Chip your tree for charity! Tomorrow, thanks to the Lions

In case you didn't make it past my rant about the origins of the twelve days of Christmas, today is the TL;DR reminder that the Lions Club will chip your Christmas tree (if you can drag it through the snowbanks) at the Pony parking lot on Saturday January 8, for donation. Drop by between 10:00am … Continue reading Chip your tree for charity! Tomorrow, thanks to the Lions

What to do with your Christmas tree? (The Lions will chip it at the Pony parking lot Jan 8. In the meantime, make some potions with the needles, and save the trunk for your Yule log next year.)

Is there an official day for taking down the tree? My partner is not a fan of clutter... if he had his way, it would be swept away already, but our 8 year old who is the walking talking living embodiment of Christmas spirit would not have it. Some wonderful humans purchased living trees this … Continue reading What to do with your Christmas tree? (The Lions will chip it at the Pony parking lot Jan 8. In the meantime, make some potions with the needles, and save the trunk for your Yule log next year.)

Food insecurity isn’t about hunger: how we can change our stories

My friend Lisa, who loves food, is a brilliant food photographer, and who often cooks meals as a volunteer for Zero Ceiling, shared this CBC article recently. And we shared a little rant, that there is something amiss in the world, and that we've got to stop pathologising the people who aren't flourishing under this … Continue reading Food insecurity isn’t about hunger: how we can change our stories

A 2021 Status Update on Reconciliation

On the sixth anniversary of the release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)'s six-volume Final Report, the Yellowhead Institute just released a Special Report asking, how things are going, you know, on the reconciliation front, and specifically with the  94 Calls to Action, meant to remedy the ongoing structural legacy of Canada’s Residential Schools and … Continue reading A 2021 Status Update on Reconciliation

So, how did the women fare this year?

The Howe Sound Women's Centre shared their annual report last week. I've been doing a wonderful online program called Deyen Transform: Canadian history through the lens of Indigenous Women. In it, I learned that the majority of Indigenous communities, before contact, were matriarchal - they centred and valued women as life-bringer, life-givers, wisdom-keepers. This didn't … Continue reading So, how did the women fare this year?