Thursday, January 31, 2013

second glances

several months ago, i went to see a condo that looked a bit like the inside of a pepto bismol bottle. it was a very large one-bedroom-plus-den-plus-solarium unit (about 925 square feet), with spacious rooms and ensuite laundry, but it was ALL PINK ALL THE TIME. and not a subtle, muted pink. a loud, vibrant rose. everywhere.

well, not everywhere. the kitchen -- which didn't have an oven or space for an oven (what?) -- breakfast nook and bedroom were mint green. but every other wall was a deep, pepto-bismol pink. don't even get me started on the boudoir-red of the very large bathroom.

at the time, i ruled the condo out. not because of the easily fixed paint on the walls, though. it was simply too expensive, given the amount of other work i already knew would need to go into it. had it been move-in ready, requiring nothing but a new lock on the front door, i might have considered it. its current owners, despite their questionable choice in paint colours, had kept the place SPOT. LESS. so, the clean freak in me was impressed.

but the condo needed new flooring (the wall-to-wall broadloom was old and the tiles were mismatched from room to room), new appliances and some sort of partial kitchen reno to add the aforementioned oven... and to get rid of the 30-year-old built-in cooktop that had long since passed its best-before date.

yet, week after week, month after month, that condo sat on the market. it disappeared from the MLS listings just before christmas, and i wondered if someone had finally been willing to fork over the asked-for cash or if the sellers had finally dropped their price when they realized no one would pay top dollar for a space that resembled the inside of a wad of Bubble Yum.

then, today, poof! it was back on the market... for $25K less.

hang on a second, i thought. $25K is a big drop, and would easily give me the breathing room to be able to afford the place AND renovate. i hemmed and hawed over whether to go back and take a second look. 925 square feet is nothing to sneeze at in the GTA, especially not when it also comes with parking AND a locker. i pulled out my home-hunt notebook, in which i keep copious notes on every property i see, and flipped back to this condo.

the only negatives i wrote down were: old appliances, no stove, PINK EVERYWHERE, needs new flooring and overlooks highway. the bathroom has a separate shower and bathtub, which isn't my preferred use of space, but i could live with it. i'd also seen this condo at a time when i didn't know if i wanted to live in its neighbourhood (research has since shown me it would be A-OK).

on the plus side: it's REALLY big, all the windows face west (stunning sunsets nightly), it's got space for an office, it has its own laundry, it's in a big-but-not-huge building, it's got a unique layout, it's super-clean, it's at the end of the hall and it's in a good area.

so, i emailed my realtor and asked her if we could go check it out a second time. i called mom, and she'll be coming with us. the plan is to go see it on saturday morning, if for no other reason than to rule it out once and for all. i know myself well enough to know that, if we don't go see it again, i would forever obsess over whether i should have.

in the meantime, here are some shots of the space (pulled from one of its months-old listings):

the solarium. 10' x 8'. i could see plants in here. and a cat condo.

the living/dining room. 19' x 12'. you can see the solarium at the rear, and the breakfast nook off to the left.
(see what i mean about PINNNNNNNNK?)

the kitchen. lots of cupboards. double sinks. ancient cooktop. no oven.

living/dining room, reverse angle. that's the front door off in the distance.

breakfast nook. 11' x 10'. you can see the highway through the window.

kitchen, reverse angle. i wonder if i could just replace the countertops and remove a section of cupboards
in order to add an oven. 

the boudoir bathroom, so nicknamed because the lighting is DIM and the walls are RED.
(i do kind of love the vanity, though.)

and the bedroom. 15' x 11'. which is huge.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

five things that happened today

1. i went into the office for about three hours. i wasn't working today, but decided to go in to escape the renovation noise in my apartment. but my dislike of the noise was soon trumped by my dislike of cooties: the lame new editor was hacking up a lung in the desk beside me (she is newly begermèd, apparently), so i decided to pack up and head back home.

2. upon my arrival back at my building, i met a tenant i'd never met before. she was very nice, and she and her husband live two floors directly below me. they're also planning to move out. "i'm actually pretty excited to leave this place," she said. we compared notes over building issues and neighbour problems. "are the people below you... loud?" she asked me. i said no, that i hadn't really heard them too often, save for a couple of parties they've had. she then explained (since the people in question live right above her) that she and her husband believe the guy below me is beating his girlfriend. she says they've heard loud arguments, screaming, shouting, crying and the sound of stuff hitting the floor. i was shocked -- i've only ever met the guy downstairs once (he came up one day to ask if i had a leak in my bathroom because he'd heard dripping behind the walls) and he was a very quiet, nerdy guy who stood as far away from door as he could while we talked. i've heard random shouts and crying once in a while, but i always thought they were coming from the tenant(s) one floor UP and one unit over from me. weird.

3. i moved my friday-morning appointment with dr. textbook to monday. my appointment is to get all my test results and, since i have a story due on monday, i know i have to get that work finished BEFORE i get potentially bad news about high cholesterol or my thyroid or something fishy in my mammogram. i don't have any real reason to expect bad news, but i know that *any* oddity in my test results will cause me to spend HOURS researching online immediately thereafter, so i want to get my job done first lest i am suddenly hugely distracted.

4. i've been researching buddy-cop films. this is not as fun or exciting as you might believe. :-|

5. the brother of the slowest ripening avocado in the world is, i'm happy to report, not as slow as his compatriot. on sunday night, i took this one out of the fridge to ripen (it was still very green and very hard) and, tonight, it's ripe and ready to go.

[7:13pm update: i have just finished dinner and can now report that the avocado was PERFECT and delicious.]

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

an ounce of Prevention

i love Prevention magazine. it's a health-and-wellness monthly filled with all kinds of interesting information about fitness and eating right and all manner of health-related issues. my mom subscribes, and finding a newly arrived copy on her coffee table when i go to visit is a tiny bit like finding a huge piece of cake -- i can't wait to get my hands on it.

aside: it's usually my bedtime reading when i stay over chez mes parents. i put george to bed, set the house alarm and then climb into bed to read the entire magazine, cover to cover, until i can barely keep my eyes open. last weekend, i actually had to stop 1/3 of the way in because i was getting sleep-monstrously drowsy. i saved the remainder to finish in the morning, since i knew i'd be up at least a half-hour before everyone else.

anyway...

for a long time, Prevention's focus seemed to be on getting fit and losing weight (nonetheless containing heaps of useful tips, tricks and tidbits) but, within the last year, its editorial team has changed and its new focus is along the lines of "living well when you're in your 40s, 50s and beyond." there's a greater focus on the mind-body connection, and on fostering a healthy you physically, emotionally and spiritually. there are still plenty of recipes for nutritious meals; lots of Q&As with noted physicians, nutritionists and medical professionals; and a ton of step-by-step guides to adopting different exercise regimens or fitness practices, all geared towards building endurance and strength over time (instead of forcing the reader to dive head first into something far too intense far too quickly). but feeling great and being great are now as important as looking great.

each time i read an issue of Prevention, i get a little buzz. i suddenly want to go out and buy new running shoes or cook a bunch of dinosaur kale or head to the community pool to swim laps. i don't know how they do it -- maybe it's language? imagery? design? subliminal messaging? -- but i always feel ready to do something by the time i get to the last page of the magazine. it's pretty great, actually, and the same thing happens to mom and trix when they read it. i think part of it is the wealth of easily digestible information and advice. for the most part, articles are concise yet value-packed. there are longer features, but those are often first-person accounts of achievement, conquering fear and doubt, or just learning to live a better life.

all this to say: yesterday, thanks to the issue i read over the weekend, i decided to try after-work "calming" yoga for the first time.

they'd discussed it briefly in the print version of the magazine, and encouraged readers to check their website for a set of nine postures geared towards helping you stretch and unwind and relax your muscles at the end of the day. ever since i started working at the office on a regular basis -- and despite walking to and from work most days -- i've been feeling like my body is slowly stiffening up on me. i know my posture blows, and parking myself at my desk for eight hours a day wasn't helping.

so, i checked out the website. i've never been a fan of yoga. i've never been able to really get into it, and i don't get the fervour surrounding it. we used to do it fairly regularly in my meditation group, but i always groaned quietly inside whenever it was announced as the practice for a given night. after looking over the suggested postures in the Prevention piece on sunday night, i decided i'd try it monday when i got home from work.

i printed out the move-by-move instructions, moved my dining table to the side to create a space big enough for yoga, unrolled a fluffy towel (i'm not buying a yoga mat just yet, thanks) and got to it.

it was challenging!

i kept wondering how this was meant to be relaxing. i was amazed at how out of shape my body seemed as i struggled to hold simple postures for more than about 15 seconds. and then i thought back to all those stories i've heard about people who weren't able to hold any postures when they started yoga, but who had evolved into the kind of headstand-doing, limber-bodied, namaste-saying devotees.

as such, i cut myself some slack. i heard my inner voice wanting to throw in the towel (*rimshot*), but i kept going. i decided that my goal for the first week was to try all the postures and to hold them for as long as i felt able. if that meant five seconds, so be it. if it meant 20, great!

and, in about 22 minutes, i finished the full set. i was tired, and pretty sure my body would be sore this morning (turns out: only my arms!), but i felt weirdly accomplished. which is why, when i got home tonight, i did it again. i can't do a downward dog to save my life, and my back and arms are aching tonight, but i'm hoping to keep it up -- at least somewhat regularly -- going forward. we'll see.

Monday, January 28, 2013

the facebook unfriending phenomenon

as an adult, i shouldn't really care as much about facebook as i do. i know this. i recognize how ridiculous it sounds when i'm speaking about FB as though it were an actual, physical place, and the goings-on within its digital walls as though they, you know, actually mattered.

don't get me wrong -- staying in touch with my faraway friends, sharing photos, sending funny messages or even just giving someone encouragement via a simple "like" are all parts of the experience i enjoy. i "hang out" with folks from work and many of you who read this blog and, however synthetic or virtual, it creates a sense of community and kinship for me.

but, like just about everyone with a facebook account, i have "friends" with whom i'm not really friends. people i either added hastily (though, i'm picky so those are few) or just haven't been able to bring myself to delete because the politics (yes, i just wrote that) of doing so would be more of a headache than just leaving things be.

last night, i was engaging in one of my favourite FB activities -- live commenting on TV with some out-of-town and in-town pals -- when one of my FB friends decided to pee in our corn flakes. i don't understand why this particular individual repeatedly posts comments with a very clear know-it-all tone, and i really don't know why anyone feels compelled to chime in to a conversation that did not involve them, between people who did not request an opinion. but what i find even worse, and borderline offensive, are the comments that essentially say, "you're stupid. your friends are stupid. what you like is stupid. i'm better than all of you."

which, in short, is exactly what happened yesterday. and it pissed me off. i find self-righteousness nauseating, and even more so when it's simultaneously hypocritical.

so, i was going to remove that friend from my friends list.

yet i stopped myself.

why?

because i didn't want to deal with the possible real-life, in-person ramifications. what happens if we're at the same event down the line? does removing someone from your FB friends list mean you're automatically ending your real-life friendship, or simply closing a branch of your online social network?

i think it's the latter. yet, for many, it's the former. another writer friend of mine wrote a very funny blog entry on this very subject a couple of months ago. it was about being unfriended on facebook (it had happened to her and she had no idea why), and what happened when she subsequently ran into that ex-FB friend at a coffee shop (awkwardness all around). it was also about what FB friend lists have become to otherwise sane, sensible, grown-ass adults -- namely, more important than their actual offline personal relationships.

this morning, i was recounting last night's incidents to one of my co-workers who's not on FB (and simultaneously realizing how silly it all sounded coming out of my mouth). she stopped me and said, "see? this is why i'm not on facebook. it's stupid. delete [this friend]. who cares? it's simple! if someone's being a jerk, delete them!"

and she's totally right. why maintain a social-network connection with someone with whom you don't interact socially? or who behaves like a jerk? why not just hit "remove" and be done with it? just because it might reflect poorly on you? even though you know, in reality, it doesn't really reflect "poorly" on anyone except maybe the person who very obviously demonstrated jerk-y, antisocial behaviour?

i'm not sure. i still might delete. or not. maybe i'll be deleted first!

in the meantime, i will kick myself for giving this as much consideration as i already have.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

i'm ready to find my next home


i'm ready to find my next home. this afternoon, after an epic THUD from the apartment above -- where, presumably and based on the heart-stopping loudness of the sound, a member of the construction/reno team either dropped a large appliance or a body -- i looked around and wondered how much longer i'll be living here.

i'm ready to find my next home. i'm ready to have a cat, and i don't want to adopt one while i'm still living in a building that's as noisy and chaotic (thanks to the aforementioned construction) as this one. the noise and chaos won't end anytime soon and, very realistically, could last for years to come as units are renovated one at a time. granted, no apartment renovation will be as loud (in my unit) as the one directly above me, but you'd be surprised how effectively sound travels along, and through, concrete walls. *i* don't want to be in my apartment during the day, so i can't imagine leaving a pet alone all day in that kind of constant banging/drilling/sanding/yelling/thunking/hammering.

i'm ready to find my next home. i'm ready to decorate and to paint and to make a whole new space my own. i'm ready to find homes for so many of the things i currently have in boxes -- either in my closets here or in my parents' basement. actually, i think (in this regard) my mother might actually be more ready for me to have that kind of space. she's ready for my stuff to move with me.

i'm ready to find my next home. i'm ready to have my own washer and dryer. i'm ready to do laundry without having to bag it and transport it to my parents' house. (yes, there's laundry in this building and, until the replaced the old machines with new, sub-par and pricy HE machines, i actually did the bulk of my stuff here.) i'm ready to sit on big red and have my washer and dryer humming in the background. i'm ready to fold laundry on my dining room table. i'm ready to do laundry whenever the mood strikes -- in the evening after work, on a sunday morning, when i'm working from home and looking to be extra-productive.

i'm ready to find my next home. i'm ready to move into a new part of the city (or to find a new part of my current area) and to discover new places to shop and to find great paths to walk. (literally and figuratively.) i'm ready to see the sun rise from a different perspective, to see how the light makes it way into the corners of my new space, to watch the sun set over different rooftops and treetops. i'm ready to have a spot to put my christmas tree, a spot where i pick up great desserts, a spot i determine is the endpoint of a "long walk through the neighbourhood."

i'm ready to find my next home. i'm ready to have a space that is my own. a space that's MINE. a space where i can control the temperature, where i can control who comes and goes and when, and where i feel like i can stay for as long as i'd like.

i'm ready to find my next home. i'm ready to start the next chapter of my life, especially as i feel the current one drawing to a close. that's not for any specific reason -- i just have this feeling that the next phase of my life is on the horizon and i'm trying to get to it, and a big part of that next phase is finding the place in which i will live as it all unfolds.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

the slowest ripening avocado in the world finally ripened...

... and earned itself a new distinction: the worst avocado in the world.

man.

it felt ripe. it looked ripe. it was not ripe. it was watery and bland and tough, and i had to throw away about 2/3 of it.

in other news, i forgot to bring along my camera today. i was going to photoblog our shopping outing. it's probably for the best, though, because YB lost steam by noon, so we were home by 1pm.

we did not find any deals.

well, except for the catelli smart pasta i bought for half price.

so, no photos. no sales. no avocado.

and, essentially, no blog entry of note today because i'm now at my parents' house for the night and sitting down here writing feels antisocial.

Friday, January 25, 2013

workplace vignette: hooray! PARDON?!

just before 5:30pm, i was walking my boss to the elevator at the office -- he was headed home, and i was headed back downstairs to my desk to pack up. as we were about to part ways, he said, "so, any big plans for the weekend?"

"well, a shopping outing tomorrow..." i began.

"that'll be fun."

"... and then the SAG awards on sunday."

"right!" he said.

"and that means... SNACKSSSSSS!" i added, saying "snacks" in an ecstatic whisper, with a huge grin and while raising my arms over my head in victory.

my boss stopped dead in his tracks and just kind of looked at me, a little stunned.

"that means what?" he said.

"snacks," i repeated in my normal voice.

my boss burst out laughing.

"you'd better enunciate more clearly if you're going to say that to other people!"

"SNACKS! i said snacks. oh, honestly."

fin.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

developments

(and, no, this isn't another breast-centric post.)

1. after many years of holding my ground and refusing to budge on the issue, i bought myself a small space heater on tuesday morning. i named it peter. peter the heater. even though i know i'll be buying a home sometime before next winter (she said, crossing all appendages) and hopefully won't need a space heater in the new place, i was tired of wearing fifteen layers just to watch TV on my couch in january. so, on my fabulously snowy walk to the office, i stopped at canadian tire and located the heater i wanted (i'd spent monday night reading online reviews). tuesday evening, i plugged peter in and my apartment temperature rose from 16ºC to 20ºC in about two hours. not bad!

2. apparently, veterinarians in canada are wary of participating in interviews for articles that will be published in a retail magazine. i contacted seven different vets, and two different veterinary colleges, and only ONE sent a reply: "not at this time." the rest didn't respond at all, even after follow-ups. i was set to give up on the four pet-health stories i'd been assigned when, FINALLY, i received two responses late last night. one from a renowned cat behaviourist, one from the canadian veterinary medical association. pet stories: back ON.

3. coincidentally, my day-to-day work may go on hiatus soon. my boss and i were talking today, and he said the departmental budget is stretched as far as it can go at present (and for the first quarter of 2013), so "it might be a good idea" if i took a couple of weeks off. he's assured me he can always justify having me come in, but this worries me a little -- with all the growth our department is experiencing, and all the full-time positions set to be filled (mostly design, web and sales jobs), i expect that budget may snap altogether. hopefully, i've proven myself important enough to keep around if it comes down to, "okay, who's dispensible?"

4. weather-permitting, YB and i will finally have a shopping day this saturday. we both missed all the post-christmas and post-new year's sales -- i was sick for the two weeks after christmas, and she was sick for the next two weeks after that. so, this is a belated "let's see what we can get for almost nothing!" outing. our plan is to go west or north. she's hoping to buy seeds for the 2013 gardening season; i'd like to buy snacks for sunday's SAG awards. we'll head out early and, hopefully, come home with a trunk full of booty.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

"madam, my breast is not a mango"

mammogram: done! ultrasound: done! dentist appointment: done!

i'm pleased to report i have no cavities, and my dentist doesn't need to see me again for six months. i had a very thorough cleaning, had my fluoride treatment and then an exam. when the dentist said i was good to go, i let out a big sigh of relief.

my mammogram was not quite as delightful an experience. for starters, they were running behind at the usually-like-clockwork imaging center. normally, i arrive early, am taken early and leave early. today, i arrived early... and then sat and waited for about a half-hour.

then i was called in by a tech i'm going to call dot. she was barely five feet tall and looked to be in her late-40s or early 50s. small, but stocky and sturdy. friendly but looking to get things done quickly. she was clearly trying to make up for the delays by hurrying me into her mammography room as though i had been the one who'd kept her waiting. when i remarked that it seemed busy today, she sort of sigh-laughed and said that a lot of people had arrived late and set the appointments all behind.

anyway, if you recall, my inaugural mammogram was very efficient and fairly pleasant (as far as these types of tests go). my tech at the time was quick and gentle. today, though, dot -- despite her petite size -- shoved and yanked me around like a rag doll. she wasn't terribly good at giving direction so, instead of saying something like "i need you to move your left shoulder down a little," she would say, "move your left shoulder down" WHILE she was shoving my left shoulder down. eventually, i gave up trying to "help" her and just kind of went limp so she could position me however she needed.

and, unlike the first go-round, this mammogram sort of hurt. not bad pain or anything, but certainly a lot more discomfort than last time... and i think part of it was dot not raising the machine up to match my height (something i know it can do because IT DID IT LAST TIME). instead, i had to kind of slouch and contort myself to meet the machine rather than having it adjust to meet ME. she grabbed my breasts as though she were the steel claw in that arcade game where you try to pick up a stuffed toy from a vat full of crap. she approached my breasts as if they were the last mangoes in the "25¢ each!" sale bin, snatching them and yanking them away lest anyone else get there first. ow

anyway, after dot was done, she sent me back into the waiting room to wait for my breast ultrasound. thankfully, i only had to wait about eight minutes -- no small feat because it's FREEZING in toronto today and that waiting room was COLD. i felt bad for the men and women waiting in nothing more than boots and cotton gowns.

my ultrasound tech was much better than dot. i'll call her oksana. she was cheerful and gentle, and the ultrasound gel was the warmest thing i'd experienced at the clinic so far. she did her thing, sliding and clicking the transducer. every now and again, she'd slide and click repeatedly in the same small area here or there, which (of course) completely stressed me out and made me wonder if she'd seen something and then decided to go back over it for another look. i'll get all the results from dr. textbook next friday.

for now, overall, i'm relieved (about the dentist) and sore (from the breast assault). peter the heater is warming my apartment as i type this -- the temperature is dropping to -15ºC/5ºF (windchill of -23ºC/-9ºF) overnight, so i'm glad he's whirring away.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

appoint-mehs

i don't like having appointments.

doesn't matter if it's a medical appointment or an appointment at the bank, there's something about them that i find distracting and, sometimes, distressing. as if the slot an appointment occupies on my calendar has somehow thrown a big wrench into whatever plans i don't really have.

"ugh, i have to go to ________ on thursday."

"what else is happening on thursday?"

"well. nothing. but still."

if i have an appointment on the horizon, i find it hard not to fixate on it. this is especially problematic when it comes to doctor and dentist appointments -- the latter more so than the former. if i have a dentist appointment booked, all i can think about is that it's coming up in X days, and that maybe i'll have to go back for ANOTHER appointment if X-rays or an exam reveal a cavity or a crack or a giant alien coiled within a molar. then i get lost in a spiral of dental what-ifs and "did i floss enough?"s and mental calculations of how much this latest appointment is going to cost me.

also, the farther away the appointment, the worse this all is. you'd think that it would be the opposite -- that i'd worry more as the day grew closer. you'd be wrong. i actually worry less the closer the appointment gets. as in, "FINALLY, i can go and get this over with."

if i'm set to get test results, i spend the pre-appointment days worried about the results or trying to guess them based on how i'm feeling. am i extra warm? chilled? is that a rash on my neck? have i put on weight? which then leads to: is my thyroid wonky again? am i anemic? is my cholesterol too high?

note: after last week's visit with dr. textbook, my blood tests revealed that my thyroid has gone wonky, that my medication dosage needs to be increased and that i now have to schedule not one but TWO follow-up appointments. one sometime next week, to go over the rest of the blood-test results and the results of my impending mammogram/ultrasound, and another in about five or six weeks so that my blood can be tested, and the results reviewed, again.

at present, i have booked neither.

when i have to schedule an appointment, i always try for the same-day or next-day booking. i'm happiest and most relaxed if i can call a given office first thing in the morning and hear, "we have an opening this afternoon if you'd like." PERFECT.

so it was that, this morning, i got around to calling my dentist's office to book an appointment. they'd left a message for me last week, reminding me that it's time for my six-month check-up. given all the to-and-fro-ing for dr. textbook, i initially thought i'd shove the dentist to the back burner for a while. then i realized that knowing i would have to book an appointment was just as distracting as actually booking one.

thankfully, when the receptionist answered, she said, "when did you want to come in?"

and, before i could even answer, she added, "i don't suppose you want to come in today or tomorrow?"

done.

mammogram in the morning tomorrow.

dentist in the afternoon.

two appointments, one stone.

Monday, January 21, 2013

five events coming up this week

* on wednesday, i go for my mammogram. that's also the day the electricity in my building will be shut off for an hour. the two have nothing to do with each other. i'm just saying.

* apparently, the big desk move -- from utopia to inner-city office space -- at work is happening on or before friday. though, no one's yet delivered the giant, red plastic moving boxes that are the harbingers of interoffice relocation, so maybe not.

* tomorrow, the forecast is for bitterly cold temperatures. coldest day in toronto this winter and, possibly, the coldest day since winter 2011-12. i still plan on walking to work. something about putting on warm layers and my amazing deep-winter hat, then walking for 35 minutes in the frigid air first thing in the morning, makes me giddy.

* i had better find some veterinarians to interview before friday, because i've still got a slew of pet stories that need an expert voice. last week, i sent out FOUR requests, to four different vets in four different cities across canada. know how many of them said yes? none. know how many of them responded at all? none. i even sent TWO follow-ups to each one. how hard is it to hit reply and type "no thank you"?!

* condo hunting continues.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

mom does not have ebola

on friday evening, just after 6:30, i called my parents' house to discuss saturday plans with mom.

dad answered the phone and, when i asked for mom, he said, "she went to bed."

uh oh. being in bed by 6:30pm is generally a sign that something's up.

"is she sick?" i said.

dad went on to explain, somewhat gravely, that mom had been battling a headache all day (i'd spoken to her in the morning and, while she had a headache at the time, she had been planning on having a day out). he said she'd gone to the gym and done laundry but, by the time they sat down to dinner, her stomach was upset and she was "so weak she didn't think she'd be able to put her bedding on the bed."

i was suddenly so overcome with worry that i didn't bother chastising him for, you know, NOT HELPING HER PUT ON THE BEDDING. (honestly.) i started asking him about symptoms, but he wasn't overly helpful. did she have a fever? dunno. a cough? no. did she have to throw up? don't think so. did she say ANYTHING about anything? no.

i hung up and called trix. she lives about six minutes from my parents' house, and i thought it might be a good idea for her to head over and perhaps stay the night if she could, just in case anything happened. lord knows dad wouldn't be able to do anything but call YB, anyway, so i figured this would guarantee someone capable was on hand, if needed.

when i spoke to trix, she was already one step ahead -- she'd talked to our dad just before i had, and she'd already been thinking that she should stay over at their place as a precaution. i was relieved, and i asked her to call me in the morning to update me on mom's condition.

that night, i worried. mom's fairly hardy, so having her be too weak to eat or dress a bed was extremely unusual. i went to bed and my mind raced -- i envisioned trix calling me in the middle of the night to say she was taking mom to the hospital. all sorts of conditions ran through my head: migraine, aneurysm, flu, brain tumour, you name it. my sleep was fitful and, when i eventually got up at 7am on saturday morning, i wondered how early would be too early to call the house.

thankfully, trix called me just after 8am. i picked up the phone, said hello and, in a very cheerful voice, trix said, "hi! it's me. mom's fine."

seems the ACTUAL story of what happened was: after shuttling dad to the dentist in the morning, mom hadn't had time to have a proper lunch before going to the gym (all she had was a yogurt and a granola bar). so, by the time she finished her workout, she was light-headed. when she took a shower, she got some water in her ear, so she was feeling a little dizzy and, as a result, didn't feel much like eating dinner. so she decided to go to bed to sleep it all off. by saturday morning, everything was fine and mom realized she'd just been dehydrated and lacking sufficient calories.

"i spent the whole night worrying!" i said.

"i know, me too. i thought i might have to take her to the hospital or something!" said YB.

"that's exactly what *i* thought! i can't believe dad would make it sound like she had malaria! so, does she still have a headache?"

"nope!"

"and she feels better?"

"yep!"

"thank goodness."

and, really, i suppose i shouldn't have been surprised that dad managed to get the details wrong and blow everything out of proportion. remember when this happened?

yeah.

fin.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

yay! i found a... DAMMIT!

this morning, my real estate agent took YB and i to see a condo.

it was very very nice, in a gorgeous complex that felt rich and fancy. the amenities were superb, the building silent and the whole place was within walking distance of everything but a subway station (plenty of buses to subways, though).

the unit was large -- about 800 square feet -- with a private balcony and a walkout from the (small and weirdly configured but brand new and functional) kitchen. it was on the third floor, and had a nice northeast view of trees from large picture windows. all-inclusive maintenance fees that even include upgraded cable!

there was TONS of storage: five (!!!!) closets in the bedroom alone, plus a linen closet, a coat closet in the entryway and what i can only describe as a closet-like space -- complete with huge, mirrored sliding doors -- big enough to put a desk and shelves right in the living room. also, an owned locker and parking space.

best of all, the ensuite laundry was big enough for a side-by-side (not stacking!) washer and dryer.

kind of my dream come true, though the location would mean a lengthy commute downtown. still, way more pluses than minuses.

as i sat on the couch with my mom tonight, wondering aloud whether i should go look at the place again or just put in an offer, i decided to look over the listing printout -- the one that lists all the room sizes and extras and the like -- and my heart kind of sank:

"pets permitted: N."

no pets.

at first i thought it might be a mistake, but then i checked all the comparables my agent had sent me and all of them (from 2011 to present) said the same thing. pets not allowed.

that's a dealbreaker.

even if i might not be ready to get a cat the second i move in, i want to at least have the option of getting one at some point. which means that today's condo, despite all the things it has going for it, is out.

too bad.

Friday, January 18, 2013

the sephora solution


sephora is a great place for free stuff.

i thought everyone knew that the cosmetics retailer was a mecca for samples but, apparently, there are plenty of folks who don't actually know that. so now you do.

it couldn't be more simple: walk into any sephora store anywhere in the world, find a product you like -- any product in the place! -- and then just ask a sales associate for a sample.

done and done.

you can get up to three samples per visit, and you never have to buy a THING. it's not a sample with purchase, it's a legitimately FREE sample, just for walking over their threshold.

years ago, before the world discovered the plethora of beauty products available for sampling, sephora actually used to let customers dispense their own samples. they had bins full of little plastic containers all over the store, and you could fill them (as many as you dared!) with as much or as little of ANY product you wanted.

pricy sunscreen?

moisturizer from dubai?

the latest french perfume?

free. free. free.

nowadays, the little containers are tucked away in drawers below the display shelves, and you have to ask someone who works at the store to procure your sample for you. but, no matter how times i've wandered into a sephora and asked for something for nothing, the sales staff have always been overly accommodating and happy to hand out their wares gratis.

try it! my tip is to find the most expensive products you can. treat yourself to a free sample of something you'd never ever actually pay to buy. something so ridiculously priced that you can barely bring yourself to pick up the bottle, lest you accidentally drop it and suddenly find yourself having to fork over $200 for a thimble-sized bottle of hair serum made from tulips.

YB regularly tops up some fancy eye cream whenever she's there and, for a while, she would give herself a mini facial right there in the store because in-store sampling is also allowed and encouraged. i make sure i never leave a sephora without one of their micro-sized sample spritzers of perfume (one of those teensy bottles is good for about four applications!). it's like a sin against shopping if you go into one of their stores and don't take advantage of this fabulous freebie.

one more tip: if you do it right, you can find a luxury item you'd never dream of buying, and continue to use it without ever paying a dime. this only works in cities with multiple sephora stores (toronto has five along the subway lines), though.

all you have to do is get a sample of your product of choice at each store. then, put the locations in rotation.

week one: store one.

week two: store two.

and so on. by the time week five or six rolls around, you just loop back to store one. the chances of you being served by the same sales associate are slim and, even if you are, the chances of them remembering you and what you sampled five weeks earlier are even slimmer. meanwhile, you've collected six little containers full of free product! play your cards right, and you'll never have to pay for your favourite lotion or potion again.

awesome, no?

yes, it's also shameless. but i don't care.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

in the shadow

so, i started rereading The Artist's Way. i haven't yet committed to the tasks and exercises, but i'm reading the book and its lessons again.

the first chapter includes a section on "shadow artists." these aren't folks who create art using shadows, these are would-be artists who choose to live in the shadows of their art instead of pursuing it outright. people who want to act who, instead, work in the periphery of acting. people who want to sing who, instead, work for a record label. people who want to be playwrights who, instead, work as journalists. you get the idea.

i remember this chapter resonating with me back when i read the book the first time, but the theories it contained practically reached up from the pages in front of me and slapped me in the face this time. lately, i've been speaking a lot about feeling like i'm letting my potential down, and coasting on my work instead of pushing myself to create my own stuff. reading that chapter the other night, i realized i'm a big, fat shadow artist!

and, even more so now than at the time of my first go-round with the Way. i've spent much of the past few years in the shadows, helping other artists with their art (which is another trait of the shadow artist). i've written for them, and cheered for them, and supported them... but have largely ignored myself and my art in the process. (uh, and please know how much i want to roll my eyes when i write the words "my art." it sounds so pretentious! oh look: self-criticism. another shadow artist issue!)

now, as for how to remedy the shadow-artist situation: that's what the next 11 chapters of the book will cover. i can't actually remember much of what to do, but i do know that i haven't been doing any of it. if part of solving one's problem is recognizing that the problem exists, then hopefully i'm on the right track.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

a slice of randomness

* today, i went to dr. textbook for my annual check-up. (i know, i know... i'm still going to dr. textbook. someday i'll find an awesome doctor but, in the meantime, i've got her.) within an hour, i'd had blood drawn and my heart tested and my urine sampled. she's referring me to a neurologist to have my numb ass and back checked out -- the ass is almost definitely a result of an irritated nerve, because i can get the tingling to stop if i correct my posture, but the tingly section on my back is more of a mystery. it, too, is likely caused by a wonky nerve, but dr. textbook would rather i have it fully checked out. and so would i. earliest available appointment for the neurologist? april 15th. booked it. also booked my mammogram and accompanying ultrasound for next week.

* my dentist's office called yesterday to tell me that it's time for my six-month check-up and cleaning. timing.

* the new editor -- the one i don't like -- is turning out to be a gigantic tool and is not making any friends. she keeps to herself, doesn't engage any of us in conversation, gets huffy when huffiness is not called for, speaks only when spoken to and, even then, does so in as few words as possible. she also skipped work over the holidays even though she'd been required to come in. she figured no one would know or find out, but people know and found out.

* the new editor i DO like, for the magazine launching in spring, is, by contrast, fantastic. smart, savvy, ambitious, proactive and an excellent sharer. we're starting to get promotional merchandise coming into the office, and she ALWAYS distributes it to the rest of us. so cool!

* i am moving desks at work. again. and, sadly, i'm going from prime real estate to terrible real estate. no more windows. no more quiet. no more privacy. my colleague and i are being yanked from our professional oasis and plunked into a noisy, windowless, congested, high-traffic collection of pods, and we're both seriously bummed about it. we'll try to make the best of it, but it kind of sucks.

* working from home won't be an option for me until the property management company at my building finishes renovating the unit directly above mine. seems the previous tenant, who was quite quiet and often away, moved out in december... so the place is being gutted. LOUDLY. the workers arrive by 8:15 each morning, so i try to be out of my apartment by 8:45am at the latest. but i really miss working from home. until the pounding and drilling and hammering and sanding and construction noise ends, though, sitting at my desk or on my couch during the day is out.

* right now, i am working on SEVEN pet-related stories.

* speaking of pets, over christmas my parents discovered that george has learned how to open doors. thankfully, just closet, cupboard and storage room doors, which are all somewhat light and don't lock. he's a clever little monkey, that guy.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

a voice from the past

something weird happened over christmas. on christmas day, actually.

we were in the process of opening presents, around noon, at my parents’ house when the phone rang. because my father has yet to appreciate the purpose of the answering machine they’ve had for years – i.e., guess what? when the phone rings, YOU DON’T HAVE TO ANSWER IT IF YOU’RE BUSY because this machine does that for you – he immediately shuffled to another room to listen to the message as it was being left. my mom figured it was probably one of her friends, or maybe a distant relative, calling with a “merry christmas” greeting. she, YB and i could hear that whoever was leaving the message was doing a lot of talking.

a minute later, my dad returned, looking confused. (this is not surprising, as he no longer processes information on the first go-‘round and only seems to half-listen most of the time, anyway.)

“it was a woman from new brunswick,” he said, making “new brunswick” sound as foreign and remote as mars, “who’s in town for christmas.”

“OH!” said my mother. “that was for vickie!”

wait. what?

“it was deepa. her mother wanted your phone number.”

deepa (not her real name) is a girl with whom i went to high school. she was a couple of years older than me, indian and suffered from lupus. she was very smart and very nice, and she walked with a cane. the steroids that she took for her disease routinely made her face swell, and her cheeks were always red. we had one class together, and were friendly in the halls between classes, but weren’t close pals or anything. i had thought of her on occasion over the years, and wondered what had become of her.

last summer, my mother called me after one of her fitness classes at the local community centre. “did you ever have any high school classes with a girl named deepa?” she asked. i said yes, relayed the above information and she said, “her mother is in my yoga class.” apparently, our moms had started talking one day, and my mom mentioned which high school i’d attended. deepa’s mother said her daughter had attended the same school, around the same time, and wondered if her daughter knew me. anyway, in the weeks after i’d confirmed that deepa and i had, indeed, sat in the same lab for four months, her mother filled my mother in on what life had been like for deepa.

in a word: crappy.

apparently, her conditioned had ravaged her body and left her contemplating suicide on multiple occasions. she’d had umpteen surgeries and dealt with severe depression. but she was married and now living in new brunswick. 

cut to early in december when deepa’s mother evidently asked my mother for my phone number because deepa wanted to get in touch when she swung into town for the holidays. i didn’t know this info exchange had happened – if i had, i probably would have discouraged it. deepa and i had one class together. i doubted she even knew who i was. 

so, on christmas day, deepa used the phone number her mom had passed along and called my parents’ house (my mother had said i’d likely be there over the holidays).

i listened to the message. it was long, but friendly. “this is a message for vickie,” it began. “my name is deepa, and we went to high school together about a million years ago.” she went on to say that she hoped i was well, and that i should call her when i get a chance. then she wished my family a merry christmas and said it would be nice to get in touch.

i wasn’t sure what to do. i mean, we had ONE CLASS together. after she graduated, we didn’t stay in touch at all. what would we talk about? i wondered if she’d actually asked for my number, or if her mother asked for it independently, thinking deepa needs more friends. either way, it was kind of weird, and my gut was telling me to ignore the message and not return the call.

but, i argued with myself, that would then put my mom in a bad spot. what if deepa’s mother confronted her at the gym, asking why i hadn’t called back after deepa’s message? i didn’t want mom to have to lie, and it was christmas day and the season of giving… and i kind of just wanted to just get it over with. i figured returning the call on christmas day might ensure we could keep it short – “oh, gotta go! we’re sitting down to eat now!” – so, i headed to the basement for some privacy and dialed the number.

deepa answered, i introduced myself and she seemed glad to hear from me. then she said, “i have to be honest with you, when my mom told me your name, i didn’t remember you.”

oh. well, this is suddenly way more awkward.

“so i pulled out a yearbook and looked you up,” she continued. “i guess you were a couple years behind me, right?” i said i was, suddenly realizing i should have listened to my gut and that deepa clearly had no idea who i was. 

“when i found your photo, i thought, `yeah, she looks kind of familiar,’” deepa said.

WTF? why call me if you have no idea who i am????

“so, what have you been up to since graduation?” she asked.

by that point, i was looking to make this conversation short and polite, so i gave her a super-brief recap of, oh, the past 23 years. then i said, “how about you?”

and so began a very long, very detailed, VERY very TMI account of her life and, mostly, her medical history. she talked about all her surgeries, and the challenges she’s faced, but said she has a great support system and network of friends. she talked about how she could never see herself living in toronto because it’s so unfriendly – she actually said, “i could fall down on the street and have people annoyed with me for getting in their way!” – and how she’s been able to travel because of her husband’s job. she talked a lot about him, actually -- how they met, why he was the most amazing man in the world, how he helped through all her trials. 

but she spoke in a way that reminded me of someone who might be overly medicated. her speech was a little slurred, and her thoughts and feelings just kind of poured out in a tidal wave of oversharing. as she talked, i was getting more and more uncomfortable. when she started talking about how she had to have a hysterectomy last year because, in her words, “i was hemorrhaging so much every time i got my period,” i wanted to hang up and run. again: we had one class together, didn’t really know each other well and hadn’t spoken in 23 years, and she was telling me about things that were very private, very graphic and not really the stuff of breezy holiday chats between strangers. 

as she continued (she did almost all of the talking), i kept hoping my mom or YB would venture down to the basement, so i could signal one of them to call me off the phone. but neither did so, eventually, i just interjected and said, “oh, i’m going to have to go. we’re getting ready to sit down to eat.”

then she said, “oh! i didn’t even ask you if you’re married! are you?”

“nope,” i said.

“oh, so i guess that means you don’t have any kids? even though you don’t need to be married to have kids.”

“nope!” i said. 

“so, are you seeing anyone?”

“nope!” i replied, wondering where this line of questioning was going and how much more she wanted to know.

“oh,” she said, “that’s okay, too.”

?!

i reiterated that i had to get going and she said it had been nice chatting. then she started to say, “so, now that i have your number, when i get back home…”

and i cut her off. i know it might seem cold, but i didn’t want to stay in touch and, again, wasn’t really sure why she wanted to chat with someone she didn’t remember in the first place. i figured maybe her mother had said something like, “this girl vickie remembers you from high school and would love to hear from you!”

regardless, we have NOTHING in common as adults and not much of a teenage foundation on which to build a new friendship, so i wanted to nip this in the bud.

“really,” i began, as nicely and gently and jovially as possible,  “it’s fine. our moms wanted us to catch up, and you didn’t remember me, anyway. it was nice to hear from you, though.”

it was not the most graceful exit or rebuff, but i knew i had to make it. deepa isn’t someone with whom i’d want to forge a friendship, and our entire conversation – which lasted maybe 15 minutes – was so uncomfortable and awkward that i couldn’t imagine having another one.

thankfully, she seemed totally cool with that. (again, maybe her mother had pushed her to call me and she, too, had no clue why. so maybe she was just as relieved.) she wished me well, i did the same, and that was that.

Monday, January 14, 2013

are we ready to begin?


before christmas, i had all these ideas about what i wanted to do with my two weeks off. i'd planned to take big walks, go shopping, take photos, maybe paint YB's kitchen and just generally do stuff that didn't involve me sitting.

then i got sick on christmas eve and the 11 days that followed were basically a write-off. best-laid plans and all that.

as anyone who dropped in on this blog during that time knows: i didn't write, either.

as 2012 was drawing to a close, i thought i'd be filled with verve and excitement about 2013, ready to make plans and set goals and get myself psyched for the year to come. funny how cooties can suck the life out of you, physically and mentally. i thought i'd be writing a kick-ass "this is what i want from 2013" blog entry but, instead, i was lying on the couch, watching TV marathons, eating spicy soup and trying not to cough myself into oblivion when the year started.

and now, on january 14th, a new year's post seems a little belated.

but... what the heck. 2013 is still pretty much a blank slate, so why not put some stuff out into the universe?

i don't know what the next 11 1/2 months will contain, but i'm hoping to be living in my own home by next year at this time. so much has changed in my building in the past couple of months that everything in the apartment complex outside my front door now seems foreign. the noise won't end anytime soon, the management company would love for me to leave and i don't know that i have the energy to engage in the inevitable hearings that will come when they notify us all that they're applying to hike the rent. i know my ideal home is out there somewhere; i just need to find it. more importantly, i feel ready to find it.

work continues to be plentiful (*knock on wood*). some days, i can't quite believe how much has changed on that front in two years. i went from profound unemployment to steadily working for FOUR magazines. i'm looking forward to more of the same in 2013. bigger stories, more responsibility, new opportunities. our department is growing and i've become a vital part of the machine driving that growth. even better, i've developed a slew of professional relationships that will ensure i always have a foot in the door somewhere. i'm so relieved, and so pleased to say that i'm not worried about my career.

what i am "worried" about is my creativity. i'll be honest: i haven't really written anything of my own in more than a year, and i find it very hard to motivate myself to be creative for more than about five minutes at a time. and i'm not happy about it. i feel like i'm letting a part of me down, and i know i've got a bunch of awesome projects somewhere inside me. there's a bestseller in there! and a screenplay or two! and a bunch of po-emes! and drawings and paintings and crafts! i just need to get 'em out. and, to do that, i need to clear the creative logjam. i'm considering redoing The Artist's Way and its 12 weeks of exercises in the hopes of doing that, and complementing my professional work with more personal stuff.

that's part of the reason i'm going to try the blog-a-day thing. again.

as for other stuff in 2013, who knows?

i want to get back behind the wheel to practice my driving so YB and i can embark on more road trips... including maybe one to kentucky to see my pal, moob! but i'd also like to be able to drive my mom around when we go shopping -- she plays chauffeur enough for my dad, so it would be nice for her to see the world from the passenger seat more often.

i'd like to master a new recipe or two. last year, i conquered the cheesecake. i haven't yet decided what to tackle in 2013.

i'm hoping to continue to expand my skills, professionally. keep learnin' indesign. keep making cool stuff. keep keeping my brain sharp.

basically, as i said in my end-of-2012 post, i want to improve on what the past year brought me. to do better and be better, and to accept myself and my decisions no matter how things turn out.

OMG, what if i have a cat by next january? :-)

Sunday, January 13, 2013

daily blogging returns!

time to get back on the horse. no excuses. my cooties have finally abated and i'm no longer being felled by hacking, and the "new" year is already 13 days old.

i'm going to make an effort to blog every day, and i'm going to see how long i can maintain a streak.

today's entry doesn't really count. it's more of an alert -- to anyone still bothering check this space -- that actual content will once again be posted on a regular basis. and, i suppose, an announcement that i haven't dropped off the face of the earth or somehow been rendered digitally mute.

for now, i'm watching the golden globes, enjoying some snacks and pondering what i'll write about tomorrow.

actually, i already know. :-)

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

welcome back, old friend


remember how, for many years, i would buy my page-a-day horoscope calendar for the cosmic guidance -- however simple or vague or freakishly fitting -- it provided me? remember how much i loved those calendars?

remember how they were discontinued a few years back and my page-a-day-ing evaporated?

remember how that sucked? (okay, maybe not for you, but for ME?)

oh, sure, i tried to fill the daily void with a page-a-day zen calendar (useless, and i didn't bother turning its pages past about mid-february that year) and the page-a-day origami calendar (fun while it lasted, but i eventually gave up on the daily creations), but nothing worked. instead of eagerly turning a new page each morning, i felt apathetic about my calendars and, eventually, stopped buying them altogether. what was the point? i missed my daily messages from the universe. and from author jill goodman, who delivered them in the form of 365 teeny pages.

and then, like an astrological phoenix rising from the ashes of page-a-day disappointment... cue the chorus of angels... the calendars RETURNED FOR 2013!!!!!

instead of a separate calendar for each sign of the zodiac, there's now one calendar for all of them together -- one general horoscope for each day and then, on the reverse of each page, 12 unique horoscopes for the day for each sign! and they're authored by jill goodman, just as they always were.

i almost cried when i made the accidental discovery a few weeks back. (every december, i check amazon to see if, by some fabulous twist of fate, the calendars are back... and, this past december, THEY FINALLY WERE!)

i'd planned to head to chapters to pick one up after new year's and then, while out shopping with YB last week, i came upon a small calendar section at a big grocery store and there, on one rack, was the horoscope calendar... for 50% off!

with so many of my favourite products being discontinued, never to be seen or smelled or tasted or heard from again, this was a downright miraculous resurrection.