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    December 05

    I am now published

    In the Medicine Hat News ; November 19, 2008 National Day of Remebrance for Road Crash Victims.
     
    On November 5th, my husband's parents needed to get from Kimberley BC to Cranbrook and as they are elderly, choosing not to drive any longer for the sake of safety, they took a taxi.  They shared the costs with a third gentleman who made regular trips for dialysis.
     
    A truck driver through distraction or poor choice, failed to stop at a the stop sign as he crossed Highway 95.
     
    Roy has a cracked pelvis in 2 places, and a cracked hip. He is being moved from ICU today. Medications he needed for pain relief adversely affected a pre-existing condition. He is in great pain.
     
    The other gentleman, Colin, has been moved to Trail BC to care for the need for dialysis and repair his leg broken in three places.
     
    The driver of the taxi, has nothing broken but cannot work as yet due to other soft tissue injuries.
     
    Pam was flown to the Foothills ICU with injuries of 3 cracked cervical vertebra, a broken sternum and multiple broken ribs both sides and a partially collapsed lung. There is also a gash to the liver. These are life threatening injuries and fog delayed her transfer to Calgary. She has had to make a difficult decision. She had to give the doctors permission to perform all life saving measures except CPR.
     
    I am no longer angry at the driver as I have come to some acceptance of this situation. Here is what continues to make me angry as I drive in our own 'nice' city:
     
    I am angry at people who don't have time to stop at a stop sign. If you have to drive on Ross Glen Drive make sure you are ready to avoid drivers coming at you from Rice Ave and Robinson.

    I am angry at people who feel that out-of-towners cause our problem. These shoppers and visitors are guests here. Give them some time and space to safely arrive at their destination. Wouldn't you appreciate that in an unfamiliar area? You wouldn't have access to all the shops here if there wasn't the extended marketplace.

    I am angry at driver's who cannot behave in a construction zone, yet complain about the condition of the roads.

    I am angry at driver's who don't look both ways at intersections...some people still walk.

    I am angry at people who don't signal or shoulder check. How egotistical and rude not to let others know your intentions and cutting people off..
     
    I am angry at people who tailgate trying to intimidate you to go faster. Push, push, push.   I have learned to go even slower so that when the accident occurs, it will be at a lower speed, causing less harm to me and my family.
     
    I am angry at those who speed. Your late. It feels good to hear the motor pull.  It feels like you're doing something. You get angry at all the 'slow' people doing the speed limit blocking your personal path. Really? You can create time with speed?  You need to do some math here because all you make is momentum and a bigger accident.
     
    I am angry at those who rely on drugs and alcohol to get through life and then get in a vehicle. Plan how you are going to get home before you even go out. If you take your own car, you are going to want to bring it home. So don't do that. Take a cab or have a designated driver. If you kill or maim yourself that's your own concern and might even work out better for the rest of us.. But you drunken buggers, get on the road and you don't care who you kill or harm. It is the leading criminal cause of death in Canada. Proud of yourself?
     
    I am angry at those who think they are 'kind' and let medicated or elderly drivers keep their license.
     
    I am angry at parents who are tired of driving their teens around, buy them a car but don't include the lessons.
     
    I am angry that people do not budget for winter tires and maintenance but feel entitled to use their vehicle anyway.
     
    I am angry at people driving aggressive vehicles aggressively unaware that they come to a stop they same way others do.  You need reaction time. You need braking time.and you slide on ice.
     
    I am angry at people who intend to drive distracted with make-up, hair, cell phones, reading material, CD changes and food to go. 
     
    I am angry that people are so sorry when they have caused an accident. How come they couldn't think of that before?
     
    I am angry at the people who cause so much damage to individuals and property yet complain about the wait in emergency and the costs of insurance.
     
    I am angry that charges against a dangerous driver causing this much pain and damage are ridiculously inadequate and act as no deterrent to others. The RCMP on the scene wanted criminal charges laid and they got a Traffic Infraction.
     
    I am angry in a small city of 60 000 we have 60 to 100 accidents a week and yet I am told this is a nice place to live.
     
    I am angry at idiots on the road. Keep your vehicle safely away from other vehicles. Why is that so hard? You'll drive properly after an accident.Won't you? and you'll be so sorry.
     
     
    December 05, 2008
     
    Have a very Merry Christmas...and make sure your driving doesn't cause this much damage and pain.
     
    An update: Roy was able to walk around his hospital bed just the other day. Pam has the Traheotomy tube out
     but still not allowed a cup of tea until she has healed a little more. The accident was exactly 1 month ago today.
     
    September 04

    My Daughter's Poetry

     
     
     
     
    All Grown Up
     
    by Calli Hart Walton
     
     
    Flourescent lights, Dull and blinding
    Fall upon desks and chairs
    The smell of chalkdust
    And a freshly sharpened pencil
    Scratching out equations.
     
    I lift my head and gaze
    Past the window
    And let my mind escape
    To play in golden leaves
    And roll down grassy hills
    As I once did When I was young
    Skinned knees and blisters
    From falling on the playground
     
    The bell chimes
    Its mocking, sing-song melody
    Snapping my mind into place
    Trigonometry
    Broken hearts
    Drugs and cigarettes
    And to think...
    I wanted to be a 'big kid'
    August 26

    Been too long

    I almost forgot my password over here but a friend invited me to be a friend and so...
     
    My mother died on June 20, 2008 from Cancer. Gratefully, it was a short illness and she died peacefully. There was so much beauty and so many signs that all was fine but now the signs have stopped and it is time for her, and I, to move on. She is with Dad now...she had been waiting for this time to be with her love again.
     
    Friends and family have been visiting more. It makes me feel important and loved and part of something bigger.
     
    There is an estate. Not life changing but more secure. Even in death, my Mother, still caring for us.
     
    I will miss her so very much.
     
    My role now is to ensure that the memory and values and traditions of my parents are passed on.
     
     
    May 19

    Never give up Wine

    Never Give up Wine!!

     


    I was walking down the street when I was accosted by a particularly
     
    dirty and shabby-looking homeless woman who asked me for a
     
    couple of dollars for dinner.  
    I took out my wallet,  got out ten dollars and asked, "If I give you this  
    money,  will you buy wine with it instead of dinner?"
     
    "No,  I had to stop drinking years ago", the homeless woman told  me.
    "Will  you use it to go shopping instead of buying food?" I  asked.

    "No,  I don't waste time shopping," the homeless woman said.    
    "I  need to spend all my time trying to stay alive."
     
    "Will  you spend this on a beauty salon instead of food?" I  asked.

    "Are  you NUTS !" replied the homeless woman.  " I
     
    haven't  had my hair done in 20 years!"

    "Well,"  I said, "I'm not going to give you the money.    
    Instead,  I'm going to take you out for dinner with my
       
    husband  and me tonight."

     The  homeless Woman was shocked. "Won't your husband
     
     be  furious with you for doing that? I know I'm dirty,
     
    and  I probably smell pretty disgusting."

    I  said, "That's okay. It's important for him to see what a  woman
    looks  like after she has given up shopping, hair appointments, and  wine."

    March 05

    Catherine won!

    Well, how exciting is this! Catherine's Paper towel project took First Place for Individual Project Physical Sciences and then she took first Place Overall for Physical Sciences. She has now received a Letter of Intent to attend the CWSF (national) Science Fair In Ottawa!! We are filling that out this evening. There were 10 letters handed out but only 4 or 5 kids will go. We are so excited it is stupid.  Also: She was invited to display her project at GreenWeek here at the College beginning March 17. (Pictures to be uploaded when techie husband arrives home)
     
    I was amazed overall at the choices the kids made to study and test from hovercrafts, and conterfeit money, environmental concerns, and how to wash fruit and veggies properly. One fellow received accolades for a project based on Phantom Draw. the amount of electricity an item uses if it is plugged in but not in use. He took his own home and calculated $75/year and then multiplied that by the number of houses in Medicine Hat, then Alberta and then Canada. These kids at our school are 13 and 14 years old. At the Regionals there was a younger division Grades 4-6 and an older division as well. The Best overall was a little robotic puppy made from recycled parts.  The winner, Kate, lives in our cul de sac. When they interviewed her for the paper she said, " I just like going out to the garage with my Dad, and seeing  how things work."
     
    On not such a lite note, my Mom is 81 and has been persuaded that it is time to move into assisted living. She is so distraught they had to take herto the hospital because she couldn't breathe. Way too much stress. Everyone I talk to says this is what they went through with their parents and in a month they were wondering why they hadn't moved before. Mom, has a hard time seeing things in a positive light she suffers from depression and it is hard for her to remember to think about the good stuff. We shall see.
     
    To top off this great stress of the move , she was diagnosed with Breast Cancer. What bothers me is that the lump found is quite large and also is already under her arm, Where was her damn doctor then? This needed some time to grow or did Mom just decide not to go for her Mammograms? I had mine February 29 as part of an annual check-up. Don't forget those monthly self-exams. Early detection is the answer so don't be afraid. Better to have a small lump checked out than to go through a complete masectomy  or face death. Take good care. 
    February 24

    God lives Under your Bed

    I think this is  perhaps one of the BEST email 'forwards' I have ever read. I hope you will  enjoy it half as much as I have!!

    Don't start reading this one until  you've got more than 3 or 4 minutes to just 'scan' over it. It  deserves some time for reflection.

     



    GOD LIVES UNDER THE BED  


    I envy Kevin. My brother Kevin  thinks God lives under his bed. At least that's what I heard him say one  night.

     

    He was praying out loud in his  dark bedroom, and I stopped to listen, 'Are you there, God?' he said.  'Where are you? Oh, I see. Under the bed...

     

    I giggled softly and tiptoed off  to my own room. Kevin's unique perspectives are often a source of  amusement. But that night s omething else lingered long after the humor. I  realized for the first time the very different world Kevin lives  in. 

     

    He was born 30 years ago, mentally  disabled as a result of difficulties during labor. Apart from his size  (he's 6-foot-2), there are few ways in which he is an adult.  

     

    He reasons and communicates with  the capabilities of a 7-year-old, and he always will. He will probably  always believe that God lives under his bed, that Santa Claus is the one  who fills the space under our tree every Christmas and that airplanes stay  up in the sky because angels c arry them.

     

    I remember wondering if Kevin  realizes he is different. Is he ever dissatisfied with his monotonous  life?

     

    Up before dawn each day, off to  work at a workshop for the disabled, home to walk our cocker spaniel,  return to eat his favorite macaroni-and-cheese for dinner, and later to  bed.

     

    The only variation in the entire  scheme is laundry, when he hovers excitedly over the washing machine like a mother with her newborn child.

     

    He does not seem dissatisfied.  

     

    He lopes out to the bus every  morning at 7:05, eager for a day of simple work. 

     

    He wrings his hands excitedly  while the water boils on the stove before dinner, and he stays up late  twice a week to gather our dirty laundry for his next day's laundry  chores.

     

    And Saturdays-oh, the bliss of  Saturdays! That's the day my Dad takes Kevin to the airport to have a soft  drink, watch the planes land, and speculate loudly on the destination of  each passenger inside. 'That one's goin' to Chi-car-go!' Kevin shouts as  he claps his hands.

     

    His anticipation is so great he  can hardly sleep on Friday nights.

     

    And so goes his world of daily  rituals and weekend field trips.

     

    He doesn't know what it means to  be discontent.

     

    His life is simple.  

     

    He will never know the  entanglements of wealth of power, and he does not care what brand of  clothing he wears or what kind of food he eats. His needs have always been  met, and he never worries that one day they may not be.

     

    His hands are di ligent. Kevin is  never so happy as when he is working. When he unloads the dishwasher or  vacuums the carpet, his heart is completely in it.

     

    He does not shrink from a job when  it is begun, and he does not leave a job until it is finished. But when  his tasks are done, Kevin knows how to relax.

     

    He is not obsessed with his work  or the work of others. His heart is pure.

     

    He still believes everyone tells  the truth, promises must be kept, and when you are wrong, you apologize  instead of argue.

     

    Free from pride and unconcerned  with appearances, Kevin is not afraid to cry when he is hurt, angry or  sorry. He is always transparent, always sincere. And he trusts God.  

     

    Not confined by intellectual  reasoning when he comes to Christ, he comes as a child. Kevin seems to  know God - to really be friends with Him in a way that is difficult for an  'educated' person to grasp. God seems like his closest companion.  

     

    In my moments of doubt and  frustrations with my Christianity I envy the security Kevin has in his  simple faith.

     
    It is then that I am most willing  to admit that he has some divine knowledge that rises above my mortal  questions 

     
    It is then I realize that perhaps  he is not the one with the handicap I am. My obligations, my fear, my  pride, my circumstances - they all become disabilities when I do not trust  them to God's care

     

    Who knows if Kevin comprehends  things I can never learn? After all, he has spent his whole life in that  kind of innocence, praying after dark and soaking up t he goodness and love  of God.

     

    And one day, when the mysteries of  heaven are opened, and we are all amazed at how close God really is to our  hearts, I'll realize that God heard the simple prayers of a boy who  believed that God lived under his bed.

     

    Kevin won't be surprised at all!  

     

    When you receive this, say a  prayer. That's all you have to do.. There is nothing attached. This is  powerful. 

      

    Prayer is one of the best free gifts we  receive. There is no cost, but a lot of rewards.

     

    FRIENDS ARE ANGELS WHO LIFT US TO  OUR FEET WHEN OUR WINGS HAVE TROUBLE REMEMBERING HOW TO  FLY  

    February 16

    Catty is a winner!

    Catty won her division Physical Science for the Science Fair!!! She will go to the regionals in March here
    at the college. Also attending will be her Best Friend Jayden who lives in our Cul de sac (House #12) 
    worked with paint, glue & oil got a third,"The Boy" Jamie got a third adding alcohol to plants which they
    liked for a while, so dumping your drink into a plant at a party is okay as long everyone else isn't doing
    it, and a friend in the Cul de sac (House #8) got a first and is on the front page of our news with a big
    5 X 7 photo and write up. She made a recycled puppy out of parts of older things that were going into
    the garbage anyway...Christmas lights light up the eyes ..etc. (MedicinehatNews.ca) I think.

    Catty's project; Battle of the Brands was a product comparison of Paper towels. She (we) tested 30
    different brands. It got a little tedious so we all helped. Anyway, we learned that:

     -Paper towels are an environmental nightmare but a bit of a necessity. They stop the spread of viruses
     and  they take a lot of fats out of our cooking but...we believe they are a product that has been
    Greenwashed, meaning they try to make them look environmentally friendly (recycled material, no
    chlorine, less water used to manufacture etc...but they are usually used for messy jobs and then end
    up in the landfills...

     -New material has longer fibers than recycled material so that stronger and more absorbent usually
     means virgin material is used...Sponge Towels are okay as they use managed forests so as not to cut
     down virgin tracks. Their Select-a-Size is all new material from their own forests,  their regular size
     towel is a 60% recycled/40% new material. Then they have White Swan (Viva) which is recycled. The
     best towel then becomes the best towel for the job So that you are not using too much paper towel for
     a small job or having to use  sheets and sheets of a weaker brand to do the same job as a stronger
     towel. So consumers need to look at their own usage and re-think the purchases they make. Are you
     polishing windows or picking up a hairball? (Don't use paper towels to polish your  glasses - it takes off
     the coatings)

    - Also the best paper towel is a personal choice based on a consumer's values...inexpensive, kosher,
     recycled, environmentally responsible (I didn't know there were Kosher paper towels either KSR
     logo on the label)
     
    - Buy large rolls: a single roll (45 sheets) and core is 9.25 cm across add another 35 sheets and
     increase roll size by only .75 cm...this reduces using another core, reduces the plastic needed to
     wrap the package and also reduces the costs of transportation and the emissions...925 double
     rolls is 1850 rolls is about the same space  as 1000 single rolls..then there are super, mega and
     jumbo rolls.

    - When Catty e-mailed companies she suggested they reduce the core size to  2.5 cm from 4 cm
    changing the industry standard and increasing the benefits that come from the smaller roll size
     same as from the mega rolls (less material in the core, in ther wrapping and less effects of shipping)
    OMG...they are looking into it! There is a big thing now about Carbon Credits and such and we are
     aware  of Government grants and Tax breaks for some of the capital expenses that this would
    require to re-tool some of the machines but not too sure how they work. More study to be done.

     - The top 5 brands were store brands and then Sponge Towels were the first National Brand tying
     for 5th place  (Bounty was 8th)

    -  If you must use Paper towels then the one we ultimately loved for general use was London Drugs
     Super absorbent Jumbo Premium Recycled ranking 14/30 (2/30 lowest price) and tied with that was
    Cascades Brown 14/30 is was stronger than their white one which were more expensive but were also
     more environmentally gentle.

     - The best picker upper really is a rag...Cut up your old T-shirts and worn out towels into nice squares
    and set them by the sink..If they have to go in the garbage then that's where they were headed anyway
    but you got one more use...if they can be rinsed out and thrown in with a load of laundry and re-used
    well...even better! Being Green is actually very economical.

     And that's that..
     Lots o' love
     Bonnie

    February 10

    Love & Counterfeits for Valentine's Day

    This is a rather intellectual but hillarious article on Valentine's Day, love and relationships...there were a few references I needed to look up on the internet but definetly worth the read. I have read it many times since 2006 and find a new reference or deeper meaning every time I read it. So if you are one of those people who hate Valentine's Day, feel the day was designed only for couples and greeting card companies and retailers, if you know of someone who feels this way...or if you just like a good laugh...Happy Valentine's Day from your friend Bonnie
     
     
    Common Ground home Citizens For Public Power
    
     
           
         

     

     
    Love and its counterfeits

    by Geoff Olson



    T.S. Eliot had it wrong. The cruellest month isn't April, but two months earlier, when advertisers and the media go off on a Valentine's Day bender.
    The overkill is okay for couples renewing their commitment to the greeting card industry, but it's not so great for the sorry ranks of the unattached, who get to slum around with the scarlet letter of singlehood. Most of us want to believe that romantic love works, assuming we haven't yet aged into a fine whine of bitterness. There are plenty of good reasons to believe in love, if only to keep the species going. Without the ideal of eros, our great works of art, music and literature would probably be whittled down to gangsta rap, Tom Clancy novels and installation art.
    Not that relationships were ever easy. Love's theme park tests both the brave and the foolhardy. You and a companion prepare for a ride through the tunnel of love, and suddenly you're in the dark, arguing about where you're going. Next thing you're pulling Gs on the counselling tilt-o-whirl, or losing it on the in-law scream machine. But fate willing, there will be enough good times to make the stress worthwhile. That's assuming you have a steady companion. The most common complaint I hear among Vancouverites, besides the weather, is the difficulty of meeting the right person.
    Perhaps our world-class city, with its big population of singles, has become too classy, too inward, for its own good. In response, some local media has taken to spinning solo as celebratory. Last February, one newsweekly ran a lead Valentine article on the slippery joys of self-love. A year earlier, a local entertainment weekly provided some sybaritic advice for the solitary, offering restaurant choices for a romantic dinner alone. You know the times they are a-changin' when the expression "go screw yourself" has transformed from a personal insult to a marketing opportunity.
    From the anecdotal evidence of the media and the talk of friends, we may suspect that relationships are becoming more problematic as our lives become more complex. Many of us have friends who have given up the search completely. They find pyrrhic victory in singlehood; their banner is a calendar full of free weekends and their throne a pre-warmed seat in a coffee shop. In today's fast-paced urban environment, singlehood has become Shakespearean. Romeo sits morosely in a Starbucks sipping coffee while fitness-freak Juliet jogs past the window with her iPod. He catches a glimpse of her and returns to his paper. She catches a bus and heads home to dress up for a romantic dinner by herself. The two will never meet in this near-myth, because he's on LavaLife and she's not.
    At this time of year, the media focuses on finding love, as opposed to the less interesting, but more pressing, question of keeping it. The usual themes are sexual chemistry, astrological compatibility and pop-psychology's Mars/Venus gender differences. But something else deeper is going on with the difficulty moderns have in connecting and staying connected, reflected in the relative absence of any credible, heartfelt love songs in recent popular music. (Easy-listening schmaltz doesn't cut it.)
    When the latest research findings about female ejaculation, or a newly discovered erogenous zone, are trumpeted in the press like the unearthing of a Mayan temple, we can't claim to live in sexually repressed times. We can, however, state with some assurance that we live in a culture that is growing more and more messed up about love and straightforward connection. Love, romantic or otherwise, is defined, and experienced, as a deep sense of connection to another being. But the temper of the times is in the opposite direction. This involves more than just a disconnect between couples.
    In his book Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community (Simon & Schuster, 2000), Harvard professor Robert D. Putnam examined social statistics from the past century in the US and found a surprising decline in the number of civic organizations, guilds, sports leagues, neighbourhood clubs and volunteer groups. Americans, among the most gregarious people on earth, have retreated in huge numbers from service to the community to tending the self. This trend has been accompanied by several decades worth of ego-massaging messages from conservative foundations, think tanks, public relations firms, and advertising companies, with the self-esteem industry and personal growth movement joining the chorus.
    The messages -- just do it, be all you can be, find yourself and look out for number one -- all dovetail into something that may seem relatively benign at first glance. Yet the notion that you owe it to yourself to be happy easily shades into a much more toxic message: that you owe nothing to anyone but yourself. That kind of attitude would be absurd enough among so-called primitive people, let alone people living in the most advanced part of the world. Yet the message is becoming normative, and social programmers are turning up the gain on the signal. As the disparities grow between rich and poor, we are led to believe that a rain-soaked person in the street with an outstretched hand is not a thou, but an it, a civic stain on par with sidewalk litter or potholes in the street. This isn't a climate conducive to connection, in any sense.
    The Bowling Alone trend has multiple causes, but the economic factor is paramount. We are working longer and harder for less, often taking jobs hundreds of miles away from family. We find we have less time and energy to cultivate new connections with others, and when we do, they are often mediated by electronic commerce, just like our work lives. When the pressures of day-to-day life have some wage slaves fearing they themselves might plunge through the social safety net and land flat on the streets, the reflexive response is defensive and inward. In this Darwinian cultural climate, love becomes more of a commodity than a living reality, skeletonized into the recipes of self-help books, sentimentalized in Hollywood schlock and counterfeited by the quick fix of porn.
    In a survey cited by the New York Times, Americans rated Boston and New York as the loneliest cities in the US to live in. In another poll, New Yorkers put "having lots of friends" near the bottom of the list of desired personal traits. "Taking responsibility for your actions" was number one. For denizens of the Big Apple, pride in stand-alone autonomy far outweighs connection with non-family members -- in other words, community. It's impossible for this kind of urban attitude not to affect the possibilities for romantic love, if only because the old ways, including introduction through friends, have become more a thing of the past.
    Urbanites rush around in all directions, meeting schedules, making brief contact and parting ways. That's less tragedy than trajectory, but it's harder to create lasting chemical bonds in this hot, high-pressure environment. For people living in subsistence societies, relaxed face-to-face contact is not a luxury, but a necessity. With urban life's dense overlay of restrictions and regulations, along with electronic communications and professional Balkanization, we no longer depend on the verbal "pay me back next time" agreement. Mutuality and reciprocity, the glue for both friendship and the barter system, are not essential to a post-industrial economy. Long-term connections increasingly seem a relic from an age of small towns and staying put.
    Of course, there have been plenty of gains for personal autonomy in this exchange, making for important, progressive change. We've traded the arranged marriage for the coffee date with a stranger (among my married friends, I can number two couples who met online). Yet the meaning of "to connect" now has connotations that are less social than techno, referring to the hum of a fax machine, a visit from the cable guy or a line up your serial port.
    Some years back, I read a travel account in a local paper that stuck with me. A woman travelling through Iran discovered a society of tightly drawn restrictions and observances, yet below the clerically demarcated lines of a theocratic society, she discovered neighbourhoods where deep friendships lasted through time. She described the warm welcome she received, with a level of hospitality she had never experienced back home. In contrast, mid-'90s Vancouver had the infrastructure the poorer parts of Iran lacked -- phone lines, faxes, Internet access, cable TV -- all this, she noted, in a city where you can still "die from loneliness." That may sound a bit extreme, but anyone who spent some time travelling will understand her point. I can't endorse Iran's current governance, which has revealed its lethal side to at least one female journalist from the West. But I have doubts about any plan to liberate Persians from their oil (sorry, I meant oppressors) and bless them with free market capitalism, which, for many, means the freedom to sleep under bridges. The great virtues of modern life connect, like a Mobius strip, to its tremendous vices, not the least of which is the dependency of the First World on the natural resources and labour of the Third World.
    The irony is that compared to most places in the world, we live in great comfort and plenty. No one can deny that, in relative terms, we're blessed with an abundance of opportunities. With our baseline needs met, we have the opportunity to obsess all we want about any loving we feel we're missing out on. When we do find a relationship, it's common to expect the other party to be therapist, sexual partner, mother/father and friend. No culture other than our own would be mad enough to expect one person to fulfill all of these roles. But such an attitude is almost a given in a time of diminished community, with proper mentors and extended families a thing of the past. The absence has created a social vacuum, which the media infosphere now occupies. We swim in a sea of information, exposed to thousands of messages a day. These memes are precisely tailored by clever professionals to get under our skin and work into our psyches like spirochetes. Advertising, television, film and the mainstreaming of pornography present us with impossible standards for beauty, style and wealth, which younger people unconsciously use as templates for potential partners.
    Market psychology relies, and has always relied, on dissatisfaction -- with ones body, hair, features, education and personality -- to move products and services. The surface becomes the real, the form the essence. An alienated self, manipulated by the market into subliminal self-loathing, is in a tricky position when it comes to love.
    When relationships are commodified like every other service and product, people are coached into incompleteness. "When we're incomplete, we're always searching for somebody to complete us," writes author Tom Robbins. "When, after a few years, or a few months, of a relationship, we find that we're still unfulfilled, we blame our partners and take up with somebody more promising. This can go on and on -- series polygamy -- until we admit that while a partner can add sweet dimensions to our lives, we, each of us, are responsible for our own fulfillment. Nobody else can provide it for us, and to believe otherwise is to delude ourselves dangerously and to program for eventual failure every relationship we enter."
    The word "person" is drawn from persona, an ancient Greek word for mask, in the theatrical sense. The root meaning of the word betrays the illusory, playful nature of our surface personalities. In Greek tragedies and comedies, the masks had carved openings through which actors spoke. Who, or what, speaks through us? Do we read from the script supplied to us by the interests of disconnection, or do we actively listen to what's going on within and without?
    A culture that thrives on weapons of mass delusion, whether they're the seductive lies of cosmetic alteration, brand identity or national security, is heading for sci-fi hybridization: one part Brave New World, two parts 1984. Love cannot flourish where lies, whether economic or spiritual, reign supreme. Addicted to fossil fuels and the two-car garage, with lifestyles financed by unsustainable personal debt, our society stumbles along a path every bit as false, and dangerous, as the one taken by a junkie on East Hastings. Westerners live massively out of equilibrium with the environment, treating the planet as a combination of crack house and garbage dump. And we can't even get a cheap thrill from the ride. Too many of us travel to jobs we don't like in vehicles we can't afford to buy stuff we don't really need, while the resources required to fuel this mad whirl dry up. Why would we expect relationships in this cultural and ecological milieu to be any better than in the past? Why wouldn't we expect some scary stirrings in the collective unconscious, some indications that the ground of being is shifting under this psychic weight? At the very least, why wouldn't we expect more stressful lives as a result of our hypervigilant, pharmaceutically tweaked, megahertz mentalities, with love morphing into the deformed forms of neurotic possessiveness and sexual perversion?
    In our part of the world, over half of all marriages end in divorce within 10 years. Recently, I flipped through my mother's high school yearbook from 1947. The graduating students' pompadours and beehive hairdos had a certain retro charm about them. The kids look like adults in miniature, with the role they have rehearsed for all their lives, adulthood, now within their grasp. My mother and father married a half-century ago. They, and friends they knew at the time, have lasted as couples to this day, mostly happily, with the exception of one couple. When times got tough, my parents didn't bail out. But then again, they met in a time before the online upgrade, the instant rebate and the "no questions asked" return policy. Few people then thought in terms of the first-quarter business cycle. They lived more by the phases of the moon than the cycles of the motherboard.
    Of course, plenty of couples in the past suffered under years of mutual loathing, chained in unholy acrimony out of social or religious pressure. Few mourn the passing of the postwar era, with its repressive innocence and narrow worldview. That being said, I can appreciate that there is such a thing as trade-offs. For all the advances of the past 40 years with gender issues and multicultural understanding, we have probably given away a few precious things in the bargain, not the least of which is our time.
    Serendipity and lazy afternoons are like sunlight to romantic connection. Family and community are its soil. It's subterranean spring, its aquifer, is a tacit sense of the soul's reality. In a world growing more fractured under data-mining, personal surveillance, corporate drug-pushing and a war on terror that the current US vice president says "will not end in our lifetime," love of any kind has its work cut out for it.
    Shortly after I met my angelic partner, she passed on to me a quote from author Michael Crichton, on separating love from its counterfeits. "There ARE ways to know real love. It feels calm. It's steady, and it can easily last a lifetime. It's nourishing. People grow under its influence, they become who they really are, not what someone expects them to be. Real love isn't blind; on the contrary, people feel understood and accepted for whom they really are. It's healing."
    In other words, true love connects us to "the real thing." Not a soft drink, but the ultimate Act or Actor behind all masks. And on that note, I wish you all victory on V-day.

    Geoff Olson is a Vancouver writer and political cartoonist, and he dedicates this article to Erin. Geoff can be reached at mwiseguise.com

     

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    January 20

    A Good Point

    Message from a hard-working Canadian:

    I work in the oil  fields.  They pay me.  I pay my taxes and the government distributes my taxes as it
    sees fit.  In order to earn that pay cheque, as I work on a rig site on a Fort Mac construction project.

    I am required to pass a random urine test, with which I have no problem.   What I do have a problem
    with is the distribution of my taxes to people who don't have to pass a urine test. Shouldn't one have to
    pass a urine test to get a welfare cheque because I  have to pass one to earn it for them...??

    Please understand.  I have no problem with helping people get back on their feet.  I do, on the other
    hand, have a problem with helping  someone sit on their arse drinking beer and smoking dope.  Could
    you imagine how much money the provinces would save if people had to pass a urine test to get a
    public assistance cheque...?
     
    Please pass this along if you agree or simply delete if you don't. Hope you all will pass it
     along though, because something has to change in this country.... soon...!
    January 19

    Tickle Me Elmo

    So it's been a while again...but nice to be back.   I had a look at Facebook but there is no room to blog but a good way to store photos and play games if you want to down load lots of other programs ..I am content in my Garden...
     
    Haven't had a good one for  while...enjoy
    Tickle Me Elmo:


    There is a factory in Northern Minnesota which makes
    the Tickle Me Elmo toys. The toy laughs when you tickle
    it under the arms.


    Well, Lena is hired at The Tickle Me Elmo factory and
    she reports for her first day promptly at
    8:00 AM.

    The next day at 8:45 AM there is a knock at the
    Personnel Manager's door. The Foreman throws
    open the door and begins to rant about the new
    employee.


    He complains that she is incredibly slow and the whole
    line is backing up, putting the entire production line
    behind schedule.


    The Personnel Manager decides he should see this for
    himself, so the 2 men march down to the factory floor.
    When they get there the line is so backed up that there
    are Tickle Me Elmo's all over the factory floor and they're
    really beginning to pile up.


    At the end of the line stands Lena surrounded by mountains
    of Tickle Me Elmo's. She has a roll of plush
    red fabric and a huge bag of small marbles.


    The 2 men watch in amazement as she cuts a little piece
    of fabric, wraps it around two marbles and begins to
    carefully sew the little package between Elmo's legs.


    The Personnel Manager bursts into laughter.
    After several minutes of hysterics he pulls himself
    together and approaches 
    Lena.

    'I'm sorry,' he says to her, barely able to keep a straight face,
    'but I think you misunderstood the instructions I gave you
    yesterday...'


    'Your job is to give Elmo two test tickles.
     
    October 29

    An Update

    So what started this blog is an e-mail from a friend....It was about women over 40 by Andy Rooney. My response was initially just an observation but then it turned into my usually long dissertation on life the universe and everything.  I will put Andy Rooney's quote in first because it is a good one:
     
      In case you missed it on 60 Minutes, this is what Andy Rooney thinks about women over 40:
     

      As I grow in age, I value women over 40 most of all. Here are just a few reasons why:

    A woman over 40 will never wake you in the middle of the night and ask, "What are you thinking?" She doesn't care what you think. If a woman over 40 doesn't want to watch the game , she doesn't sit around whining about it. She does something she wants to do, and it's usually more interesting. Women over 40 are dignified. They seldom have a screaming match with you at the opera or in the middle of an expensive restaurant. Of course, if you deserve it, they won't hesitate to shoot you if they think they can get away with it. Older women are generous with praise, often undeserved. They know what it's like to be unappreciated. Women get psychic as they age. You never have to confess your sins to a woman over 40. Once you get past a wrinkle or two, a woman over 40 is far sexier than her younger counterpart. Older women are forthright and honest. They'll tell you right off if you are a jerk if you are acting like one. You don't ever have to wonder where you stand with her . Yes, we praise women over 40 for a multitude of reasons. Unfortunately, it's not reciprocal For every stunning, smart, well-coiffed, hot woman over 40, there is a bald, paunchy relic in yellow pants making a fool of himself with some 22-year old waitress. Ladies, I apologize. For all those men who say, "Why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free?", here's an update for you. Nowadays 80% of women are against marriage. Why? Because women realize it's not worth buying an entire pig just to get a little sausage!

    60 Minutes Correspondent And y Rooney (CBS )

    Andy Rooney is a really smart guy!  

     
    This was a good one!  I usually remove all of the addresses when I forward these along and, in the process, notice just how many come from somebody's place of work.  I am the day manager at Quiznos now - I don't really want the stress but I got it...anyway as I have found anywhere I have worked is that there are some people who just don't pull their weight and it destroys morale - the workers v.s. the slackers.  There is one gal over 40 who is lovely but it just bugs her to watch these other two giggling, eating and taking a bizarre number of breaks.  The more I try to get them to contribute, the more they sabotage.  One gal is pregnant so we don't mind giving her some latitude and she won't be there long but her buddy, a 18 year old lad, what a pain! He doesn't seem to understand that when Laura goes he will have to work with the rest of us and he needs to figure out how that is going to work.
     
    Calli is away from home again. There is a group here called McMann Family Services and they have a home she can stay at for 10 days and sometimes they are willing to accept a little longer and then there is the youth shelter.  It seems now, when there is a blow up, she calls the police or Children's Services soooo....I am just drawing a line - she can't live at home. I am sad but I also need to keep the family safe and she has about 6 months left to go before she is 18 so I am not going to have her destroy our home and family and then move on leaving a disaster in her wake. Calli is destructive - everything - relationships, herself, a good job, putting dishes away or doing laundry she just leaves a path of destruction.  We are currently hoping her cell phone will work again after she washed it.  She phoned in one hour before a shift at work to cancel so Val took away her next two shifts as well - Calli just doesn't seem to be able to connect the dots- Val connected them for her..  Hopefully she will learn before long but as she finds in me a person to challenge instead of being her teacher/mentor;  I am not the person who can get her to learn or to behave. and then I get the same crap at work from the two gigglers.  My nerves are a little shot!!
     
    Catty as always is lovely.  She continues to be easy to get along with, she does her homework, and she keeps a good group of friends.  She is maturing well. She is a teenager though so 1. Boys are not so icky as she once thought they were and 2. She is leaving a bit of a mess behind her:  towels, make-up etc. 3. Getting up in the morning  has become more difficult but she does it. The difference is:  I told her to lay out her clothes for school the night before to save morning time and she never fails. I asked her, when she gets home, to bring her lunch kit to the kitchen and clean it out and she has done that everyday since. I asked her if she knew we loved her, she said most of the time but she does feel that she is being raised in Calli's Shadow.  An also-ran.  God, how I remember that feeling.Sad
     
    With Calli I am still telling her to wash her hands, go to bed, get up, put your shoes away, hang up your coat, take your vitamins, don't touch other people's stuff, eat something healthy ....every day she needs to be told again.  We had her to the Addictions Center in Calgary on Tuesday last week and the doctor there feels the diagnosis of ADHD is perhaps not accurate as there is definitely something else going on probably from the drug use, but I know Calli's behaviour has been like this since she was about 4.  I think it is based in lack of sleep and perhaps a lack of  trace minerals, and a sexual incident with a 6 year old neighbour boy that she still has issues about and a brutal kindergarten teacher (without whom we would never have found the excellent school we did seek out)  then the drug use was like self-medicating.  She finally felt capable when she was high.  At least it was an escape but she took so many drugs, it was like she couldn't get high enough. 
     
    So now she has acheived sobreity but she has not left the other problems behind:  She still doesn't accept that you get out of life what you put into it.  She keeps thinking that you can avoid homework, lip off to a teacher, move out to a crisis bed, claim emotional duress, and graduate with scholarships. She can't figure out the real consequences to her actions at all. Like you are not going to get a scholarship if you don't get the grades, the homework has to be done sometime or you don't graduate, you lip off to a teacher you will at least get detention and keep it up you can get expelled and if you phone the police on your family every time something goes wrong, then, you can't live at home.  Yet she still believes she is so damn clever. She spends so much time trying to lie, steal, cheat and manipulate to beat the system and will not accept the  simplicity of the equation: you have to work to get something good out of life. You will like yourself better if you are honest and work to your goals. When you can count your personal successes as your own, the more you like yourself: the better your relationship with the world, the easier life becomes.
     
    So what are we going to do now...I talked to Children's Services and they are looking into some things.  Because we have been to Calgary to the Addictions Center, and there is perhaps an undiagnosed illness, they might be able to find something for her.  They would like us to set Calli up in her own little home. That is exactly what Calli wants too...somebody else to pay the way. We don't have money.  We are about $50,000 in debt. So this is just not an option but for Calli and her growth...there is no way I would set her up like that even if we could. What kind of lesson would that be!  You have to work to get what's good in life. So if she wants to have a little home, she can graduate properly, get a job, learn how to keep it, and pay her own way and choose her own place.
     
    Garry is struggling this time... he is so hurt and angry he wants to get even - he says 'no' but he also was going to chop up her favourite hoodie because it had a burn hole in it.  That's what makes it a favourite, it's a reminder of a Birthday Party with good friends who are not so close now but it was a good memory. He cleaned her room and we can see the floor now.   I know a lot of parents who exercise their rights by removing everything from a child's room and taking the door off.  They can earn back privileges.  It seems drastic but then Calli has such an amazing feeling of entitlement that maybe that is the answer to  make her appreciate what we do for her instead of demanding more...she is like a spoiled princess and it makes me look like the nasty Step Mother trying to sort her out.  Here's to a happy ending.
     
    So that is why I haven't been on line so much lately.  I may use this as a blog (I did) as there isn't too much time to write and I have wanted to blog as it is an outlet for me - get some of that stress out and on "e-paper'  I see why journaling can be so healthy.
     
    How is your world?
     
    Love
    Bonnie
     
    September 24

    I had a root canal today...

    and the freezing came out and I'm not doing badly....except I don't think I should take the 600 mg of ibuprophen any more.
     
    So I was keeping a running total of how much errands cost today:
     
    $   45.00 Calli's School Photos
        170.00 Calli's School Fees
        110.00 Calli's school trip to Calgary for 2 Plays and dinner and transportation
        230.00 Catherine's School Fees
          18.00 Chiropractor
        126.00 Dentist
        116.47 Superstore groceries
          40.04 Superstore groceries added on so I could get the free item
          30.98 Safeway groceries cause we like the milk there best
    __________
    $ 886.49  Total for September 24, 2007 or the equivalent of a stay at The Elkwater Lake Lodge for three nights  and a massage each day and dinner out.
     
          I hate school too.
    September 23

    A musing as opposed to amusing...

    On Saturday we took our lovely Border Collie Cassie to the SPCA to be adopted by some other family. I loved her and I miss her and I ache.  Calli wanted a dog so badly for her Birthday and she met Cassie and had us all go and see her too.  WE knew it was a foolish move but we brought the dog home to be Calli's pet with all the usual promises.
     
     In reality:
    Calli would not take responsibility for the dog.
    Bob the Cat was unbelievably unhappy and just slept in our room because Cassie liked to chase him.Bob's older and it wasn't fun for him.
    Cassie did nip at heels and play too rough so Catherine did not like her much even though Catherine played with and taught her the most.
    Dogs are expensive and we are on an austerity plan trying to eradicate all debt in 4 years. Yup! No more plastic.
    Calli needed to be taught that if she was not going to care for her dog then the dog could not stay.
     
    I can rationalize all I want too but it doesn't stop the hurt or the tears. I miss her and I want my dog back.
     
    I met an acquaintance the other day when we were walking our dogs and I was feeling put upon by the Cassie's needs and she said, "Yes, but they give so much back."  You don't know what that is until the dog is gone. She was so happy: the happiest entity in our home. So loving, sometimes she would just shower kisses; and so appreciative for the small things especially cheese and a bit of attention. I feel like she was the only one who really loved and needed me and now I miss her...I need her..I wish I knew this before Saturday.
     
    *******************************************************************************************************************
     
    I once said I would try and write up some quotes that were meaningful to me while dealing with my daughter's addiciton. There are many I just haven't been consistent in my plan.  But here is one I have loved:
     
    "Don't Panic! Few situations -- no matter how greatly they appear to demand it--can be bettered by us going berserk. "
    From The Language of Letting Go by Melody Beattie
     
    *******************************************************************************************************************
     
    Also for fun I have found a very cool Birthday Site which I have started to send to friends on their special day instead of e-cards:
     
     
    *******************************************************************************************************************
     
    We have had a new fish since September 11 of this year as the Captain died.  We did a nice memorial and had flowers in a vase on top of the toilet for about a week. Ashes to Ashes, Fish to Flush. So then on September 11 which was the day we got the Captain many years ago, we got a new Beta.  I calll him SeaQuill (Sequel) He is just like the picture on the food package all red with black feathering on his tail.  Garry didn't want another fish but the water, plant and food were all just sitting on top of the piano. I figured for another $3.99 we could just add the fish. It's not like they are a lot of trouble.  Anyway, it is September 23 and Calli has not yet noticed we have replaced the fish.
     
    A long time ago in Calgary we had an aquarium and we had a lot of fish die on us. A long skinny stick thing that cleaned the bottom of the tank the kids called the NOO-NOO from Teletubbies. We had one goldfish survive for a good time so we called him Richard after Richard from the first of TV's Survivor.  Anyway, Richard finally died too and I wanted to make a point about who takes care of all these animals so I flushed poor Richard and left everything else the way it was to see how long it would take everyone else to notice the fish was gone.  So about a week later the kids are in a knot because they have just discovered the fish is not in the tank and they think Bob ate the fish. I finally told them that, no, he had died a week ago and I was just waiting for someone to notice.  And Garry said, get this, " The fish cannot be dead.  The pump is still running."  Got help me if I should die in front of the computer or while the TV is on : )
     
    *******************************************************************************************************************
     
    It is September the 23 and I have not had a newspaper delivered for 2 days now...I went next door and asked to borrow their old ones.  I don't think I am going to be very good at this. 
     
    *******************************************************************************************************************
    I have developed a sensitive tooth and went to the dentist and we are going to wait it out and see if it settles down. I think it stems from the stress of going back to work that perhaps I am clenching my teeth.  I see him again on Monday.  I love our dentist but he is a little root-canal happy.  Thank heaven for Company Dental Plans! Sometimes we get so used to our life that we forget how fortunate we really are.  Garry was off work recently with a kidney stone (Very Painful) He is fine now but we realized his Disability Insurance paid only $580 per week and we have gotten used to more.  Oddly, my husband makes 3 times the poverty level and we have trouble making ends meet.  How do people afford travel...we can't afford passports! And thus we are keeping to a budget.
     
    *******************************************************************************************************************
     
    We had to buy black printer ink so we wanted the best deal of course which seems to be a double cartridge pack.  Superstore has a $4.00 off coupon.  Future Shop gives us 10% off because we bought the printer from them and Staples has the lowest price at $45.99 on the websitebut $50.99 in store. So the best deal is Staples even at $45.99 but because we also have gift cards (from our At Home Service, ask me about this if you like savings because you get 20% off just about everything but you need to purchase gift cards in advance...we already have the Staples gift cards so now the double pack is $36.79  We could also get Futrure Shop Cards but their cost was too high even with 10% off. We could also fill the current cartridge at Island Ink Jet with a $3.00 off coupon and that is the best deal but could void the warranty.  What an effort and then Garry didn't notice that Staples made a mistake and charged him $49.95 and he has to go back and get his $4.20...That is what we go through for just one purchase and now we need flourescent lights.They seem to be on sale at Home Hardware and Canadian Tire and we have the At Home Service for both of them and for Home Depot.  Can't things just have a set value?
     
    ********************************************************************************************************************
     
    I believe in omens and God sending us subtle messages to keep us on the right track.  I have been realizing that I want to read all these fabulous books I own and never seem to have time...but I watch TV at night for 2 or 3 hours.  I know if I am going to read anything I need to shut the TV off and pick up a book. So yesterday, Calli is watching the original Psycho on a 7 Nights of Hitchcock special and it is still a great movie. So Calli moved on but I continued to watch 'Shadow of a Doubt" and the first character is a little girl named Anne who is reading Ivanhoe.  I have Ivanhoe by my bed and I am in the Introduction ...still.  I believe I must go and read now instead of continuing to play Spider Solitaire.  The quote here is my own:
     
    How can you expect your life to be managable if you don't manage it?
     
    *******************************************************************************************************************
     
     
     
     
    August 19

    Garage Sale


    Hellooooo! We have been amazingly busy this last week.  Calli had a bit of insomnia and decided to clean out her room and have a garage sale.  This was totally spur of the moment to us....Clothes, CD's some old toys and computer games. She woke us up about 6:30 a.m. on Saturday last (11th) with toast and coffee and made her announcement. For Garry this was a dream come true as he has wanted to clear stuff out of the garage for years so it is Saturday, we need to do flyers, and I am subbing on two routes so that means I have five to do, 310 houses,  and we start putting on a garage sale instead, aargh.  However, it went so well and was not even advertised. Now, being that the garage was torn up anyway we decided to have an official Garage Sale this weekend the 18th.  Garry placed the ad in the paper we got the road signs and we emptied boxes and boxes of stuff. Games, toys, clothes, an old computer, Books, lots and lots of books, Catty sold a moving box full of Lego for $30.00, All the Barbies went, Calli's punching bag we bought for $80 , never hung up and then sold it to a friend of hers for $20 AND had to drive him home. Some car parts, coffee mugs, candle holders.  There was nothing big and our goal was to get rid of stuff so we marked most stuff a buck or two  (the Petro Canada Glasses went for 10 cents each as is the going price) and we ended up with over $400, obviously the hard way. Most of it belongs to the kids. Then we found out that the ad only ran one day of the sale Thursday, so we were a little frustrated by The Medicine Hat News.  What part of Thurs. Fri. Sat. do they not understand? But I think on Saturday... people drive around looking for Garage Sales. Lots of people looking for antiques and collectibles...we sold a lot of our old vinyl records and still have a box full.
     
    Our Neighbour had the most beautiful Bamboo dining room set ($4000 new) It was about 20 years old and she let it go for $50. It would have been perfect for an atrium, or an enclosed or covered deck...people have those here and we would like one too but where we are it is so windy; we wouldn't have it for long.  She also let her beautiful sofa go for $75 and then she  was worried that the love seat wouldn't sell and then at the end of the day when we are packing stuff up along comes the most amazing lady in a bright yellow Mustang started going through all the boxes ... bought the loveseat for $40 and grabbed a whole bunch of toys and clothes and games, a pair of old rollerblades and made a huge pile and gave me $25.00 for it. Her arrival was the highlight of the whole thing, she is the first person in Medicine Hat I have met that I thought, This is a person I could have a beer with!
     
    So at the end of it all the neighbour lent us their new, as in brand new last week,  150 km.. Harley Davidson $52,000 Ford pick up.  Garry called Value Village and as they stayed open to  8:00  pm,  we took a truck load of stuff there and then went to Burger King and got a Bart Simpson Toy...Garry started screamning NOOOOO!!! NO MORE TOYS!!!! We didn't really want to come home right away.  I was hoping somebody might see us driving around. Value Village gave us a 20% off coupon for our next purchase which is good in case I have to go back and get some of my stuff back.
     
    Before we gave everything away at the end we spent some time just quickly going through what was left to see if we really wanted to give it up and Catherine pulled a few things out, we gave some stuff to the neighbours for their help, Cassie got away once and two kids brought her back so we let them pick out what they wanted It was just wild. There was stuff we couldn't give away. Including the dog.
     
    Because Garry was sick I asked Mom if she could help us out this Month as it came at a bad time with going back to school and starting up extracirricular stuff is always expensive and Short term Disability only pays $580 a week. We got the check from Mom on Friday with a note that suggested we have a garage sale ...what a hoot. Mom was always a bit psychic. I have it a bit. Nephew Andy and Calli have it a lot.  Carol also sent a note (odd advice coming from my sister Carol, but anyway that is actually normal for Carol to be odd) The note said, " Bonnie, I found a chapter on Buddha in the World Encyclopedia: We suffer, we thirst for things (Constant Craving KD Lang) and finally become slaves of things. Obsessions for Possessions prevent us from attaining knowlege and insight, desiring goodness and what is true freeing us from sorrow and bondage using meditaion and leading to Nirvana on earth." I thought it was prophetic considering that we were totally dunging out the whole house.  We still have too much stuff so that is one truth I have reached.
     
    Calli had gone to work or we may have ended up keeping more.  She had her first shift at HMV. She likes it so far but she just had to learn how to operate the till and did not have to wait on any customers.  The two fellows that are her managers waited outside with her until her Dad picked her up, they also offered to give her a ride home...not left alone at night makes me happy! the kids that work there wear jeans with no holes, and an HMV T-shirt for a  "Uniform" and piercing, Tattoos, and Hair color are no problem. She gets Items there at cost except video games - staff pay retail.
     
     I saved all the Pooh Bear Lego for a girlfriend in Saskatchewan but  I am not sure how to get this to her Maybe she will come and see us for Pooh Bear Lego!   I couldn't believe it!  To get all the characters I had to buy about 5 sets of Lego, I put it together with a little Mega Blocks table probably new it was about $120 and I couldn't sell it. Starting price was $15 and I marked it down to $5. and so at the end of the day I salvaged it back and thought  that  she might like to let her grandkids or great grandkids play with it.  There's Pooh, Eeyore, 2 Tiggers, Piglet and trees and house, wagons, slide  and all the other extra bits. Anyway...we will just hang on to it.  Maybe I will have grandkids too.
     
     One of the other highlights was that I couldn't find the lid to a teapot a friend gave me that matched the cookie jar I couldn't find but I had the lid to the cookie jar.. It is a  peach colored one shaped like a big stuffed chair with a white cat sleeping on top for the lid. What I had was the cookie jar lid and the tea pot but no lid. I was so afraid that it was lost somewhere. I have had these other things in the hutch since we arrived here and so for 4 years I have been waiting to go through boxes looking for the lid and the cookie jar....and we found it. Firstly I found the Cookie jar and panicked because the lid to the teapot was no where around and it should be in the same box  but then I realized the cookie jar was filled with paper so I stuck my hand inside and felt the lid ..so happy.  I like things that are sets. I like, like-items with like-items, Order, matching, complete. So when things settle down again I will make cookies and have tea and enjoy thinking of my friend Annette who found such a lovely gift for us.  the other item we found is from another friend in Saskatchewan. It was a candle holder called "A Circle of Friends" and they are made of this clay that is amazingly fragile but it survived. Today I must find the coffee table under all the paper and computer games and dust...and light this candle.
     
    I sold the coin sets my sister had been giving me for years thinking why is she doing this? We kept the ones for 1990 and 1994 when the girls were born.  I had given 3 other sets away for  Birthday gifts and still got $130. So because they were supposed to be a long term type of gift I am trying to think of what I should do to make this $130 count for the long term.  Extra Mortgage Payment maybe?
     
    Lots of memories going through old boxes. Forgotten moments revisited. Sometimes we don't have our memories so carefully packaged and tucked away. They become harder to retreive as more of life is added on. Sometimes we need a little reminder like a small toy or a well read children's book  or a chipped glass with a silk flower from a wedding vow some 20 years ago. That's why we hang on to things for so long because they are reminders of good times, friends and our lives till now and that is the truth.
     
    August 14

    Observations while grocery shopping...

    1.  I noticed that treat manufacturers are realizing that it is just simply difficult for some people to stay on a healthy diet and are now providing small portioned 100 calorie packages.  I just wanted to make note that God/nature has done this since the beginning of time. An orange or apple, banana or nectarine all pre-packaged at about 100 calories.  (An aside: There are those of us who do not stop at one 100 calorie package, so now there is the problem of excess packaging.)
     
    2.  The new reusable bags at the Superstore are quite attractive and, at $.99 each, quite a bargain.  Considering a gift bag the same size can be quite expensive, I figure it is a good idea to stock up on these grocery bags and give 2 gifts. It is of constant amazement to me that there are still people who believe that they do not pay for grocery bags at other stores.  If you take bags to the Safeway or the Co-op you can ask for a bag credit and they will take 3 or 4 cents/ bag off your grocery bill for the number of bags you brought.  So one can also keep taxes down re: garbage collection and the cost for a new landfill site and any new land  (habitat) that is appropriated for urban use is going to screw with the balance of nature.  I have noticed in our town particularly that there are so many stinkin' rich people that they do not care how they behave as they can always pay for land, taxes, fuel, or utilities but increased prices marginalize so many people who were just getting by. Last month they were able to rent a movie, this month they cannot. Last month they could afford the rent and this month they cannot. How much will it cost us now?
     
    3. I can go into the Superstore with 5 items on a grocery list and still spend $204.00.  Apparently, it gives me a lot of time to think.
    August 06

    Deep Thoughts...naught ((*-*))

    Deep Thoughts For Those Who Take Life Way Too Seriously:

    1. Save the whales. Collect the whole set.

    2. A day without sunshine is like. Night.

    3. On the other hand, you have different fingers

    4. 42.7 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot.

    5. 99 percent of lawyers give the rest a bad name.

    6. Remember, half the people you know are below average.

    7. He who laughs last thinks slowest.

    8. Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.

    9. The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese in the trap.

    10. Support bacteria. They're the only culture some people have.

    11. A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.

    12. Change is inevitable, except from vending machines.

    13. If you think nobody cares, try missing a couple of payments.

    14. How many of you believe in psycho-kinesis? Raise my hand.

    15. OK, so what's the speed of dark?

    16. When everything is coming your way, you're in the wrong lane.

    17. Hard work pays off in the future. Laziness pays off now.

    18. Every one has a photographic memory. Some just don't have film.

    19. How much deeper would the ocean be without sponges?

    20 Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines

    21. What happens if you get scared half to death twice?

    22. I couldn't repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder.

    23. Why do psychics have to ask you for your name?

    24. Inside every older person is a younger person wondering what happened .

    25. Just remember -- if the world didn't suck, we would all fall off.

    26. Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.

    27. Life isn't like a box of chocolates . . . it's more like a jar of jalapenos. What you do today, might burn your butt tomorrow.  

    Why I Love Mom

    > > Why I love MOM
    > >
    > >
    Mom and Dad were watching TV when Mom said, "I'm tired,  and it's getting late. I think I'll go to bed."
     
     She went to the kitchen to make sandwiches for the next day's  lunches. Rinsed out the popcorn bowls, took meat out of the freezer
     for supper the following evening, checked the cereal box levels, filled  the sugar container, put spoons and bowls on the table and  started  the  coffee pot for brewing the next morning.
    > >
    > >
     She then put some wet clothes in the dryer, put a load of clothes into the washer, ironed a shirt and secured a loose button.
     She picked up the game pieces left on the table and put the telephone book back into the drawer. She watered the plants, emptied a
     wastebasket and hung up a towel to dry. She yawned and stretched and  headed for the bedroom.
    > >
     She stopped by the desk and wrote a note to the  teacher, counted out some cash for the field trip, and pulled a  textbook out
     from hiding under the chair. She signed a birthday card for a friend,  addressed and stamped the envelope and wrote a quick note for the  grocery  store. She put both near her purse.
    > >
    > >
     Mom then washed her face with 3 in 1 cleanser, put on her  Night Solution & age fighting moisturizer, brushed and flossed her
    teeth and filed her nails. Dad called out, "I thought you were going  to bed."
     "I'm on my way," she said.
    > >
    > >
     She put some water into the dog's dish and put the cat outside, then made sure the doors were locked. She looked in on each
     of the kids and turned out their bedside lamps, hung up a shirt, threw some dirty socks into the hamper, and had a brief conversation with the  one up still doing homework.
    > >
    > >
     In her own room, she set the alarm; laid out clothing for the  next day, straightened up the shoe rack. She added three things to
     her 6 most important things to do list. She said her prayers, and  visualized the accomplishment of her goals.
    > >
    About that time, Dad turned off the TV and announced to no one in particular. "I'm going to bed." And he did...without  another thought.
    > >
     Wonder why women live longer...?
    > >
    > >
     'CAUSE WE ARE MADE FOR THE LONG HAUL...... (and we can't die sooner, we still have things to do!!!!)
     

    Oh! Bother!

    Copy of a recent e-mail as I don't have too much time to write...but this is the news so far.  The only other thing is that Calli is acting up about curfew, truth issues and work or, rather,  not working is more like it.  I am about ready to get her a nice fridge box and a cart. If I sign her up for Meals on Wheels then maybe Social Services will be satisfied that I have met all my duties....If they don't think that's good enough then they have a lot more people they need to care for.  You see if she lived in a fridge box there wouldn't be that issue about cleaning up, and if she only had one outfit we could eliminate that whole laundry problem too.  Get a nice red cart from Zellers and pick pop bottles out of the recycling bins and off the streets as a service to  society.  Sigh, if only life could be so simple.
    So this year we have been trying to complete the painting of a very, very long fence and deck as well, then we got a break, Garry's one week of holiday and went out to Elkwater Lake Lodge with our Harry Potter books, stayed in a loft there with a nice kitchen, two baths , fireplace, 900 channels of TV etc. and had a massage and swim and Little Golf and dinner out.  We did make one trip back into town in order for Catherine to accept her award for her artwork...an etching of a horse called Wind Runner.  The first time out to a judged competition and she placed third for her age group and got a check for 15 dollars!  So then now we were back for a bit, but not long, and Garry is now in hospital with a Kidney stone.  These are very painful, so they kept him in the hospital for pain management ( translation:  Morphine and Torodal) and just waiting.  I seem to be managing the basic duties but the house is just horrendous. And that is really bad because that is my level of 'horrendous' not someone else's level of horrendous.
     
    Also in all of this I found a cell phone that was lost by an individual who had attended a party where the home was trashed...we know this as we saw the house and then put it all together...there were pictures of the party on the phone so that's when we spent most of the day contacting police and all that.  The best picture was of the guy doing a swan dive off the roof into the hot tub and all the people in the hot tub reacting.  The poor parents got home and the Mom has gone into shock, I think they will probably fix the home up again and then move.  I don't think I could live in the same place after an event like that.  What bothers me is we knew of one kid so out of it that he did not recognize his own sister....his parents took him to emergency and the doctor's didn't want to run a drug screen...It's just too much booze they say.  I think the doctor's in this town are part of the drug culture or they are just so totally removed from it. 5 bottles of wine and 80 kids and a home destroyed and this twit doesn't think drugs are involved. He's smokin' something. And I used to be uspset when my children weren't invited to parties.
     
    Any way the dog is trying to get me to take her for a walk.  I bought some cookies yesterday and opened the package to take some treats to Garry, left the cookies on the kitchen table.  The dog ate them all so I know she wants a walk but I don't want to take her 'cause I am mad at her but  I guess that's enough jawing....love Bonnie
     
    July 26

    A not so damn funny, funny...

     
    >>Mom and Dad were watching TV when Mom said, "I'm tired,  and it's getting late. I think I'll go to bed."
     
    She went to the kitchen to make sandwiches for the next day's  lunches. Rinsed out the popcorn bowls, took meat out of the freezer
    for supper the following evening, checked the cereal box levels, filled the sugar container, put spoons and bowls on the table and started the
    coffee pot for brewing the next morning.
     
     
     She then put some wet clothes in the dryer, put a load of clothes  into the washer, ironed a shirt and secured a loose button.
     She picked up the game pieces left on the table and put the telephone book back into the drawer. She watered the plants, emptied a
     wastebasket and hung up a towel to dry. She yawned and stretched and headed for the bedroom.
     
    She stopped by the desk and wrote a note to the  teacher, counted out some cash for the field trip, and pulled a  textbook out
     from hiding under the chair. She signed a birthday card for a friend,  addressed and stamped the envelope and wrote a quick note for the
    grocery  store. She put both near her purse.
     
    Mom then washed her face with 3 in 1 cleanser, put on her Night Solution & age fighting moisturizer, brushed and flossed her
    teeth and filed her nails. Dad called out, "I thought you were going  to bed."
     
    "I'm on my way," she said.
     
     She put some water into the dog's dish and put the cat outside, then made sure the doors were locked. She looked in on each
     of the kids and turned out their bedside lamps, hung up a shirt, threw some dirty socks into the hamper, and had a brief conversation
     with the one up still doing homework.
     
     In her own room, she set the alarm; laid out clothing for the next day, straightened up the shoe rack. She added three things to
     her 6 most important things to do list. She said her prayers, and visualized the accomplishment of her goals.
     About that time, Dad turned off the TV and announced to no one in particular. "I'm going to bed." And he did...without  another thought.
     
    Anything extraordinary here?
     
    Wonder why women live longer...?
     
    'CAUSE WE ARE MADE FOR THE LONG HAUL......  (and we can't die sooner, we still have things to do!!!!)  
    July 22

    Oh! Oh! Oh! I have a secret!!

     And I am just bursting....Calli and Poppa Bear know the secret and so too does the Cypress Center....the place where the award will be given out...the award for Catty's artwork!!  She entered a real contest with judges and everything for the Stampede and we got a call yesterday to let us know she has won an award and the ceremony and reception is Monday night. She entered two pictures: one is an etching of a horse she calls Wind Runner (There is a fellow offering to purchase all horse pictures entered) and the other is untitled but I call it "When Love Hurts' It is a girl lying down, perhaps on the floor, with her hair falling around her face, her beautiful hand just beside the cheek and she is looking straight out of the picture with a tear starting to fall from her eye.  It bothered me how sad it was but how beautifully drawn. Catherine is only 13, she shouldn't be able to feel such sadness yet you can look at it and feel the heart ache.  BTW: There is a cash prize! They run $10 - $50 with an overall winner an additional $100.  Go Catty! Go Catty!
     
    Anyway we had made plans to attend the reception anyway, so we decided not to tell her she won and let it be a surprise!  I am so proud of her!
     
    Calli is applying for a job at Starbucks.  It would be a good fit for her (except the working part)  but she has had two interviews and they seem to love her so far.  The final decision is left with the manager who is currently away and will return next week. 
     
    So we are going on holiday for a few days...one we cannot really afford but we need a break so we are taking one.  The Elkwater Lodge is about 45 minutes from here which you can Google if interested.  We got a loft suite for 3 nights on their promotion SUM1 pay for 2 stay for 3.  We get a full kitchen and 2 bathrooms,  fireplace and patio, Queen bed and pull-out sofa so we decided to bring a cot as well so both the girls get a good nights sleep. We have booked massages for the first morning there and dinner in Bugler's for the last evening.  It has a pool but it also has a lake. Works for me!