Saturday, February 09, 2008

I forgot to show you my new tattoo!


I forgot to show you my new tattoo! I had it done about a month ago.
The question did arise, as I announced my intention to run for political office, if I were elected, how the other regional directors would feel about their new counterpart sporting several tattoos... was good for a laugh!
So yes, I am running for Regional District of East Kootenay Area F Director this fall. Whew. Long winded title. Long story short, I was asked to consider running a few months ago, and made the decision the other night. I figure with all the growth and development, there needs to be someone representing the residents who does not have a personal agenda. So, we'll see what happens. But don't worry, I won't become one of THOSE politicians!

Thursday, January 17, 2008

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT



Please click to enlarge to ensure all pertinent information can be read.
Thank you,
The Management.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Remember all those things your mother told you not to do?


Ah. the sweet smell of disinfectant and cast plaster.

Just let me look in your ear...

So a doctor, a plumber and a priest walk into a bar....
I had to do something as I awaited my turn...

Well hell’s bells if they really truly are not good things to do.
Dumb as hell things to do, really. You know the things I mean…
Don’t tip your chair back on two legs or you’ll fall and break your neck.
Don’t run with scissors or you’ll fall and stab yourself dead.
Don’t play with matches you’ll burn down the whole neighbourhood and kill us all.
Don’t put things in your ear, you’ll break your eardrum and go deaf.
Don’t ever go out without clean underwear or you’ll be in an accident and die with dirty underwear and WHAT will the doctor think of you then?
You know, all those paranoid, goofy, never really gonna happen dire consequence scenarios that make us all roll our eyes and groan, “yes mom.”
Well, here’s the thing. That one about your eardrum? Pretty much bang on.
It all started when I had a shower yesterday late morning, after working at home a while and feeding stray teenagers buttermilk pancakes (which, incidentally, I make better than anyone in the known universe) with peanut butter and sliced bananas, and as I stood in front of the steamed up mirror brushing my teeth, chose most unwisely to try and do two things at once.
Now I should point out that I was running on a grand two hours of sleep, for reasons I will not go into just now. But suffice to say, I was not running on, shall we say, all six cylinders, or driving, shall we say, a Ford Mustang…
So, in my infinite wisdom, I decide, “hey, my ears are all watery, I could grab a Q-Tip and dry them.”
Now, just let me say I am generally very, VERY careful when I Q-Tip my ears. I never roughly jab it in, or go too far. And I never do anything else while I am Q-Tipping (not to be mistaken for cow tipping).
But this particular morning, a morning when I apparently chose to go with cute instead of bright, I not only do two things at once, I chose to go one step further into the land of unfortunate decisions: I let go of the Q-Tip in my ear and left it there a moment while I… well, I don’t know just why I let go of the damn thing… I just did. In the immortal words uttered in the aftermath of stupid moments throughout time, —all together now because you know you’ve said it — it just seemed like a good idea at the time.
So there I stood, teeth foaming with toothpaste, Q-Tip sticking out one ear, and I decided to… I decided to… hmmm, well, near as I can piece together, I decided to reach up above my head… quickly, without purpose but with all the strength of conviction I can muster… and in the process accidentally jammed that Q-Tip straight into my ear.
And when I say I jammed it in, I mean I JAMMED IT IN.
First there was shock: shock at the really creepy sound that exploded in my head, shock at the sight of the thing so far into my ear, and shock at the realization of how incredibly stupid I was at the moment, all in the space of about a bazillionth of a second.
Then came the pain.
I pulled the Q-Tip out quickly but carefully, and cupped my hand over my ear. A strange sort of numbness was taking over, as was a significantly reduced sense of sound, but a definite feeling of thumpa thumpa thumpa thwack, which I realized much later was the sound of blood rushing into my ear canal.
I stumbled down the hall, now starting to realize the true Stooge Brothery of what I have done, and announce to Lindy and Mike, who were sprawled happily on couches with tummies full of pancakes and nearly purring like kittens, that I have just jammed a Q-Tip in my ear, and surprise surprise, it hurts!
Unwilling to truly consider the damage I may have done, I take some ibuprofin and head off to take darling Lindy and Mike to town and get myself work much later in the day than normal.
By late that evening, my ear, down my face and into my neck was aching like a giraffe in a Mini Cooper, and my niece, the ever fabulous Miss Margery convinces me that I really should see a doctor the next day. The dried blood I discovered in my ear also helped convince me.
So the next afternoon, as I could not get into the clinic, I end up, with my mom no less, sitting in the emergency room waiting room for my turn.
Of course, I have to explain to the nurse, who funnily enough I have known for many years but won’t name to protect her (Ann Richardon), just what I did.
Laughing and shaking her head, she took my blood pressure, temperature, etc and then sent me back to the waiting room, her eyes still filled with mirth.
It was a busy Friday in the ER. My mom finally had to start the drive home to Golden, and after nearly four hours, finally I was on a stretcher awaiting the doc on call, whom, as fate would once again have it, because fate has a twisted sense of humour, is my regular doc, whom I will not name to protect her(Theresa Ross). She walks in and asks, not so much smiling as grinning, “so what’s this about you jamming a Q-Tip into your ear?”
To give her credit, she succeeded in not REALLY laughing as she had a good look at my bruised and bloodied eardrum with the Q-Tip sized gouge in the canal in front of it.
She saved the laughter to share with Ann as I walked sheepishly over to the desk to collect my prescription for the eardrops I was to use.
Don’t get your knickers in a knot though. Both of these women are women I consider friends, and frankly, the whole thing was just too ridiculous not to laugh at, and I could not help but join in.
So the top and bottom is, I am very lucky, my eardrum is bruised but intact, I should have full hearing back in a few weeks, I am bending all the Q-Tips to ninety degree angles to prevent over-insertion, and I am rethinking that whole underpants thing pretty seriously.

Monday, December 31, 2007

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!



A happy new year hello to all of you from Moorish Mansion on New Year's Eve! The bunch of us in the video - Ian, me, Hayley, Scott, Justin, Jill and Keith - are the die hard partiers!! Well, as much as us all party these days! Family and friends that mean just as much as family... my dear, dear friends Jill and Keith are in the video with us, and I cannot think of anyone I would have rather had with us tonight!
Loads of love, lots of light and laughter, and here is to another year together my darlings!
love love love,
Stevie
xxx

Saturday, December 29, 2007

fun in the snow... toboganing up Forster Creek Road....






explanations and more pics tomorrow... mostly wanted to give Rache a glimpse of H's hair!
xxx

Friday, December 21, 2007

hee hee!




My darling Miss Margery and I are just now having a brief visit before she is off to Winnipeg... and we've gotten a little silly, very happy, and taken a picture of my lovely witchy boots and tights... I had to pull up my black velvet witchy skirt in order for you to see them!
Happy Winter Solstice to all, and to all, a good night!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Tag!

All righty... a Christmas theme tag: Gypsy, Margie and Mary-Beth

1) Best present ever as a child: A Wonder Woman doll with hands that really moved!

2) Best present ever as an adult: there have been lots I've loved, but short of getting #3, my favourite is always new socks!

3) The one gift you've always hoped for and not yet received: A proposal

4) Your favourite part of Christmas dinner: turkey sandwiches on while bread a few hours later...mmm....

5) Favourite Christmas movie: Love Actually. It is a holiday tradition for my darling Margery and myself.

6) Most lusciously shameful holiday indulgence: doing NOTHING for a couple of days!

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Holy holly bells batman

My Christmas column for the Christmas issue of The Echo, which because of press schedules, is always done the week prior...

This year is going to be a very special Christmas in my and Ian’s family.
This year, for the first time in 10 years, Ian’s daughter Hayley will be with us.
And this year, we celebrate in our own home.
To say we should always count our blessings seems almost too cliché.
But as I wandered around my house this morning, frowning at the clutter that arrived in the living room yesterday when we had to empty out a room that needed some minor renos, I realized hey, this is our clutter, in OUR house.
So I scrapped the column I had originally written for this issue and started anew.
Our house. Our own piece of land, our own little space in the world to call our own.
And somehow ‘blessing’ seems too small a word to describe just how that makes me feel.
I feel like we had to make a choice a while back: not a conscious one, perhaps, but one that made all the difference in the world.
I have always tried to look for the positive in things, to see the bright side. It takes a concerted effort sometimes, but I’ve tried.
But while I am a positive person, there was still a tiny part of me that sent out a constant stream of negative: I was convinced we would never own a home here. I verbalized that sentiment. I believed it. It was a pathetic, self-serving, self-pitying emotion, a self-fulfilling prophecy. And hence, we did not own a home.
That little thing, that one conviction, can change everything, no matter what the focus of that negativity is.
I can’t tell you the exact date when I became aware of what I was doing. I can’t give you an exact time or place I decided that enough is enough. But I do remember making a conscientious effort stem that negative stream, to eliminate it from my being. And then on the drive home to Wilmer one afternoon, I saw a for sale sign. And here we are. In our home.
It is like we reached the crest of a mountain, and though there is plenty of journey left in front of us, with that negativity out of the picture, I feel stronger, ready to tackle the ups and downs ahead. Not because we bought a house, but because I stopped defeating myself.
Christmas is not something to take for granted. Food, gifts, warmth of home and warmth of heart are not common in the world. For some families it means nothing at all. For some children in care facilities (often there through no fault of their own), some as young as seven, it is “just another day in lock down,” to quote a friend. He, and others like him, do what they can to make Christmas happen for the children at one Calgary facility in particular, with gifts not just of the wrapped variety, but the gift of their time on Christmas day.
“It is such a privilege to be able to be with them while they open those presents, some of them children no one else wants…” His voice wavered at the end of that sentence, any words to follow left unsaid but understood.
Here in the valley, there are families who do without. Not always enough food, not always a gift to give or receive… but we have the Christmas Bureau and Angel Tree help those who reach out.
There are those here who do not for whatever reason access that help and if you know someone like that, please reach out to them. If you know of someone with no one to spend Christmas with, whether their family is far away or simply gone, invite them in.
This Christmas, our tree will shine extra bright.
Each friend that comes by, each family member we have with us, every morsel of food, every gift, every moment we have…none will go unnoticed.
Christmas is truly, in my heart, a time to be glad for all we have, for our family around us, and family far away (and my beloved bloggy family!).
Christmas is about love. And I have more love in my life than I could ever wrap in boxes and put under a tree.
Merry Christmas. Indeed.
S.

Sunday, December 02, 2007

oh ebay, my ebay, where for art thou ebay?

Shoozzz!!
Hee hee! I love these, and they're MINE MINE MINE! Or will be as soon as they are shipped to me!
LooK:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=130178033542
ps:
I HAD to add this... I looked at a little bookshelf (which was described, I believe mistakenly, as one inch high), but nearly peed when I read the description from the seller... bablefish anyone?

"Exquisite Tibet rosewood bookshelf
Hello my friend: The thanks sees my item. all they are good. Very lifelike! If you win the item, it will bring you is in fortune with your family and wish! Please don't miss the a fair show to take it! Own your bid !The astonishing felling is start because once you bid. Your contented is my happiness.
I wish you will like it and don't lose the chance to get it. Good Lock!"

And now for something completely different... a photo one of my energetic YC kids...

Monday, November 26, 2007

of underwear and skulking....

okay, so I know I am going to hell already...
Here I am in the sketchy hotel, right? It's the Nomad, by the way Dale... and things like the tap coming off in my hand as I got ready to shower this morning, the gnarled up bit of two by four holding the bed frame together, the broken chair... literally so broken one cannot sit in it as two of the legs are no longer attached... these are all things that make me giggle and want to stay here again because the owner is this sweet old Asian woman who keeps smiling even as she brings a better chair to my room saying "is okay now, is okay now!" the whole time.
And my brain is stuffed full after the seminar today, with all the different meds you can take for HIV, and what contraindications each carry, and what all the generic and brand names are, and the scientific methodology of how an HIV cell takes over the TD4 cell... on and on... so by the time I had dinner with my colleagues and stumbled back to my smelly room (which no amount of air freshener seems to help) I am ready to take break before I tackle putting grant stuff together before bed.
So off I go to the anti-christ Walmart (I reiterate: I am ALREADY going to hell) to look for a bra and de-stress a little. MIndless wandering through aisles of styles, whiles, and files....
So I am looking over a bra to see if I like it, and these feet appear in my lowered line of view.
"Hey is that you?" I hear a voice say, and the feet remain firmly in my vision.
I look up and this guy from our group is standing there with a few things in hand, staring at me as I grope this aubergine coloured bra, four or five more over my arm awaiting inspection.
"Uh, hi," I say, incapable of recalling his name. "What's up?"
He proceeds to start to chat about how he was bored in the room, didn't want to watch tv, thought he's come down to Wallyworldmart, and lo and behold, there I was as well!
"Um, yeah... I thought I would take a quick break before getting back to work." I say this as casually as I can, considering I am draped in lingerie. I just want him to go away so I can go about my relaxing wee bit of retail therapy. For this to be relaxing, I need to be alone, or at least not feeling like I am being watched.
A few more "SO I was bored" bits of chat and I finally manage to pull away and end the conversation with a breezy "see you in the morning!" and he gets the hint and leaves... or so I think.
I try on a few of the bras, none really work except the aubergine number, and I head back over to another part of the lingerie section to check out a couple more, am engrossed in the literature crowing about this new George line of tee-shirt bras, when from behind me I hear "Is that you?" and turn to see him, again, grinning and standing right behind me.
Now, I should explain, he is a very nice guy, not creepy really, but either really dense, or REALLY bored, or both.
I say a few mumbled words and flee further into the lingerie section, convinced he will not follow me. And I was right. He did not follow, but did seem to circle the area looking hopefully inward now and then, waiting, I figure, for me to finish shopping so I can visit with him over coffee.
So I start checking out socks, girdles, undershirts, underwear, all and any undergarments, all the while dodging about and ducking like some deranged limbo dancer in an effort to see a clear path to the cash register that would give me sufficient cover to pay and get to my car.
I swear I could hear the Mission Impossible theme song in the back of my mind.
Finally, aubergine bra in my clutches along with three Red Bulls, one polka dotted pair of knee high socks and two pairs stripey underwear, I skulk through handbags, costume jewelry and scarves to the check out, all the time peering around like a
nervous lemur on the lam as the girl rings up my purchases.
"Would you like any cash back?" she asks in a nasal tone.
"No, no, just these things," I stage whisper and punch my pin numbers in frantically.
I sprint out the door and to my car, stopping just long enough to sweep off the snow that has collected on it as I was inside shopping/skulking.
I made it back to the Nomad, stealthily made my way to my room where I now sit to tell you all my story.
I feel a little guilty. He just wanted to chat and I made like a hermit and... hermitted.
Sigh.
But I do really like the polkadotted socks.