megfowler.com

October 2, 2007

maybe i’m crazy? maybe you’re crazy.

Filed under: vancouver — meg @ 9:03 am

There was a crazy man at the drugstore the other day. He had crazy hair and crazy eyes and a crazy voice and he was shaking a crazy piece of paper while asking for a crazy price on tissue.

Everyone nearby was transfixed by his craziness.

Granted, Vancouver is full of crazy people. I’m one of them. We bring crazy like spinach dip to a party.

But truly vocal craziness from someone in a (normally orderly and eerily silent) drugstore tends to stand out a little more. You take notice. Especially when you can tell the crazy person in question doesn’t have an actual mental concern — just a vendetta against bad prices and a lack of tissue (and whatever else is nearby.)

My favourite crazy moment from the crazy man was when he started chasing one of the managers around the store demanding a rain check for a price that a) had not been advertised anywhere; and b) was totally unreasonable. His hair rose up like flames from his head, giving him the appearance a mythological figure destined to rain vengeance down on mankind and all those foolish enough not to give him the 24-pack for the price of 12.

I think I would have forgotten about the crazy man, had I not seen him on the bus today.

He was still crazy — you just knew he was waiting to take exception to the weather or what he had to pay to get on the bus or having to stand up in the crowded aisle or the standard exchange of molecules through breathing or the modern practice of Marxism — but he was low-key for now.

I watched him watch the world go by through the steamy, drippy bus windows, and I thought, “Crazy man, what do you see? Are you thinking about tissue right now? Does anyone know your heart? Will you ever be happy?”

Then he looked at me and said, “Damn rain.”

And I figured he might not be that crazy after all.

September 29, 2007

cold.

Filed under: think, vancouver, Sandyeggo — meg @ 6:31 pm

Right now, it is 10 C (50 F) in Vancouver, with a rain warning, and lows of 8 C (46 F) tonight.

In San Diego, where I was last week (and the week before) at this time, it’s 21 C (69 F) with lows of 16 C (60 F). No probability of precipitation.

Seriously.

Come on now. I don’t even own any fall clothing. Or a raincoat.

I actually wouldn’t need to buy shoes or fall clothing if I lived there. I could live in skirts and Havis and be done with it, since I don’t work in a corporate environment. Sigh.

It’s not just the weather that bugs me, though. I love seasons in general (although I don’t know that Warm Rain/Cold Rain qualify as seasons.)

It’s that I went to Southern freakin’ California and felt good about myself and my body for ten full days, even though I am larger and don’t have all the “right” clothes — and wore less clothing, to boot!

If men looked at me, it wasn’t to scoff. I literally always felt like I fit in, even in a place often described as one of the more shallow locales on earth. No one ever looked askance at me… not even women with fake boobs in bikinis!

Funny thing, though. As soon as I got back to humble, polite Canada, I felt immediately under scrutiny, and that I didn’t look right or have the right things on. From the moment I arrived at the airport, actually. And ever since.

What the heck? Talk about a chill setting in.

I really gotta figure out why that is.

September 27, 2007

dear bus drivers of the lower mainland,

Filed under: vancouver, angsty — meg @ 9:11 am

HEY.

STOP TRYING TO KILL ME.

SERIOUSLY.

Before I go on, I should say that a good many of you are awesome. Helpful, funny, thoughtful, gracious, skilled… oh yes. You are a credit to your profession. I’ve really enjoyed watching you do what you do.

But as someone who has been on Vancouver buses for more than a decade — and in all three zones — let me say that many of you could use some remedial driving classes. Or maybe just a less violent sense of humour.

I’m not sure if you’ve just been dealt a bad hand in terms of vehicle quality (I’m sure that’s the case at times, and that’s not your fault) but the way you operate the buses MUST be having a fairly negative effect on their functionality.

You brake like you couldn’t make out the stop light from a block away. You take corners like Mario Andretti. You weave haltingly through traffic like you were a Yugo and not a giant death rocket with 40 people inside. You cross into other lanes like you don’t see the lines on the road. You drive too fast, merge too slow, stop unnecessarily, and refuse to stop for no reason at all. I’ve twice been on buses that have caused accidents with a fair amount of damage… and yes, it was the driver in error.

And with some of you, it’s not just the driving.

I’ve seen you yell at old ladies who moved too slowly to sit down. I’ve seen you kick people off for being a dime short who commute peacefully with me every morning. I’ve seen you keep up a running commentary on the appearance of everyone who got on or off the bus. I’ve seen you scream at people who couldn’t pull their wheelchairs into place properly (”Haven’t you been a cripple for a while now?”) I’ve seen you get off the bus to become involved in physical altercations with people who weren’t even ON the bus. I’ve seen you throw things and break things that were owned by your riders. I’ve seen you refuse to put down the wheelchair ramp because you were “running late.” I’ve seen you bellow at young mothers who were struggling with their strollers. I’ve seen you refuse to listen to people who couldn’t speak English, and refuse to speak English to people you didn’t like.

Yes. You’re human. We all get fed up at times.

But when your job is to drive safely and interact with the public in a polite and efficient manner, then I’m sad to say a great many of you are failing miserably. Not just slipping up now and then, but showing a total and complete lack of concern for any standards in your job.

I pay too much every month to feel this unsafe.

I don’t have another option economically or locationally, so I’m going to keep riding. And I’ve done my part by calling you guys in when things really got out of hand, as with the time I told you a man was smoking in the back of the bus, and you kicked him off at my stop after informing him I was the one who let you know.

I really enjoyed being followed by a screaming man. Thanks. It’s good I wasn’t some old lady, because I doubt she’d have felt comfortable to yell right back.

But according to my ideals, being a union shop should give you PRIDE in what you do, not an excuse to take advantage of job protections. If you’re too stressed to do it, you need to move on. That’s what the rest of us have to do, too.

It’s just that most of us, when we get stressed at work, don’t have multiple lives in our hands.

Like mine.

Yours,

Meg

September 6, 2007

his eye is on the sparrow.

Filed under: think, vancouver — meg @ 9:51 am

There is a study that says Vancouver is the most livable city in the world. Well, lots of studies, actually.

Everyone likes to tell us how livable we are.

And it’s true — when I drive along the coastline in West Vancouver or stand on bustling, vibrant Commercial Street or walk through the Sun Yat-Sen gardens or sit on a sunny patio on W. 4th or stare up at the iron-willed trees that still grow tall in Stanley Park, I feel like I live somewhere good. There’s beauty here.

But I’m supposing that where and how you live in the most livable city matters more than anyone’s rating of the city overall. The people lying in doorways downtown might say the temperate weather is good, but the endless rain is bad. The people living in slum-condition housing on the Eastside might tell you that they’re glad they found a spot that they can afford to live, but that they wish they had more locks on the door and a landlord that didn’t try to collect the rent twice.

I’m also supposing that it matters who you are, and what you expect. If you expect nothing, every city is livable. If you expect the world, any city is bound to disappoint.

Situation and perspective.

There’s a lot you can do about them… sometimes. And then sometimes you can’t.

Thousands of people move through this city every day and I wonder how livable their lives are.

Did they wake up this morning with excitement or dread?

Do their bones ache when they walk, or do they run for miles with wind in their hair?

Are they ruled by habits and needs and vices, or do they make choices based on reason?

Is there someone else directing their days, or are they in control?

If they could be somewhere else, would they be? Or are they passing me on the street with full confidence that where they are is where they belong?

I suppose a little of both, depending on the day.

When I got off the bus this morning and flipflopped down the hill to my office, I was cut off by a variety of different people heading in different directions, crosshatching the pavement in a hundred different hurries. I walk past most of them every morning, and they’re no better at navigating the bodies around them now than the first day I walked this path.

There is the woman in her awkward, clompy shoes who nearly trips on the curb, and hopes no one sees.

There is the man walking his dog who just looks angry. I don’t think there’s another way to describe him.

There is the man in his suit with loose pants, clutching a briefcase as old as me, sighing at the weather.

There is the obliviously slow set of girls always discussing someone named Brandon — sometimes kindly, sometimes not.

I watch them carefully and weave when I need to, avoiding collisions.

But I know I’m in my own world, too.

Or I was, until a bird got into it.

In the World’s Most Livable City, a tiny yellow and green bird was lying dead on the sidewalk and I nearly stepped on him, as did the man after me, who shuffled him to the side with an oddly horrified face.

“Dammit, nice way to start my day!”

The body looked perfect and unreal, as though someone had dropped a toy out of their hand. He was so small… so easy to miss.

Because I am a minister’s daughter with an encyclopedic memory of hymns, I remembered these lines as I walked on:

Though by the path He leadeth, but one step I may see,
His eye is on the sparrow, and I know He watches me

Then I was standing in Starbucks, and there was a man with an obvious mental illness berating the girl at the till for overcharging him — though she hadn’t — and generally making a spectacle of himself in the midst of tired, just-waking-up people.

Everyone avoided eye contact, lest they be drawn into the drama. But you couldn’t miss him, no way.

He finally realized he hadn’t been “fleeced”, and went to struggle loudly with coffee lids, dumping them on the floor and swearing at the cream jug. I met him again at the crosswalk down the street, where he stepped boldly into oncoming traffic before the light had a chance to change.

Fortunately, the Audi had good brakes, or I would have seen another body on the pavement this morning.

But I think this man fell from the sky a long time before today.

Does anyone see him? Really see him?

Does anyone see me?

I wonder if anyone knows that there is a song that I have to skip on my iPod when I’m riding the bus because I will surely cry if I let it play. I wonder if anyone knows I am craving cherries. I wonder if anyone knows that I feel sick from a new run of pills or from an old set of problems. I wonder if anyone knows that my smile is from a crush or a joke or a deep breath of salt air coming up from the harbour. I wonder if anyone can tell what I’m thinking when I smile at babies in their mothers’ arms. I wonder if that man sees me looking at him, and knows how I’ve already memorized the line of his jaw. I wonder if anyone can tell I’m struggling.

They can’t, though.

Just like I can’t. Or don’t. Or don’t want to.

We move through and that’s that.

We only notice the things that throw themselves into our path, and even then, we try and avoid them or put them to the side. We’re just trying to survive ourselves, after all. We don’t need the complication.

But something in me says that the only way I’m going to make my city — or my life — truly livable is to open my eyes and turn my heart outward and actually see things around me, rather than just watching them go by.

After all, the best way to not feel alone is to remember that you aren’t.

September 5, 2007

not even a little bit ashamed.

Filed under: vancouver — meg @ 12:02 pm

I’m not going to the Justin Timberlake concert tonight.

But I WOULD have, had all the seats not sold out in a matter of milliseconds, and if Craigslist wasn’t so rife with steely-spined opportunists.

Ah, well.

Depending on how you feel about the stubbly young man, you’re either laughing at me right now, nodding in sympathy, or fondling your own tickets to the show. Or you have no idea who the hell I’m talking about. And no idea how the hell you got here. Who am I, anyway?

Anyway, indeed. He’s just fun with all the singing and dancing and winking, and fun is something I can sorely use in my life right now. He also has the most diverse body of fans amongst my friends that I’ve ever known an artist to have… from grandmas to teenagers to thirtysomething hipster boys to career musicians and back again.

This is old, but makes me smile:


Enjoy the concert tonight, kids!

August 24, 2007

radio girl strikes again.

Filed under: vancouver, radio radio — meg @ 8:36 pm

So much fun.

Thanks, Buzz!

August 23, 2007

a wretch like me.

Filed under: vancouver, angsty — meg @ 9:19 am

Ah, yes.

The bitchy week.

The week where everything goes wrong.

The week of willful ingratitude.

The week of weak.

Do you ever have weeks like this?

I’m pretty sure I’ve been a total prize to be around.

Well… hold on. I don’t think I’ve been all that difficult to be around, but if there were a small community of people living in my brain, they’d have long ago tried to migrate and establish an independent state in my spleen.

Until I vented it, that is.

I’m not sure why I’ve been so negative, other than a particularly rollercoaster-y jag of hormonal activity (along with the odd, unpredictable physical manifestations of the same) and a fair amount of stress in a few areas of my world. But I know nothing I’m going through is all that big a deal, really.

I just can’t seem to get the perspective I need to shake off the frustration.

Which only frustrates me more.

I hate feeling sorry for myself.

I hate indulging that gross part of me that thinks I’ve “got it rough.”

I hate the almost-crying itch in the back of my throat, and I hate that I can’t drown it with coffee.

Most of all, I hate hating anything, because What. Is. The. Point.

It could be so much worse than this.

This Tuesday afternoon, a man jumped 26 stories from a building I can see from my office window. My co-worker actually looked up from a phone call to see him heading for the glass and metal awning that he glanced off before he met the cement.

I’ll never forget the way her voice sounded as she tried to process what she was seeing, just like I’ll never forget the sight of his legs splayed, or the blood, or construction workers pacing with cell phones, endlessly running their hands through their hair, never standing still.

They took his body away and hosed the area off and now you’d never know he’d been there.

You’d never know anything happened at all.

That’s my definition of worse.

I need to wake up to the ease of my own existence.

To change what I can and then move on.

To not allow what hurts me to define me.

And to understand that whatever is happening now, I am nowhere close to falling.

I’ve been thinking about that man’s family ever since.

It’s a perfect change from thinking about myself.

August 21, 2007

and keep your stick on the ice.

Filed under: vancouver, hockey — meg @ 9:37 am

UPDATE: And justice is done. For the record? It’s embarrassing it took this long. But it’s the right thing.

***

It’s no secret that I’m a Trevor Linden fan, just as it’s no secret that my roommate plans to marry him, against all odds.

He’s a natural leader, a mental and emotional anchor for a young team, and a hardworking player who — while he may not generate marquee stats in every game, or any game — shows strength, determination and wisdom on the ice. That’s a rare set of qualities in today’s NHL. He’s old-school, he’s clutch, he’s Captain Vancouver… he’s our Trev.

But that doesn’t seem to be enough for our management right now.

Sure, we all like flashy players who rack up huge point totals, partly because they’re fun to watch, and partly because we need those points to win games. The Canucks haven’t had that kind of star power in a long time, what with the painful demise of Naslund’s enthusiasm, and the relative humility of Luongo and the Sedin twins.

Not that they don’t bring the plays that keep us afloat, but they certainly don’t showboat after every goal — or go from the locker room to the pages of tabloid rags — like 90’s sensation Pavel Bure.

That kind of bandwagon-candy glitz is why many people still say that the Canucks were at their best when Bure was lighting up the ice, but I think the best is truly yet to come with our team.

We’re in a huge development phase: our roster features a group of young players who are still discovering their areas of strength, some (fairly) skilled veterans who could use a serious boost in intensity, and a goalie who is breathtaking on his best days… and still pretty damn reliable on his worst!

If we can harness all that post-teenage energy, light a fire under the older guys, and add a strong dose of discipline and skills development to the mix, I think we’re in a position to make big things happen.

I’ve got faith, at least.

What I don’t have faith in is our Captain.

Markus Naslund was a tremendous disappointment during our playoff run this year, and a relative non-starter in many games this season.

There’s really no other way to say it; the totals weren’t there (at least according to his previous standard), and his leadership was so passive as to seem absent at times. There’s no question that he CAN be a HUGE asset to the Canucks, but we haven’t seen him achieve consistently at that level in a while. I think he could use a wake-up call.

Regardless, I’ve long been a believer in the notion that hockey captains don’t need to be the strongest scorers or the most glamourous performers on their teams.

What they do need is a powerful voice in the locker room and on the bench, a sense of honour and gravity in their play, and the ability to take a diverse group of egos and personalities and skill levels and motivate them in the same direction. If Naslund had those strengths, I’d be more willing to excuse the weak performance in other areas. But it’s simply not there to the extent the we need it now.

So who has it?

Trevor Linden. As yet unsigned.

Our management will continue to add players to fill skill holes in the team, and even inject a bit of flash and drama into the roster to keep the media buzzing. I wouldn’t expect any less; hockey is a business as well as a game, after all, with two bottom lines: stats and ticket sales.

But if they continue to treat one of the best leaders on our team like an old horse who may or may not get another lap around the track, they’re doing a huge disservice to the morale of the organization… not to mention turning a blind eye to the wishes of the fans who pay their salaries every year.

We need someone who can reign in all the inconsistencies we’ve seen on the ice for a couple of years now, and turn our rag-tag group of possibilities into a unified, passionate outfit. I don’t think I’m overestimating Linden’s character when I say that he’s the man for the job.

And I don’t think I’m overestimating the idiocy of the way he’s been dealt with when I call it a slap in the face.

We need to stop angling for the next big thing or the next quick fix, and put some dollars and time into building the mental stability of our team. That’s where we fall apart. We lack the mettle that counts when we’re behind in the third period, or facing a Game Seven. We lack the stuff that makes good players great, and the legacy-building spirit that turns teams into dynasties.

Isn’t that what we want for our Canucks?

So hurry up and sign one of Vancouver’s finest, and — even if you don’t slap a C on that new jersey, because I doubt he’d take it from Nazzy anyway — give him a chance to be our hero for another season.

We have a crucial opportunity to build on our successes and address our major flaws in a meaningful way this year, but it’s going to take someone who gets the bigger picture to take us to that next level.

And take us all the way to the Cup.

We love you, Trev, no matter what happens.

August 16, 2007

friday love list.

Filed under: love, random, vancouver, let me count the ways, listy — meg @ 11:59 pm

Because it should be a tradition, y’all.

I’m posting more stuff I love in, simply in honour of Friday. I never really run out, anyway.

THINGS I LOVE

Eating a million pounds of juicy summer cherries
Cracking up publicly at a text message
White sundresses
Freckles
Odd brown shirts you buy for $7 at Old Navy that make you look 20% more fun
Men with deep voices
The Colbert Report
My old Thierry Mugler Angel perfume
Giant tufts of pale pink cotton candy
Americano Mistos
What a Fool Believes
Salmon sashimi
Scrabulous on Facebook
My mom coming to get me when I was dizzy/teary at work
Mark Ronson
Twittering
LISTS
How loudly I can snap my fingers
Interpretive dance at work
My heterolifemate Catherine
The upcoming Fantasy Football season
When I manage to say the right thing, against all awkward odds
Open deck doors
Aviator glasses
Bounce softener
Foggy nights
Hot pink toenails
Bouquets in just one colour (pink, white, green…)
The idea of having my own advice column
Fudgesicles
Long drives
Fresh salsa
Hoop earrings
YOU!

As I said last time…

I challenge everyone to post a love list on their own blogs, even if you think it’s horribly cheesy and eye-rolling. And if you have no blog, do it in the comments here! Celebrate something good.

I want to know what you love!

August 7, 2007

overcast.

Filed under: think, vancouver — meg @ 10:45 am

I woke up this morning to a wooly gray sky and a humid, heavy breeze tumbling through my bedroom window.

For once, the dubious weather has saved itself for a Tuesday (rather than a Sunday), and the sunshine lasted through our entire three-day weekend. That’s impressive, for Vancouver. It’s not that we don’t get sunshine, mind you, but we don’t always get it on the days when anyone has time or opportunity to use it.

You get used to it, after a while… laughing at the weather forecast because the timing is so absurd.

I’ve been feeling a bit cloudy myself lately, but it really seems as though I shouldn’t be. Why am I through a low pressure system at the wrong time. Shouldn’t I be more shiny? More thankful? More positive?

But I’m so Vancouver right now: reliably unreliable. The only constant is that I feel things at the exact time I’d really rather not.

Whenever I look back at the last couple years of my life and classify them as ‘difficult’, I rush to remind myself of all the good things that have happened in that time. The move I’ve made to a better home. A job that is stretching me. The friendships that have developed in odd and perfect ways. The discoveries I’ve made about my health that enable me to move in a direction, rather than wonder, wonder, wonder.

It has been difficult, though. I can’t pretend otherwise. The things I have to be thankful for are huge doses of comfort along the way, but they don’t always buffer the experiences that have etched lines into my face and scars onto my body.

I’ve been scared. I’ve been lonely. I’ve been disappointed. I’ve been angry. At myself, at other people, at intangible entities like ‘life’ and ‘love’ and ‘happiness’.

I’ve wanted things to miraculously change or evolve or work out in some direction that appears sunny and good and easy… but every time I think I’m going to get a break?

Overcast.

I do feel good a lot of the time, mind you.

I sing and dance like the random freak I always was. I can see the humour in everything from a weird boomerang ladybug I was trying to knock off my arm yesterday to pretty much everything Catherine and I do together. I wake up in the morning ready to run, and go to bed at night most of the time with a head full of thoughts that are not negative at all (mostly just random.)

I just have some questions and empty spaces that I am learning to live with.

I have some regrets that I am trying not to use like a brick wall against my head.

I have some unrequited desires I am managing as best I can.

I have some lists from which I have yet to scratch a single item.

I have some serious bumps in the road that I’m not going to be able to steer around.

I’ve screwed up a few things I can’t fix.

But.

As cloudy as it is now, or as cloudy as it might be in the future, the sun always shows up again eventually.

I have faith in more things than not.

And like a true Vancouverite, I’ve learned that the weather can’t change how you live your life, anyway.

It’s just a good excuse to buy boots.

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