughter stuck all the totally non-negotiable items she owns, (including of course her cat) in the back of her van before she drove me too the airport, because she is leaving the guy she is living with and does not want to take the chance, again, of being locked out of her home and being ripped off for all the items she brought to the relationship

She's got three Uncles and two Aunts who think she's really sweet living on the coast at the moment. They can help out.

I don't know. Maybe it's a good time to be just a little bit south of Nome.

This is according to the little green screen on the back of the seat in front of me. This is my fifth intercontinental flight and I still haven't figured out how to do things with that click button thing on my chair arm. Guess it helps if you have a tv and that control thingy at home.


Just finished reading Anne Rice's Merrick. Think she's been mining that seam long enough. So, ok, an old fart in a young fart's body is still an old fart and the girls know it. We have all suspected it's more a matter of mind than matter. Now, how do we celebrate the undeniable advantages of old fart hood?

Later

Monday, December 25, 2006

Christmas 2006


Lovely quiet Christmas Day, another year winding down to it's close, safely negotiated the great dark once more. Talked to my youngest brother on the phone, great meal with Mike and Chris. Sort of sad neither of my sons made any effort to contact me but Rainbow did like her little bits of sparkle. Back across the water again day after tomorrow, my flight to India getting closer and closer. I'm really looking forward to stepping out into warm dry summer, and finally ready for it.

A sleepy looking Pat and Michael getting ready to drive me to the ferry.

So the best of all good wishes to all my friends and family out there.

Meditations on Christmas Eve

I'm reading Kiran Desai's Inheritance of Loss at my brother's place on Vancouver Island. It's a perfect match for the time and place. It is so wet. Rain falling hour after hour, running in rivulets down the driveway. The bark of trees is dark and sodden, puddles are growing on the lawns. All cold, cold, cold. A cold monsoon. Twice as much rain as last year, and this a month before the usual rainiest month of the year. I went over to my brother Pat's trailer for a while this afternoon.

The outside weather is more apparent there, the fragility of life sustaining itself against the great elemental furies of the natural world more directly appreciated through his thin trailer walls. The river running a hundred yards away from his doorstep is surging past full bore barely foot below it's banks, and the grassy flat the parked trailers sit on. Fifty year old trees stand half way up their trunks in the water. Over on the other road that goes down by the river mouth, the ocean is at high tide, chunks of sodden banks shedding away into the surge that roars over the wide swampy estuary. I feel a little nervous we are parked so close to the edge.

The weather has been strange and violent this year. Great gobs of snow dropped all over Vanvouver and Victoria weeks ago, gale force winds battered the shores last week. People nervously watch barometers and listen on the radio for hints about another expected gale. A cold hurricane. The slopes above the roads on the North shore are spiked like porcupines with shattered spears of orange cedar. Not quite so much damage on, the Island where we are, the rise of the Malahat channeled the blow toward the mainland. Only a few dropped sprigs of green, the odd upended pine tree.

It's not very cold. The thermometer on the porch is a hair below -5 C. So lovely to come back inside the house, the air warm and still, full of the smell of burning cedar logs in the fireplace mingling with the smell of Christmas baking. My brothers live in such different worlds, Pat so close to the edge of everything. Michael's house so still and quiet and buffered against the elements.

Things disintegrate in the northern rain forest dampness. Everywhere wooden structures molder into the ground. Roofs grow green fuzz, lichens coat the branches of apple trees, everywhere drifts of sodden brown leaves melt back into the ground. It takes constant applications of heat to dry everything out and keep it from dissolving away into the rain. Pat tells me he found himself telling himself that jumping into the river would be a really stupid way to kill yourself. He was surprised by the very thought.

Got a phone call from Rainbow. She wanted to come over with me on the ferry yesterday, but instead she had to go to the emergency room to get an awfully infection of the skin on and around her earlobe a looked at. Very frightening stuff. It just got so bad overnight despite courses of antibiotics she needed an intravenous pump. They don't want her anywhere near the hospital with such an obviously resistant staph infection. Seems like nature is beginning to fight back on a lot of fronts at once. Christmas Eve and I'm worrying about how many of these cold damp winters my brother is going to be able to make it through in that biscuit box of a trailer, what kind of world the child my daughter is carrying will have to negotiate? Maybe the Peace on Earth we need to make is with Mother Earth Herself.

The Christmas Carols singing softly in the background, candlelight glowing on reflecting surfaces, the beautifully decorated tree, it's all so much the perfect image of a traditional Christmas. Why do I hear the soft tread of a tiger behind me, the future stalking up from behind on silent feet while I gaze mesmerized into the past?

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Lunches



Having some very nice lunches lately.

Yesterday I went out with two really old friends, companions from my elementary school days, Alice, Bob and Bob's wife Susan. Alice is also going on a trip to Hong Kong, China, Korea and Japan for six weeks this spring. Bob is very happy with the Nikon DSLR he got with his retirement present. And Ken phoned from Calgary while we were dining. It is nice to see the people I spent so many formative years with at the same point in their lives trying to make choices that will give their retirement years meaning and pleasure. We all have had different lives since the old days at St Andrew, but we are all at much the same place in our biological destiny. We all have a few good years left and want to make the best of them.

The luncheon today was very different.
Ran down to Whiterock with my daughter Rainbow to see my sister-in-law Holly. Went out for lunch with her sister Heather and her niece Eve. Both Eve and Rainbow are pregnant so it was very nice to see the future unfolding as it should. Whiterock is a really attractive town, had a great slab of Pacific salmon in a Greek restaurant right down on the oceanfront.

Paid for our treat on the way back, got caught in rush hour gridlock at the approach to the Mann bridge over into Coquitlam, and then again on the northshore highway at the approach to the Lionsgate. Rainbow actually fell asleep at one point waiting for the traffic to inch on down the road. There are way too many cars on the road. Luckily the roads are are only wet around here, not clogged with snow also. (That was two weeks ago.)
Late to pick up the kids, but they walked over to their Grandmothers house, and Grandmother and Auntie took them to the Mall. Fun to spoil kids at Christmas. Tomorrow, off to an evening with the relatives of Rainbow's signifigant other.

Then on the ferry and off for Christmas with my brothers on the Island.
I hate just getting on an airplane and ending up somewhere else. I feel journeys should have more substance to them. I'm really enjoying taking two weeks to get to India.
Took me a month to get back to Edmonton after my last trip.

Wish it was easier to dopage layout on this program.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

On the road.

Doing my usual struggle with the touchpad, too lazy to find where I have hidden my mouse. Testing my laptops battery.
Lovely visit wih my sister over the weekend. She and her family are struggling to reclaim a little Christmas joy after the tragic death of her son last year. I found it so hard to get moving this trip. Finally had to shorten down my to do list to what was really necessary to do for the trip itself. We had a good talk about the black dog, an old companion of mine but one she has only lately encountered. Sometimes it's good to talk about stuff like that, I found my heart lightening as we hung out together. I don't think I want to live in Edmonton for too much longer, find it hard to get myself motivated there even during the summer. It's just such a success oriented place, everything is so go-go-go with the oil boom, bigger and better and higher and faster. Tires me out just to think about it. I'm not all that interested in higher and faster anymore.
In Vancouver right now visiting my daughter, just got back from one of the kids Christmas Concert. Haven't been to one of those since my youngest was one of those little guys on stage. The star is still zooming about the house like a demented comet. Can't believe I used to have a household with that much kid energy bouncing off the walls.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Basic panic sets in

Five days to get everything sorted out. Usual panic starting to set in. I don't know why, this is my third trip, I should be getting used to all this. I never write lists. I've got a list, it keeps getting longer rather than shorter.

Saturday, December 9, 2006

Art from the Unknown II


After a three year hiatus, the Art from the Unknown show last night was like a tiny Persian miniature compared to the huge sprawling canvas of other years. Paintings were mostly from I-Human a youth oriented arts program and the Nina Haggerty Centre for the Arts for special needs artists, rather than the huge cattle call for just any non-gallery supported artist the way it was done in the past. It was held at a smaller venue, the Catalyst Theater, a very small and intimate live stage instead of the Arts Barn, a huge, drafty barely renovated bus garage. There were a very limited number of paintings and artists. Also like a Persian miniature, a perfectly done, short program including a speech by Raj Pannu telling us how hard it was to get his Constituency Association to accept funding such a radical project, and a couple of hip hop ballads.



I did see some familiar faces from my Our Voice and demonstration days, had the opportunity to talk to Raj and thank him for all he has done to humanize the Alberta Government. It was an enjoyable evening. I hope the two organizations who showed work see the value of hosting the event and continue under their own steam in the future.



Lovely paintings. Click on them to see them larger. All images copy right of the artists. There is contact info, if you want to use them in any way ask permission. Better yet, buy some.

Raj Pannu MLA Edmonton Stratcona

Keith Turnbull

I-Human

Nina Haggerty Centre for the Arts

Lorraine Shulba online Gallery

Chris Zaytsoff

Chris Zaytsoff

Chris Zaytsoff has work showing at the Front Gallery on 123rd Street and Jasper Avenue.

Chris Zaytsoff: purposeofstars@yahoo.com.

Darren Woloschuk has been involved in the “Painting Peace” project with Change for Children.

Darren Woloschuk can be reached at nyktheme@hotmail.com

You can contact Jillian Boothe at jib55@telus.net.

I come out of my cave


That perishing Siberian high has blasted off across Canada, (the rest of Canada was calling it the Alberta Express) and out over the North Sea to flash freeze Reykjavik, leaving ankle deep piles of soggy frozen latte coloured slush on the unplowed streets and parking lots of the city. The air feels positively balmy after the deep freeze. So it was with quite a bit of pleasure I finally ventured out of my messy little cave for an evenings entertainment.


Tried to take some photos of the Christmas decorations in Churchill square, was reminded yet again of the folly of trying to do long exposures without a tripod.

Images from Art from the Unknown as soon as I can get artist permissions and contact info.

Beginning to get a little nervous. I start off on the first leg of my journey to India in exactly one week. First stop Calgary to visit my sister. Ramu made me a little nervous. A Canadian guy from Montreal told him that the Montreal office is not taking walk in visa applications, they have to be mailed. I have a five day window to get my visa in Vancouver so I'm hoping there is no problem. At least forewarned is good, I'll call them up tomorrow and find out what the system is.

Friday, December 8, 2006

Caregivers

Today I went to the Edmonton Street News Vendor Christmas party, ate too much of the obligatory overcooked turkey and way too heavy donated cheesecake. Feel totally bloated and yech. Serves me right for being a pig.


I don't really have too much to do with the day to day activities of Edmonton Street News. I just do the layout because I believe if everyone would do something, even a small something, the world would be a better place for everyone. I sold papers on a street corner for four years and worked in the office doing distribution for another street newspaper so I'm no stranger to the environment. But sometimes I just get really irritated at some of the bullshit that goes down on the street.


For instance, two hours after our little event, while we were cleaning up and getting ready to go home, about ten people, not vendors or in any way connected to the paper, walked into the Mission. We told them, “we're sorry, lunch is over, foods all gone, closing up now.” Linda told them, there are a few sandwiches they could take with them. Instead they sat down at the tables and settled in. Half an hour later we are still asking for them to let us close the mission up, when this woman started yelling at me.


“I sleep in a dumpster, it's cold out there, we need a place to get warm, you don't know what it's like! You don't give a damn.” etc etc.


Just about lost it with her, the other volunteer ladies were beginning to look nervous. It's not that I expect people to grovel because I'm willing to donate a few days work every month to the cause, but I do feel that I can ask for commonplace good manners from everyone, everywhere. We didn't advertise we were running a drop in and warm up centre for the afternoon, we invited people for lunch. I think that's the hardest thing about doing any kind of volunteer work in the inner city. The lack of simple politeness. I really admire the people who stay out there on the front lines for year after year. Takes a special kind of forbearance to put up with abuse like that every day. I made sure I brought enough scarves for the volunteers too as well as the lady vendors. Sometimes the care givers need a little care too.

Wednesday, December 6, 2006

Art from the Unknown


Ten years ago, in an excess of social justice zeal, I challenged a ruling of the Alberta Social Services Appeal Panel in Queen's Bench. With the help of a lady friend far braver than I, The Edmonton Social Planning Council and a lawyer willing to work pro bono for media exposure I took my complaint about what I considered unfair treatment into Provincial Court. It was pretty wild, the newspapers and TV loved it. My friends and people in the local Social Justice Community tried to help me raise some funds to pay the filing fees and other court related expenses by setting up venues where I could put up artwork for sale. These sales were not particularly successful.


Pam Barret head of the NDP Party party at that time, was very supportive in issuing press releases and letting us use their photocopier. Then Raj Pannu, the NDP MLA from Edmonton/Strathcona, gadfly and goad of the Conservative hegemony, decided to host an art show featuring not only my work, but also the work of any other artists in the community who were not getting any gallery action. The response was phenomenal, in the numbers of people who submitted work, in the quality of the work and in the number of people who came to the showing. The show Art from the Unknown became an early winter tradition for many years thereafter. Then Raj stopped doing them and shortly thereafter announced that he would not run for office in the next election. This year I will be able to attend another installation, tomorrow evening. I'm looking forward to seeing Raj Pannu (Raj Against the Machine), Strathcona's beloved MLA one last time, maybe get to thank him for ten years well spent in public service. Only politician I ever liked, and I never voted in his riding.


My challenge in Queen's Bench didn't accomplish much. The first judge looked at the case and told the Provincial lawyers, this decision is no good because you have given this lady no reason for your decision. She is entitled to know why the Appeal Panel reached this decision.


Went back to the Appeal Panel. The program designer wailed,


”She wrecked my program!”


They came up with 13 pages of reasons why it was appropriate to turf me out of the program. We went back to Queen's Bench again, the second judge came up with nine pages of circular arguments about why the Appeal Panel was right. I guess I could have appealed that judgment at a higher court, but I figured I had gotten as much justice as I or my friends could afford to pay for by this time. My therapist estimated by the time they had paid all those billable hours for the Provinces lawyers I had probably cost the government at least $10,000.00. Drop in the Alberta oil bucket.


Anyway, I'm so happy that Raj, (or rather his fabulously creative Administrative Assistant) did the Art from the Unknown show. That is the single most valuable and useful positive energy that came out of my whole Quixotic joust with the powers that be.


I even met an old friend I hadn't seen since the early sixties at that first show. We used to drink cheap wine and listen to Barbara Streisand together when we were teenagers. She had some paintings in the show. That was magic.


I hope to bring back a sampling from this years show. Maybe I'll run into some other old friends.

Monday, December 4, 2006

Sea Changes

Ramu flew off to Singapore again today. I got up early to see him off. We are both a little sad. I will be taking off on the start of my journey to India the day before he gets back from Singapore. He will be going to visit is brother in SF and then to India to get married in February. I expect to go up to his wedding. They are doing it in his native place, the little village his grandmother lives in. I'm looking forward to that, never spent much time in India yet in any but fairly busy metros.

He and his wife will come back to Canada in March. They will stay at my place until they find a place of their own. So I will be coming back in June to an empty house again. Feel a little sad about that. I've really enjoyed having Ram around, such a very gentle and considerate young man. Totally tolerant about my peculiarities especially my strange sleeping patterns. Much nicer to me than my own smart mouthed brood.

But, can't complain, I raised them that way.

He would like to find an apartment in this building or in the neighborhood. I hope he does. It's very convenient for him, just a brisk walk to work in the morning. So I hope to be able to see him and his wife every now and then. It's been a good experience.

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Christmas Plans

Lots of chatting on messenger these days. Christmas plans are heating up. I'm planning on descending on my daughter first in Vancouver, get my Indian visa and then go over to the Island and visit my brothers and sister-in-law over there before I head off across the Pacific. Sounds like both my daughter and one of my sons may make it there more or less the same time. Nobody ever wants to commit to dates to far in advance, but it sounds like fun so far. (Wonder if my brother will agree after another Irish family shindig!) Seems like I never see my kids in town anymore, we are always flying in from somewhere. West Jet fares to the coast are a lot cheaper and mega faster than the bus.

Have to start thinking of Christmas presents, luckily I have lots of options.

My hard drive was making growling noises earlier today. I had a ridiculous number of applications open and was really overworking it, but I still don't like that at all. I'm going to go down the street and buy another portable hard drive and copy an image of my operating system onto it. I had one the last time I went to India, found it very handy, but purse snatchers got it. This one I'll put in a pouch and carry it around my neck.

I'm also busily putting a lot of files up on my Google mail program. Nice to have backup you can get at from anywhere in the world


I got an email from a friend who had tried to leave a comment but it didn't work. I tried it out, worked for me but I saw where some things about the process could be a little confusing. I'm moderating comments because a nice person warned me that she had gotten some very nasty remarks on her blog when she had listed it in the same place I did, so I took her advise and put in a moderating function to head off anything offensive. No need to leave an email address unless you would like an answer, and I'll delete any that show up in the comments. If you have a blog of your own please feel welcome to leave a url and I'll come for a visit.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Katrina Rant

Watched a rare bit of television this summer. It was a movie in which cyclonic winds sucked super cooled air down from the troposphere and froze New York. In Alberta we have our local version of that almost every year. Happening right now. Alright, alright, so it only goes down to forty below, not sixty and freighters hardly ever get frozen in on the North Saskatchewan River and our coyotes look a whole lot better than those wolves in the movie. Those kind of temperatures are still deadly to unprotected human beings And we have way too many of those in this supposedly rich and developed country.

Calgary is doing the Katrina Disaster thing this weekend, putting people up in Stampede Grounds Concourse for the duration and local drop ins and homeless shelters are letting people sleep on the floors and the hallways in both Edmonton and Calgary. This is just not good enough Alberta!

There was a tiny tiny bit of space left in Edmonton Street News so I wrote a tiny tiny little rant in honour of the beastly weather.

I am on the homestretch of putting together the last bits of Edmonton Street News this month. Too bad it's so damn cold nobody can stand out there and sell it for more than fifteen twenty minutes at a time. I'm going to see if I can get this program to mount a pdf file after I get the thing finished.

Having a lot of fun playing around with the blogger program, seeing what it will let me get away with.

Well couldn't load pdfs directly, set up a second blog for the paper and put up jpegs of the pages, Pretty small but if you click on them twice they get a little bigger. Not really the solution I'm looking for but will have to do till I figure out something better.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

It finally sinks in


It's winter. Every year I experience this period of denial. Maybe it will go away again. This year it snowed before Halloween. It has snowed before Halloween before and then melted and given us back a few precious more days of sun. No such luck this year. That Siberian high threw itself down across the prairies and winter settled down on that comfortable couch for the duration. I'm so glad I am heading for the sun in three more weeks.

Still so much to do. I brought back a bunch of Indian goodies last trip, want to sell enough to pay for my airfare in the future, this is my last freebie. It wasn't too sucessful a venture. I don't want the expense of a shop that I will not be in for six months a year. I got back too late to apply to sell at any of the large summer festivals. Too late also to get a table at the local downtown farmers maret.

There are problems with that also. I haven't owned a car for ten years and do not want to drive again much less pay for the feed and care of another automobile, so the logistics of getting boxes and bales across town every Saturday are formidable. Finally I have tried what I am good at, playing on the computer. Sold some stuff on Ebay, that works for me, except that Ebay fees are insane. So now I have spent the last couple of weeks photographing my goods to take the files to India with me and work up both applications for the big festival sales in January and my online store. My sublettor Ramu will be bringing his wife back from India in March. As fortune will have it, she does websites. So I am going to work up up a website while I am in India this time and employ her to mount it on a website. Always good to have a bit of a project to work on in the cool of the house during those long, warm dusty afternoons.

But first the photos. It's winter. I live in a basement suite with north facing windows. I have to wait for those rare moments when the sun breaks through the icefog, then gather up all my table lamps to get enough light on the subject to photograph anything. Little by little I'm chewing my way through it. Why not do it when the sun was out for fourteen, sixteen hours a day during the summer? Who knows, maybe just that vain hope that this year winter will not come.

I took this photo from my window to send to Ramu when he was in Singapore to warn him what he was coming back to.

The girl who drew horses

I went to a school reunion several years ago. When one lady heard my name she exclaimed, “I remember you. You are the girl who drew horses.”


I was a tall kid so I was always put at the back of the room so as not to interfere with anyone else's view of the blackboard. It wasn't until I was about twelve that teachers realized I was also very short sighted and had no idea what it was they were doing on the blackboard. Everything I had learned had been from oral information. Visually isolated from the rest of the class, and safe from observation in the back row, I entertained myself by drawing on the margins of my texts and exercises while I listened to the lessons. Horses, horses, always horses.


Never horses and riders. Just horses, leaping and soaring. Soaring out the window and galloping over the lawn and up, up front hooves neatly tucked up, over the school yard fence and away. “Theresa, can you tell us what is the Pythagoras's Theorem?” Oops, lost track there a bit.


I wonder now how much all those hours of visualizing leaping over barriers and cantering off into the unknown contributed to the life I am living now. I am heading off on my third trip to India the day before my birthday this year. It will be my sixty first birthday. I'm looking forward to spending it in an Air Singapore jet high above the Pacific.


My first trip I sent back photos and accounts of my adventure every month or so. I had planned to do it on the second trip but found myself getting bogged down in some depressive circumstances that I didn't really want to write about. But friends and relatives told me that they missed my stories and photos so I'm getting a bit more organized this time, setting up a blog and not limiting myself to travelogue type stuff. I wrote a lot of opinion pieces for Our Voice, a local street paper in Edmonton for a number of years so expect some of that stuff too.


The count down has started. Got my airplane ticket sitting on the nightstand. Consolidating and packing away my personal bits and pieces to leave my sublettor some breathing space. Cleaning up and throwing out, considering what to take with me this time.