Should I feel threatened by the seven-day week? Some say YES, and their anxiety is beautifully crafted in a New Yorker article “How the Week Organizes and Tyrannizes Our Lives.” Harvard history professor Jill Lepore explains how “work schedules to TV seasons to baseball games, the seven-day cycle has long ordered American society. Will we... Continue Reading →
How to Pray While the World Burns
"How to Pray While the World Burns" -- by Hila Ratzabi Go outside.Find a patch of grass, sand, dirt.Sit, kneel, place a hand or justA finger to the soft earth.Feel it pulse back. Open your palms and divineThe words creased between.Rub the specks of dirtBetween your fingers,See how they cling to skin,How they listen in... Continue Reading →
On Summer, Fires, and the Mad Bummer Lady
A re-post from Anne Lamott. She is the New York Times bestselling author of Help, Thanks, Wow; Small Victories; Stitches; Some Assembly Required; Grace (Eventually); Plan B; Traveling Mercies; Bird by Bird; Operating Instructions, and the forthcoming Hallelujah Anyway. Her blog was posted Sunday, August 20, 2023. “The harvest is past, The summer is ended,... Continue Reading →
Sorrento Centre Saturday Update – Wildfire and evacuation UPDATE
The most recent news from Monday night, August 21 is encouraging. In a few words the centre remains evacuated and is not out of danger. That said however, while the fire perimeter has come to within a half kilometre of the farm, that line is being held. There has been some rain and more is... Continue Reading →
Loss of buildings at Okanagan Anglican Camp now confirmed
UPDATE: In a nutshell, photographs taken from the lakeside confirm that ninety percent of the camp infrastructure is destroyed. Camp was successfully and safely evacuated Thursday afternoon and there were no injuries sustained. A pastoral letter from Archbishop Lynne can be read here. Heard on CBC Radio Tuesday afternoon, Camp director, Ian Dixon said that... Continue Reading →
Smoke, Heat, and the Sorrento Centre
A guest blog from Michael Shapcott Located in Sorrento, BC the Sorrento Centre is on the traditional and unceded lands of the Secwépemc First Nation. Since time immemorial, the Secwepemc people have practised virtues of harmony and generosity. We are so grateful to be welcomed as their uninvited guests. Thanks to Executive Director, Michael Shapcott... Continue Reading →
Toxic Masculinity at the Cemetery
A review of Close to Home, by Michael Magee // Guest blog by Norm Sigurdson Now in retirement and living in Calgary, voluminous reader Norm Sigurdson shares book reviews on Facebook which we are pleased to re-publish here, with permission and encouragement, on this blog. Enjoy. I just read Irish writer Michael Magee’s bleak semi-autobiographical... Continue Reading →
Cape Town Youth demand Change
Cape Town, South Africa / August 11, 2023 A member of a Cape Town church was just one of the countless thousands whose life was devastated by the destruction of her fruit and veg business in the violence unleashed by the taxi strike. Almost a million of our fellow Capetonians have been severely impacted for... Continue Reading →
Travels with my Aunt – With apologies to Grahame Green – by Juno
Juno is an award-winning canine blogger who recently was unable to attend the Juno awards as dogs are not allowed on the red carpet. She lives in Summerland, BC with her Mamaw and Papaw, Kathie and Ken. My auntie Sheila came to stay the other day. She will be here for most of the week.... Continue Reading →
Abe Weissman presents
In the period drama series The Marvellous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video) we are introduced to Midge Maisel—a fictional comic (whose story is loosely based on the life of Joan Rivers) who with her former husband, Joel, and her parents Rose and Abe Weissman, move through the tumultuous late 1950s and 60s New York entertainment world,... Continue Reading →