Thursday, July 24, 2008
Canadian, eh?
I was shocked and more than a little disappointed when I saw the new B.C. license plates - "The Best Place on Earth". While B.C. may in reality be the best place on earth, it just feels wrong to be running around telling people that we're better than them. This license plate seems so arrogant. It just doesn't feel Canadian to be tooting our own horn (we may think it, but to say it...?). Besides, the U.N. (for the second year running) has Norway as the best place to live. Canada is only number 3 (admittedly, the west coast may be the nicest part of Canada
Friday, July 18, 2008
Cruel and unusual punishment
Car-keying suspect out on $25,000 bail
As a Canadian, I've always thought that people should be punished for the wrongs they commit, but that the punishment should not be cruel and unusual. Having had my car keyed a couple of times in Vancouver, I don't have too much sympathy for people who do such mean-spirited, seemingly pointless things (and this guy has been caught 3 times) . . . however, this punishment surely is cruel...
The man is 31 and it was probably his parents who had to post the $25,000 bail. I suspect that his parents are going to make his life pretty miserable for the next little while.
As a Canadian, I've always thought that people should be punished for the wrongs they commit, but that the punishment should not be cruel and unusual. Having had my car keyed a couple of times in Vancouver, I don't have too much sympathy for people who do such mean-spirited, seemingly pointless things (and this guy has been caught 3 times) . . . however, this punishment surely is cruel...
Kim, who works at a restaurant on Kingsway in Burnaby, was ordered to live with his parents in their Coquitlam home and not to change his residence, except with prior permission of the court.
The man is 31 and it was probably his parents who had to post the $25,000 bail. I suspect that his parents are going to make his life pretty miserable for the next little while.
Thursday, July 10, 2008
No free lunch
I always forget that my brother always has something he is working on around his house. Last year, I was tearing siding off his house and doing footings for a new deck. This year, we painted his shed. I keep waiting for him to downsize and move into a townhouse or a condo.
I can't really complain. I get a nice room, good food, and laundry service.
Every time I come back to Canada I notice that ALL of my middle-aged friends are obsessed with retirement. It's a little depressing since I can't imagine retiring EVER (my feeling is that my students will one day find me slumped dead on my desk, dying with my boots on so to speak - I just hope it happens BEFORE I mark those 20 essays). What's even more depressing is that all of my friends say things like, "I only have $200,000 in this investment, $200,000 in RRSPs, $500,00 in my house, and 20 years of a pension. I don't know how I'm going to manage." Considering that ALL of my friends have 10 times more than I do, I'm a little concerned and a little disheartened. Everyone here lives so big. They all have big houses, big yards, big cars (often more than one). I think that they all expect their lives to be exactly the same after they retire as they are now. I am working on living in the moment, so I hope I can stop worrying about this.
I've been up at the TRU gym a couple of times this week. For the last few years, I've kind of been the king of the gym in Korea. A few guys have been stronger and fitter, but not many and NO women have been even close to my strength and fitness level. Here in Canada, I'm average, and quite a few woman have been stronger. It's a little intimidating when some woman takes a machine after I've used it and throws on a couple more plates. Yikes! If I stayed here, I'd really have to step up my workouts.
The gym shower culture here is also quite different. Today, I noticed how much quieter our showers are because we don't have people vigorously clearing their sinuses on the shower floor or hawking up a lung for 10 minutes and spitting big globs of phlegm on the shower floor. Mirrors here also get just a cursory look. Most guys just quickly run their fingers through their hair and then they're done. In Korea, the guys could easily spend ten minutes preening in front of the mirror before they go to workout and another 10 or 15 minutes when they finish.
I can't really complain. I get a nice room, good food, and laundry service.
Every time I come back to Canada I notice that ALL of my middle-aged friends are obsessed with retirement. It's a little depressing since I can't imagine retiring EVER (my feeling is that my students will one day find me slumped dead on my desk, dying with my boots on so to speak - I just hope it happens BEFORE I mark those 20 essays). What's even more depressing is that all of my friends say things like, "I only have $200,000 in this investment, $200,000 in RRSPs, $500,00 in my house, and 20 years of a pension. I don't know how I'm going to manage." Considering that ALL of my friends have 10 times more than I do, I'm a little concerned and a little disheartened. Everyone here lives so big. They all have big houses, big yards, big cars (often more than one). I think that they all expect their lives to be exactly the same after they retire as they are now. I am working on living in the moment, so I hope I can stop worrying about this.
I've been up at the TRU gym a couple of times this week. For the last few years, I've kind of been the king of the gym in Korea. A few guys have been stronger and fitter, but not many and NO women have been even close to my strength and fitness level. Here in Canada, I'm average, and quite a few woman have been stronger. It's a little intimidating when some woman takes a machine after I've used it and throws on a couple more plates. Yikes! If I stayed here, I'd really have to step up my workouts.
The gym shower culture here is also quite different. Today, I noticed how much quieter our showers are because we don't have people vigorously clearing their sinuses on the shower floor or hawking up a lung for 10 minutes and spitting big globs of phlegm on the shower floor. Mirrors here also get just a cursory look. Most guys just quickly run their fingers through their hair and then they're done. In Korea, the guys could easily spend ten minutes preening in front of the mirror before they go to workout and another 10 or 15 minutes when they finish.
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Kamloops
I've been in Kamloops for the last couple of days, visiting my older brother. It has been a little hot (33C) but dry. This area is semi-desert.
This will be home for the next three weeks. My days will be spent exercising, reading, and trying to really get a grasp on CSS (a daunting tasks).
Yesterday, I went to the Technogym at Thompson River University. The equipment was quite amazing as can be seen in these before and after pictures.
My older brother, the Bionic Man, having just had a knee replacement, felt the need to go for a 60 minute walk through the hills to check out some bird boxes he had put out. One box had baby bluebirds in it and another had baby swallows.
This will be home for the next three weeks. My days will be spent exercising, reading, and trying to really get a grasp on CSS (a daunting tasks).
Yesterday, I went to the Technogym at Thompson River University. The equipment was quite amazing as can be seen in these before and after pictures.
My older brother, the Bionic Man, having just had a knee replacement, felt the need to go for a 60 minute walk through the hills to check out some bird boxes he had put out. One box had baby bluebirds in it and another had baby swallows.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)