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Has a handy phone number on the back, for the express purpose of balance inquiries. You notice this while out drinking strategically purchased coffee alongside 10th-one-free coffee with the roomie.

In the same hour, you call this number, learn said balance ($5 and change!), check your .50 cent lottery ticket (cuz you learned last week that the $3 ones are for chumps), and spend $11.20 on what ends up feeding 3 people for the rest of the day.

 

Each activity is momentarily…humbling, but kinda thrilling — cuz wow! You just won the almost-payday Olympics!

Whoever you are.

Not unlike the late, great John Peel, I came home the other night from my ACC shift and played this song twice in a row (and then again).

Because it’s fucking magic, that’s why. I’m willing to bet this same reasoning went into the decision-making of One Direction’s great punk uncle (I’m coining the word “punkle” right now) or historical hipness consultant or mom or whoever was saddled with the task of making the show palatable for anyone over the age of twelve.

Whoever it was, they knew that a cover of this and only this* could sharpen the edges of their feathered, fluffy aura, if only for a moment. Well done, you cheeky cherubs.

*Led into by One Way or Another, obvi. Textbook, but damn effective.

Sometimes, I would consider breaking my own legs to avoid leaving the house. And then other times, I valiantly make it home through the storm of the century drenched to my soul, and pull myself together. Then I dry off, throw on a cute silk tank top and cut-offs and head back out in the thick of it, for fun.

Armed with little more than my Crocs, Ron’s sweet umbrella and a water-absorbent Adidas jacket, I stepped out confidently and nonchalantly to go watch Andrew’s Fringe play for the second time (which was about to get cancelled altogether- dramatic irony!), oblivious to the fact that the city was crumbling around me.

“Yeah…I’m not going out in that,” said Edgar.

“Be careful!” my mum’s faraway voice echoed through my water-logged phone.

I laughed. “I’m just walking around. It’s raining, it’s not Armageddon.”

Probably would have not been my reaction had I been watching the news footage at home (which was pretty shocking, a few hours later at the bar), or were getting around via any method besides my clammy be-Crocked feet. But I wasn’t. And as it stood, I felt quite content staying put. And super content staying the fuck away from the six streetcars lined up along Bathurst for a good twenty minutes.

Even when I remembered that unfortunate dream last week where a tornado snatched me up, I thought, “well, won’t it be nice and peaceful to walk home from King and Bathurst without another living soul coming anywhere near close to me!”

Soaked as I was, and the downpour easing up considerably, I closed the umbrella and carried it, bandolier-style, across my chest (yeah, it has a strap like that). I strutted home in the dark and desolate post-apocalypse, feeling pretty Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, dance on air about the whole thing. Lucky me, lucky Toronto.

singin

Singin’, rainin’, dancin’. Whatevs. I do what I want.

*(Quipped Steve. “And Tilbury doesn’t even have a YMCA.”

I think he was saying my house is damp. And I’ve never even been to Tilbury).

My life wouldn’t have been the same without Cinematheque.

A lady called and made a donation. When I thanked her for her generosity, this is what she said.

My heart could scarcely take it.

Google Cinematheque and it might show you this.  I'm also going to watch it on Tuesday.  #relevant

Google Cinematheque and it might show you this. I’m also going to watch it on Tuesday. #relevant

Is not a big deal for some people. Such people would include the girl 2 rows up and across the aisle from me on my plane ride back from NYC last weekend.

I watched this young lady (of the UGG boots and perfectly tousled hair) casually tell her mom to put her down for about $700 in goods on the customs form. They slid US magazines up and down the aisle to each other, while I observed her observation of take-off. I could tell that to her, flying was simply another form of driving and not the deliverer of destined punishment for doing something unnatural and luxurious. I used her facial expression as a barometer of our safety, as my over-loaded senses had me reacting like a dog in a lightning storm. I crushed my sister’s hand and talked to her to distract myself, but JESUS! Not NOW! Please stop talking!

It’s good to go somewhere different once in awhile, and be reminded that I am tiny, and that taking a vacation doesn’t mess up some natural order of the universe. I’m not the star of a disaster film, nor am I a God, I am simply moving. No big whoop (as my first role model of New Yorkiness would say).

And it’s good to remember that New York is not the same as Toronto (or anywhere else) because of Pastrami and bagels and pizza (which I’ve known for at least 5 years now).  But did you know that lox, or “Nova”, which is what I think I ordered, is one of the most delicate, divine delights my mouth has ever experienced in its life?

bagel

This bagel cost me $10.95, and I found that perfectly reasonable.

I tried to blend in at Chipotle by ordering “soda” and was met with affectionate laughter (and pure disgust, from my sister) at my stilted and hesitant pronunciation. I sat in cramped restaurants where tables had to be moved so people could, and came across multiple Starbucks which were restroom-free. This made every day an adventure. After a trek through strange, winding and ending streets in Chelsea to watch some interactive theatre at 11:30 pm, I (in a supremely undignified manner) had to run into a pretty nice restaurant and be like, yeah, we call it a washroom in Canada. No, I am not asking you to use your shower.

We were treated to a tour of the Sesame Workshop offices, and I was overcome with the legacy of Jim Henson and how goddamn much it means to my life. Our gracious host showed us where the magic happens, and Emmys everywhere, but I was equally moved by two of the framed photos at his desk: of himself as a six-year-old, and his sixth-grade art teacher. This guy, I thought to myself, has really got it figured out.

We got to spend the time with two of our back-home besties by TOTAL coincidence, but I like to think it kismet. Same goes for our unexpectedly upgraded room which facilitated sleepovers and the fact that half of us are born navigators, and the other half are born followers (in only the most literal sense, of course).

Maps

They don’t love you like I love you.

I will not lose touch with this momentum. I will stave off the desire to sleep in. The excitement I feel on foreign streets and the newness of my real life upon return? I will hold it in my bones and my brains.

As for the girl in UGG boots, I did see her eyes narrow on the fading horizon in a split second of hyper-awareness and felt a little validated.

I also glimpsed a hint of this when I came back; in the big smiles and extra-lingering hugs of my parents and roommates, and the yelping gratitude of my dog who realized I wasn’t dead after all.
You and me both, Brandy. Traveling is a big deal when you never do it.

…by the last couple weeks. So I’m sitting in the Toronto Reference Library trying to think of a way to tell it, and knowing I probably shouldn’t try (not here, not now). And the tears start randomly, frequently, while I get meaningful text messages in between and mop my face with Starbucks napkins.

I’m not usually one for out-of-context quotes (particularly presented so Pinterest-erly), but this one is so nice and important:

emerson

Repeated at an unbelievably beautiful and moving memorial for an incredible person, and I have been thinking about it all week. It’s really all there is, kids.

I resolve (to use the parlance of the season) to try harder.

They make me awkward and plain? Hells no! But actually yes, in the old days. Especially when I realized that I would need to forego yet another one of my feminine life-duties– in this case, cultivating a debilitating stiletto-purchasing compulsion— to appease the gods of foot-flatness. Good thing this eventually made me feel kinda rebellious. Good thing Morrissey put it in one of his songs.

So, following the trend that I started about 7 years ago when I traded in my red Converse for my first pair of New Balance cross trainers(!), but really much closer in spirit to that day I bought my first Crocs –not the cute, streamlined flats of recent summers which get me compliments on the bus, but my SRS CROCS, bright pink and swelling with sensible, gardener-worthy arch support, I did it. Because: I was on my feet all day at the U of T bookstore and we got a 30% discount, and I was like, “fuck it”, okay?

But at least those were pink and obnoxious enough to back up my arrogance. My new Rockport loafers that my loving parents so graciously purchased for me (to alleviate the pain brought on by that job where I am forced to stand at a podium) are not obnoxious, nor do they cuss. They nod and firmly shake hands, they do their taxes (and yours!), and maybe go briefcase-shopping with their son.

socks

They also pull my socks down like nobody’s business. So I got to thinking about how I should maybe get some of these things.  Stuff went downhill pretty fast after that.  

They are not attractive. But they are not not attractive in the way that my mustard-yellow Camper loafers are not attractive. See the distinction? These clunky, cushioned Rockports would not look out of place on a 70-year-old man. They would look “smart”, as he or his elderly wife might put it, or at least help relieve his arthritis. But the lack of details, texture, shape and colour, and I dunno, LIFE (ironic, no? considering the photo above), cannot be spun, no matter how bitchin’ my t-shirt, or awesome my purple faux-leather jacket, into something funky, retro, interesting, futuristic, or ironic.

But so far, they’re pretty comfortable. And my mom likes them, so that’s nice. I tried them on for my dad, expecting a similar reaction, figuring he was bound to appreciate the fact that his money was spent on something so 100% functional. But I forgot that he also likes pretty things. He was clearly torn between being happy for my joints but sorrowful for my steadily-dwindling femininity. “They’re okay,” he mustered, eyes shifting up from his dinner. I howled with laughter as my mom tried to balance out his lack of enthusiasm with undeserved compliments.

But pretty! You want pretty? No fear, I bought something pretty that day, too. Faded-pink jeans with a brocade pattern, cargo pockets and an A.C. Slater waistband, one of my proudest thrift store finds of the recent past. It’s also possible that they’re not pretty at all, but that particular, aforementioned brand of “not attractive” that I get so excited about.

“Look Shef, they’re like the style from the eighties.” She is relieved they look almost like regular pants once they’re on.

He doesn’t hear her, but shakes his head in disbelief at the sight. “Alright, that’s enough. Sometimes you take things too far.”

And for like, the 28th time, it looked nothing like this.

The eve of my thirtieth birthday, I decided to cut my hair differently than I’ve been cutting it for nearly twenty years. Specifically, in the very same way that I’d cut it for the first ten of my life. I assume this is an indication of the mind games ol’ Father Time has been playing with me- or more accurately, that I have inflicted upon myself– since my twenty-sixth birthday or so (but much earlier if I’m totally honest).

Acting out? Defiance? Denial? Perhaps. What I think I desired (besides the bangs themselves, which I’d considered for the past few years and had been shot down by at least three different hairstylists) was a clear, visual marker that something had changed and that I was embracing it! I never embrace it. And I’d been cowering in the face of my twenties-death for so long that I knew I just needed to take a deep breath and lean into it.

Lean into it, I did. I also leaned into my terrible cold (going on nearly a month now, but at its torturous peak that weekend) and into my desperate desire to eat fried chicken and dance all of the aforementioned things into sweaty, saxophoned oblivion. I leaned into the small gathering planned for the next day to celebrate alongside my sister with the unfortunately-named “dead rockstar party” (apologies to Whitney 😦  R.I.P., we heard the news on a chip and pop run), and into the adventure I was gearing up for the following Monday.

Hiding.

In the bell jar. With bangs.

My first week as a thirty-year old was spent acting as guardian for a super fabulous six-year-old girl. Someone else’s life in someone else’s house was the exact thing I needed at this exact moment. I basked in the change of scenery, the change in environmental energy (oozing calmness with no constant din of television nor buzzing of electronics nor vibrating of clutter) and change in routine– namely, the very existence of a routine, which I have been somewhat lacking for more than a few months. And most of all, hanging with an awesome kid, doing awesome kid things.

I walked her to school four days in a row, and realized that the only thing that makes Valentine’s day not an unnecessary, invented holiday is throngs of young children dressed in red and bearing homemade gifts for their classmates. Seriously, my heart toppled out of my chest and I don’t think I ever got all the pieces back. I took her to swimming lessons and talked with one of the moms about my revelations (including not realizing that my presence beside the pool made much of a difference until I got a few excited arm waves from the shallow end), and post-lesson, followed her confident, city-kid navigation to eat at an establishment which I had previously only associated with late-night beer and chicken wings (they have a lot of other things, including a kids’ menu, FYI).

I was reminded of many things, including my much younger self. Did you know that six-year-olds are incredibly literal? They want to know why you said “two seconds” when you actually meant “five minutes”. They point out your quirks (“why do you always say ‘sorry’ when you didn’t do anything?”), and remember the words you use to explain, using them with a conspicuous frequency. In this case, “habit”. They also would really, really much rather have a pizza come to the door than pick it up on the way home- which, you know, I think I understand, cuz ordering pizza is pretty exciting. They say hilarious things very matter-of-factly, and can be startling in their innocence.

People were looking at me differently, usually with an extra dose of kindness. Parents(/caregivers) and I shared knowing looks when we crossed paths, and silent laughter at many of the aforementioned interactions. Particularly at overhearing me declare my new age (which still did not roll off the tongue, despite my years of preparation) in the middle of one of those impossible-to-describe conversations couched in 6 year old logic (something that ended up with us being different ages than we actually were).
“Don’t let anybody hear you say that!”
“What, that I’m thirty?”
“Yessss,” she hissed, with an exasperated eye-roll. Me and the lady walking by shared a good laugh, like a couple of proper grown-ups.

So, it was official. New hair, new voice (pretty raspy cool, thanks month-cold!), new decade. Newly assumed to be the mother of a six-year-old by many passers-by, which I am only now realizing isn’t just possible, but would make perfect, totally regular sense. Why did it freak me out so much? Maybe because I didn’t have my well-worn copy of Disintegration to listen to for the tenth time in the past month, or my cat and dog to crawl into my mother-effing bunk bed with (though the cat I had here was a pretty great substitute) and brood about it for the standard week  month. Maybe because everyone kept saying “how’s it feel? Exactly the same, huh?” with a knowing or nervous chuckle (depending upon their own age). When the person in question was one of the many fall and winter babies I am friends with, I felt bad at saying “NO! It doesn’t feel the same AT ALL. Does this mean I have to get rid of my bunk bed? Because that’s where I keep most of my clothes.” Because, all they want is to know it’s gonna be okay when they get there a few months from now. So I would just cautiously say…”not exactly”…and pray that I would start to feel like myself again very, very soon.

Getting back home eased me into that transition. Buying 2 pairs of skinny, metallic jeans for $7 each, exactly one week into my “new life” gave me the same joy it did when I was 29 (or 21, for that matter). And getting right pissed off about an article posted on Facebook (posted in frustration, and responded to in kind) that questioned my right to do so (actually mentioning “skinny jeans” and “thirty” in the title), gave me the exact same feeling of glee and badass unstoppability as it always did. FUCK THEM! I got to think. Maybe I liked having something new to rage against, some new thing to do my own way and nobody else’s.

You can pry my sparkly pants out of my old dead hands. I’m thirty now- and yes, two months along, I do feel almost exactly the same. I am- shock!- the same frigging person after all, but MAN, so much better without that invented planet hovering over me.

30 > 29…who woulda thought?

*I was into this life when I started writing this…then I forgot about it for awhile (cuz I had to)…

Andrew and I took that dog to the park for the first time in awhile, and took her off-leash in the unfenced (but hidden far and away from danger) dog “pit” at Trinity Bellwoods for the first time everr. I was a little terrified, but totally endeared once I realized that she always comes when I call her.

As erratic and foreboding as this weather is, I am grateful for the excess of walking it has facilitated/forced upon me. I have saved a lot of money, and probably some new pants (they were getting a little tight). I also didn’t have to buy that luxurious $175 duvet of a coat I wanted so badly or use my baseboard heaters which run on…I dunno, unicorn blood or something equally impossible to replenish*?

But best of all might have been watching that pooch go bonkers with puppy park joy on a day equal parts sun and snow.
Life/global warming ain’t so bad. ❤

*I’m told it’s called “money”.