Looking Forward


Our list of planned adventures for
this year feels endless, in the
most beautiful way. We’re going to
skate
ski
snowshoe
drive
explore
travel
and that is just for starters.

mountain_snow_laszlo

Image credit: laszlo-photo on Flickr

We’ll spend time at the zoo.
We’ll visit dusty, old dinosaur bones.
And venture out to the mountains.

Maybe even a dog sled tour.
(You think the 3-year-old will last?)

Favourite little mountain towns await us,
And I know how it’ll go.
We’ll plan all our weekend adventures,
And 2012 will go by too fast.

But that’s what life is about.

 

I haven’t participated in Six Word Friday for a while and when I saw this week’s theme (“looking forward”) I thought it was a great chance to share my excitement over the things we have planned for the year. 

P.S. Thanks for your ideas and inspiration on yesterday’s one word post. I think my word has found me. I’m going to let it sit for a bit, but I think I’ve got it, and it’s very relevant to the above and all the things we want to do and explore in our new ‘hood.

10 steps to a chaotic Christmas

Step 1: Move into a new house in a new city less than a month before Christmas. Unpack as much as you can and then stuff everything else into the basement and the spare bedroom upstairs. Pray no one needs to get in there.

Step 2: Agree to host Christmas for most of your family because you’re the house that makes the most sense this year.

Christmas-dinner-table-2011

Step 3: Start a new job the week before Christmas, making it tough to get all those last-minute errands done.

Step 4: Forego your usual practice of making many, many lists and figure it will all work out.

Step 5:  Make one exception to Step 4 and hastily make a grocery list the morning of the 23rd before you go to work. That way your husband can do the shopping and you’ll still have time to pick up all the things you forgot.

Step 6: Hide stocking stuffers and gifts in various places around your new house. Having to look for them at 9:00 on Christmas Eve so you can finish wrapping will provide a different sort of orientation to the house you’ve only lived in for 3 weeks.

Christmas-present-under-tree

Step 7: Start cooking on Christmas Eve morning by just doing things as the thought occurs to you. Send someone down the street to the grocery store for the items you forgot in your half-awake list-making state.

Step 7 1/2: Thank your lucky stars Santa’s helpers are there to pitch in.

Santas-helpers-aprons

Step 8: Realize you forgot some of the presents you meant to get, are short on some critical elements of Christmas Dinner (pickles) and neglected to appropriately plan for the vegetables you wanted to serve.

Step 9: Decide that this is the “wing it” Christmas and none of the above issues matter. This philosophy will be reinforced when your three-year-old opens his stocking on Christmas morning with a face lit up with joy and says, “He came! Santa knows me!”

stockings_2011

Step 10: Have a very merry chaotic Christmas with great family and the best damn turkey ever cooked in a brand-new-to-us oven. (And we didn’t set fire to the turkey like we did the first year in our old house!)

Christmas-tree_2011

I hope your holiday was great and you’re getting a little down time before January comes and things ramp up again.

 

[Pictures #2 and 5 credited to my sister, the other iPhone addict.]

Farewell to 2011 in Photos: Link-up

Christmas is over and a new year is nearing. As much as I love Christmas, I also really love this time of year when the holiday madness is over and the week-between lull starts. The end-of-year lists and retrospectives appear, offering a chance to remember what was and think about what will be before normal life resumes and the daily what-is takes over.

So let’s do some retrospecting, shall we?

 

Pick a picture (or a couple, if you wish) for each month of the year, post, and link up with me to say farewell to 2011 in photos. (You can focus on the photography or the memories – up to you.)

One winner will be randomly chosen from those who link up to receive a complimentary registration in the Brave Girls Club’s Soul Restoration I class.

January

bird-on-a-wire

This is the only photo I’m including that’s not mine (credit underactive on Flickr) but it’s what best represents January to me. January 2011 is when I started this blog and shortly after that I started using this image in my header. I’ve had 2 other designs since, but this one is still “my” image. It remains my wallpaper on my laptop and I’m still getting gifts inspired by this image. I love it, and it will always represent this blog and what it has come to mean to me.

February

airplane-deicing

I took this photo as we were preparing to take off for Toronto from my hometown, which doesn’t get a lot of snow so de-icing is a rare requirement. This picture is not about the snow, though. It’s about the trip, and not because it was memorable but because it wasn’t. In thinking about February I knew I had travelled for work but I couldn’t remember where I’d gone. And even now, I barely remember that trip, except that I forgot to pack underwear. It was the start of my realizing something within me had fundamentally changed over the last couple of years, and not in a good way.

March
antenatal-unit

The happenings in March—including this visit to the antenatal assessment unit—were the precursor to what happened next and what my year has become. On the current path of my life this yellow hallway was the start line. It was where I went to see the psychiatrist who put me on the medication that almost killed me (and that, incidentally, also probably saved my life). I will never, ever forget this hallway.

Aprilguest-bedroom

In April I plummeted. Crashed and burned. And this room is where I ended up. No, not a psych ward, but the guest room of a friend’s place. She was out of town and kindly offered me a sanctuary when I badly needed to run and hide. At the beginning of a 4 1/2 month leave from work I spent a few days here, awake late into the nights before finally taking a shrink-prescribed pill that knocked me out completely for at least 12 hours. When I think of the me who spent time in this room I barely recognize her. This grainy picture from my BlackBerry isn’t one I’ve published before, but I took it because I wanted to remember this room. When I look at this picture now all I feel is unending gratitude for that time and space and my friend’s generosity.

May

tree-silhouette

By May I had scraped myself up off the floor and was riding a yo-yo. Yearning to be better but mostly bouncing between desperate depression and feeling nothing. I walked. A lot. On the day I took this picture I decided it was time to start looking at what was around me again.

June

Tiger_zoo

June was the start of the road that let me where I am now, though I didn’t know it at the time. “We could move to Alberta,” my husband said, and shortly after that we went to Calgary for my sister’s graduation. This picture was taken at the Calgary Zoo and I remember enjoying the visit while one question reverberated around my brain: “Am I ever going to feel better?” And yet, at the same time, I started to really see myself again.

July

toddler-mini-golf

In July I had had enough. Enough of being on leave from work, enough of being drugged all the time and enough of feeling like a mental patient. I started to explore going back to work, but my psychiatrist wasn’t so keen. I was annoyed at the time but when I look at this picture I remember that she was right. My husband took Connor out one day so I could have some quiet time alone in the house. It was badly needed, but when he sent me this picture all I could think was that I should be there with them. But at that point early in the month I just couldn’t. When I look at this picture I think about how I missed out on so much time with my son. Not just months, but years.

August

Group at Sparklecorn at BlogHer '11

By August I had taken a stand. I fired my psychiatrist, weaned myself off the sedating anti-anxiety medication (note: don’t try that at home – much better to have a doctor’s advice and know what you’re getting in to), and scheduled my return to work. But first I went to BlogHer ’11. It was totally amazing – incredible and life-changing.

I got myself back.

(Clockwise: Lizz, Galit, Natalie, me, Jessica, Mad Woman at BlogHer in San Diego)

September

blue streaked hair

In September I turned the focus back on others and streaked my hair blue in support of suicide prevention (and my friend Cristi, who is tireless in her efforts to raise awareness). In the end, there were many #bluebloggers who did this, including my mother.

first day of preschool

But that’s not all! September was so monumental it deserves two photos. This is my baby on his first day of preschool. I just love this kid.

October

House for sale sign

In October we did it – after a month of prep work we put our house up for sale so we could move to Calgary. It sold in less than two weeks and we haven’t looked back.

November

our new house

In November we made a quick trek here, bought a house in one day and moved into it less than a month later. Life is either a daring adventure or nothing, right?. (Smart cookie, that Helen Keller was.)

December

fun in the snow

And here we are at the end of the year, living in snow and sunshine. Our whole world has shifted and we couldn’t be happier about it.

 

As I sit here now, late on the evening of Christmas Day, I will admit to looking back at this year with some emotion. I’m aware every day, around every turn and with every breath of crisp winter air, that life is different. That I am different. That I’m not where I thought I would be. But it’s been a while since I really looked back at where I was.

2011 was hard. Gut-wrenching, tear-stained, and really, really hard. But ultimately oh so good. As we finish out this year I’m so, so grateful and unbelievably excited about what 2012 will bring.

What about you?

 

Once Upon a Christmas

Hundreds of years ago life was different—simpler—and I feel it as we walk through the square. Beyond the gates, the snow crunches beneath our feet. The air is crisp, and we quickly pull on hats and gloves.

It’s quiet – quietly festive, that is. People mill around looking at garlands and holly and bright red bows outside the town halls, the general store, the old schoolhouse. Dodging horses they wander, skating on the snow in a roundabout pursuit of milky hot chocolate or crisp hot apple cider. The wagons drive past, the horses beautiful and proud, the passengers cuddled beneath woollen blankets as they breathe in the sweet smell of hay.

Coming to Heritage Park was on my list of must-do things before Christmas, and it didn’t disappoint.

green-door

The bright green trim on the door of the old house pops, making the weathered white fade into the background.

 

old-fashioned-schoolhouse

The old schoolhouse stands ready, its path cleared, waiting for students to skip in from the cold.

 

old-town-hall

The red town hall is festive all year round.

 

railway-sign

“Beware,” the railway crossing sign says with specific politeness.

 

heritage-house

Home for the holidays? I wish. (How retro that would be.)

 

Christmas-lamppost

The lamppost cheerfully lights people’s way.

 

old-town-buildings

The main street offers anything you might need.

 

oldwindmill

High on the hill, a long-retired windmill stands strong and tall.


In my world, it doesn’t take much to make magic at Christmas.

Merry Christmas, everyone. May you find some magic too.
~ Robin 

Does this count as lying to Santa?

“Have you been good this year?”

“Yes.”

[I suppose in the grand sense of the word he’s been good. Sometimes he’s very good. Sometimes he’s three.]

“Do you listen to your mommy and daddy?”

“Yes.”

[I think my kid just lied to Santa. Well, fine, it wasn’t really a fair question. He listens to daddy but does NOT listen to mommy, so I guess he didn’t know which answer to choose. Is answering ‘yes’ like rounding up?]

Overall, a very good visit with Santa. Except for the part where he tried to wipe his candy cane mouth on my sweater. (My kid, that is, not Santa.)

picture with Santa

 

 

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