Things I Love Thursday

I’m writing this in a haze of sleep deprivation after realising that it’s Thursday today and I haven’t written my weekly love post. So, in the midst of my grogginess, I want to give thanks for:

♥ spending Canada Day with two really awesome girlfriends at the Steveston Salmon Festival, complete with freshly barbequed wild salmon, kettle corn, playing on the beach, bubble tea and a movie;

♥ strawberry-picking at W&A Farm in Richmond last Sunday: sweet, juicy red berries glowing under the dusk of green leaves;

♥ watching Jurassic Park at Stanley Park, courtesy of FreshAirCinema;

the book sale at Vancouver Public Library which continues tomorrow — I picked up nine books at 75 cents a copy and only that many because my arms are weak and puny;

♥ takoyaki, takoyaki, takoyaki;

♥ sitting at the front of a train and watching the world hurtle towards you;

♥ how a sliver of white moon appears in the middle of an afternoon summer sky like another wisp of cloud; and,

♥ one of my favourite tunes to play in this season, a cover of Natsukage (Summer Lights) from AIR by someone with the original username of karimono (but who seems to have disappeared since):

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wDhoa3aJCi0]

Things I Love Thursday

Every week, I share some of the things that make me happy à la Gala Darling. This is my little love post for today:

♥ A few days ago, Binta from the UBC Blog Squad posted a series of emoticons associated with the different stages of a university semester that really is spot on!

♥ Got my confirmation email for organ donation on Monday — hurray!

♥ Someone asked me what I like to do in my spare time and he said, ‘Don’t say “reading”!’ Unfortunately for him (but delightfully for me!), that is indeed the main thing I like to do in my spare time. I love books. Not e-books — paper books, complete with weight in my hands, the sound and feel of turning crisp pages, the smell of new books, the different typographies used, the cover designs, the satisfaction of closing a book and laying it on the table when you’ve read the whole thing.

Free outdoor movies in the summer — what a great idea! I definitely want to go to a few of those. (Outdoor Movies in BC on Facebook have the most up-to-date calendar of events, I believe.)

♥ One of my UBC friends who graduated last year and went home to Thailand is back in town for a fortnight’s visit! Ensue little dance. I can’t wait to see her this weekend!

♥ I realise I’m always talking about food, so in an effort to diversify, I’m squeezing all my food loving into one point. Like finding the first sockeye of the season. The coconut lemon bar that a coworker got for me from the Delly last Friday. Making French onion soup minus the cheese.

♥ I’ve been re-reading Mary Oliver’s book of poetry, Dream Work, and it’s making me happy.

♥ Coldplay’s ‘Strawberry Swing’ is one of the most amazing videos I’ve seen in a while. Can you imagine how much work it was for the artists to put enough drawings together to make this music video? Can you imagine how proud they must be?

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lb9X5jMofEo]

98. Sign up to donate organs

I have to say, it’s a bit anti-climatic to spend years thinking about donating your organs and spending only two and a half minutes actually signing up to do so. A couple of clicks and filling in one online form available on the BC Transplant Society website later, I am, to all intents and purposes, an organ donor!

(Well, as soon as they send me my confirmation email and I verify myself on the registry, anyway.)

So for those of you who’d like to donate, but think you need lots of time to sit down and fill it all in correctly — you really don’t. Just three minutes, including time spent getting your CareCard ready.

BC Transplant Society art campaign

Live Life. Pass It On. (From BC Transplant Society. Credit: Eva Markvoort and Cyrus McEarchern.)

I decided to donate my organs a few years ago, but put off signing up until I had a conversation with my parents about my intentions. Because, although it’s not legally required to get consent from your next of kin, I thought my family had the right to have this discussion. Would it potentially upset them? Given that my family is everything from agnostic to atheist to pragmatic believers, but not practitioners, in some, but not all, traditional Chinese beliefs, throw in a healthy amount of Buddhist philosophy, a diluted dose of Christianity, and a minuscule smidgeon of Jewish heritage that no one (except myself) actually seems to pay any attention to — I had absolutely no idea how they would react to this particular announcement.

They weren’t at all upset.

It turns out, when I visited them this time around and asked, that my mother is adamantly against my donating blood and totally cool with donating organs. Her philosophy is that one might make me dead and the other, I already am so it doesn’t matter. Which is not really the kind of catchy phrase that one gleans from either Blood Services or the Transplant Society’s campaigns; I think, perhaps, that she might be thinking of the increase in AIDS in China in the 1990s when there was a sharp increase in HIV-positive cases due to infection through blood donation (or blood selling, as it really was at that time). Or perhaps she’s remembering the number of times I’ve suffered from low blood sugar in the last several years and how she doesn’t want me fainting on her hands again. Either way, we didn’t bother talking much about donating blood since I’m not eligible to do that anyhow.

Speaking of blood donations, did you know that if you can’t donate blood for transfusions, you might be able to donate to research instead? That’s for all you travellers who’ve been to malaria-infested places and the like. How exciting! (Can we tell that I want to donate blood, too? Maybe in another several years.)

Things I Love Thursday

I’ve been a little lax writing up my weekly love posts ever since I came back from Hong Kong. But it’s summer, and who am I not to give a little extra thanks to be alive at this moment?

So for all the things I love:

♥ It’s finally getting warmer in dear old Vancouver and the skies are high and blue. I’ve even acquired a pair of sunglasses for the brighter days. (Let’s see how long this pair lasts; I never have good luck with sunglasses.)

♥ I have a new part-time job! I’ve been wanting it for months; the cherry on top is that the Arts Co-op office has approved of the position as a co-op term and I can use it to fulfil my requirements. And I get to decorate the office. Hurrah!

♥ Extra thanks go out to a friend who was on a bus leaving campus and came right back to help me out in my printing (or lack thereof) panic just before my interview. Not everyone would do that.

♥ Speaking of co-op, I was browsing the online materials in the Co-op Vista site and found out that the cover letter I used for my previous co-op term was up there as one of the samples. That was both a bit of a shock and also rather cool.

♥ I’ve been watching this snail climb the outside wall of our house for the past week; it’s now hanging upside-down from the ceiling for all it’s worth. I’m not sure what it thinks it’s doing, but I admire its tenacity.

♥ Long, deep hugs with people who’ve missed you.

♥ Spending time catching up with good friends. I think, on reflection, my Hong Kong trip was actually a little lonely because my parents and friends had to work long hours and we didn’t see much of each other, so it’s been nice to again be around people who know you well.

♥ In between Adele’s ‘Rolling in the Deep’ and this version of ‘Someone Like You’, I have all my musical longings met for this week.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAc83CF8Ejk]

there is no excuse for this

To my fellow inhabitants of the city you supposedly loved:

In the morning, I wish you will remember the smell of acrid smoke from the fires you started and the faces of the people whose cars you destroyed. I hope the tears of the people who work in the places which windows you broke and goods you stole will haunt you.

Tell me what this is for.

You have your democracy, your health care, your education and housing to extents that half the world won’t even dare to dream of. You break apart the worlds of the people you live among for a few short hours of anger and rage, of a riot and something you dare to call fun. You stay to watch like this is entertainment, something to talk about in the morning, complete with pictures for your new album.

I want to know if you can face the mothers of the ones who are stabbed and tell them every word of the stories you mean to gasp over with your friends. And if you can, how you can still see yourself in the light.

Please: If you know someone still downtown, urge them to go home. The busses aren’t running but the SkyTrains are. The SeaBus is still heading to the North Shore. Offer them your place if there is nowhere else for them to go. Don’t let them stay out in this mess of disgrace and regret.