Natchez, Mississippi

(I’m really going to start blogging more frequently about my travels. I’ve already missed mentioning some cool trips over the past several months, and everybody loves a good travel post! Right? Right? Ya… you do.)

So I was fortunate enough to spend Valentine’s Day discovering the lovely town of Natchez, Mississippi, where antebellum elegance and warm Southern charm combine to create a relaxing, romantic atmosphere. Whether admiring the mighty Mississippi, wandering the silently sprawling grounds of peacefully preserved plantations, or sitting down for some catfish and crab cake, Natchez is an enchanted place.

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Still Bloggin’

This just in… this blog, not defunct!

Ya I really don’t blog enough anymore. Not that I ever really updated “frequently”, but it’s been way too long since my last post.

Since then, a lot has happened that I should have blogged about earlier…

I had a really amazing, magical Christmas, definitely one I’ll remember forever. It was the start of a new tradition, and the significance and joy of that resonates with me still. New Years Eve was really special too, and it was the perfect way to celebrate 2008 and welcome the start of 2009. 2008 was a banner year for me, unquestionably the best year of my entire life. It was a year of discovery: I found an exciting new city to move to, a great new career to enjoy, and an amazing, incredible, beautiful woman to fall in love with. And I know that 2009 will be even better, a year of building on the success and happiness of 2008, so I’m looking forward to the rest of the year with unparalleled excitement and anticipation.

There’s a new president in the United States, the guy I’ve been hoping would win for the past couple years. That’s exciting, more so for me than ever before, considering my plans for the future. The whole economic situation freaks me out a bit, to be honest, especially considering my industry and my visa situation. But I’m still very optimistic about my career and my immigration hopes. No matter what happens, the future has so much opportunity, and I intend to seize those chances and make the most of them.

The coming months will be months of transition for me - finally moving to my new city, my new place, my new life. I’m looking forward to it more than I can describe. Yes I love Calgary, my family, my friends here, and what the city has meant to me for my entire life - but at the same time, I’m ready to move on. To move on to new possibilities, new experiences, and to be closer to the most important person in the world to me.

Along the way, I’ll still be blogging, so keep reading. The best is yet to come.

I said oooh, girl, shock me like an electric eel

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December
by: Eric Thiessen

O hushed December midnight mild,
Thy lights have brightened to enthral;
Tomorrow’s snow, if it be piled,
Should hide them all.
The bulbs along the houses pall;
Lingering there we turn and go.
O hushed December midnight mild,
In shadows of this night aglow,
Make the dark seem to us less deep.
Hearts longing to be blanketed,
Blanket us in benighted snow.
We slumber at the break of day;
At noon we reach a deeper sleep;
Awake at night, a light display.
Dismiss the sun with slow descent;
Enchant the land as albescent.
Snow, snow!
For the stars’ sake, if they were all,
Whose bulbs already are burnt with frost,
Whose fragile glow must else be lost -
For the stars’ sake along the wall.

put them on the tree

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Reminisce, redux

Another year later, and I still feel sad about it.

But in a different way. It’s not something I think about as often anymore. I realize that now. I suppose that’s normal though, healthy even. A coping mechanism, but a beneficial one.

Janet’s death rocked my world, in various ways, but I can’t live my whole life in the shadow of any one event, even something as tragic as the sudden death of a close friend in the prime of her life. And so I’ve “moved on”, in a sense, while still trying to preserve and dignify her legacy, and the memory of our friendship.

But too much introspection here would be selfish, and so instead, one of my favourite Janet-stories:

In grade one, I lived in a Toronto neighbourhood that had a large proportion of uneducated immigrant families. Although many people did not understand a word of English, they nonetheless lovingly attended their children’s school events as often as they could.

One evening, just before a school concert was about to start, the janitor went to the front of the room and reminded everybody to please place their litter into the appropriate garbage bins.

Nobody understood a word he said. Everybody applauded politely.

Miss you Janet. I wish I could still talk to you, a lot has happened in two years. Some things I’m sure you’d jokingly tease me about (uh, moving to Texas) but in other ways you’d be proud of me, happy for me. I know I’d have things to both jest and celebrate about you too.

I owe you a lot. In retrospect, it’s more obvious now than ever. I’m sorry I didn’t realize it at the time, or thank you for it. But I don’t think you realized it either, you were just being you, doing what you did best - being a friend to people who needed one.

You were always a good friend to me, and I’m a better person for having known you. Thank you for that, for everything.

and I’m feeling so

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Another election, another lack of me posting my thoughts about it beforehand. The ratio of things I think about posting to things I actually post is too big.

Nevertheless, here’s my prediction for how the electoral college points breakdown will go today:

My guesstimates include:

  • Nevada, Colorado, and New Mexico, all “leaning Obama”, will go his way
  • Minnesota and Wisconsin, also “leaning Obama” will go his way
  • McCain will hold onto Arizona, despite the embarrassment of it being closer than it should be
  • Similarly, the GOP will also hold onto Montana and North Dakota, although the race will be closer than any Republican would care to admit
  • Arkansas, Georgia, and West Virginia will remain red states
  • Missouri, where the race is super close, will go for Obama by a very small margin
  • Key battleground states of Indiana and Ohio will go to McCain and Obama respectively - the former should have been an easy pickup for McCain, but I think he can still win it; the latter is always a crucial state, and I don’t see Obama losing it
  • Virgina will go blue, a major indicator of how much ground the Republicans will lose tonight
  • North Carolina will stay red, by a slim margin, despite a much closer battle
  • Pennsylvania, which the GOP tried really hard to win, will still go for Obama
  • And finally, Florida will go to blue in a close race, cementing a landslide victory for Obama

So there you have it, my predicted score is 349-189 for Obama. And, if I may add - WOOT WOOT!

The close wins (and, for the matter, the close loses) for Obama in certain swing or even traditionally red states will be partially attributable to increased voter turnout among minority and youth voters. Similarly, the overall voter turnout should be the highest by number of votes it’s ever been, and the highest by percentage of the population it’s been since JFK won. And beyond just winning the electoral points, I think Obama will capture a majority of the overall popular vote - probably around 55%.

Although I haven’t posted about it here so I don’t really have “proof”, it’s been pretty obvious to those who know me that I’ve favoured Obama from Day 1 - over the other Democratic candidates, over Hillary, and especially over McCain. I didn’t always expect that Obama would win, but I always certainly hoped for it.

And now, after a couple of years, waiting and watching, the audacity of that hope is becoming a brave new reality. God bless America.

here in my heart, yeah I do believe

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The incomparable Douglas Adams once said “I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by.” So, indeed, as today is the election, I’ve almost run out of time to post my pre-election thoughts before they turn into post-election reactions.

Overall, I honestly don’t expect this election to change a whole lot in parliament: I predict another Conservative minority government, which leaves us with pretty much the exact same situation as before: the Conservatives form the government, and Harper remains as PM - but not having enough seats to force their own legislation through the House of Commons means that the other parties can still lambaste the Conservatives for not doing enough, while simultaneously blocking them from taking action.

I do think the Conservative party will pick up some seats though. They won 124 last time in 2006, and I’d expect that to increase to 130-something, maybe even push 140. So not enough to gain the magical 155 necessary for a majority, but at least enough to give Conservative supporters something to cheer about. And really, I expect almost all of those Conservative victories to come at the expense of the Liberals. They should almost certainly drop below 100, from their past total of 103 seats in 2006 to somewhere below 90 this time. Pretty good score for a rookie golfer, not so good for Stéphane Dion.

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