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méli-mélo

I figure it might be time to write something again as it’s been awhile, and at least two people have asked me to write something (I’ve got fans!).  Unfortunately, I’m not really in a ranty mood lately.  I feel like Milhouse when he’s wearing capri pants – “My feet are soaked, but my cuffs are bone dry!  Everything’s comin’ up Milhouse!”.  I don’t actually own any capri pants, but lately everything’s been coming up mark (which is good) but that doesn’t leave me with all that much to complain about (which is bad).

Sure, I could write something positive, like about how friggin awesome the new Pearl Jam album is, but it’s been out for a few weeks now, and if you don’t realize that it’s going to be one of the best albums of the year, I’m afraid there’s just no helping you.  You should go buy it though – it’s a lot like their last few albums, except roughly 100x better.

Anyway, back on topic… here are a couple of minor things that are kind of irking me, grinding my gears, stuck in my craw, etc. but that I really don’t have all that much to say about.

engagement parties: I can dig the fact that when two people decide that they’d like to officially spend the rest of their lives together that that makes their friends and family happy, and it’s cause for great celebration… but isn’t that what the wedding is for?  Maybe I’m completely missing the point, but is it really necessary to celebrate the fact that there’s going to soon be a celebration?  Doesn’t that seem like overkill?   Isn’t it sort of like buying a car so you can drive to the car dealership to buy a better car? 

Silly analogies aside, weddings are already enormously big business.  If engagement parties really start to pick up steam, is the big-business wedding-machine far behind?  Will there be engagement presents?  Rehearsal engagement parties?  I can tell you one thing, if I ever have to buy a new suit for a wedding because everyone already saw my suit-du-jour at the engagement party, I’m gonna be awfully tempted to gnaw off my arm and beat myself to death with it.  You’ve all been warned.

Anyway, I think people should revolt against engagement parties.  If everyone reading this tells a friend or two, and they tell a friend or two, pretty soon like 10-12 people will be on the sane side of this battle.  And maybe that’ll keep at least a few of us from having to go to another unecessary engagement party.

seniors driving minivans: In the last few weeks, I’ve noticed something disturbing – senior citizens driving minivans.  I’m not a big fan of minivans to begin with, but I do see how they could be pretty useful if you tend to cart around your kids and their friends and such.  I don’t however, see any reason why someone who clearly doesn’t have kids anymore would want to (or should even be allowed to, if you’ll allow me to get militant about it) drive a minivan.  This isn’t an isolated incident of one old guy with some sort of weird desire to drive around 7 of his friends – I saw 3 seniors driving minivans TODAY.

 I just can’t figure it out.  Is it like an advanced mid-life crisis for older people?  40 year olds buy unecessary sports cars to feel 20 again… are seniors buying minivans to feel 40 again?  Like some sort of 2/3-life crisis?

I can tell you one thing – when I reach retirement age, I’m either buying a sports car, or some sort of large steel sedan with a V12 under the hood.  If I’m feeling particularly bastardly, I’ll buy whatever kind of car the cops are using at the time, paint it white with a blue stripe, put a huge antenna on the back, winter rims and a roof rack, drive on the highway and watch as people slow way down and move to the right lane when they seem me driving up behind them.

camouflage:  It’s May 29th, and the camouflage craze of the summer of 2006 is already boring.

“it is what it is”:  This seems to be the go-to phrase lately when someone has nothing left to say about a given subject.  I don’t know where it came from, or even what the hell it means, but “it is what it is” has been all over the place lately.  Jason Giambi said it when he was trying to apologize for taking steroids, without actually admitting that he took steroids.  Rasheed Wallace said it when asked about the near choke of the Pistons after he promised a victory.  Barry Bonds has said it so often recently in response to just about every question, he might as well tattoo it on his globe-sized forehead.  I’m pretty sure I even heard recently-axed White House speaker Scott McLelland say it (possibly on Leno).  Needless to say, this expression has really caught fire, despite the fact that it doesn’t appear to actually mean anything.  I don’t know why it bugs me so much, but ever since I first noticed it, it’s become like fingernails on a blackboard or a cat in a blender.  Just awful.

Last 5 songs heard on my iPod: Pearl Jam – “Severed Hand”, Pearl Jam – “Marker in the Sand”, Pearl Jam – “Come Back”, Pearl Jam – “Army Reserve”, Pearl Jam – “Unemployable”.

May 30, 2006 - 1:44 pm

Jessie - What about when people say “at the end of the day – it is what it is”?? Just adding “at the end of the day”, which is arguably more annoying than “it is what it is”, really puts that one over the edge. Listen for it, people say it ALL THE TIME.

I was about to get on the camouflage band-wagon, but now I realize the error of my ways. THank you, Mark.

May 30, 2006 - 10:25 pm

Gary - I haven’t even noticed camouflage fashion yet, but I can see how it would irk me. It is funny that you wrote a column that includes Milhouse AND camouflage clothes. “I’m over here….Or am I over here?….Amesome.”

I’m already on the dislike engagement party bandwagon. In fact, I’m driving the bandwagon and I just pulled over so you can all jump on board. I can’t think of anything to add to Mark’s analogies except to say that I’m seriously getting angry thinking about them. I’ve got to stop typing now and calm down. Serenity now!

May 31, 2006 - 3:48 am

Anonymous - Google

Google news and reviews

May 31, 2006 - 12:29 pm

mark - thanks for the input, anonymous!

If I hadn’t just written something, I’d be writing a rant about this ridiculous heat.

May 31, 2006 - 2:08 pm

Knows a few old people - Old people drive mini-vans bc they can’t bend anymore. Cars are too low for them. Plus they can pile in a lot of friends who can’t bend too.

June 1, 2006 - 8:24 am

Gary - Either forgetful.ca is growing in popularity and people other than the usual suspects are reading it, or someone I know now goes by the alias “Knows a Few Old People”. I think I’ll call you Kafop for short.

And Anonymous came strong. A solid contributor off the bench.

Ni hao from Fuzhou

Mao says hao

Greetings from China. Mao says hello with a wave.

I’m experiencing all you’d expect:

  • Interesting foods, including an oyster as big as my fist at dinner last night.
  • Insane traffic. Much worse than my last trip here in 2005. Chaos will continue as more and more people can afford cars.
  • Pollution. Everything is very grey, may not come across in photos. I wouldn’t enjoy running outside.
  • Strange exercises and dancing. There is a large square out in front of the hotel, and it is full of people starting at 5:30 am, doing tai chi, backwards walking and dancing dancing dancing …

I’ve been too busy (and too tired … I tried to get a photo of the dark circles and bags under my eyes last night, but to no avail) to leave the hotel much … might get a chance to explore and shop a bit tonight. Then it’s off to Beijing for the weekend, and up to Changchun for a few days next week before heading back home.

Git yer requests for souveniers in now!

May 25, 2006 - 9:35 pm

Jen - Remember the backwards walkers outside of 552? The first time I saw that my naive Saskatewan mind had no clue what this person was doing. I watched him for the longest time thinking he was absolutely crazy. Not that it makes any more sense to me now, but at least I’m aware that it’s some sort of morning exercise tradition/ritual. And not just some crazy guy walking backwards for no reason.

Hey maybe you can join them and find out what’s really going on?!

Enjoy the rest of your stay! I request that you bring back mysterious gooey beverages with ginormous slimy bubbles in it. And corn flavored lolipops. And some of those fist-sized oysters. Yum!

🙂
Jen

May 27, 2006 - 5:25 am

dan - Arrived in Beijing today. You would not believe how many chinese people there are here! 😐

October 11, 2006 - 9:37 am

forgetful.ca » Boycott North Korean Products! - […] That’ll teach them. I’m on my way to China for a week on Friday.  I hope to add to my collection of Mao photos, eat some interesting food, collect enough aeroplan points to hit elite next year … Oh, and accomplish the work-related goals that are the reason I’m going of course. […]

October 11, 2006 - 9:37 am

forgetful.ca » Boycott North Korean Products! - […] That’ll teach them. I’m on my way to China for a week on Friday.  I hope to add to my collection of Mao photos, eat some interesting food, collect enough aeroplan points to hit elite next year … Oh, and accomplish the work-related goals that are the reason I’m going of course. […]

One year ago today.

May 22, 2005 

Lucky, lucky me.  🙂

May 23, 2006 - 8:27 am

mark - did you drink your bottle of wine?

May 23, 2006 - 9:22 am

shannen - No, but only because Mr. Fullerton left for China at 5:00am on Monday. We plan to have another anniversary celebration once we are both back from our respective trips.

I’m not sure if I ever mentioned it – but your gift idea was incredibly creative. I may end up stealing the idea someday.

May 23, 2006 - 9:42 am

dan - You think *you’re* lucky? We’ll play paper-rock-scissors when I get back to see who’s luckiest. But you can’t use paper. And you probably don’t want to use rock. Good old scissors. You should totally use scissors.

May 24, 2006 - 2:18 pm

Sonja - The gift was the fruit of my genius. Happy anniversary – we were thinking of you in Lake Placid!

The long weekend that wasn’t.

May Long Weekend (May two-four to Ontarioans, regardless of what dates it falls on. I know – weird.) has usually coincided with the first camping trip of the year. May is usually a wet month wherever you are in Canada, and Ottawa is no exception. Therefore, those May camping trips are 50% warm, sunny and activity-filled, and 50% dreary, depressing and spent hiding under a tarp city.

We had talked about camping for May Long Weekend 2006, but various things got in the way. In retrospect, it was a good decision. The weather forecast for Ottawa is rain, followed by rain with periods of rain.

May Long Weekend takes on a different meaning as well, as it’s now our anniversary. Not that there was much danger of me forgetting the date, but having it coincide with a statutory holiday is really quite handy. Unfortunately, I fly out at 7am on holiday monday, so the celebration has to be a bit early.
Finally, May Long Weekend is the official start of Summer Beer Drinking Season (SBDS). I (and several people I know) enjoy beer. There are few beers I don’t like. But I haven’t come anywhere close to trying them all.

Therefore, this summer I’ll embark upon a virtual Tour of Ontario Craft Breweries, the first step towards trying every beer on earth. Gotta start somewhere …

Care to join me?

(PS – Happy 30th Birthday Crispy!)

May 19, 2006 - 11:40 am

Shannen - I am THRILLED that we decided against camping this weekend. I can’t say I’ll never camp in the rain again, but with three full days of rain in the forecast and a rambunctious pooch sharing the tent with us this time around, I can say that I wouldn’t survive more than one night out there. Tarp city or no tarp city.

I like camping. But I love dry camping.

May 19, 2006 - 12:40 pm

Kel - Ah! So Crispy IS a person! And he or she smells.

Now I know.

Obsessively,

Me.

May 24, 2006 - 8:11 am

EAP - May Two-four? May long weekend? What is this crap?

Just to set the record straight, it’s called the Victoria Day weekend. It commemorates the May 24 birthday of our longest-serving monarch, Queen Victoria. This is what happens when they stop teaching history in the schools.

And the unofficial name of the holiday is “Firecracker Day”. May Two-Four indeed!

EAP

May 25, 2006 - 7:22 pm

dan - Touche, EAP, touche.

Now if you’ll just explain the “Civic Holiday” we get in August … who was Civic? Why is he just as important as Vicky? Why not Liz?

Dan

May 31, 2006 - 4:01 pm

EAP - The August Bank Holiday, as it’s known in Britain, or Civic Holiday in Canada is just an excuse for a long weekend in the summer.

I’m afraid Liz will have to die before they rename the holiday after her. Given the way Canadians shun our British heritage nowadays, however, an awful lot of other people would have to die before we ever got another holiday named after a British monarch! 😉

EAP

Summer officially begins.

With yet another premature flame-out by the Sens complete (comments welcome regarding who will be blamed and run out of town), summer officially begins. Our thoughts turn to other things … like what we’ll do with our precious weekends, and what terrible work trips will drag us away from sun and fun.

  • I’m off to China next week, Fuzhou and Changchun. I’ve been to Fuzhou before so not that excited, but Changchun should be interesting. It’s pretty far north!
  • Shannen’s off to Toronto later in the month for her annual conference. While she’ll be busy with work while she’s there, she’ll also take advantage of the trip to catch up with friends and family she doesn’t get to see very often.
  • Late June sees us moving into our new house, sure to rekindle my hatred of moving, and ensure that we stay put for at least a few years. Or until the hatred fades …
  • We are back in Toronto for the Canada Day long weekend for a Murphy family reunion. Here’s hoping it’s rain-free and sunny!
  • My May trip to Calgary was bumped because of China, so we’re going to try to reschedule that to late July or early August, when Shannen and I both can go, and spend more than 1 whirlwind night exploring Cowtown.

And that doesn’t even include any camping yet. I’m eager to expand the campsite review section of the website.

In other news, Crispy smells.

That is all.

May 15, 2006 - 2:25 pm

Kel - Okay, Dan, I’m afraid to ask this, really, but: Do you mean “Crispy smells” as in, someone or something named Crispy is malodorous? Or were you just tossing out a sort of stream-of-consciousness evocation of smells that invoke crispiness, like, say, bacon?

Mmmm . . . bacon . . . .

May 15, 2006 - 2:52 pm

Gary - For someone who loves listening to coherent sports talk radio, this is the worst time of year. It took about 5 minutes of listening to the stream of Senator “fans” ranting about the playoff loss before I had to turn off the radio and actually get out of bed. According to these callers, the loss can be blamed on, in no particular order, Alfredsson, Muckler, Chara, Redden, Fischer, Ghandi, The Conservative Party, and Osama bin Laden.

Fans seem to have had a disconnect with the reality of pro sports and their part in it. It seems as though a lot of fans think that they’re paying the team to win when they buy a ticket to watch them play. One caller actually said that “because they didn’t win the cup this year, he’s not buying tickets next year”. Apparently, the scale back in salaries wasn’t enough for him and he wants a better deal. Look, all fans want the team to win and are disappointed when they lose but we’re buying the tickets, paying for cable to watch them, and buying the gear because these are the best players in the world and we want to be entertained watching them. It’s great when they win and it sucks when they lose but there are 20 or so players on the other teams bench that are trying to win too. Let’s give them some credit.

If you want my opinion on why we lost I think it’s 2 reasons. Defensive breakdowns (the D was bad) and crappy fans. I won’t rant about the defense but let’s discuss the fans. Ottawa’s fans are so freaking uptight when the playoffs arrive that they transfer their tightness to the team. The team can feel the crowd and if the fans don’t think they can win, that will transfer over. Here’s an example. In game 5, Bufalo scored within the first minute of the game and the place was deadly quiet. The fans just died and stayed quiet until we tied it up. In Edmonton in game 3 or 4, the Oilers got scored on early in the game by the Sharks and after about 20 seconds of shock by the crowd, they then GOT LOUDER cheering for the Oilers to come back. The Oilers felt that energy and did come back and won. Anyway, I’m about done discussing the hockey season. It’s summer and the Boys of Summer are out to play and the Jays are playing well. Let’s beat those Yankees!

May 15, 2006 - 4:37 pm

mark - I don’t understand why fans aren’t satisfied with amything less than a Stanley Cup. When did the Sens become the Yankees?

I’m in the vast minority who think we did ok. Dissapointed sure, but nobody seems to be thinking about how it actually happened:
-Lost 3 games in overtime.
-Lost the series by a total of 3 goals.
-Played the whole playoffs with a rookie backup goalie.
-Since the beginning of December, Buffalo has been much better than Ottawa, record-wise.

The Sens didn’t get killed by a vastly inferior team – they barely lost to a team that’s been better than them for the last 5 months. This really shouldn’t be all that surprising to anyone.

May 15, 2006 - 7:06 pm

Jen - This is totally non-hockey related.

Just wanted to say I am excited about your ctown trip 🙂 🙂 Yay to non-whirlwindiness.

May 16, 2006 - 8:08 am

dan - We’re excited too. What should we do that weekend? What are the Calgary Top 5? It’s not my town anymore. Maybe a hike out at Bragg Creek?

May 16, 2006 - 8:51 am

Kel - I still want someone to clear up the crispy mystery for me. So that I can stop dreaming about bacon.

May 16, 2006 - 11:37 am

dan - Why would you want to *stop* dreaming about bacon? People pay good money to have bacon dreams. Relish it while it lasts. It may soon be replaced by dreams of overcooked liver or old, stale cinnamon buns.

May 16, 2006 - 12:52 pm

Jen - Bragg creek would be fun – I actually haven’t been out there yet either.

Take your pick!

Calgary Top 5:
5. Drive from the far NW to downtown core during morning rush hour. Find parking.
4. Ride the C-train from City Hall to 8th St station when it’s +28 degrees
3. Happy hour at the Cecil
2. An evening stroll through Forrest Lawn
1. Saturday night at Cowboys

OR

Alternate Calgary Top 5:
5. Drive to Banff and have dinner at Fuze. Stop in Canmore for fun.
4. Hang out at Bragg Creek
3. Tube floating down the river
2. Drinks at Red Door Bistro
1. Stampede*

* July 7th – 19th

May 16, 2006 - 3:33 pm

Gary - I don’t know who Kel is, but I find it amusing that everyone is refusing to answer his/her question. I’m of the opinion that it’s Dan’s responsibility to either continue the silence or not.

May 18, 2006 - 3:31 pm

Sonja - I really like the sounds of the Alternate Calgary Top 5. Count me in! ;0