irksome crap

Canadian style dustup with landpeer yesterday. Nothing to speak of publicly.

Started watching Prime Suspect, and did *we* stay up past our bedtimes? Yes we did.

Today something something cinnamon buns. Apparently the recipes in the breadmaker manual (we replaced the old one it DIED) need to be adjusted for Canadian content because our flour is different, so I’m not holding out much hope that the buns will be awesome, but they will be buns. My unboxing experience was okay, let’s see how the (jenndurd slur alert) sumb*itch runs.

Goddamnit, I want to go out for breakfast. Who’s with me?

 

 

Ceci n’est pas une entrée de blog

The only thing that will fix this mood is travel, as I am well aware from past meshuggas.  I have an appointment this Friday, finally looking after a lingering and semi-permanent health issue, but after that I’m tempted to rent a car and disappear for a week into the wilds of the Island.

This is my current favourite photograph. Georg Scharf is a frickin genius; although this pic is dramatic, most of the others in his folder are also amazing in their own way.

Still no progress

First let me get something out of the way, given what’s going on on the INTARWEBZ.

Had a nice long chat with Dave yesterday but all I can remember is ‘do a little editing every day’ and ‘David Mitchell’.  I’ll be working my way through the last two books I bought and didn’t read first, I think, before I tackle Mitchell.  I’m still recovering from Europe Central, f’goshsakes.

Mike’s out of town this week.  Words cannot describe the corporate cluster that is happening, but nothing I say will help the customer, so I won’t provide details.

THERE WAS MUCH REJOICING when it was learned that mOm has recovered sufficiently to rejoin pOp for trips in the Camaro.  World is good.

I am thinking of learning traditional weaving.  There’s a class tonight. Of course it’s a toetall feckin’ hassle to get there, but that’s Vancouver for you, car or not. But if I don’t get out of the house and learn something new I think my brain will break.

Jeff reports a simply hilarious encounter with a spider yesterday. I am hoping he’ll tell the story in the comments, I don’t want to steal his thunder but I was howling, so I hope he shares.

I’ll be heading off to the library (Tommy Douglas) today to check this out.

I will ask them if they’d like me to donate a copy of Scrivener. They probably don’t but then again they have Macs, which were in part supported by a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which makes me laugh quite heartily.

I made chicken schnitzel yesterday. It was very very yummy. I took a picture of it and then realized I was being a jerk.

 

 

A metered amount of bopping about plus dialect rant

Did a shop with Jeff. It had been days since there was any butterfat in the house, and I was feeling droopy. First thing in the morning is the right time.

Spent the afternoon at Mike Beach. Literally stared at clouds for two hours while drinking beer, occasionally watching eagles courting (presaged by an incredible rise in the noise of crows and flickers and followed by a grim silence which lasted about ten minutes until the songbirds lit it up again.) I introduced Mike to the ethnically exotic wonder that is Freybe Liquid Spam (oh, sorry, it’s actually Fine Liver Sausage but I sold it as Liquid Spam because I’ve seen Mike eat Spam) and the taste sensation that is applewood smoked cheddar and the cracker God himself lays out for faspa (hazelnut cranberry) . After he fed me rilly good Japanese food at Makoto on Rumble. I departed somewhat from my normal ordering habits and had Tuna and Salmon Don and Agedashu. By 730 I could no longer keep my eyes open and begged leave to go home.

OMG I just came to the realization that Margot is telling time again. It’s been a week since her last bowl of wet food.

We ‘give her the can’ once a week, and Buster of course ends up eating most of it but for a minute there she is really happy. I wasn’t here so Jeff gave it last week. This week I plumb forgot.

So… this morning around 2 am Margot comes downstairs (I was restless and slept on the IKEA couch, which I did very well, actually) and stands about half a metre off the port beam and SCREAMS:

AAAAAAOOOOH!

AAAAAAAOOOH!

AAAAAAAOOOH!

in what I can only describe as a commanding tone. Not aggrieved, not upset, just GET TO IT, handfinger.

I woke up fast enough to be discomfited and, having identified the source of the ungodly racket, returned at once to the snoring embrace of Styx. Which I rilly don’t think was her desired outcome, but I will give it to her as soon as I’m done here.

RANT COMMENCES

YOU KNOW WHAT I DON’T FEEL LIKE RANTING TODAY.

Anyway, I was going to rant about my use of accents in the novels I just wrote and the point I was trying to make about how English speaking humans assumed that George was smarter than Michel because Michel speaks English with a heavy Montréalais accent and George speaks this Mid-Atlantic, sort of Eastern European-inflected English that sounds like he had an expensive education and lived all over the world.

And I was going to rant about how I try to write how I talk when I’m writing in my own blog, and so I find myself stealing – stealing – stealing – imitating – nope, stealing – over and over and over again from the tropes, accents, cultural touchstones, dozens and church amens of American Black culture.

It’s how I talk. Jeff is not quite used to how I speak in a cartoon voice pretty much all of the time (and that’s the other place I steal from, WB and Tex Avery cartoons) but I have to stop doing it.

I don’t know if I can. It’s like hoping it won’t rain. It will eventually. You hope it won’t happen when it’s inconvenient.

The part of racist self-examination that contains cultural appropriation is not fun to drag into the light. And that’s all I can say about this tiny portion of the cognitive load I’m carrying right now.

various kinds of tension

mOm is okay. More deets later.

Alex was here today. I hope to have edited video ready soon. He was in really good shape and we had a blast playing on the back deck with the big blue ball.

My ‘Defender’ art is now framed. I have to fetch and pay for it.

Margot just came in demanding skritches. I bought a proper tripod so we can get good video of her and Buster as they do their hilarious hijinks.

Imani Gandy retweeted me this morning. I don’t imagine any of you care.

We’re getting a new breadmaker next week!

Buster brought in a baby bird and Jeff took it to the Wildlife Rescue people.

Every morning I get up and think I’m going to edit, and every day I’d rather clean things. I will start soon I promise.

dramatis coworkerae

Bart – the former CEO shaved his head and scared me with it (not what I remember), talked interestingly about poker (he plays top league)
Antonio, the former CFO (also shaved his head and made him look younger how the hell does that work)
Al-Karim, the former CTO ….YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO LOOK THAT GOOD.
Mike
Me
Amanda Looking good!
Katie – didn’t talk to her
Klaus – No change. That smirk never dies.
Venu – So lovely to see him! He was always a sensible and hardworking individual.
Christine Three kids under ten and taking her masters GOOD GOD WOMAN
Dave D – such a happy guy. I’m following his parenting joys and hiccups on fb.
Haakon – lovely talk with him
Silvana – gave me job hunting pointers
Bert – He’s a brutally private person so let’s just say I was *really* happy to see him and I think he’s a goddamned trooper.

AND APPARENTLY A GABRIOLA CAMPING TRIP IS ON THE BOARDS FOR 2017. Or mebbe Tofino? Mike and I spoke to the Dalai Jarmo last Friday. HHHHHmmmmm they are running a B&B.

I guess it tells you something about what kind of place it was to work that literally fifteen years after we last all worked together we wanted to see each other again. At least two of the above noted people look younger and healthier than they did when I last worked with them, which just seems bizarre.

I had a really good time, and some lovely conversations with some great people.

I hope the surgery goes well today. Odds are it will all go slick.

Foggy Dew

Off to the Dew tonight for an old workplace gathering; Mike and I are going.

Today is a laundry and sweeping the garage and dishes and tidying kinda day. I have also been filing, throwing stuff out and I just realized that something I took out to mend is actually too threadbare to be successfully mended so into the bag went it, went it.

I light a candle for those people undergoing surgery – strength to them and wisdom to their surgeons and caregivers.

Covers for the first three books are done. I’m putting together a visual checklist for what has to be done regarding the rest and it’s really a lot.

The salmon of wisdom

Mike fed me and Jeff dinner last night. I branggg salad (with sunflower seeds, cranberries, avocado, olives, green onion, red onion, celery, iceberg lettuce, caulifower, snap peas and strawberries) and we had a lovely time chatting and watching videos and looking out at that freaking dismal weather which dumped more than an inch and half of rain in our neighbourhood yesterday. Bleugh.

Mike cooked mushroom risotto, a beautiful hunk of salmon, and stir fried bok choi. It was all absolutely splendid, and I sneakily doubled the salad so we have a nice fresh salad here, which I think will go very well with tuna.

Laura R. from church has made me covers for the books. I will be only to happy to pay her for the work, I think she did an amazing job.

Today I’m going to finish clearing up the living room and perhaps see if I can work on a sewing project if I’m feeling especially motivated.

walkies

After we went for a walk at the Quay (I sent mOm a pic)

Paul  @ New West Quay May 2016
Paul @ New West Quay May 2016

and Paul fed me a lovely meal at Original’s, we came back to Geekhaus and got my bike tires pumped up and then Paul volunteered to cut the grass, which was just wonderful. I thought well I can’t stand around sighing so I got out the weed whacker and took care of all the lawn bits that the mower can’t reach. Phew.

And my bike is now rideable and I got rid of the fuzzy mold growing at the bottom of one of the panniers (I wiped them both down with vinegar and let them dry in the sun.)

Today’s card is the seven of cups… profusion of choices!

Mike will be dropping by after work.

Rewatching Dark Matter. Marc Bendavid doesn’t annoy me as much this time and I love errybody else.

much fold many laundry

So yesterday I interacted with the church sibling who’s going to be doing the covers for my books (I’ve picked the art, she’ll do the pixel-shifting.) Google did not send a bunch of my attachments. I have an annoy, but not with her, she’s awesome, and prompt, and all that good stuff.

Downstairs bedroom is now ready for guests again. I still have laundry to haul upstairs but it’s all folded. I’ve matched all my socks and pitched the same grim solo socks that keep turning up like Banquo’s ghast.

Did you know Consumer Reports only charges $30 per year? and $6.95 for a month’s access? Jeff if you want to put a sub for that on the household account, please feel free. We are in the market for a breadmaker. After the success with the toaster…

The new Krups toaster is excellent and I’m wondering why we didn’t replace that big white half useless busted failure of industrial design and cleanability earlier. The Krups even has a bun warmer on top and it has a stop button, which is along the lines of “This new science amazes me.” We spent an additional $20 above the base model and I’m liking our choice a lot. Plus it’s SHINY. And takes up less COUNTER SPACE. See how easy it is to make me happy? and it turns out that Consumer Reports (we did it backwards) really likes Krups toasters.

Today I’m going to research engines for space vehicles.

A little late

Apart from feeding Ayesha and ingesting a lovely breakfast with Jeff at Coming Home, oh and there was some laundry in there, I did nothing today. Oh, I did recopy an essay. I’ve never posted it before. I wrote it in November 1998 when I was living in this house the first time.

It’s about Katie. I wrote it during my Artist’s Way course with June Swadron.

Grit

There is no grit like the grit of a pre-teen girl. It is a combination of testing her own power and mute ignorance, of not knowing what she is or is not capable of. When I look at my daughter, who turned ten this past week, I see the way she constantly flings herself at life, how she can be so serious and responsible one moment and so goofy and intemperate the next.

Already her downy skin contains a crone. Sometimes she is very patient and wise. Life has already taught her how to choke back fear and grief in case she upsets adults. There are times when things family members have done will make her cry in bed at night, and she won’t say anything for fear of offending.

We tried hard not to hide the good and bad things about adult life from her. I try to stay one step ahead of that agile brain. It’s hard to judge when you’re doing a good job, but every once in a while Kate will do something that will tell me that I’ve not done badly.

When her brother was home sick and I had to work, she kept him hydrated and gave him a wet washcloth and made sure he got some sleep. She’s amazingly sweet to her frail great grandmothers, and when one forgets who she is, she’ll say things like “I’m one of your descendants”, and then her ancestor will ruefully laugh and keep guessing. Katie has the strong stomach of a healer and the keen eye of a naturalist, always looking for something special and interesting on our walks, a western garter snake or a purple mushroom. She is very observant, when it suits her.

And when she decides she wants something or is going to do something, she’s able to show an unearthly tenacity. She has four different volunteer jobs at school. She monitors the kindergarten class during brief teacher absences, she is a library monitor, she’s a crossing guard and two weeks out of four she helps with the lunch program. The first time she described what it’s like on soup day she had me and Paul in hysterics, but she was as serious as anybody gets, talking about a bad day at work.

She didn’t do her math homework the other night and Mr. Tanner, her teacher, suspended her from serving on the lunch program. From her reaction you’d think WWIII had been declared. It was her intention to march into school the next day and tell him to jam it in his ass. Paul and I whipped around, and she smirked delicately at our expressions. “I won’t say it like that!” she said, “I’ll ask him to reconsider.” And he did, and she was reinstated the next day.
I think of the other times she has shown grit, as when, at the age of eight, she watched her beloved cat be anaesthetized to have her teeth cleaned and two extractions. The vet nearly said no. I told him, “This is not an ordinary eight year old girl,” and that I’d whip her out of there in a heartbeat if she caused him the least bit of trouble. She ended up helping the technician.

She shows her grit all kinds of ways, the way she defends her friends and her own rights, and reminds me, sometimes yelling and sometimes very quietly, when I am overstepping my authority. I hate it, but it’s part of my own growth, letting go in the right places and times. I do sometimes wish to be a domestic tyrant, and right now I am the stand in along with her dad for every authority figure who will ever try to injure her for her own good or dominate her for the sake of being able to. If she cannot defend and articulate her rights to me, how limited she’ll be when the big moments come.
They say in teen girls, the grit dies around 12-13 in the face of grim social pressures to ‘feminize’.
I want Katie to have grit forever, even if I have to get a bit ground up myself in the process.

Still feeling rather… you know. Sessile.

Some thing done

Yesterday, I mended three pairs of pants on the sewing machine, thank god, but see below.

Fended off a potential thief who walked up to our house and TRIED THE DOORKNOB without knocking or ringing the bell and then he walked away pretending not to speak English. Drove a truck, didn’t see a helper. On the off chance he was a legitimate housepainter who got shitty instructions I didn’t call the cops.

Made a ‘bead curtain’ out of huge wide multicoloured (purple and green) ribbons $2.75 from the Value Village that isn’t there any more. And man of all the things that have disappeared in the last while, that’s the thing that hurts the most. Plus something like 2 bucks for dowel I had lying around, and it wouldn’t have taken me so FUCKING LONG if I’d had the tension set correctly from the get go (I redid all the threading from beginning to end but the instructions for the critter are pretty bad) and believe me it would have taken longer if I hadn’t gotten it mostly where it needed to be previously and put it away before I killed someone.

Asked and got Jeff to make a mount for it so now we can leave the back door open without attracting the hordes of flying insects. Yay. I couldn’t handle spending any money on an insect curtain when I knew I had the stuff lying around, also I think I told Jeff I’d make it like eight months ago at least. And the day to do it is a nice cool one like this so it’s actually ready when the sun comes out again, which it will with intent quite soon.

Transferred the rest of the cat food into the bin. Loaded the dishwasher. Made coffee. Took my vitamin D and probiotic. Flossed my teeth. Put on deodorant. Brushed my hair.

LEFT THE HOUSE. Went to London Drugs and bought a toaster the same day our old one died and man does the new one smell plasticky, hoo-ee!

also personal care items for us both plus parsnip chips, we’d never seen them before and we like the brand, so screw it, and carrot chips too.

Had a nice chicken burger for lunch. Put away all the garbage and bags from the shopping tirp. Watched telly. Had one beer and will likely have another with supper, which will likely (again) be rigatoni bolognese which will likely (again) blow through my colon without touching the walls, so once again I pray with atheistic fervour (“sod Kegels, I want a miracle!”) for the strength of my pelvic floor.