Wednesday, November 29, 2006

the way it will all come together...

today feels like a good one. i woke up late and slow, made coffee, and sat at the kitchen table for a long while just watching the snow fall and peering in on my next-door neighbours. (ah, the intimacy of city-dwellers).

been doing a lot of thinking lately. i still have a lot of time on my hands, but i feel good about it today. if i can make rent in two days and have a bit of cash to spare i'll be happy. isn't that what life should be like? scraping off enough freedom to be happy, and working enough to feel satisfied and stress free? i don't mind working if it fulfills me, but i can't imagine spending the next ten years working full time in the food industry. and i won't.

and for this reason i am liking tutoring; i have found something that makes me feel good and that i think perhaps i am good at. i am helping people to learn and i am getting paid for it. and i'm valued and appreciated, which should not be taken for granted.

and the world around me has had a glow lately. i feel like my perspective, my way of seeing things has changed so much. i still get depressed, i still have terrible days. but i've come to see how precious life is, how fleeting and how marvelous t'is. look outside! it's incredibly beautiful, and so unlikely. on days like this i forget completely why i get so down sometimes.

and i'm finding a community, a staggered disconnected and motley community, but still. there are familiar faces in random spaces, and that is the one thing i have been looking for since i left victoria.

and it can only get better, right?

Monday, November 27, 2006

beauty! beauty!

wow. it is so beautiful out. i've had that glow like being on mushrooms for the whole day, watching everything move slowly, absorbing the stillness that this rare weather brings.

and last night i forced myself to go to a party filled with strangers. and guess what? it was neither terrifying nor terrible. it was, in fact, loads of fun. i met some lovely people, drank a lot of wine and skipped home at four a.m. under the most magical moonlit sparkling snowflakes. yes!

things are looking up.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

it's such an enormous thing to walk and to listen

feeling exceptionally happy today. why? is it because two of my favorite people have (finally) returned from their travels and travails? is it because i had a day completely to myself, to walk and to listen? is it because i moved furniture, and acquired a beautiful blue shelf? is it because my apartment (and possibly my life) are becoming slowly but surely cleared of clutter? is it because of the wind that blew in clear skies? is it because of the many cups of coffee and the thought of a creative project? is it because winter has finally come and i can stop dreading its coming and just plain embrace its existence?

i imagine it's a bit of everything.

Sunday, November 19, 2006

and it's terribly good to carry water and chop wood

on friday i went out dancin' with pamela and john. discussed some important matters such as couple cute/barf factors and the many categories of sexuality to which one may belong. (i wonder where i stand...?) john seems to have an extensive list, as well as some lovely sound effects and gestures to illustrate his points. pamela got drunk and giggled a lot, and wondered whether people who don't know her talk about her the way that people talk about tippi. ha! i like those kids...

and yesterday morning i woke up after 4 hours of sleep and too many glasses of beer feeling oddly clearheaded. i think perhaps i have realized a few important things:

for one, i realize that i do indeed have lovely friends and that they do indeed keep me grounded, anchored, as much as i try to spin wildly out of control some days.

for two, i realized that victoria is no longer my home. for now? for ever? we shall see, but despite the loneliness i feel strangely comforted returning to vancouver. ah, the mountains, the many views, the greyness and the colors and...well, y'know. other stuff. stuff i try to be wordy about but is really best left inside my head to wallow in its own juices. splish splash.

for three, i realized that life is really an amazing thing. well, maybe that hit me earlier than yesterday, but yesterday morning it seemed exceptionally clear. terrible things happen, and are happening, and will continue to happen forever and ever. but there are so many human beings around, big hairy ones and little goosy ones and everything in between, and it's so exciting. human beings are so great.

for four, i realized that i have changed a lot lately. i think i like these changes, though i think i need to try them out a little longer before i decide for sure. we shall see we shall see.

and to top it off, the new joanna newsom album came out.

woooot.

Friday, November 17, 2006

the victorian era

is it a coincidence that my street and bus route in vancouver are both called 'victoria'?

hmmm... i miss that fair city. spent the last five days on the island, filling my time with friends, music, beer, books... felt strangely normal, as though that were in fact my life, and it is vancouver that is a recurring tangible dream.

and yet... such a big part of me says "kerria! you need the smog, you need the skyscrapers, you need the filth, you need the life, you need the millions of stories that surround you!"

well, something like that. hard to translate your inner voice into words.

but i miss a life i used to lead, and i miss all those people that made my visit so full of love and fun and excitement. perhaps it's just in relation to my rather antisocial and introspective life here, but it was fun and exciting and full of love nonetheless.

well, at some point i plan on finding my community, my niche, my comfort zone. it may take years but i will find it, and for now i'll try to be thankful for this time and space to think, drift, over-analyze, write, go mad and most of all, feel thankful for what i had and have and will have.

and going mad is not so bad, i think...

Thursday, November 09, 2006

the small things

my busdriver yesterday was a hipster, young and handsome, with a jaunty black and white checkered scarf slap-dashed over his uniform.

isn't that wonderful?

also, check this out.

oh, the internet...

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

peel off all your layers

today was quiet, uneventful. i slept late, since insomnia has gripped me fairly regularly for the last month. last night i finally broke down and covered my window with a large cloth in the hopes that the problem was all the light seeping in at all hours. sadly, it didn't fix the problem, but i'm hoping that tonight some tea and dickens will soothe me to deep dark sleep.

spent the day sitting in my new haunt, a coffee shop full of middle aged men and mommies. somehow i like it that way - i feel more anonymous, more inconspicuous. perhaps it's the opposite, but hey, they sell coffee with gold flakes! real gold!

chatted with an interesting man for a long while. he had a lot to say, and he said it very slowly and deliberately. he has lived in vancouver for forty years and seems to know all its secrets, its intricacies, its politicians and street-preachers. he showed me his book of poetry, and he tried to read my journal over my shoulder. ha! i like his style.

and today there was this incredible light, with the clouds sitting just above the horizon and beneath them the sun. and all these trees...oh man, autumn is incredible in this neighborhood, with every house a different color, every street paved with different shades of red, and everything glowing. and my discman singing to my footsteps, thom yorke crooning to me and only me.

if only...

and took the skytrain out to see my grandpa turn 88. he still calls me his 'little redheaded rascal' after all these years.

today was nice.

Friday, November 03, 2006

cityscrapers

a man in his leather jacket calls me mamacita, ''ti quiero mucho, beautiful girl.'' i smile, i let him kiss my hand, he moves on to the next young girl behind me. he moves on like all good things.

a man shouts and prophecises the end, captive bus passengers are the only audience he can find to listen to his ideas. i listen with a grin. i want to get up and hug him.

an old chinese man: shamefully cute in his square thick-rimmed glasses, his pants chin-high. he gesticulates wildly, he grins and laughs, he points. translation: he loves my cheap-o chinatown shoes. i love him too. he pats my shoulder kindly as he leaves.

a lady gets on, loaded down with bags. she sees a familiar face, tells him that her guardian angel sent him to help her. she loads him up with everything, giggling. he is covered in bags.

ah vancouver, you're not so bad.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

bicycle dreams


this morning seems to be all about bicycles. i woke up from a dream of riding a unicycle around town, wind in my hair. it was easier than it looks, in my dream. I think i'll have to try it in real life. anyone own a unicycle? got an email this morning about riding bicycles through piles of leaves. and on sunday i rode my bike to tutoring, cold cold wind, leaves blowing around my face, nose running and red. nothing better than that wind-and-bicycle-induced snot, flowing out of control.

so this morning i decided to read about our lovely two wheeled friends. some factoids:

''All the bridges built since the last war over the St. Lawrence River in Quebec have omitted facilities for bicyclists. And the four bridges involved include both those constructed by the government of Canada and the government of Quebec... In Montreal things are actually retrogressing. The hundred year old Victoria Bridge was renovated to eliminate sidewalks in favour of two additional car lanes. In Philadelphia, no less than four bridges crossing the Delaware river have no bicycle access. One such bridge is named after Walt Whitman, author of the Open Road. ''

''The most spectacular do it yourself cycleroute was built in the summer of 79 between bristol and bath in England. George Platts, chariperson of bristol's cycling organization writes: 'We have achieved a number of firsts, including the construction of a five mil stretch of inter-urban cycle and footpath in ten weeks using volunteer labour and raising the 5000 pound material cost ourselves.''

''The bicycle was recognised by nineteenth-century feminists and suffragists as a "freedom machine" for women. American Susan B. Anthony said: "Let me tell you what I think of bicycling. I think it has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world. It gives women a feeling of freedom and self-reliance. I stand and rejoice every time I see a woman ride by on a wheel...the picture of free, untrammeled womanhood."

and the best one of all: ''Sociologists suggest that bicycles enlarged the gene pool for rural workers, by enabling them to easily reach the next town and increase their courting radius.''

think of where we'd be without bicycles...

my favorite memories from asia are those lazy afternoons when i would rent a bike for pennies and take off. oh, those lovely hundred-pound one speeders that would take me sweating along flat open rice fields, past waving kiddies, cute as buttons.

someone must force Harmony to ride a bike. it's so made for her.
stubborn girl.