29 April 2010

Variety night at the old Miller barn

Twas a good night, a good night indeed. Thanks Rud! The line-up looked like this:
1st - Yours truly doing an acoustic set of 4 tunes (1 original and 3 covers)
2nd - "Marooned," a one-act play featuring the young thespians Renae Friesen, Carlie Giesbrecht, Brooklyn Sawatzky, & Patrick Wiebe - Very funny stuff. Ends with a bang!
3rd - A four tune set by Kaptain K and the Krazies (aka, Mike Luptak, Kevin Neufeld, Jeff Dyck, & Derek Klassen) - Mike, Did you know that that Boston tune got that high? Whew! What a brave man you are!
4th - A time of cheesecake, coffee, and juice, and perusing works of art by many students (thanks Jill!)
5th - "My Proud Beauty," a one-act melodrama featuring more young thespians: Graham Calder, Mel Fehr, Eric Friesen, Craig Heppner, Sara Krahn, Brittany Moise, & Dylan Reimer. More funny stuff. Ends with a weddin' and some good 'ol family time (after puttin' the villain out in the snow)!
6th - A three tune set by Miller's Senior Vocal Jazz, led by Jana Zens.

A full house (100 +) donated over $700 to see, hear, and eat. What, seriously, what!? could be better?!?
Excellent!

Ride in           13'C  Wind SE 30ks (sweet!)
Ride home     Thanks Sara. (I wussed out because of the wind and the rain.)

Settling

Learned a new song today, to play at the coffeehouse tomorrow. One of my favourite albums of the first decade of the new millennium is Death Cab for Cutie's Transatlanticism. Solid tracks all 'round. And I'd like to know whether they listened to The Weakerthans, or vice versa, or whether they just made similar musical style discoveries simultaneously, one on the west coast, and one in the middle of the continent. I hope for the latter. The dates on their albums would seem to say that their similar sounds just happened. Anyway, both bands sound great, and, I think, are great. I'll learn a Weatherthans tune next, just to say it.

Ride in            8'C Wind SE 15 ks
Ride home      19'C Wind SSE 47-65 ks!!! (a bit of work, but I'm getting better)
 

27 April 2010

Lavinia

I want to believe that the angst of originality and creativity are on the wane. At least for a season. With sampling, and open talk of influence, and David Shields' book Reality Hunger: A Manifesto (an entire "novel" (although Shields won't call it a novel, and insists that the novel is in need of a rebirth, or of a kind of death) of quotes and footnotes), I expect that the decline of the original is on, in full. Of course any reader who takes his work seriously knows that "original" is one of the those wondrously impossible expressions of the English language (probably of any language). Whatever I read, I'm always thinking, "Hmmm this is a lot like ..." And if I can't think of what it's like, I'm still thinking about what it is like. I'm always trying to place it. Everything we read, we place. We sort it into one category or another. We may read by flavour, but we know what the source of it is - what it holds in common with others like it. The ones we call "originals" are those that take something we've always known and redress it in such a way that we recognize it (and if we recognize it, didn't it exist somewhere in our memory as a kind of possibility, at least) as something other. Perhaps this was what happened when people first read The Catcher in The Rye. Or when they watched The Tempest. Or The Inferno. And so on. But each of these things remains a member of something, a child of some style or movement - an end and a beginning of some imagined world.

Ursula K. LeGuin's Lavinia is a rewriting of Virgil's Aeneid no less. But she rewrites the story in novel form, with Virgil (known as the "poet") as Lavinia's muse and prophet. Lavinia, who is a silent outline of a character in the Aeneid - she becomes Aeneus's wife - tells us the story from her point of view. She tells us that Virgil tells her the story, so that she knows it, and how it will end, before it happens. She becomes the first reader of Virgil's epic, and his telling of the story becomes the template for her life. To put it in Star Trekkian terms, Virgil indirectly violates the "prime directive" for he can see what will (or should) happen and, via Lavinia, he makes it so.

The plot of the novel follows Virgil's telling, which is a modified version of the founding moments of the Roman Empire. Psychologically however, Lavinia is a force who uses her influence judiciously and effectively. Though the men make the decisions, her approval means everything. In this she is a political force for she defies the commands of her deceased husband's son, Ascanius, to save her own (by Aeneus) son, and becomes a symbol of heroism for her people because of it.

Rather than replicate the large-scale myth of her model, LeGuin scales things down, empowers the silent and everyday voice of a woman who loves the land and her people, and in doing so the story becomes inhabitable. Whereas the men too often hear the call of "Mars" who always lurks around them, Lavinia brings to the fore the necessities of living, of sowing and reaping, of making daily sacrifice to the gods, of caring for a father and mother, of raising a son, and of mourning all inevitable passings. Virgil recounts the reality of the world according to Mars. The world of men and ego and violence. LeGuin reminds us that our blood flows daily because we care for one another, because repeated ritual tending to the material world keeps us fed and watered, loved and living.

As in her novel The Left Hand of Darkness LeGuin sees and accepts both sides. Our necessity is to understand the two faces, the Janus, and to seek harmony with them. To choose one and reject the other leaves you with only half of the story.

Ride in:                   Temp 7'C    Wind NNE 15 ks
Ride home:             Temp 19'C  Wind NW 4 ks
        

26 April 2010

Shiftin' sands

Always interested in the morph-ing of language - some call it evolution, but we all know that God created English and High German, so I'll steer clear of the morass - I found this site of alphabetical loveliness.

Margruite's away tonight, so I got to gather the eggs this evening: seventeen hens, eighteen eggs! It's obvious that chickens are among the most efficient domesticated food (protein) producers we've engaged. Eight of these hens are coming up on two years old, and they're still producing consistently. If a hen averages five eggs per week (which, from our experience seems reasonable) she will produce something like two-hundred and fifty eggs a year (5 x 52=252). According to this website one egg yields about 90 calories (depending on size). So one hen, over the course of a year, would produce roughly 22,500 calories (250 x 90=22,500 cal), and over the course of a lifetime (they have about a two year span as layers - ours will live longer, and just look pretty peckin' n' pawin' around the yard), possibly produce 45,000 calories (22,500 x 2=45,000). I'm going to try to figure out how many calories that hen might consume to produce that amount of energy. Pretty cool stuff though.

Ride in:            7'C, Wind NNW 20ks
Ride home:      17'C, Wind NNE 20ks

25 April 2010

Rowed, rode, road

Just watched Antonio Gaudi, God's Architect a BBC documentary. This Spanish architect, born in 1852, and died in 1926, created utterly unique and remarkable structures. Like much of Frank Lloyd Wright's work, you can hardly believe that his work is around 100 years old. Also like Wright, Gaudi was eccentric. His oddness was his celibacy, and extreme Catholicism. Yet his work is curvy and sensuous, even sexual. I suppose Freud would have something to say to this. Ah Freud, the amateur critic's answer to many riddles. Sorry about that. But there are times when sublimation offers a reasonable explanation. If not a soaring rigid tower, why not flowing, curvaceous lines, and mushroom-headed rooftop vents?
 












Pedaling is rowing. Repetitive. Back and forth. Up and down. 
Roads are rivers. Linear. Meandering. Rippling.
Today my bicycle and I pushed and floated East, then South, to Emerson. 
We rode around the town.
We were pushed Northward by the South wind, then turned West to return home.
55 kilometres; 30.27 km/hr average speed. Wind 20 ks SSW.
The longest ride of the year. 
Not long yet, but just fine for April.

24 April 2010

When I'm 65 ...

... it'll be 2030. And I hope some friends stop by with a few bottles of this or that, and we head out to the back, light a fire, and sit around it until the sun comes up. I hope I can stay awake that long. I hope I can still make a bit of a dent in one or two of those bottles. I hope that there'll still be CPP and OAP to collect when I get there. I hope that I will have already been retired for 10 years, so it'll all be anti-climactic. I hope that I'll have a really nice Kubota tractor with which to till the garden. I hope that my 1988 Toyota truck will still run. I hope that Paul Bergman and Karl Redding will come by later in the evening - Paul first, and then a good while later, Karl - with their guitars and play me a few tunes - maybe an impromptu concert. I hope that my kids will be there too, just helping us old farts manage.

And I hope that Harry had a good day today too. We tried to do our best. (But we could not.) We brought a couple of bottles and sat around in the living room drinking one. We struggled to stay awake. We watched a bit of playoff hockey action. We decided that it was useless to fight it. We went home early to go to bed.

I like Harry. But hey guys, please. Please don't let me go to sleep before midnight on my 65th. Serve me coffee between beers if you must, but keep me awake for a good long time. And if it's a Saturday, make sure that I don't go to church on Sunday. I think Jesus would be appalled to see me there too.    

Terry's test and tune

Well when Terry invited me over I thought I'd have to bring my riding mower, but he said I should bring the guitar. Never one to disregard the request of the host, I obliged. Terry and I spent a few hours playin' the blues - guitar and saxophone. Sweet! A good time! And it's Friday, which is all right too.

Ride in       Temp 7'C Wind SE 10 ks
Ride home Temp 20'C Wind SW 15 ks

22 April 2010

The last hurrah

Poker night at Dennis's. A classic ... until I lost. Still a classic, though. For me that is.
And, we're starting to plan for 2012.

Ride in           Temp 3'C   Wind SE 6 ks
Ride home     Temp 20'C Wind WNW 6 ks

21 April 2010

Story-tellin' time-travellin'

Do you know the Ambrose Bierce short story, "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" (first pub'd in the San Francisco Examiner, July 13, 1890)? It's been made into a short film a few times. An Academy Award winning version, La riviere du hibou (part 1, part 2, part 3) made in 1962 by a French director Roberto Enrico, was aired as episode number 142 during The Twilight Zone's last season (1965). And recently Johnny Depp's directed a Babybird music video that's clearly inspired by it (FYI: Depp plays guitar on the song).   

Ride in:         4'C    Wind N 10 ks
Ride home:   15'C  Wind N 10 ks

Ted and Gibson's excellent adventure

It's good to have friends like Gibson and Ted with whom to share the troubles of the world. And the victories too. He's a good man that Ted. And Gibson too.

Ride in:               Temp 4'C  Wind N 20 ks
Ride home:         Temp 16'C Wind N 20 ks

19 April 2010

Hey guys!

Have you ever seen or heard this before? Forever and ever. How can two words mean so little, and be used so much? The optimism! These people really believe. People will see me. People will know me. They will say, hey, back! Oh these wide-eyed fantasms of hope! Isn't the internets wonderful?

Today was my last dental appointment with my good friend, Mark (well, really he's just a dentist in waiting that I've come to appreciate, probably know him well enough to make him a Facebook friend, at least, if he'd friend me - don't we all want to be friended?), a third year UM dental student. With Mark's help, over the course of this Winter and Spring, the  saga of my tooth work has involved a gold core to fill the failed root canal of two years ago, a gold crown for the same tooth, a filling for a molar, and a thorough cleaning. It's been reasonable, except for the near too numerous to count trips into the city. I've never missed so many full and half-days of work over my entire career as I have in this one year. But hey, it's an investment in my future. My quality of life. I do like to eat. I like good food. Who likes a toothache? So I've started using a "go-between" and floss to help keep my gums healthy and remove the offending bits of food. It's for the best. I love my gold tooth - ma' bling! Yo!

Confession time

Tonight, even after much reminding from Bekah (she said she knew it was going to happen - she's usually right about these things) before, and while, I drove her to work, I forgot to pick her up. She phoned, but Genevieve and I were in the back, where there is no phone, watching "12" (as amazing movie, by the way - maybe I'll review it later), so we didn't hear it. For an hour and a half she stood out in the cold and waited. Then she walked to a place she knew, but no one was home there neither. She went back to The Hut and waited some more. People drove by. Even the police. No one stopped to ask. It was 11:30 pm (It's along movie. 160 minutes. This is no excuse I know. Just saying.) when finally a friend drove by, picked her up, and brought her home.

There's not much you can say when you're wrong, and it's just so obvious. I can remember one night when I was  home alone, mom and dad were out somewhere, and it was getting late. No one seemed to be around. That's the way it felt. And just a few nights before we'd watched this "end times" movie, "A Thief in the Night." It's the classic story of the rapture of the saints - 2nd coming of Christ - leaving all the unsaved behind. The longer I waited, the more sure I was that the rapture had happened and that I had been left behind. Finally I walked out of the house and walked down the street to some friends of my parents who I believed were Christians. The relief I felt when I saw the lights on! Still, I walked up to the door, rang the bell, and waited. I wonder what I looked like to Mrs. Zacharias when she answered the door. I bet I didn't look as forlorn and disappointed as Bekah did when she walked in tonight.

Epic fail. Now I believe it will take some time to make this up to her. I guess the upside of it, for her, is that guilt-trips are powerful, and one of us just logged a lot of miles.

Ride to 75 and back (32 ks):    Temp 20'C Wind S 20ks

17 April 2010

What is man that you are mindful of him?

It was movie night at the Wiens's tonight. We watched Alexandra. On a related note (related in that I'm connecting the two) I'm to page 122 (of 279) of Lavinia, by Ursula K. LeGuin. Lavinia, the narrator and main character of the novel, is the daughter of King Latinus, of Latium. She marries Aeneas of Troy. This oversimplifies the story LeGuin tells, but in the main it is a story that parallels the story of Aleksandra, an 81 year old grandmother of, Denis, a 28 year old soldier serving in the Russian army in Chechnya.

I am drawn to these synchronicities, to the nexuses that occur in my own experience, and that repeat endlessly in art. Besides the contrast of the young woman's view of men and war, as compared the elderly woman's view of men and war, these two pieces tell the same story. Men do what men seem damned, or created, to do. Women watch and wonder. Indeed writer and director Aleksandr Sokurov (Russian Ark) seems to have created a female alter-ego to plumb the female point of view.

In one scene Aleksandra, on an independent and unsanctioned excursion into a Chechen market, befriends an elderly Chechen woman. The Chechen woman, recognizing that Alexandra, tired in body and spirit, cannot sleep amidst the hurly burly of the military base, offers to take her to her apartment for tea. In this simple moment of hospitality the two women, barely acquainted for an hour, care for one another as fast friends. Aleksandra says that they are like sisters. And how can that be while these men, their sons and husbands, wage war. They have no answer to this question. But there is little doubt that that is a question writer and director Sokurov asks.

He also wonders why women love these men. We know why men love women. Even at 81 Aleksandra becomes a magnet for the men's attention. They serve her, carry her, guide her, feed her. In return she gently chides them, touches them, treats them well, and appeals to their decency. As she walks through the camp, navigating amongst armoured personnel carriers, troop transports, and tanks, she reminds them, not to be too trite about it, of their humanity. The tenderness she elicits reaches a zenith when she returns from her excursion to the market. First the young troops guide her to a table for the meal she missed. They set the table elegantly, with a bouquet of flowers. Then, as she returns to the room she is sharing with Denis, he exclaims of his concern at her absence and, after their most heated exchange about his need to marry, and to settle down, Aleksandra confesses to him that she's no good without a man. Despite having earlier declared that her husband was hard, and hard to live with, and describing how free she feels without him, in the presence of her grandson she reveals an ache that surprises us. Then, in a remarkable scene, as Denis hugs her, she tells him, "You smell nice. You smell like a man." She touches his chest, almost as a lover, and then she tells him he should go and wash. The grandson replies by saying, not until I have braided your hair (which he has, earlier in the scene, unbraided, despite her tired protestations). He gently and deftly does it as she says that he used to do this for her as a child.    

Both Aleksandra and Lavinia (full review of the book later, when I'm finished it) love men, and pay attention to the details that signify nurture and care: feet, hair, shivering, illness. But this is not a doting, overbearing presence. These women accept "the ways of men". Lavinia, while eating breakfast with her new husband Aeneas, marvels how those hands, those eyes, can be so tender in the home, but on the battlefield they are fierce and ruthless - unknowable and wild.

How great is this divide? Is it not within a man himself? How can we house these opposites? How do we braid a grandmother's hair, and hours later head out to shoot to kill our own kind? The answer, I suppose, rattles itself out, rasps from the mouth of some Leviathan, "This is the human condition". I admit it. I feel it in myself. In my own rage and tirades. But I feel so small when I'm done.

I recall now a paired set of scenes from the movie. In the elderly woman's apartment there are stacks of books tied together in rows on the floor. Later, as Denis unbraids Aleksandra's hair, she asks him what he's reading. "What?" he says.

She asks it again, "What are you reading now?"

"Nothing," he says.

Ride to Harry & Susan Wiens (a bit of a circuitous route of 26 ks)
Temp 17'C  Wind SSE 12 ks (my avg speed: 35 k/h)  

16 April 2010

It's Friday and I was hoping ...

... for something good on the radio. Instead I got a call from Lisa, saying that Todd needed me to come down and give my opinion on two possible bases for our granite table top. Well I hopped into the "new" 1988 4x4 Toyota truck we bought from OneTwoTree Cornelio last week, but only just registered today, and motored the three miles North and mile and a half East to Todd's, enjoying the feeling of "Hey this truck should be driving these gravel and dirt roads. That's what this truck was made for. Right on. Because when you drive your passenger car down the gravel roads you're thinking, Geez I'm just wrecking this thing with all the gravel and dust flying around. It just wasn't built to drive on these kinds of roads." So right there I already justified the purchase of the truck yet once.

I get to Todd's and he shows me the two options. I ask him if he's got a preference. He says he's not going to say, but I can tell that he does. We go to the first option. It's a slab about 6 to 8 inches thick and about 26 inches wide by 63 inches long - pinkish gray granite cut flat on one side and au natural on the top side. Todd's proposal for the base for our 9 foot long by 43 inch wide by 3 inch thick granite table is a granite pod-like base, with four stainless steel "legs" drilled into the base and angling (kind of radiating) up to the top, where they'll be drilled in as well. It'll look something like the awful drawing I'm including above (side view, 1D), except it'll look a lot more real. Well, as real as things can look around here. Virtureal. That's not "good real" that's mostly real.

Todd's real. Big and real. Great guy too. Like a rock. I'd link you to his website if he had one, but he's so great he doesn't need one. Seriously.

The ride in:          Temp 3'C   Wind 20 ks NW
The ride home:    Temp 12'C Wind 25 ks NW

15 April 2010

More evidence of evolution!

Driver's License Test-taking adaptation:

Margruite:    failed first attempt,
                         failed second,
                         passed third
Paul:             failed first attempt,
                         passed second
Genevieve:  failed first attempt,
                         passed second



Sara:          failed to renew Learner's License,
                    had to reschedule test date,
                   then passed that "first" attempt

Rebekah:    passed! on her first attempt today!!!

The Krahns have, at long last, evolved into a "I passed my Driver's Test on the first attempt" family!

Ride in:          Temp 7'C  Wind NW 30ks
Ride home:    Temp 9'C  Wind NW 40 ks

14 April 2010

Some memories are better left forgotten.

When I was younger, you know, a kid, delivering papers in Winkler, tugging my red Radio Flyer wagon through the trailer park, I had this transister radio that I won from the Free Press for selling new subscriptions. Around that time I remember liking this guy, and this song. Maybe it was the hair. Maybe I'm actually a romantic. Call it what you will, sentiment is hard to overcome. That is, until I watched this today. And actually, this little bit of funny makes me like the guy and the song all the more. I'd love to be able to sing and play like this guy. Maybe someday I'll be as good as Lionel, or Warren. Until then.

Ride in:       Temp 11'C  Wind S 20 ks
Ride home:  Temp 18'C  Wind SSW 40 ks

13 April 2010

BFD!

I was surfing about looking for something a little more lighthearted to post, and low and behold, I found that I can buy a t-shirt to help the American's celebrate Health reform. This is a legitimate Barack Obama site! Wow! What do you say to that? Congratulations?

I have to go to bed.


Ride in:       Temp 5'C Wind 20 ks ESE
Ride home: Rudy's truck  Wind 60+ ks ESE
                       Thanks Rud!

12 April 2010

And now, at the end.

I finished reading Muriel Barbery's novel, The Elegance of the Hedgehog, last night. As of Wednesday of last week, when I had read to page 170, approximately half of the novel, I found it quite inspiring, both as a reader and as a writer. As I moved into the second half of it, these last few days, I read quickly, though by the last third I admit that I scanned and jumped over paragraphs.

There seemed to me to be a significant shift in the tone and interest of the narrator, Renee Michel, the dowdy concierge. Until her inadvertent revelation to Kakuro Ozu, her "hedgehog-ness" was what had drawn me to her. This prickliness was what made her and her fellow confessee, Paloma Josse, the 12 year old genius, so intriguing and, for me at least, attractive.

As the novel drew on though, and the two of them revealed themselves to one another, and to others around them, that tension ebbed. Paloma's trenchant questions about life and meaning nearly evaporate into quaint observations as she sits in the easy-chair in Renee's apartment. In this context, escorted there by her mother, she is reduced to her 12-year-oldness. She looks and sounds young again as we watch her dangle her legs and fidget.

Similarly, Renee's former discussions of things of beauty and reason in the world around her, are replaced by concerns about hairstyles, dresses, and pastries. Strangely, a woman who has, to this point taken great pains to free herself of the classist concerns of appearances, becomes the focus - initially unwilling, to be fair - of a kind of makeover. The story shifts from a focus on the beauty of order and simplicity - in grammar, music, ideas - to an awakening love of self, as she is seen, and comes to see herself, through the eyes of the other, Kakuro Ozu. Indeed Renee learns to love herself, because Ozu comes to love her. It becomes the ideal transformational love story.

What's wrong with this? Good question. Nothing really, except for the ending. You see, as soon as Renee comes to accept and love her new self (and apparently let go of her alter-ego, a deceased sister who's foray into the city results in rape and death in childbirth has haunted her - "You are not your sister," says Ozu), she comes to suffer the same fate. She is killed by her own naivete, in the city. Certainly running into traffic, and being struck by a dry cleaning van as one attempts to rescue a vagrant from traffic, is a reasonably noble way to die, but it is also mock-heroic and non-sensical, in a novel that has, up till now, taken great pains to make sense of things.

Of course life is like that. Shit happens, as they say. But this novel has been approaching the altar of high art - a religion of order and structure. It has invoked classics of music, philosophy, and literature. In fact, it is almost certain that Barbery intends Renee's death to parallel, or at least conjure, the death of Anna Karenina in Tolstoy's novel, which is often referenced in this story. The haphazard nature of Renee's demise leaves me cold. If it is to be tragic, I don't see the lesson in it. Rather Renee deserves better, not worse. Her death does not stand as a warning for the higher classes who disdain common folk, or, as in Tolstoy, those who would disdain a woman's right to choose. And even as we struggle to see Renee's death as something other than accident, she ascribes it to "the paths of God" that are "all to explicit for those who pride themselves in the ability to decipher them." Really? That is God? So we are just to accept this as "fate" we lie dying; that God makes shit happen. Amen?

From a novelist who has, for much of her story, found exquisite beauty and meaning in the mundane, I find suggesting that this fatalistic conclusion is the result of the hand of God a bit of a cheat. What purpose does it serve except to bring the most abrupt closure to a plot that wasn't the point of the novel anyway? At its core this novel seeks to play the notes of psychological (who am I) and political (class-ism) tension and harmony. The ending fails to illuminate those further. In fact Paloma's bourgeois mother hardly flinches at the news. This non-reaction jars as much as Renee's invocation of god. The classed, atheist universe will trundle along, unmarked by this baser matter.

So it goes.

The ride in:       Temp 4'C Wind 20 ks ESE
The ride home: Temp 8'C Wind 35 ks ESE

It will be rain tonight.

11 April 2010

Faustian bargains? On a Sunday?

Okay. So take one testy, but oh so necessary, piece of software and add a fast approaching deadline (which of course uses said software) and what's bound to happen to make your time on the Lord's day REALLY need prayer? Yup. A glitch. Javascript? Jar Jar Binks? George Lucas? Whatever. It didn't work. I know, I know. My tech friends assure me that it's going to work sometime soon. I know the drill. Somebody'll get right on it. And so I wait. Everything else that I wanted to do, in the meantime, gets pushed back, because I know that as soon as the glitch is fixed, I'll have to get right on it and finish what I wanted to have done about six hours ago. So it goes. The tail wagging the dog? If you've never felt compelled to yell at your computer, then obviously you are a better person than me. 

Back in the day, so they say, Robert Johnson was standing at the crossroads with his guitar when the devil strode up to him and offered him fame and fortune, in exchange for his soul. Well Robert, thinking something like, "Really, how could it get worse than being a sharecropper's son out pickin' cotton?" ended up saying, "Sure." At least we all got a good song out of his deal! (A few more than that really.)

Another hero of the Faustian sort, Tom Waits, looks at this problem of the cosmos shaking its finger a little differently. Whatever the case, today was one of those days during which I was reminded that I am not in control of my days, much less my destiny.

In the meantime I have got to find a better way to manage these frustrations than Boxer's mantra, "I will work harder." I keep hoping I don't end up sitting on the front lawn, for all to see, scratching pustules and boils with pottery shards, but I tells ya, somedays you just wonder. (Movie recommendation on this theme: The Coen brothers' A Serious Man.)

And to corroborate my travails, note the wind shift here:

Ride in:       Temp 9'C Wind WNW 25 ks
Ride home: Temp 5'C Wind ENE 25 ks

Up against it both ways. Yup. I can feel it. Something is on its way.

10 April 2010

Recipe: Saturday #15, 2010

Ingredients
Morning meeting (see April 06).
Aspirations of work completed.
Requisite web-related, totally foreseeable/predictable technical difficulties.
Add interruptions galore.

Stir in
Do what you can with what you get.
Add: So it goes.



Just go on and let the cats back in already.

09 April 2010

Quiz Night Zen Poker face











Tonight the Schwoarta Choisha defend their Quiz Night title and strive for a threepeat, that should be a fourpeat. Be that as it may, the boys are feeling relaxed. Having long proven their general supremacy they feel rather blaise about the whole thing. Or perhaps we should say, rather Zen. What happens, happens. And, as the Mennonites say, Amen!



On the other hand, later, the poker face will be on at Woody's. It'll likely be a knock down drag'em out affair!

Ride in:        Temp 3'C
                        Wind SE 15 ks
Ride home:  Temp 12'C
                        Wind WSW 35 ks

08 April 2010

Theft over $1000.

Just read an interesting Vanity Fair article on the theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in 1911. I had no idea. The painting is recovered in Florence, when the thief claims that he's a patriot that wants to return it to rightful place. Having been to the Uffizi last year, the article comes alive a little more for me, although I think it's about time to spend a day or two in the Louvre. Some day. The article does add a sense of atmosphere to my reading of the Barbery book.















You know, da Vinci's work is great, but Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus" (above) and "Primavera" (below) which I did see at the Uffizi, are among my absolute favourites.

        
  

Ride in:        Temp 4'C;   Wind SW 3-5 ks
Ride home:  Temp 12'C;  Wind SSW 20 ks

07 April 2010

To page 170.

In Barbery's novel, The Elegance of the Hedgehog, Renee, the concierge of a Paris apartment block, tells us how she prefers to play this role rather than herself. French society, according to her, expects a concierge to be doltish, unsophisticated, uneducated, and certainly not well-read, so she gives the people who live in her block what they expect. She is, however, very well-read, both in literature and philosophy - an autodidact of the highest order.

For the people who live in the block, she prefers to be seen as the typical, slow-minded concierge. In this way she can live a quiet life that pleases her, and allows her to carry on reading and learning. Her cover is blown when she says, in a conversation with the new tenant, a wealthy Japanese man named Karuko Ozu by quoting the first line from Tolstoy's Anna Karenina: "All happy families are alike." To which he replies with the next line from the novel: "Every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." She know that this will, in some way, be her undoing, at least to some extent.

To this point in the novel, the "plot" if you will, has been driven by the novel's other main character, Paloma, who, with Renee, shares the narration about equally. Paloma is a 12 year old inquisitive genius who reveals very early on that she intends to commit suicide on June 16th, the day she turns 13. She is a happy cynic, who feels there's not much point in going on with her life.

Both characters feel it is better not to be known. They do not even seek to be seen as mysterious, or eccentric. They would simply rather not be known, despite both having exceptional intelligences, and what we would call, "great potential." In our celebrity-intoxicated times, where reality tv makes famous anyone prepared to expose their potential, or lack of it, these characters stand in stark contrast.

One question: If Renee is party to the telling of the story, in the very public form of the novel, what am I to make of her intentions? Am I being too clever as a reader? Should I ignore the apparent fact that a character who does not want to be known is telling me and anyone who will read her words that "reality?" How does the form and structure of the novel work in this kind of story-telling. This revelation, that the character is a paradox, works as high irony on me, the reader, if I don't wake up to how I am getting this "inside" information. That is, that she who does not want to be known is in the process of telling me, and anyone who will read it, who she really is. I feel like I've just opened up a Russian (or Chinese?) nesting doll. Where does it all end?

More later. I have reading to do. In the mean time, have fun with this "rick-rolling".

Ride in:        Temp 3'C Wind 5-8 ks NNE
Ride home:   Ted H. Klassen's Ford

Meetings suck, massages are okay!

After school today (I feel like I'll never grow up whenever I say "I had a good day at school today" and I'm 44), I headed home early, knowing full well that I had a meeting to attend in the evening. And not just any meeting. A church meeting. With apologies to the good people that I spent 2 1/2 hours with tonight, meetings like this suck. They suck up time. They suck up energy. They suck up good ideas (or rather attract stupid comments). I can't tell you what we discussed at that meeting, and really, I know you don't want to know. So when I got home, I sat down at my desk to gather myself together for the day tomorrow, and Margruite walked up behind me and started to give me a massage. Suddenly I felt like I was back in school. Junior High school. Do you remember those days? Where you'd line up boy girl boy girl and give the person in front of you a massage, while you got one from the person behind you. Pretty sweet. Of course, now it also looks pretty creepy, and kind of gross. But whatever it looks like, a massage feels good. Tonight Margruite's massage helped all the tension from the meeting bleed out, and now here I am writing. That's just fine, I'd say.


Ride in: Temp 4'C Wind 15 ks NW
Ride home: Temp 10'C Wind 20ks NW

05 April 2010

We're back

I've counted four house flies (in the house of course), and already killed one. Even now one buzzes around my desk. Does this portend an early onslaught of the Musca domestica? Not a good omen. Where are the spiders when you need them?



Ride in: Temp 5'C Wind 15 ks SW
Ride home: Temp 11'C Wind 10 ks SW


04 April 2010

(enters sipping Dalwhinnie) Here's a toast ...













... to a Spring Break lived well:

- writing and reading
- bike rides
- a stone table base agreed upon
- a home-made storm door installed
- winter tires changed for all-seasons
- a new (used) truck
- a bottle of 15 yr old Dalwhinnie acquired
- and so on

Having returned from the final family experience of the Easter extravaganza -- dinner with the Manitoba Krahns in Winnipeg -- I turn once again to my weekly, my week-daily question: What am I to do tomorrow during those four classes wherein I seek to affect the young, expectant, if not entirely refreshed, minds of the next generation - to keep them from mad, starving hysterics? It's a hard one to be sure. Allen was probably right: write poetry.

So I must turn myself over to this occupation, my constant study and, if not to it, then to the reading of The Elegance of the Hedgehog (Barbery) in bed. But first, for you, some freshly wrung verse:

Hydrophilic

In what we once called our car
we motored away
along the road open
the flood before us and we five
insistent that what's been
watered and wet
today cannot but desiccate
the wind's the world's constant
it would dry to a husk of itself
were it not for these rivers

In Morris they employ
great gas-buzzed mechanisms to pile clay
before the bridge, to block
the entrance, to keep
the town dry

Are we not born of water?
Still, we devise many-a-thing to stay
out of it: hip-waders, boats, sandbags, dams
Like Noah, only the rain and the wind
may defeat us


Sturm und drang Saturday


So, according to the accounts of theologians greater than I, this is the day that our Lord harrowed the nether regions. Busy busy busy.

Well up here in the somewhat more hospitable climes, the wind howled, but the rain and the snow did not come. Still, we hunkered down in the morning as if it might. Then I went into town to pick up the latest issue of Rhubarb (pictured here), a publication of the Mennonite Literary Society (no hyperbole intended). Please look for it in fine bookstores near you, or use the link above to subscribe on our website. This issue feature the work of writers and artists (I know, they're just artists) under 30 years of age. If you know me, then some of the names you might recognize in this issue are: Laura Boutet, Sean Braun, Teresa Braun, Lori Dueck, Genevieve Krahn, Demetra Penner, and Laura Schmidt.

On another, more adventurous note, I dream of doing a trip like this some day, and documenting it in some way that would be as lasting and interesting as this short film. In Europe would be the best, but I think a maritime Canada trip would be wonderful as well, and likely easier for tenting.

Short ride today: 30 ks: 421 to 30 to 243 (return)
(with GeeVs) Wind N 30 - 50

02 April 2010

Okay Friday















This is the day
this is the day
that we visit relatives
that we visit relatives

Can we rejoice
can we rejoice
and be glad in this
and be glad in this?

...

You get the picture. It was in Steinbach. The fare involved salad, turkey and stuffing and mashed potatoes, and ham and pasta salad, and a jello dessert. Followed by the "Easter basket" hunt for the kids. And later, after three (pained?) rounds of "Catch Phrase" in the basement, faspa! with paskja! (were two words ever more obviously intended to live together in one sentence?) and leftovers galore.

For those of you eating chocolate bunnies today, or tomorrow, or the day after, perhaps a sober reminder from the Muppets is in order; perhaps the University of Victoria could take a lesson from that crazy monster dude.

Rain today. NE wind at 30 - 50 ks.

01 April 2010

Aunt Susie's Funeral (on April Fools day no less)















To attend my Aunt Susie's funeral, I wore a black jacket, black crew neck shirt, and gray pants - no tie. My Dad wore a blue-gray wool jacket, white shirt, and dark pants - no tie. From my point of view it was an amazing transformation, to see Dad without a tie. I wish I'd had a camera. Without the tie, and with his white hair, and a jacket that fit him well, for the first time, to my eyes, he looked distinguished. And he walked well too (he's 89 and had a knee replacement recently), although I held his hand for some of it. He seemed to have energy. I asked him how he was feeling, how his energy-level was, as we were driving back, and he said it was good. But Margaret (Dad's 3rd wife) is less so, both mentally and physically. Anyway it was good to have a proud moment with Dad there. He looked good, and his interactions with those who met and greeted him were classy and genuine. I know, I know. Vanity. Ah, but if you can't look good ... I'm sure Oscar Wilde said something about this, something trenchant, something glorious.

Above is a picture of Dad and Margaret, with the great grandkids, Summer 2009 (in Neubergthal).

The Epps (my cousins, who've lost both parents) were out in full force, but not the three other brothers, Andy, Abe, and Ben. Neither were any of their kids. Uncle Andy's sick (Dad said so), but I think the other guys could have made an effort. I expect that if one of my siblings dies, we'll all be there, unless we just can't. These kind of things are not about convenience.

So the April Fools was on me I guess. I had a great day with my Dad, at a funeral. Really, that makes a lot of sense, given where he's at in life, and given that funerals often bring out the best in people. At least the best of intentions (for the most part, my uncles notwithstanding).

We're travelling to Steinbach for Easter tomorrow. For those of you who might (as we likely will) receive Peeps chicks as a "treat" from grandma, you'll likely be at a loss as to what to do with them? Try making Peepshi.

Today's ride: 32 ks down the 421 and back,
Wind 20k NE, a bit of rain too,
Avg speed 31 kmh