Thursday, January 17, 2008

Can't see the woods for the housing developments

This is a pretty old story. We've all heard it enough times, but it keeps getting told.I think that if there is one trick our fuzzy neighbor to the south has taught us so far, it's that one of the tricks for making people accept something horrible is to do it often and without shame.These pictures work their way in from the edge to about a kilometer and a half into a section of woods not far from my home. The sunnier photographs are from March break 2001, while the overcast winter pics are from last week. I'm alternating between a photo of one spot from about six and a half years ago, then showing roughly the same location as it is now.I can barely walk five feet through here without tripping over a flashback to some important - or at least nostalgia inducing - moment from my life. The only area comparable to this part of Carp would be downtown Ottawa, in that both are densely laden with Firsts, Passion Plays, Unsolved Mysteries and other Memorables.This has served as my little escape from the world, when I've needed one.But a tedious, tedious story has begun to play out. The forest is being cleared for new housing, the likes of which tend to take their street and neighborhood names from the very terrain they are obliterating.Naturally there is a part of me which is furious, disappointed, disheartened and all the rest. There is also the part of me which knows that the owners of the land can either sit on it, making nothing, or sell it and make a very handsome retirement fund for themselves. Then my sense of taste is just outright offended by the style and size of homes being built, including how little they resemble anything else in the community, but that is very peripheral.Anyways.Eventually I'd come across a mound of earth which prods into the underbelly of a small lake and this is where Things would generally happen. On my own, I'd usually stop here to write or just close my eyes and clear my head. With others, a number of things might happen but the safe bet would be a good ol' bush party. In Carp, until you got your drivers license, your primary gateway to Adult Thrills would generally come via a bush party. A small circle of rocks sat there and was used for fires done up by tweens and teens for many a year.But it's recently gotten a lot less inviting.Yeah, private property and all that! I know! But dang if it isn't an unpleasant thing to see after being freely allowed to romp around this area all your life. It feels a bit childish of me to get uptight about seeing a polite, lurid, orange "Fuck off, unless you've got cash in exchange for planning rights" spray painted over somewhere you remember being led by your kindergarten teacher, along with all the other little ducklings, to see a beaver lodge. This isn't just where I discovered the folly of alcohol from that guy's dad's poorly locked liquor cabinet or how girls can be good for more than throwing snowballs at, it's where I made some of my earliest connections with nature - "Nature" being the primary element composing "The Earth".Yeah, it's fair to say that I'm being a little wrought up about this and that my personal perspective heavily influences how I feel about these changes. In this one post, I'm not even going to pretend to be objective. Once in a while, it's okay to emote - so long as you don't try to present it as something else. I am not Michael Moore, this is not the Charlton Heston segment of Bowling for Columbine.So that's that, then. I promised I'd show Carp and this is part of it. I feel that eventually I shall come back to take more pictures of Carp, but it won't be Carp anymore. It will be Stittsville or Kanata. It will be the new place that people want to move further away from, so as to live in "the country".I honestly try not to romanticize these woods, this village or it's inhabitants - the same way I try not to romanticize anything else, as doing so is a luxurious indulgence which obliterates objectivity and rational thought. This makes me sound like a goddamn Vulcan, but I'm just a guy who values seeing things clearly. But I can't see this sort of thing clearly through all the tears.

Ha!

Got you!

You thought this was going to get all stupid and weepy. No, no. I used to feel that way about the development in Carp and I still don't like it...but I find that I've reached an age and a certain level of knowledge where it becomes absurd to look at things in such a maudlin fashion. I'm still for denser, better planned development. I'm just no longer able to sustain the kind of intense angst and frustration which this shit used to provoke in me - I think the angst gland starts to shrivel on your twentieth birthday and is eventually passed like a kidney stone.

The fact of the matter is that I'm now seeing my frustrations with this shit with almost the same sense of temporal detachment that I see "all them memories" etc. Not being able to blind myself to other sides of the issue, I can't maintain the kind of tunnel vision required to be vehemently against or in favor. I do know that I wish the development was being done differently and for less assinine reasons, but I can no longer shake my fist at The Bastards and spit.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Fact: Wabasca is a small town in Alberta.

Researching for that web series I mentioned, I've come across some pretty interesting stuff - a lot of it being rather right wing, but then I suppose that was to be expected.

You might find it interesting too. If only there was a Historical Pre-enactment Society around to help me run a few scenarios that are percolating in the back of my mind. For now I'll have to settle for copious notes and a rather large world map that I've purchased, which helps keep me from forgetting key parts of the world.

Busy busy with getting ready for moving down to Toronto on Saturday, but I am going to my best to get that last big Carp post up before I go and everything gets even crazier. I certainly do feel like I'm managing about a dozen spinning plates right now.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

"The Athiests!" next, on FOX

I was reminded of the FSTDT top 100* today and browsed some of the top entries. The following script of life with THE ATHIESTS twisted my nipples just right (the pictures are my little addition, otherwise it's unedited).
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Athiests as a Majority

This is what it would be like, if the majority of people were athiests.
ATHIEST KID: Mom, I'm going to go fuck a hooker.
ATHIEST MOM: Okay, son.
ATHIEST KID: Afterwards, I'm going to go smoke pot with my friends, since it's "not addictive."
ATHIEST MOM: Okay, come home soon!

The athiest kid leaves the room. The father comes home from work several minutes later.

ATHIEST DAD: Hey!
ATHIEST MOM: Hi, honey! I'm pregnant again. I guess I'll just get another abortion, since "fetuses don't count as human life."
ATHIEST DAD: Okay, get as many abortions as you want!
ATHIEST MOM: Oh, and don't go in the bedroom.
ATHIEST DAD: Why not?
ATHIEST MOM: There are two gay men fucking eachother in there.
ATHIEST DAD: Why are they here?
ATHIEST MOM: I wanted to watch them do it for awhile. They just aren't finished yet.
ATHIEST DAD: Okay, that's fine with me!

Suddenly, their neighbor runs into the house.

ATHIEST NEIGHBOR: Come quick, there's a Christian outside!
ATHIEST MOM: We'll be right there!

The athiest couple quickly put on a pair of black robes and hoods. They then exit the house, and run into the street, where a Christian is nailed to a large, wooden X. He is being burned alive. A crowd of athiests stand around him, all wearing black robes and hoods.

RANDOM ATHIEST: Damn you, Christian! We hate you! We claim to be tolerant of all religions. But we really hate your's! That's because we athiests are hypocritical like that! Die, Christian!THE END

Scary, isn't it?

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Read the original post and the responses which followed, if you dare (to waste time).

Meanwhile, you can tell I'm spending most of the day job hunting and taking breaks from job hunting....but no worries, something much more substantive will be up later today or first thing tomorrow.

*I've no interest in this post sparking any kind of debate and I definitely am aware that these are the worst of the worst, possibly taken out of context.

Big Ups In BlogTowne - Part 2 Something Something Shoobadoo

Posterchild has had another novel idea, of which I heartily approve.

Relatedly, I had no idea that slightly more than half the single population of Toronto (nine years ago, admittedly) don't have any dates! My work is cut out for me.

My...my work of dating half the singles in Toronto.

Um.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

"Electroma" or "I refuse to make a stupid pun in the title of any post about a movie"

So Daft Punk have done a little movie, which I caught at The Mayfair this Friday night past. I'm still thinking about it two days later and since it is a highly unusual film that is primarily doing the "midnight movie" circuit, I reckon it's worth talking a little about it here.

Firstly I think it's only fair to tell you what I wish I had been told. There is no music by Daft Punk in the film. None at all! There is a soundtrack that was selected by them, but nothing actually by them. Those hoping for an extended music video would be far better off pursuing a copy of Interstella 5555.

It's also short, though not a short, clocking in at 74 minutes. Odds are though, it will not feel short. Some shots, particularly later in the film, push the one minute mark. These shots are primarily of our two protagonists - actors done up in the traditional robot garb of the two lads who make up Daft Punk - wandering a Californian desert. The entire movie takes place in a nameless, dry area of California. But this is not a Hollywood movie by any stretch.

The promotional email I received used a lot of the usual suspects names to endorse it. I think the only name worth mentioning is Michel Gondry, who I could have sworn had been brought in to direct one of the middle scenes, and perhaps George Lucas - though only for THX 1138 .

I can't talk about the story really, since it is very minimal. Let's just say that they are on a journey and leave it at that. I will say that you do get treated to good music (just not Daft Punk), inventiveness, very strong cinematography and even a few laughs. It's easy to lose yourself in the film and that's always a lovely feeling, but at parts it is also easy for your mind to wander elsewhere. It's worth watching and it could easily find itself being studied by future generations of film students, but I'm not sure I'm entirely comfortable with the $10 I spent on admission. If anybody who reads this here ol' website ends up seeing it, I'd love to hear what your impressions were.

Big Ups In BlogTowne

Just thought I'd help draw attention to Green as a Thistle - a daily blog by a young lady at the National Post in Toronto. The idea is to, each day, make one green change in her life. The changes are cumulative and so, theoretically, by the end of the one year trial period she shall be living more environmentally in at least 365 ways. I've browsed through the archives and I think it's very impressive. Certainly, if you are wondering about things you could do then this will provide a treasure trove of practical and interesting ideas.

The other enjoyable part is, of course, getting her appraisal of each change and reactions to her steadily changing life as the changes start to add up and play into each other. This definitely feels like a kind of "everywoman", not one of the parodies of a parody which critics like to point and sneer at, thus making a rather radical experiment highly approachable and far more plausible to the reader.

A few of my favorite posts are...
"Go Big or Go Home" - Giving Up Plastic
"A Plastic Fork in the Road" - Chopsticks!
"From Record Album to Photo Album" - Fairly self explanatory!

Meanwhile - How to Green Your Sex Life