Dec 19, 2007

dinosaur eggs are baller

thoughts on the best regular season game of the season: 

- much like when the raps played boston, the atmosphere was simply rabid. this is playoff level basketball, no matter what anybody says. 

- there was an article on ESPN today by JJ Adande about how black people need to stop hating on the celtics for being a white team. well written, but in crunch time, after a giant game-tying 3 by rayray, detroit takes a timeout with under 30 seconds left to play. what song is blaring through the arena? 'rock you like a hurricane' by the scorpions. would you like some grey poupon? 

- hubie brown noted during the game that deron williams reminds him a lot of chauncey billups, which i agree with entirely. if that's the case, then is cp3 vs d-train even a debate? would you rather have the future chauncey billups, or the future isiah thomas? thought so.

- there's no such thing as statement games, but if we learned anything, it's that big game experience still makes the pistons the team to beat in the east. boston is a beast, but in the clutch, detroit was calm, poised, and executed exactly what they wanted. the celtics have three future hall-of-famers, but seemed confused about what exactly to do and who should take over down the stretch -- particularly KG. if they're going to go anywhere, he needs to demand the ball in the clutch, he's unselfish to a fault and was nearly invisible in the last two minutes of the game.

- i was supposed to go out tonight, but i'm jumping from this game straight to suns/mavs and in 5 minutes, the raptors game. if i were to estimate, i'd say i've chosen watching basketball at home over going out with friends at least five times in the last two weeks. please help me.

Dec 18, 2007

"morning" musings

simon's twitter train has finally left the station. i didn't even understand how it worked until this week. apparently my problem before was i had no friends. please, refrain from making the easy joke on that one, i'm delicate.

been picking up my poor neglected guitar with my recent freedom from school. i missed her so.

and finally, when it rains it pours, and in this case it's pouring engagement rings. 

congrats to wictor and gorphanie, may your weddings have as much or more booze than vanessa's. 

good. times. ahead.

Dec 13, 2007

quickies

wakey! wakey! has probably recorded the best weezer cover these ears have ever heard.

"say it ain't so" on piano = tasty-delicious.

by this time next week, i am probably going to be complaining of boredom. either that, or catching up on about three straight months of sleep deprivation. i've been averaging about 4 hours of sleep a night, and have the eating habits of kate moss. 

if it weren't for coffee, i think i might have just dropped dead weeks ago.  still, the holiday break cannot come soon enough -- i have so many "to-do-list" type things i would like to accomplish but simply haven't had the time. for example, i wish barbershops were open 24/7, i am in dire need of a trim. 

i think the worst part about working for real is that you no longer have summer and winter vacations. i mean, in all honesty even the year i took off to work, i worked full time through the winter, then only part time from january through to the end of my contract.

i have never not had a summer vacation. the thought of not being awarded 3-4 weeks off for my concerted efforts every winter is depressing. to not have 3-4 months off to travel in the summer? that's just going to be downright cruel. 

maybe i can get away with freelancing forever. 

maybe. i'll probably have to get used to sleeping in my car though.

Dec 10, 2007

huzzah

published! multiple-times! 

the only thing that could ruin my day is if i were trying to write five stories at once and nobody called me back about any of them. 

oh wait, that's happening, and i'm still in a good mood.

awesome. 

Fiction(alized)/Insights

not necessarily an actual event as much as a description of my state of mind during about a five minute span of time, fictionalized at some points and reorganized chronologically for the sake of narrative composition.  

I open my car door and step into the cold winter air.

The bustle of traffic fills my ears as I pull my jacket close to myself, walking briskly across the small parking lot and pulling open the door to my brightly lit destination.

The acrid but comforting smell of cheap coffee embraces me, warming me almost as much as the warmth does itself. I pull up a chair at a table by some large foggy windows, sitting down opposite a familiar face.

“No, press the middle button,” says my friend embarrassingly into his cell-phone. He looks up and waves sheepishly before averting his gaze again, returning all his focus to the conversation at hand.

He is taking a call from his fiancĂ©, meticulously talking her through the nuances of playing a movie on his new Playstation 3. I remove my wool coat and stuff my blue gloves into its pockets. Attempting to settle into my chair, my mind notes that they are made of plastic and an uncomfortable yet seemingly durable metal. As I hang my coat on my stiff seatback, I wonder briefly if the lack of ergonomic design is a matter of cost or merely a strategy to dissuade loitering in this fine fast-food establishment. Trying not to eavesdrop, I take a deep breath of Tim Horton’s air and proceed to survey my surroundings.

In the corner to our left, studying under the familiar fluorescent glow of the donut shop, an Asian couple sits with their noses buried in textbooks. The girl’s bright red pencil case is shaped like a cartoon ladybug, laying sideways on the table and spilling out a collection of multi-coloured highlighters. It has always baffled me how compulsively some girls choose to colour coordinate their notes. I attempt to think of a male who might share this academic trait. I cannot.

To the side of coloured pen girl is a male companion who seems equally engrossed in his own textbook, twirling a pen around his thumb as he stares distantly at the page. His eyebrows are severely furrowed, and it is difficult to tell if he is either completely distracted or completely focused.

Turning to my right side, there is another Asian couple sitting diagonally from each other at a four-seat table. I find this odd. A magazine about computer games sits open on the table in front of the male, completely engaging his attention. Meanwhile, the girl (who is mildly attractive in the protypical suburban Asian female manner -- petite and well dressed, with smooth pale skin and large eyes) types away at the keyboard of a black laptop that completely dwarfs her tiny delicate hands.  

I return my gaze to my friend, cracking a wry smile as his Playstation tutorial continues.

“Not that menu, no, go down to video…”

He gives me a look and shrugs, shaking his head as if to say that he had long ago acquiesced in the fact that conversations such as this were to be part and parcel of a stable long-term relationship. It was the compromising price that accompanied being accompanied.

As I sat there listening to a conversation that bore a striking resemblance to one I once had with my mother about how to send an email, I come suddenly to the stark realization of how foreign to me that price actually is.

There in a coffee shop, book-ended by couples and staring straight ahead at another, there comes to me a rush of tacit fear accompanied by possibly the only emotional response that has ever truly concerned me: loneliness.

I wonder why I haven’t met my perfect match; I wonder if there is ever going to be the right girl for my life; I wonder where things went wrong with all the girls that I have cared for in the past. I wonder if I will ever grow up to be an adult along the lines of those peers who increasingly are getting married and proceeding with down payments and mortgages while I scrape up enough cash to buy a soft-taco for my midnight snack.

I wonder these things in the blink of an eye, and snap back to reality as my friend gently closes his cell-phone and returns it to the pocket of his puffy black down jacket.

“Sorry about that, she’s never used the Playstation before.”

“It’s all good,” I reply, laughing while being genuinely impressed by his completely normal domestic conversation, yet at the same time feeling almost unbearably alienated by it.

“It’s part of the territory right?” I ask, and watch him nod his head in agreement.

“Yea, I guess,” he replies.

We laugh, in a moment of awkwardness, and pause to consider my words.

Whatever territory I’m talking about, he is clearly surprised to wake up some days and actually find himself standing there.  And it’s a territory I’m not sure I’ll ever even step foot upon myself.

It’s remarkable how completely opposite scenarios can result in the exact same paralysis.

I find this realization strangely comforting, and it assuages my personal panic from code red to mellow yellow. All of this happens in only the smallest fraction of time, and now I am back to the more pressing matter at hand: namely, do I want a large or medium coffee?

Dec 3, 2007

28 weeks later

i know i'm way behind the times on this one, but i finally got around to watching 28 weeks later tonight, the follow up to 28 days later. 

as for as zombie flicks go, it's at the very least as tense as it's predecessor, with lots of jumpy moments and anxious scenarios. 

i found however, that i could not enjoy the pacing or action or direction, because the movie asks you to root for the survival of the main characters, who, surprise surprise, are responsible for the problem at hand. 

i'm all for forgiveness, but really, the kids in this movie drove me insane. they just tra-la-la through the world's most unimaginable catastrophe as if they don't know any better, but for god's sake, they're basically teenagers! i couldn't watch this movie without thinking how utterly stupid these kids were, and frankly, that they kind of deserve to die seeing as how their ignorance is completely unabashed. 

i realize this is harsh, and i know logic is suspended when watching a b-movie. but GAH! i just found it so frustrating that they were not only responsible, but unapologetic, and ignorant. i mean, you kids are DIRECTLY responsible for the death of thousands if not millions of people. where's the part where they think "do you think maybe this was our bad...?" 

argh. of course, that's just part of the stupidity. like how a civilian caretaker has access to the most privileged of military installations. but that's the type of stuff that i can forgive in these types of silly horror flicks.

stupid people who make their own bed however drive me insane. i guess i'm just not one for merciful sympathy. if you make your bed and refuse to apologize, you should have to lay in it. even if that means being eaten by zombies. i've never had a movie force me to root for the death of children so much in my life. i feel dirty.

i'm going to be the worst parent ever.

Nov 29, 2007

more late night ramblings

so, without fail, whenever the clock passes 3am, i get into this melancholy, sanctimonious mood where i tend to spew emo-reeking posts about paranoid delusions and broad sweeping social commentary that really deserve to get me punched in the ear. 

i can't explain why. i think my biological clock genetically predisposes me to emotional entropy as a self defense mechanism against my insomniac tendencies. it usually doesn't work. 

tonight however, i choose not to post my psycho-analytical blathering (although i did write it out). 

no, tonight i opt instead to simply ponder what the single most substantial difference in my life would be had i elected to attend the university of waterloo for undergrad instead of western. 

i would probably be working now instead of still in school. i would be in commerce, meaning i am in nothing in particular at all. i would not treat girls who's names start with c as if they carried bubonic plague. 

most importantly however, and perhaps the single biggest reason i am glad i went to uwo:

i would not be as good at basketball. not even remotely close. 

don't think i don't thank my lucky stars every night i went to london. can you imagine if my jumper was still as lackluster as it was in high school? i probably wouldn't even like playing basketball that much anymore. i shudder to think... it truly is frightening. 



 

Nov 28, 2007

horseshoe

i'm always mildly offended when people refer to the "Real World" post university/college. 

i mean, i understand what is meant and in many cases the patronization is not entirely intentional. to a certain extent, i completely accept that student life is by definition a fictitious existence, predicated on the idealistic farce that you can be whatever you want if you get a good grade (i'm not cynical in the slightest...)

when someone refers to this "Real World" however, i am always left wondering how strange the concept is that you can exist in the same temporal plane as the person next to you, yet concede they live in an entirely different world. 

i mean, that'd be like some crazy alien showing up and telling you the world actually has five dimensions, but we can only see three and thus are missing out on a whole wack load of "reality" as it were. actually, isn't this a real theory somewhere? but anyways. 

i guess my long winded and completely un-focused point is that part of me realizes that i'm wearing... perhaps not rose coloured, but at the very least mildly pink tinted glasses right now. i am still idealistic. i am still hopeful. i still have delusions of grandeur. and frankly, the notion of a cold and harsh reality scares the bejesus out of me. the idea that i could one day wake up 40 years old and be completely disappointed with the first half of my life. 

then again, a little bloody eyeball mentioned (in a different context) today that worrying about everything will drive you crazy. so yes. i would be remiss if i did not state that one of my goals for the future is to, you know. not be crazy. yes, i dream big dreams lady and gentlemen. welcome to my world. 

on a completely unrelated note, if there was a pivotal moment where one could say, yes, chinese people run Vancouver, this would be it:

those are the mascots for the upcoming winter olympics. and somewhere, a 50 foot fob is searching for his or her missing giant cell-phone charms.

Nov 17, 2007

the weekender

an interesting blog post about bottled water by one of the guardian's food critics.

he seems to equate bottled water with sparkling water, which is two entirely different beasts in my mind. i personally feel that sparkling water is much more worthwhile than bottled-water as we north americans are familiar (the distilled variety).

drinking normal bottled water is in my mind the biggest waste of money and resources ever. you are literally paying for something that you have free access to. this idea is unheard of in any other business model -- it's the equivalent of a dairy farmer buying bags of milk from a grocery store.

as for sparkling water, i feel like you're literally just paying a premium for...bubbles. which is pretentious, i will not deny. but at least you're paying for something you can't get out of the tap attached to your kitchen sink.

...in unrelated events, a worker at pearson airport has been suspended for altering her work uniform (a skirt) to be longer, citing religious reasons.

i'm not entirely sure how i feel about this. i'm not going to go all quebecois xenophobe or anything, but i mean...she has the option to wear pants. she thinks they show too much of her shape, so....wear looser pants? is it really the companies responsibility to allow uniforms to accommodate every possible religion?

isn't the whole premise of religion that you have to make sacrifices in your life? why expect your company to accommodate you fully when you knew going into it that the job entails adhering to certain rules?

in my opinion, she should just find a new job or something. i prefer my airport security to be more hottie than dowdy anyways, but hey, that's just me.

Nov 12, 2007

the mondays

- there is nothing particular interesting about this story on LPGA golfer Paula Creamer winning this past weekend's Tournament of Champions. what IS interesting however, is if you flip open today's globe and mail to this same story, you'll notice that the headline is different from the AP deck that appears in the above link. in print form, this morning's headline was "Creamer in pink." I shake my head at you, globe and mail. she has an unfortunate last name, we get it. now can we all be adults about it? I won't lie however, i giggled like a school girl upon first reading that headline...

- Another interesting globe story about differing circadian rhythms being a quantifiable genetic trait. being nocturnal myself, i want to believe this is true. but....part of me is inclined to think it's all a fair bit of wishful thinking. the "research" provided is a tad thin at best. call it a hunch, but i'm willing to bet that story was written last minute and submitted late...

- ESPN's page2 has a few great columns up about BB boycotting the HOF, and the ubiquity of asterisks in history. particularly funny is this tidbit by DJ Gallo:

1536: John Calvin develops Calvinism, which espoused predestination*
*Calvin does not really deserve credit for introducing Calvinism, since he was predestined to develop it.
you know what the worst part about being cynical is? (and no, it's not the irony of that sentence.) it's the tainting of good memories.

sure, it's all well and good to be jaded by life to the point where skepticism is a part of your daily routine. this is particularly poignant when the single greatest asset of your professional career is a persistent and enduring need to question every single detail presented before you with a fine tooth comb.

what really bites however, is when you are cynical to the point where even when considering past instances when you were happy -- times when things might have (surprisingly) gone your way, or better than you were expecting -- you begin to question whether you were actually happy after all, or just deluding yourself.

now i realize that sounds terribly depressing, and more often than not, i won't argue that such a state of mind generally does not make an individual the smashingly popular life of most parties.

but, i digress. my actual point is that in lieu of these thoughts, and in discussing happiness, i often consider the concept of joy -- and i wonder if it even really exists. there have been moments in the past where i considered myself the fortunate owner of a "joyful" state of mind.

i may not have been emotionally happy, but there may have been some sort of general state of peace about things, whether it be a mixture of contentment and fortunate timing, or pure and simple indifference.

at the same time however, i so often find myself wondering what the reason was for this seemingly abstract concept that was supposed to exist outside my emotional sense of awareness.

was it real? because at the time it felt real, but in retrospect is seems...well, suspect.

if "ignorance is bliss" is an accepted axiom, then doesn't it only make sense that bliss is ignorance? and if i can equate bliss to joy, i guess the question more simply is:

does joy even exist?

Nov 6, 2007

pagination station

it's hard to be purposely vague all the time.

it requires a breadth of communication skills, and knowing how to bend those rules just so, omitting information that is key, yet also divulging just enough information to make things seem mildy interesting.

to pique ones curiosity without really telling them anything at all is an act of salesmanship.

i hate sales.

but i'll be damned if i'm not pretty good at it.

in a way we all have to be good salespeople in life.

some just take longer to figure out what they're selling.

Nov 2, 2007

sleepy

there was a time when staying up to watch the west-coast game of the TNT double header wasn't a big deal for me.

now...well, lets just say now I'm starting to think watching basketball on TV might be the end of me. if i was a zombie before the season began, currently i'm a listless zombie, and by this time next week i fully intend to be whatever zombie's turn into when they no longer maintain the bodily functions to stay conscious.

ohbijou concert this saturday and i can't go. who wants two free tickets?

Oct 26, 2007

out of wine

man, you ever feel like you have all these ideas that might be really good ideas, but at the same time, you'd understand if someone thought they were really stupid ideas?

like, things that seem so simple they're genius, but in actuality, are just so simple they're mundane?

yea, i'm full of those. going out on a limb for any of them is always a decision wrought with anxiety.

Oct 23, 2007

information that would have been helpful

found on a financial quiz at the toronto star website:

5. I may deduct what I pay my adult child to care for younger children at home as a child-care expense: T or F.

the answer is TRUE?! man. if i had kids of varying ages, this would be the best loophole ever.

Oct 20, 2007

i find the sun-maid attractive

there's something strange about the fact that raisins still come packaged in tiny little paper boxes. for some reason, this practise seems antiquated, but i can't put my finger on why exactly this is. unless of course sun-maid realises this, and is purposely aiming to be antiquated, which in my mind seems not so much kitchy as it seems impractical.

what if i want to eat more than one box of raisins? then i need to have twice the litter. unless they are suggesting one box of raisins per snack session is exactly the proper amount a raisin fan should indulge themselves in. but staring into the eyes of the sun-maid raisin girl (who if measured with proper ratios, seems to be carrying a basket of grapes that no real women her frame should be strong enough to carry with a smile), i can't help but believe that is not the case. she would not place such limitations on us, and it is clear by her delicate features and knowing smile that she honestly believes that raisins have the power to make our lives better.

actually, maybe that's why the boxes are so small. so that somebody who gorges themselves with six boxes at once can suddenly be so much more than regular in their bodily functions -- they can be the proud owner of a harem. i must concede with each box i finish and place on my desk, my collection of sun-maid girls is keeping me company on this most blustery of autumn afternoon.

it's crazy how in depth these marketers will go. how did they know i was attracted to women who wear bonnets?

simply amazing.

Oct 17, 2007

the price of ... guilt?

On October 10, thousands of people logged onto the website www.inrainbows.com to download Radiohead’s latest album. The fact that the band officially announced the release mere days in advance was a shock to many. That the download would cost whatever you wanted, however, seemed absolutely mind-boggling to some.

The novel idea (customers can pay as little as nothing if they are so inclined) has sparked debate over the future of the music industry, with many starting to subscribe to the idea that the clock is ticking for behemoth record companies like Sony and BMG.

This is a knee-jerk reaction. Reports suggest the average downloader is paying between five to eight dollars to download “In Rainbows”. This is a veritable steal considering most digital downloads from stores like iTunes cost one dollar a track (there are 10 on the album), and CD’s are often priced well into the double digits.

Well, it would be a veritable steal. That is, if it wasn’t available for free. People have asked me why I didn't pay anything for "In Rainbows," or if I feel guilty for doing so. I pondered that question myself as I entered nill into the donation bin of rock.

After all -- this is a social experiment. It’s a question of what the experience of music is worth to us personally, on an emotional and economical level. Blah blah blah.

What "In Rainbows" should really be seen as is a sample survey on how fiscally responsible we are.

If you take a pragmatic look at the situation, the idea that Radiohead should be hailed as some sort of musical Che Guerra is absurd. People were going to download their album for free anyways, through Bit Torrent and other piracy venues. In fact, I would wager that the very same people who were going to steal it are now the ones paying nominal prices for an inferior version of the album.

What the band has done is basically just ask their fans to donate money. For nothing. Every cent that goes toward the digital download of "In Rainbows" is money Radiohead would never have seen had they only released a CD version.

People willing to buy the album will still buy it – they want something tangible. For everyone else, however, who otherwise would have downloaded the album illegally but not necessarily purchased it, this is an unexpected expense. People have been programmed as consumers to pay for a service. It’s not surprising that many would feel bad for actually having to type "nothing" into a donation box.

Downloading from some faceless peer-to-peer site is easy. “Stealing” directly from the source seems somewhat more difficult and guilt inducing. And so, small numerical values start being entered by downloaders into the “how much will you pay” box, all the while rationalizing it by telling themselves how little they are paying for an album. But you know what’s cheaper than one or two? Zero.

The band that created arguably the greatest rock album of the past 20 years in “OK Computer” have taken hundreds of music fans (and probably more than a handful of college students) and essentially shaken them down for their lunch money.

Not everyone may have thought hearing Paranoid Android was a seminal point in their lives, but somehow Radiohead have guilt tripped music pirates into paying for music – and incredibly, convinced them to do so happily. If that doesn’t prove the band is a foursome of musical geniuses, I frankly do not know what will.

To be fair, “In Rainbows” is a gorgeous album (yes, there is actually music involved in all this), with sweeping melodies and a driving rhythm section that somehow have made an album that does nothing crazy, and sounds perfect within its familiarity. In short, it is so un-Radiohead avant-garde it actually is Radiohead avant-garde (like that episode of South Park where a goth kid decides he is so goth, he's going to be conformist instead of non-conformist). I will probably buy the CD when it comes out, just to hear Reckoner in better quality.

However, Thom Yorke lives in a giant house, while I just ate ramen noodles for dinner again.

So no, the answer is I don’t feel bad for downloading “In Rainbows” for nothing. And neither should you.

Oct 11, 2007

question

you awake one day to find yourself in the bedroom of one of your closest friends of the opposite gender.

you are not, however, merely sleeping in his or her bed. you quickly realize that, somehow, you have actually been transported into your friends body, similar to the movie "being john malkovich."

you are befuddled by this surreal turn of events.

do you look at yourself naked?

blink

it's funny how from utterly asinine conversation, you can glean morsels of wisdom.

life is just too short, too unpredictable, to spend it doing anything but enjoying every moment to the fullest. having that mentality changes so much of the way we approach every decision we make, yet we so often take for granted that the next day will even exist for us.

i guess it's kind of morbid to think about. and it's also awfully cliche. but at the same time, i'd rather spend my time preventing myself from having regrets, than having to live with them later on.

the impact we have on those around us, our legacy; to some it might all be irrelevant in the greater scheme of our biological existence.

ironically of course, if that's the case -- doesn't what we do now count for even more?

Oct 9, 2007

LAST SONNET

by: John Keats (1795-1821)

      BRIGHT Star, would I were steadfast as thou art--
      Not in lone splendour hung aloft the night,
      And watching, with eternal lids apart,
      Like Nature's patient sleepless Eremite,
      The moving waters at their priest-like task
      Of pure ablution round earth's human shores,
      Or gazing on the new soft-fallen mask
      Of snow upon the mountains and the moors--
      No--yet still steadfast, still unchangeable,
      Pillow'd upon my fair love's ripening breast,
      To feel for ever its soft fall and swell,
      Awake for ever in a sweet unrest,
      Still, still to hear her tender-taken breath,
      And so live ever--or else swoon to death.


neat huh?

Oct 3, 2007

Last Week

[Tues]
14:00, Curry chicken, bowl of rice
23:00, Bowl of cereal, pear

[Wed]
11:30, Ham sandwich
14:00, 1 slice pepperoni pizza
20:00, 1 can cream of mushroom soup
23:15, Bowl of cereal

[Thurs]
16:00, Bowl of instant noodles
18:30, Banana

[Fri]
16:00, Bowl of cereal, Banana, some toasted almonds
20:00, Rice w/ various dishes

[Sat]
08:00, Timbits
14:00, 2 Hamburgers, small box of smarties
20:00, 10 course Chinese wedding banquet

[Sun]
12:00, Vietnamese grilled chicken on rice
20:00, Rare beef Pho, small

[Mon]
11:00, Pasta w/ pesto sauce, tomatoes and sausage
13:00, 1 pear
20:00, Rice /w various dishes, 1 orange

[Tues]
13:00, Rice /w various dishes
18:00, 1 Red bean popsicle
20:00, 1 Wendy's Jr. Bacon Cheeseburger

In conclusion, I believe I need to eat more fruits and vegetables.

Sep 27, 2007

agent zero

it means a lot for me. live '95 was the first basketball video game i ever had. being on the cover of a video game is not something you dream of. making it to the nba, winning championships, yea, but for some reason, being on the cover of a video game isn't one of those things; so when i got it, i came to tears.

(gilbert arenas, on being on the cover of this year's NBA Live game.)
how could anybody not love gilbert arenas. the dude averaged 28.4 points per game last year, and still he cried when he found out he was going to be on the cover of NBA live.

he's like, if you put one of your favorite friends who happens to be a basketball nut, and transplanted him into the body of a near perfect NBA physical specimen. he just doesn't have the attitude that makes so many other professional athletes annoying -- gil is a normal person. he does, thinks, and says things the average person can relate to.

how can you not love that swag?

hibachi!

insurance

i like how when you buy new shoes, they often come with a spare pair of shoelaces.

laces are one of the most over-looked items in our daily lives. unless you wear loafers, these innocuous slivers of plastic tipped string play an integral role in our waking productivity. can you imagine how annoying it would be if our shoelaces suddenly vanished?

our shoes would come flying off our feet. we wouldn't be able to run, or even walk at a brisk pace, without our shoes coming off. we would loose any sort of ankle support; construction workers would be at peril; the inhabitants of nunavut would freeze; firefighters would singe all the hair off their toes. it would be chaos.

i realize this is less of an issue for females, what with their plethora of lace-less pumps and sandals, but still, recall the many times during the week you thank god for the comfort and practicality of your trusty, dependable sneakers. our ability to do routine tasks would be severely hindered without the lowly shoelace, holding everything together in its strong and silent manner.

it is for this reason that i appreciate the spare shoelaces that come with my shoes. not only are they a different colour -- allowing me to personalize (in so much as having 2 options constitutes a personalization) the appearance of my kicks -- but it is also a constant reminder that somebody, somewhere, understands how important these shoelaces really are, and had the foresight to ensure my ability to function should i for whatever reason lose or break a lace.

this attention to detail is the kind of thing that makes the world seem like a more bearable place to be. so wherever you are, shoelace woman or man, i thank you. it is because of you, and the unwavering strength of shoelaces everywhere, that i will sleep easier tonight.

god bless, and goodnight.

Sep 23, 2007

they do

now that's what i call a wedding.

congrats to the lovely couple; cheers for the great weekend.

now where's that advil...

Sep 17, 2007

vampires hate italians

we like to convince ourselves of things we know are not true.

this is a fact of life, and despite our sometimes adamant denial of this seemingly naive behavior, we all know it happens, and often. this is why we usually laugh at people when they say things like "i hate linkin park", "i find reality television to be inane, and would surely watch more tv if american idol were replaced by a show that chronicled the history of long-division", or "i'm not really looking for a relationship right now".

people 90% of the time do not believe individuals who make broad sweeping and quasi-pretentious sounding comments like this. in fact, people who tend to make these comments usually do not even believe themselves. regardless, this is behavior that we succumb to all the time.

we need to lie to ourselves once in a while just to make our lives seem that tiny bit more bearable. be it a false sense of intellectualism, anti-intellectualism, or some sort of self-reverse psychology to combat our underlying desires to be wanted, we will often tell ourselves whatever it takes to keep ourselves sane. and strangely enough, we will force ourselves to believe it, despite how absurd it might be to think some people genuinely find the OC to be utterly unentertaining, or that ambient music is honestly more complex than sitting in a coin-operated laundromat with a blindfold on.

these are all things we know inherently. and yet we constantly wake up everyday and attempt to brainwash ourselves otherwise, for no other reason than we fear who we might really be, or what others might think of us should they ever get to actually know us.

this is why we let so few people into our inner sanctum's, and why falling in love can often be such a journey fraught with peril -- that level of trust is sacred in our relationships, be it with friends or lovers, and the thought that someone might view our inner workings and have the audacity to not just escape us, but tell the world about our issues; well, that's enough to bring a person to convince themselves animal collective make catchy music.

if anything is degrading in our society, i find it is our ability as human beings to be honest -- both with ourselves and other people. and i'm not quite sure why. somehow, through some entirely non-scientific method (or perhaps an entirely scientific method), i would like to figure out why this is. and perhaps even more importantly, i hope i won't have to keep pretending i hate romantic comedies to do so.

Sep 12, 2007

question

you have been given the choice to turn yourself into the most physically attractive person in the world. do you do it?

worth noting however, is that your actual physical make-up does not change. what you are in effect doing, is making every other individual in the world less attractive than you currently are, thus placing you at the top of the hottie heap.

does this change your answer?

Sep 11, 2007

the cheese stands alone

a lot of us seem to be entering our mini-mid life crisis phases. people getting married wonder whether it's smart to be getting married. people not getting married wonder why nobody wants to marry them. it's all terribly confusing, and frankly when you step back for some perspective, it's all incredibly humorous.

today we will focus on an endangered species: the single.

much like the northern right whale, single people are becoming an increasingly rare breed. as their numbers decrease, these poor creatures are forced to seek out others of their ilk, forming small isolated packs. complicating matters, poachers and married couples often prey on these pods for the sake of the ever controversial sport of matchmaking. indeed, protesters continue to rally the canadian government to shutdown the aboriginal tradition of "clubbing" that takes place almost weekly in most major urban centers. many animal rights activists have condemned the ritual as "tiring and over priced".

unlike the related but thriving "involved" species of singles, "non-involved" singles tend to spend most of their time griping about their lack of numbers, drinking alone, and generally manifesting various incarnations of narcissism about whether or not they are actually too good for anybody they currently know or have known in their lives. conversely, some scientists argue this erratic behavior is actually the cause of many single individual's problems. this theory continues to be debated as evidence is thusfar inconclusive.

currently, a body of research is building that indicates a direct correlation between the dwindling number of singles, and what federal wild life experts have coined "intimacy and commitment issues"; a disease that often leaves singles defenseless against and unable to adapt to the rugged environment of their natural dating scenes.

non-involved singles can often be identified in the wild by their looks of indifference in group outings, cynicism about life in general, and a propensity for temporary platonic bonds with other non-involved singles.

experts are unsure if the rapid decline in the single population is a natural and cyclical phenomenon, or attributable to changes in climate and ecological systems due to pollution, greenhouse gasses, and existential boredom.

if you would like to donate to the cause of S.O.S., please send a cheque with your monetary contribution to the S.O.S. fund at:

Save Our Singles
p.o. box 12854
m2k 2a2
toronto, ontario, canada.

for more information about singles, refer to resources at your local warhammer store, adult video rental location, or gentlemens club at 11am.

Sep 5, 2007

something else

if there is one thing i wish we had gotten to do in new york, it would have been to attend a US Open match. one of the random danish guys i met in the hostel was talking about how he went to watch a federer match, and now as i watch him shrug off the best that andy roddick has to throw at him, i want to witness him live even more.

it's pretty fortunate that i've been around to see some great athletes in their prime. gretzky, jordan, woods and federer, that's pretty ridiculous. i'm proud of the fact that i will one day be able to say i saw these guys doing their thing.

some might argue federer isn't the best tennis player ever. but watching him play, it's not so much the fact that he wins so much: it's how he wins that's impressive. the dude is a tennis robot. it's unbelievable.

i also must admit that watching tennis so much this year has given me a somewhat greater appreciation for the sport. there's a beauty about individual competition that i can only parallel to boxing, where in one match you have nobody but yourself to hide behind. it's not like team sports where you can have an off night and still contribute -- in tennis, you have to bring it consistently, every night.

other random notes:

- venus williams has lost a tremendous amount of weight. she now looks borderline attractive.
- i've said it before but i'll say it again: roger federer's girlfriend is really not that special. he could definitely do better.
- tennis is perhaps the only sport where what you wear while you play is arguably just as important as how well you play. it's the closesting thing the sporting world has to a fashion runway.
- i miss new york.

*edit scoop jackson bit my post.

how does this guy get famous simply by writing in the most hyperbolic fashion he can imagine? how many things can possibly be the best thing ever when comparing apples to oranges?

nobody has ever stolen my ideas so blatantly in the history of story stealing.

ever.

Aug 29, 2007

our kids don't stand a chance

seriously. i sometimes get very concerned about the world we're sending the little ones into.

they stand absolutely zero chance against today's advertising and corporate trend makers. the whole idea of cultural and ideological appropriation is so intertwined with post-modern thinking that in this new world, where modernity has become just another aphorism that comes prepackaged with a matching clothing line and accessories, musical tastes and political values, where do we even begin to delineate cultural dissolution from cultural creation? and all things considered, is the fact that these ideas are now arguably one and the same actually the true definition of our generation?

has the last line been crossed? has independent thinking itself been co-opted?

they're trying.

www.nikelegacy.com is an online community set up by nike to gauge trends, opinions, and general interests. cool hunting, trend setting, early adapters -- these are the people marketeers and companies are sitting on and watching.

but this website man, it just looks at the feedback loop and says "fuck it. this takes too long." nike legacy is a "social community" for those interested in nike basketball. it combines every resource into one place, and allows for interaction where instead of taking surveys and focus groups to task, it simply puts a blank screen in front of kids and asks "what do you want us to sell you?".

as a marketer, i would say it's genius. as a consumer, it scares the shit out of me.

exhibit a. would be the websites first activity for new members: take a picture of your closet and send it to nike, including details of everything you own in said picture.

and you know what? teens are glad to do it. they take pride in showing off their shiny material goods, paid for by overwhelmed parents or minimum wage jobs -- or both.

now, don't get me wrong. anyone who knows me will know that i am unabashedly a nike fan. but when the intrusion becomes so blatant, so bold; even i can't help but feel dirty.

i'm not against capitalism. to be honest, i kind of laugh at the idea of hipsters who refuse to support major corporations but will then drop $200 on pants made by a smaller clothing brand, which in turn is likely prospering off a subcultural niche being propagated by one of many said corporations the person is trying to avoid.

i love money. but even moreso, i love the idea that money is the result of chasing things you have a passion for that are not....well...just money. this is what makes our world interesting. and when capitalism begins to exist outside a free market and enter into the realm of hyper-consumption, one can't help but wonder where our priorities got misplaced, and how to fix things.

i'm probably sounding an awful lot like a communist. but i swear i'm not. i'm not trying to be partisan, or pretentious (well, ok, maybe a little), or hell, even personal.

all i'm venting about is the bigger picture: what does it even mean to be an individual anymore?

and most importantly, what will we tell our kids when they ask us?

Aug 28, 2007

maybe, maybe not

so increasingly, i find everyone just wants to play softball.

i've been playing for a lot of summers now, and it's always a good time. i mean, you get to enjoy the weather, run around a bit, and spend the day hanging out with good friends. what's not to like?

but it seems recently, people have started to go softball CRAZY. so many of the same people i played with in church league are now playing softball at least 3-4 times a week, every week during the summer. now, i'm not saying this is a bad thing. i am merely saying that as much as i like the sport, there has definitely been a noticeable surge in the games popularity (particularly amongst asians) over the last couple years, and it continues to grow.

i mean, even at my church, we went from having just 1 team, to 3, to 4 teams this year, with enough numbers realistically to field 5 teams if we had the resources.

what's up with this? i think it's great kids are getting into it (although personally, i'd have my own kids play hardball instead) but, where the heck did this come from?

actually, what i think really makes me envious is that people don't show this kind of interest in basketball. if i had people to play basketball with 3-4 times a week, i'd be in much better shape.

i find it comes in fads amongst us asians. it used to be dragonboat, but that is starting to wane. now softball is peaking, but you can already see that the next thing coming up is going to be ultimate, and kind of along with that golf.

hmm.... now that i type it out, i suppose it makes sense, since those sports go from the most exerting down to the least...

dammit. i guess i should invest in some golf clubs....

Aug 26, 2007

like an onion

new york can't come soon enough. finally bit the bullet and bought tickets to see the yanks play the red sox in their final regular season game of the year.

it's going to be amazing. plus i'll get to say i saw a yanks/sox game in the house that ruth built, before they tear the shrine down and put up the new yankee stadium.

still; for the price i paid, this better be the most exciting baseball experience of my life.

Aug 24, 2007

where every child wants to go



camp okutta!

trust me, you want to check it out.

bill walton is on crack

// i heart samuel dalembert. slammin' sammy was doing his best tim duncan impression against venezuela last night, dropping a few crunch time buckets and clutch free throws. on top of that, he was swatting shots and protecting the paint as if leo rautins threatened to send him back to haiti if we didn't win. big boy finished with 18-8, and 5 blocks. not too shabby//

//consider this: steve nash is holding himself out of international play mainly to save his body for the grueling NBA season. if the suns do in fact go all the way this year, is nash then more inclined to play for canada if we make it to beijing? if magloire decides to get off his lazy ass for the chance at an olympic medal, can you imagine a canadian starting lineup of magloire, dalembert, brown, english, and nash? not exactly the most feared lineup in the world, but at least it'd be fun to watch some real talent wearing the colours. at the very least, we'd have to be considered a darkhorse for a medal merely for having nash. i mean, dude took a team with sherman hamilton and todd mccullough to a 5-2 record in sydney. just one more reason to root for the suns//

//speaking of our boy sherm, i would love to meet the programming director of raptors tv. has anyone actually ever watched X's and O's? and i'm paying a monthly premium for this channel? yikes//

//quote of the day: "take that hugo chavez!" -- tony kornhesier during PTI, in regards to the beatdown the united states put on venezuela in their FIBA tourny opener two nights ago. of even more interest is that after the U.S. made the venezuelans look like the washington generals, team opec came out tonight and looked like a bunch of all-stars against canada. to put things in perspective, we had no answer for the offensive force that is hector romero. we're going to get massacred on saturday. i can't wait to watch carl english being checked by kobe. poor kid's probably having nightmares even as i type this//

//i wonder if celine dion will be at the game on saturday. i hope not. if anything that would only motivate the americans to crush us more//

//on a personal note, i was blasting feist in my car yesterday and pulled up at a light next to a dodge caravan with what i can only describe as a prototypical canadian soccer mom at the wheel. she quickly turned to look at me, and flashed a huge grin with two thumbs up, as she proceeded to bob her head in her seat. needless to say, i turned the music down, and quietly sped away as soon as the light turned green//

Aug 20, 2007

only because herb asked

here's one of those updating my life with current event posts that i rarely if ever partake in.

this weekend, i went to vanex's jack and jill, organized brilliantly by the leung family and crew (that would be us). it went off without a hitch, and fun was had by all while enjoying company, celebrating the couple of the hour (and hours continually onward until september 22nd), and doing some salsa dancing. lots of fun, no stories to tell, except that one where brian was macking girls. i bore no witness to said macking, but he has promised to repeat it next time we go clubbing with even greater results. i am giddy with anticipation.

today me and a small gaggle of gals took in finals sunday at the rogers cup. justine henin won it all again this year, and we learned several things from our first live tennis match, including the zeal of serbian tennis fans, as well as the importance of sunblock.

speaking of which, upon inspection when i got home, the right side of my body is definitively and quite obviously more tan than the left side.

to further sate herb's appetite for news from the homeland, i will update him regarding the five juicest pieces of gossip currently making the rounds:

5) wendy has a friend that we officially refer to now as date-rape. it is the rare occasion where that term can be used, and despite its absurdly inappropriate nature, we generally all just laugh because we actually understand who we're talking about.

4) western has turned brian into a pimp. why that never happened to us, i do not know.

3) the current hottest topics of conversation are: weddings, engagement rings, and things to wear to weddings (in that order).

2) somebody has a crush on cammie

1) that somebody is herb

Aug 17, 2007

unison

i'm probably going to look back at this summer in three months and really regret how i spent my time and money.

until then -- lets party like it's 1989.

Aug 14, 2007

a brief window

can you imagine how liberating life would be if we had no concept of time?

fascinating.

Aug 10, 2007

Bill Simmons is wise

In this day and age, what even constitutes cheating? I don't know the exact rules for the era in which women dress like hookers, shrug off one-night stands and dance by grinding their butts against the groins of various strangers at dark nightclubs. So what's cheating in this universe?A threesome with two of their boyfriend's best friends? Sleeping with their boyfriend's brother or dad? I give up. Just know that I'm sending my daughter to high school in a suit of armor every day.
what a well articulated man that Simmons is.

Aug 8, 2007

a movie script ending

it's funny what can happen in a couple months; how perspective can change so drastically, for better or for worse.

is it possible for a person to change who they are over one single summer?

Aug 3, 2007

what could have been...

is it worth it to throw sensibility to the wind sometimes and just enjoy where life leads you despite your better judgment concerning long-term ramifications? i mean, is there much to be said for the meaning and value of living in each "now" moment and just being confidant that whatever the consequences you'll be able to handle them? after all, if we don't live for the now, than why live at all?

conversely, is sacrificing the short term excitement for long term stability and practicality really a bad investment? is protecting your own interests -- even at the expense of someone else -- and curtailing some immediate gratification in lieu of the "big picture" really ever unwise?

is it silly to live life hoping to make every decision wisely? is it worth living life that way? am i romanticizing spontaneity?

is it ignorant to think that the above two scenarios are necessarily mutually exclusive? am i asking too many questions?

...probably.

Jul 24, 2007

songs for the deaf

are transit shelter advertisements for programs to help the illiterate hilarious, or cruel?

i have yet to decide on the matter.

Jul 23, 2007

new york run by the swiss

Toronto sucks.

now, i'm not saying i don't love it here. i do. i absolutely adore all that our city has to offer, and i wish upon wishes that we can continue to improve towards being a truly international city that the world can view as a leader culturally, economically, socially as well as architecturally.

that said, we as citizens just don't care enough.

you know the reason New York is such a successful city? because people love it. it even says so on their tshirts.

the general feeling amongst Torontonians i find, is not so much love, as it is a general fondness. and man, that just isn't enough.

it would be awesome if we had a waterfront. if we had better mass transit. if we have beautification and leading edge design as part of our civic mandate.

but these things don't just happen on the will of a few politicos and a general public that nods and says "yea, that would be nice", then goes back to pimping their facebook pages.

and i say this not so much as a call to arms, but merely as an observation. Toronto will probably not achieve the status of New York, or even a Chicago, because in Canada, we're alright with being mediocre.

in business, in sports, in life -- if we're ok, we're good enough. Canadians don't seek to be the best. to be able to gloat from the top of the mountain.

all this potential in this country, and this city. seemingly squandered.

Jul 18, 2007

the more things change...

forty-two days later.

why is it that whenever you're in school, the summer months always seems so formative and life changing, whereas when you're an unemployed hobo, it's the winter months that really get you thinking?

curious.

anyways, people probably knew i'd be back, so here it is if anyone bothers to come 'round these parts anymore. blog readers are of but two catagories: the fickle, and the bored.

i suspect the fickle won't find this for a while, while the bored will be here ... by morning.

what i've realized in my short time as a honda prelude owner: there are a lot of us out there.

back when i drove a VW, i felt like i was part of a subculture that was just slightly askew of the mainstream, despite the fact that....well....there are a crapload of VW's out there.

but there aren't NEARLY as many '98 passat's out there as there are '98 preludes. i mean, goodness. i see my exact car driving beside me at least once a day. it's kind of like buying a tshirt, then going to school and realizing everybody is rocking the same shirt as you. uncool dude. uncool.

when i get a real job, i am so buying a motorcycle.

with streamers on the handlebars.

Jun 7, 2007

false media

fine. i will allow you to read my archives if you are truly that bored at work.

i know *I* find them amusing.
the blog is dead.

Jun 4, 2007

struck dumb

i would say....

saturday looks good to me
+
camera obscura
+
the triangles
+
the oneders (yes, those oneders)

= Lucky Soul.

i feel like i should be wearing a cardigan sharing a malt in a diner with my high school sweetheart while listening to this song.

either that, or breaking out into cool post-grease musical dance moves or something.

May 30, 2007

hmmmm...

make it happen colangelo.

doooo ittt....

May 29, 2007

let it die

if the yankees are supposedly mired in a hopeless talespin, what does that say about the jays?

we're only 1 game ahead of them.

if the yankees are terrible this year, the jays are just quietly trying to avoid being noticed....

May 28, 2007

no one needs to know

a well deserved sleeping in.

feist was incredible on saturday, she put on one of the better shows i've ever seen at massey hall. she's powered by personality, and her music is definitely just an extension of that at her show. it's pretty crazy to see. all around an amazingly talented girl.

May 24, 2007

falling slowly

you know what makes me feel old?

realizing that we are no longer the young, cool generation of softball kids at church, hahaha

we are officially the old team.

we also do not have a kickass websites that has stats, profiles, a blog, and....RSS feeds? what? justin's a nerd, hahahaha

check out the david's mighty men site. i am in awe.

May 23, 2007

people get ready

portland and seattle 1 and 2? so who's willing to bet against Nike signing both oden and durant before the month is over? nobody? yea, i wouldn't either.

why is it everybody thinks that taking the best player available is the same thing as saying take kevin durant first overall? has it occurred to anybody that oden might actually be the best player in the draft? just a thought.

finally, can people please stop making the michael joran draft analogy? please? everybody says that it's ridiculous to pass on the next MJ, and that we all should have learned our lesson in '84

what i personally have learned since '84 (a tumultuous terrible twos for me, i remember it fondly) is that a dominant center ALWAYS pans out.

i don't care how many big man busts there have been, if you roll the dice on a talented dominant big and win, that equals championships. rolling the dice on talented wings is just as, if not more risky these days (name someone who's done what MJ did. what? nobody? curious....) plus even when they do pan out, it never guarantees rings (see tmac, vc, dirk, kg even, etc etc...)

in other words, greg oden is going to portland. no question about it, barring some sort of unforeseen deal breaker. at this point, i could make a cliched jailblazer joke. but i'm better than that, so you should be too.

.....

and for those of you who remember my NBA draft = dating analogy, i'm going to break this year's crop down into laywomans terms for the ladies.

greg oden is the professional student who is relatively well balanced in everything and is certainly going to be a rich ass dude who makes the world a better place, as well a dedicated family man. he might even end AIDS somehow, through either doing research or ridiculously generous philanthropy. hell, perhaps through both.

kevin durant is a performing artist who's about to make it huge. he's enourmously talented, and is capable of both winning a grammy and an oscar without people rolling their eyes. just enormous potential for greatness. and he's not even fake about it, he just happens to be really good at stuff in a way that seems almost unfair.

see, the difference between real life and the NBA now, is that even if kevin durant DOES end up winning a grammy, an oscar, a VIBE lifetime achievement award, and the nobel peace prize, he might still not necessary win a championship if he's on a crappy team, or surrounded by incompetent organizations. (see kevin garnett).

however, i just realized after typing out that comparison that most people would choose durant in a heartbeat.

i guess my analogy is somewhat flawed. dammit. back to the drawing board.

May 20, 2007

dull flame of desire

June 25 - The Fiery Furnaces
July 1st - Harbourfront festival
July 14 - Mirah
Sept 8 - Vfest

May 17, 2007

jazz crabs

fox renews 24 for two more season.

am i the only one who is already jaded by jack bauer's endless string of day-to-end-all-days?

someone please put this poor man out his misery.

no one deserves to have this many bad days in one lifetime.

can you imagine the stress of knowing that every year, you're guaranteed to have to save the world at some point? how could you ever garner the courage to get out of bed? I'd be debilitated by fear every morning I woke up. even the day's you don't have to save the world, i doubt he enjoys. all he probably can think about is "one day down. 364 more to days to worry about...."

poor guy.

May 16, 2007

the resurrection

thoughts:

- stephen jackson must be a schizo or something. how can someone be so crazy one minute, and seem so genuinely sane the next? it's mind boggling. he essentially clotheslines dee brown, goes nuts for a technical foul complaining, and then the second the game ends he runs up to jerry sloan and hugs him. what? the real-life equivalent would be if someone beating the snot out of you for insulting his shoes, then taking you to the hospital and waiting until you're stitched up before taking you out for a drink as if nothing ever happened. just completely nuts.

- the suspensions to amare and diaw are probably the most controversial i can remember in recent memory. it's hard to swallow, really. by the letter of the law there is little doubt they made their call. but there should always be exceptions.

the frustrating part of the decision is not merely that it was unbelievably draconian, but the decision favours the team that committed the crime! truehoop points out the warped logical end of this decision.

A TrueHoop reader emailed a great point -- by this logic, if James Jones had noticed that Duncan and Bowen had wandered on the court in the second quarter, he should have immediately decked Francisco Elson. There's your altercation. Mr. Commissioner! Presumably Jones, Duncan, and Bowen would have all been suspended for Game 5 -- a big win for Phoenix.
i wonder if the assistant coaches for phoenix are in trouble for this one -- it's their responsibility to keep their players on the bench in situations just like these. a travesty really.

then again, if it's must see TV the NBA wanted, they certainly have it now (debately, they had it before anyways with the intensity we've seen so far). let it be known though, if the suns manage to win game 5, they will win this year's championship. it's undeniable; as certain as paris hilton complaining to her prison guards about unstylish bedsheets.

- wearing a steve nash jersey actually produces a noticeable increase in pressure while playing basketball. as if i have to justify why i'm wearing it to a bunch of random dudes.

also, i keep forgetting to yell hibachi when i hit game winners.....i can't wait until gil's healthy

- i think i need to hang out with guys more. all my life i've pretty much been socially surrounded by a gaggle of girls. which to some may be a pimps life.

but at this stage, i think i need some guy love.

come find me fellas. i want a hug.

May 15, 2007

no such thing

for those who know me well, they can only imagine my elation today.

and a big thank you to Winners, without whom none of this could have been made possible. security database breach be damned, i still love you.

behold, perhaps the only material object in the world that i have consistantly longed to own over the past decade or so:

May 14, 2007

she don't have to know

does anyone have spare bookends that they don't need anymore? i'll gladly take them off your hands.

and milk crates?

and spray paint?

yea, i'll take those too. shoot me an email.

May 10, 2007

i've decided to go AWOL from the internet for a little bit.

if you need me, find me the old fashioned way.

toodles.

May 9, 2007

Phrases like "rare talent" are thrown around all the time these days, but this compilation makes painfully clear just how unique and valuable this music is. Smith's visionary qualities were not terribly flashy or transgressive, and his great musical gifts were not those of innovation. Instead, he steadily and quietly wrote, honed, and recorded a body of beautifully executed, deeply moving records not quite like any others. Consider him the patron saint of hobbyists, a talented and dedicated craftsman with a tireless love of the creative process.
i normally hate pitchfork. but this summation by matt lemay in his review of 'new moon' is as succinctly as anyone could have put it, so good on him.

we miss ya elliott.
this is at once hilarious, surreal, and frightening.

but mostly hilarious.
with the window open, i can hear the train going by in the middle of the night.

like some distant thunder, it wafts to my bed through the darkness, the sound coming from nowhere, but quickly becoming so natural you begin to think it had always been there before.

as the rumble recedes, and eventually pitter patters away into the dark from which it came, the sudden silence is startling. the quiet of the night is new again, the peace of the darkness undisturbed, reminding me that there is still much to wonder about outside my picturesque three-pane window.

lights pierce the darkness, a part of my everyday sights.

but there are stories behind those lights. behind the faces who placed those lights. and the minds who created those lights.

everything has a story. every face, every tree, every mailbox, every traffic light.

our world is full of stories.

so maybe we're just here to listen.

May 8, 2007

balaclava

it's amazing what 25 and sunny can do for ones disposition.

i immediately went from content to happy when i opened my front door. awesome.

May 7, 2007

anthem for a seventeen year-old girl


The conditions of discipleship given to us by our Lord in verses 26, 27, and 33 mean that the men and women He is going to use in His mighty building enterprises are those in whom He has done everything. "If anyone comes to Me and does not hate his father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, yes, and his own life also, he cannot be My disciple " (Luke 14:26 ). This verse teaches us that the only men and women our Lord will use in His building enterprises are those who love Him personally, passionately, and with great devotion— those who have a love for Him that goes far beyond any of the closest relationships on earth. The conditions are strict, but they are glorious.

All that we build is going to be inspected by God. When God inspects us with His searching and refining fire, will He detect that we have built enterprises of our own on the foundation of Jesus? (see 1 Corinthians 3:10-15 ). We are living in a time of tremendous enterprises, a time when we are trying to work for God, and that is where the trap is. Profoundly speaking, we can never work for God. Jesus, as the Master Builder, takes us over so that He may direct and control us completely for His enterprises and His building plans; and no one has any right to demand where he will be put to work.


ouch.

May 6, 2007

oh wow.

lightbulb....

big time....serious....light bulb.

i want to move away.

May 4, 2007

wow.

spiderman 3 is really....really bad.

i've never laughed so much at a movie that wasn't particularly trying to be funny.

moreover, i haven't seen people literally walk out of a movie -- least yet a hugely hyped 12:10am premier showing -- in a very very long time.

quote of the night:

guy walking out the door with 20 minutes left in the movie yells to decidedly impatient and by this point extremely sarcastic crowd: "this was fucking terrible"

*crowd breaks into applause and laughter*

yikes.

May 1, 2007

writer's block

a tale worth telling:


randoms:


roll on

i wonder...

Apr 27, 2007

(this is) the dream of evan and chan

first order of business: compile a list of things to accomplish this summer.

second order of business: accomplish said list.

done and done. man, i'm good at planning stuff.

i have a feeling this summer is going to be pretty eclectic. amongst other things, i'd like to:

- build furniture
- read more
- join hoopdome
- practice writing
- go to new york
- start a t-shirt silk screening business
- supe up my car
- go to more concerts
- write a short film

same old...same old.

Apr 26, 2007

umbrella

the irony of being sad about leaving school, when all year long i was tired of having to go there.

but hey, it's over, and there's much love about an incredibly tight knit class. parting ways in body, but still united in spirit.

or some shit like that, i dunno. i'm not good at this sentimental stuff.

Apr 25, 2007

knocked up

i really wish i was good at singing. while i'm at it, i guess i'd also like to wish for a new pair of basketball shoes. oh well, one thing at a time.

not sure what to do with myself now that school is pretty much over. i should probably like....be productive. easier said than done.

on the bright side, everyone officially has the ok to make plans any day or night and i will be interested and up for doing something.

in fact, please come hang out with me, hahaha

Apr 21, 2007

mcfearless

guilty pleasure #106: watching 'a league of their own' at 2:40am when i should be writing.

i just really enjoy this movie. every time it's on tv, i always end up watching the entire thing.

Apr 20, 2007

for the windows in paradise, for the fatherless in ypsilanti

ah, late night blog posts. the arena of depressing self-reflection and waxing philosophical about retrospectives on life, love, and the open jumper you probably shouldn't have passed up.

man, my body isn't what it used to be. nagging injuries are really starting to pile up: bruised/pulled achilles heel, pinched nerve in shoulder/neck, jammed index finger. my body refuses to fix itself.

i got over my wisdom teeth in one day, and even the most painful injuries i've ever suffered during sports, i've been able to drag myself back into the game a few minutes later and be completely healed no more than a week from then.

but now.....now my crickity bones doth protest the abuse.

you know, everyone is strange in their own way. but it has not escaped my attention that some of us are just stranger than others.

and sometimes....i wonder why?

Apr 18, 2007

cosima

ramblins:

1) you know how CNN is always useful DURING breaking news stories, but days later of non-stop 24hr coverage, you begin to be resentful about being forced to watch the same videos and same fear mongering graphics, stats and decks over and over? yea, i'm at that point. it's like if someone forced me to listen to "Say it ain't so" on repeat 800 times straight. amazing song, but it just takes all the poignancy and meaning out of it. you're telling me nothing else is going on in the world now that 33 students died? nothing else newsworthy is happening right now at all?

this is like when Anna Nicole-Smith died. except not as funny.

2) i cannot tell a lie: Gustavo Chacin is the ugliest player in all of major league baseball. this is probably the best photo of him i could find.



and that list of sad-sack mugs includes Randy Johnson when he was still sporting a mullet.



i feel bad taking a shot at Gustavo. what a game he threw against the bosox last night. he's a good kid, but unfortunately, he looks like the lovechild of mr. clean and mr. potato head. just....unfortunate.

3) I like to parallel the final two weeks of school before summer as to the WNBA finals.

nobody cares, nobody wants to be there, and a little bit of frontal nudity would make everything that much more interesting, yet simultaneously, horrific.

2 more weeks.

i think i'm going to make it my goal next year to not fail any classes.

my standards for my education are officially so low, i have to dig up to hit rock bottom.

man, if being self-depreciating was an olympic event, i would so finish like......

actually, i suppose the only way that analogy would make any sense is if i said i'd finish dead last.

i'm blowing my own mind here by zinging myself. i think it's time for bed.....

Apr 16, 2007

came to the rescue

Burn your bridges behind you, and stand committed to God by an act of your own will.


bearing witness to history, and appreciating it while it happens, is often difficult. in our generation, we have been both blessed and cursed by incidents of significance: when the berlin wall fell. when nelson mandela was freed. the personal computer. the advent of the internet. sept 11, 2001. and to a lesser extent, virginia tech, 2007.

we've seen a lot of "first ever's", "last ever's" and generally some most auspicious moments in our times.

as a Christian. as a journalist. as a person with a social burden on my heart, reconciling my place in the world is difficult.

as i'm inundated with media coverage of yet another violent tragedy, reading details on the internet, hearing witness accounts on the television, all while having this worship music playing on repeat on my computer, i can't help but feel the sometimes inherent ironies of my identity.

as i read an article in the newest Macleans (which has undergone perhaps one of the greatest transformations in Canadian magazine history in my opinion) that deals with the increasing relevance religion is playing in our world, as i attempt to come to grips with personal issues regarding my life and my career and my future, the prioritizing and identification of my faith continues to leave me at a loss for answers.

the quote i started with is from today's Utmost. how does one stand committed to God by an act of personal will? it seems like a catch22 that the more we are called to obey, and homogenize, and lay down our lives, the more is demanded of us to fight, and struggle, and choose God consciously in every facet.

a lot of people talk to me about Christianity, and how it's an acceptance of doctrine, and that it's just a bunch of rules.

maybe to some people, this is true. but to me, if religion is to have any purpose at all in my life, that definition is -- and must be -- absolute bullshit.

my faith is the driving reason i am trying to be different. because as much as i refuse to settle for the religious status quo, i feel in this world my personal responsibility is meant for more than the standard 9-5.

that's perfect for some.

it's wrong for me.

but wherever i'm meant to be, i feel like all the idiosyncrasies of my faith, my personality, and my professionalism, will serve me well.

acting of my own will is different from talking though.

perhaps that's the most frustrating part of all -- figuring out how to act on all my gut feelings and making them more than mere words.

but where faith leads some blindly, i feel it's leading me purposefully.

so take that for what it's worth, i guess.

Apr 13, 2007

some loud thunder

i like when you're all stressed about stuff, and then things all work out in the end.

actually, i find if you put enough effort into things, this happens more often than not. which would probably explain why it's such a new experience to me. maybe i'll give this "sustained effort" thing some more consideration. well, until i get lazy again.

some things never change.

i've really decided that i enjoy working on magazines. enough that if someone told me i'd be doing that in some capacity for the rest of my life, i think i'd be ok with that, provided it affords me the opportunity to do some of that work and tell some of those stories while traveling around the world. this is essentially my dream, and always has been.....circle the globe, telling stories about the world to people back home. be it in print or online, but at the very least some sort of written form.

every day that passes, i feel more and more like it's less of a pipe dream, and more of a possibility of i were really to want it enough, and be willing to put in the work.

and surprisingly, for once....i really think i am.

look, a happy post!

Apr 10, 2007

for agent 13

i'm lacking in coherent thought, but I feel like there's some sort of God post in me trying to get out. i just don't know what to say exactly, so a ranting i will go...

the hardest part for me is always trying to figure out the balance between what i am capable of and/or responsible for, and what i am suppose to depend on God for.

because frankly, I feel like sometimes i don't depend on God for anything. and inevitably, things will fall apart. which is not exactly rocket science -- i mean, perspective on a half-full glass does not validate a religion.

moreover, there are times i feel my religious principles and ideals are actually holding me back. over-complicating my decision making process, and guilt tripping myself more than i necessarily should be about things.

but the truth is, although i have these lapses of doubt....and really, when things don't go the way we like, doubt will always creep in, it's human nature. but when i do have these lapses, i can't deny that despite all the questions, i have found that my personal determination to change things is ultimately a futile course of action.

i have been successful in changing my life in many ways, but this has always only sated the deeper reasons for those changes insofar as i move on to newer, different, and (debateably) greater challenges.

and sure, maybe that's what life's about. challenges. climbing mountains, one after another.

someone told me once they considered any sort of alternative -- to be content in life -- settling. and although at the time, i disagreed, when i think about it, she was probably right.

being content with life really is settling. which is exactly why God implores us not to worry too much about life. we could chase happiness for 100 years, hoping only to be content with our lives when we die, and it would probably still be settling to some extent.

ambition should be prioritized, and for me, that just means trying my hardest to not settle spiritually. all the other stuff...literally, stuff.....it's really starting to just all be the same -- pointless.

frankly, sometimes i see myself as some kind of masochist. so why do i do it? what's keeping me here? why do i stick around and insist on all this faith-in-God bullshit to carry me through?

is it a crutch?

i can't answer that. all i know is the most perfect periods i've ever understood, the most fulfilled i've ever been, the most joyful experiences of my life, have all come when i am most in touch with God.

not necessarily when i'm just struggling, but really, just when i'm being critical of all the other stuff in my life and seeking answers to cliches.

the answers are usually there. you just have to know where to look.

and for me....well...even though i want to believe otherwise, i know where my answers lay. getting to the point where i can recieve them and understand them regularly? well....that's just a whole 'nother story....

Apr 9, 2007

this one's gonna bruise

man, i steamed these bbq pork buns, but i left them so long that the paper wrapping thing at the bottom turned all soggy, and i forgot it was even there, and i ate the paper and just realized it now.

you know your day has a high potential for crappiness when....

had myself a pretty interesting easter weekend. lots to figure out still, but trying to trust God with everything i do. whatever that means, because really, i don't know.

there's this thin line where i sometimes worry i'm repeating high school all over again, and i'm going to turn around and walk away from church because i feel like i'm just going through motions.

life is cyclical.

and i really need to understand what it means to learn from my past, and to learn from my mistakes. because frankly, i don't think i'm strong enough to repeat them again.

Apr 3, 2007

get innocuous

i won something from tim horton's FINALLY. i had yet to win a donut, or coffee, or anything, until i finally was rewarded during a wonderful 2am conversation the other night.

speaking of which, i'm incredibly grateful to be blessed with understanding and supportive friends. really, thanks guys. i'm trying especially hard not to take anything in my life for granted lately.

things are shaping up to be pretty fun this week. i'm considering quitting work more and more with every passing day....but then i realize that i'd be so very very poor. even moreso than i currently am.

Mar 28, 2007

twenty four hours

if i can't keep track of people in real life, well then....facebook it is.

Mar 27, 2007

spitting venom

the new modest mouse? the band's kickin' it old school (well, relative to their own sound) with a johnny marr edge. it's good stuff, the whole album is, really.

'dashboard' is a great summer song, and an awful catchy first single. i can see it being just as huge as 'float on' was for them a few summers ago.

but the real gem here is 'spitting venom', 8+ minutes of classic marr guitar laced in perfect doses with some of the best west-coast indie rock modest mouse has ever made. if one song told marr and the band that their little experiment was going to work -- this was it. featuring all the hooks, strained quirky harmonies, and diabetic melodies that modest mouse craft so well, but this song pulls it off while sounding infinitely more mature than the band ever has. and the results are....awesome.

it takes you on a journey, as any great song should, and the understated use of horns as the lush arrangements and layers build are the cherry on top.

nice. very nice.

in other news, i need to sleep earlier.

also, i'm planning on planning a trip to the bar sometime next week, perhaps after multisport. yay or nay? i crave some catching up people, lets work together on this project i will title "not forgetting simon exists".

Mar 22, 2007

agent zero's latest blog post on NBA.com is one of the most insightful basketball ramblings i've read all year. definitely worth a great read, especially if you follow the game, and love the game.

just another reason why i'm really starting to love the guy. he's right behind steve nash in my fanbook.

march into the sea

i'm using this huge, giant, ridiculously oversized computer monitor right now that's plugged into my laptop.

i don't want to give it back. this thing is....awesome.

anyone see the new gilbert arenas commercial? the "impossible is 0" one?

youtube it. it's an awesome commercial if you like gil.

Mar 20, 2007

incomplete

i just watched stranger than fiction.

A SEA FOAM FENDER STRAT!!!

that's my dream guitar! i wanted to buy a sea foam strat but couldn't afford it, so i got the white dano.

stranger than fiction indeeeeed. i wonder if this means someone is writing a book about my life.

i bet it'd be a pretty stupid book.

Mar 13, 2007

i need a friend with a boat

i've been told my recent lack of appearances are starting to push me into the fringe of our little socialsphere. well now, that's just unkind.

busy busy, but i'm trying to make time for people, i swear to god. my best friend right now is definitely....my car. and the soothing voices of CBC radio shows.

so it would appear that despite the protestation and snarky remarks about people who get into relationships then disappear from their friends lives, i have clearly become one of those people, hahaha

not that i have any regrets; nor would i conclude any causes should be directly shouldered by my lovely better half (or as facebook calls her, my "significant other") that i could not arguably rationalize as equal parts due to work and school responsibilities.

i am, however, willing to concede that truly, i have become that which i at one time mocked.

naturally, i remain pragmatic and optimistic about the situation. i have but a month of school left, after which i hope to reconnect with people who i am essentially ignoring right now.

in the meantime however, this is a most general and impersonal attempt at an apology for my utter self-alienation. at least the irony is not lost on me, non?

keep sending me emails to stuff. at least then i'll know what i'm missing when i'm missing it.

and no, that was not sarcasm.

and neither was that.

now bed time. the favourite, most cherished part of the my day....