A Week on Sunday 27/52

Welcome! This week, a little photo-essay of the things that keep us smiling and keep us busy as we transition into summer holidays, plus a few quotes from articles from around the web.

Winnipeg has been getting a lot of rain. The skies above it are often filled with painting-worthy clouds and dramatic light. On the way to the pool one evening, I just managed to catch a tiny rainbow.

My mother-in-law moved from a main-floor room with a basement window to a second-floor room with a regular window. I can now wave to her from the parking lot! At the MCC Thrift Store on Chalmers the other week, we found a comptometer like the one she used when she worked at Eaton’s in the 50’s. (Previous mention in 2023.) 

The peonies are blooming and I couldn’t resist taking a picture of a home-made bouquet of them on a desk at Artists Emporium.  

Long daylight hours mean that Christian and I can go on exploratory bike rides in the evening, getting a feel for neighbourhoods that is different from taking a car. When we last explored Warde Avenue’s funny breaks and continuation, the Bonavista neighbourhood was still being built. The difference in atmosphere from our comparatively middle-age neighbourhood is perhaps in part because Bonavista is a master-planned community. (And it feels similar to ones visited in Airdrie, AB!)

Here I present my second sourdough ever… It was better than the first and the family has been spoiling me with encouragement. Keeping natural leaven alive produces discard and I’m now on the third batch of Discard Crackers. Turmeric and black pepper happens to be a very healthy combo and a fairly addictive snack.

For our daughter’s birthday we went to Blufish downtown, where the soy sauce was served in such cute ceramic vases, we mistook the presentation for missing a flower rather than hiding a condiment. 

My Mom sent us a packet of Magic Fire and we experienced our first backyard campfire with colourful flames. One packet lasts a surprisingly long time.

Quotes

On the subject of beauty: In a Youtube video about typography and book design, designer Klaus Krogh says: “I think beauty and faith is interlocked. The beauty of the language for prayers, the beauty within, we’re trying to make it show on the outside, and that’s our deepest inspiration.” (Around the 5 minute mark.) 

On the subject of courage: “Courage is an ancient predisposition that has played a protective role on the stress.” Hearing about “the courage response” to stress on a podcast, I was immediately intrigued, and found a scientific paper on the subject. Incidentally, it is common in French to wish a person “bon courage”, whereas in English, we commonly wish people “good luck”. What’s nice about the French expression is that you are recognizing a behavioural approach that implies agency. 

On the subject of negativity: A study linked and excerpted on Marginal Revolution shows how negativity gradually increases over time because negative responses stand out, more than positive responses. “[…] analyses suggest that negativity rises over time because social media users seek to make unique comments on the same topic, and it is easier to differentiate oneself through negative comments than through positive comments. As threads and communities evolve, and it becomes more difficult to make unique observations, users turn to negativity.” This feels true in real life, where the greater effort must be devoted to focusing on what is constructively positive rather than destructively negative.

On the pitfalls of rationalization: In an article titled “You don’t have to swallow frogs” Andrea Pitzer writes, “But the truth for nearly everyone is simpler. You don’t have to turn your back on the big issues, but you also don’t have to import the entire national crisis into your personal one. You just have to think for yourself. Know what tradition you’re aligned with, whether it’s a philosophical one, a religious one, or one that rises out of a particular past oppression—or all of the above. There might even be a group or a school of thought you’re reacting against. If you haven’t thought about these things before, read less daily news and try to find an approach that reflects what matters to you. Having answers to that will do a lot to give you direction.” 

On the subject of human dignity in design: I really liked this article by Sara Hendren titled “Pattern Recognition”. She discusses dignity in relation to design (and includes this definition of what dignity is by Helmut Thielicke: “Dignity is not a possession to be more fairly meted out but a universally contingent relational force […]”) and includes examples of design that incorporates human dignity, from babies to the elderly. Sequestered dementia patients are a fact of the society I live in, but reading about places where that isn’t the case is heartening.

Eating

My friend invited me for an al-fresco lunch in her backyard and made the Jennifer Aniston Salad. It was delicious! 

For a snack table in our garage for our daughter’s outdoor birthday party, I had fun cutting “handles” for the watermelon, an idea I saw here!  

Walking the dog

Here’s a picture to bookend the spring season of walking the dog, now that summer holidays have begun and Christian has taken over the doggy duties!

Happy Sunday!

Friday Five

1.

An exercise Since watching this video, more than a year ago, I still do this exercise, pausing a moment in the hallway while talking to Christian or boiling water for tea, to sit on the floor and put my elbows against the wall. It's short, and my back feels massaged after doing it.

https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMYA9TpRx/

2.

Comptometers My mother-in-law in her youth left school to take a job at Eaton's and help her mother by earning an income after her father's death at age 43. She would have worked at the department store in the early 50s, and she will often recall how she was trained to use a Comptometer to track inventory in large ledger books. A little while ago I finally googled the term and discovered that it is something like the grandfather of the calculator. From the youtube videos on the subject, it looks complicated to use. (This video presents the various models of comptometer from 1904 to 1950.) This snippet of information brings to the fore an object that represents how something was done not even a century ago, when people like my grandma would have thought the world was modern. It’s a detail, but it’s precisely the granularity of such a detail that thrills me and has become one of my favourite ways to criticize historical television series!

3.

Reading I really appreciate the Libby app... browsing biography this week I came across Jennie's Boy by Wayne Johnston and have been listening so much I drain the airpods of their battery life. 

4.

Recipe It is common to find pea soup on the menu at food venues at Festival du voyageur. This past Sunday I made our favourite version yet from Anita Stewart's Canada. CBC offers the recipe on their website. 

5.

Matter Wowed by this image of the Milky Way, it's hard not to consider how iota-like life can seem. It made me laugh when I noticed this sign along a walk, put there by some well-meaning person...

Matter has many meanings... it's 18th in the OED is "the substance, or the substances collectively, of which something consists; constituent material, esp. of a particular kind." And so, poetically, one could read the sign and recognize that unlike the importance it is meant to confer on the reader, it is a statement, that like anything, you too are a bit of dust in a galaxy of stars. Perhaps the only difference is love. I wouldn't put it so lightly had a friend not plugged in her stereo, unfolded the cd case of collected songs by Yves Duteil and made me listen to "Le bûcheron." (Here Yves Duteil sings it; here, someone else sings it more slowly and the lyrics are in the description.) Wayne Johnston ends his memoir with this final sentence: “I have come to believe that unlike my childhood illnesses, life is not idiopathic. It has a discoverable cause and whatever its duration, many purposes.” Yves Duteil ends his song with this refrain:

Je n'étais qu'un maillon dans cette chaîne immense
Et ma vie n'est qu'un point perdu sur l'horizon
Mais il fallait l'amour de toute une existence
Pour qu'un arbre qui meurt devienne une chanson.

Happy Friday!