"I want to marry all of my close friends,
And live in a big house together by an angry sea."
"...Cause there's a million ways to be, you know that there are..."
Today, It snowed. First snow of the year. November 6, 2006.
Alright, so it has obviously been a very long time since talk like a pirate day. I could pretend I've had an eventful and thrilling month, but in all honesty it's been pretty much like every other month of the school year. Except for some splendiferous concerts. Jon-Rae and the river last Saturday, how do I even begin. In fact, the concert was too fabulous to talk about so I'm just going to say that it's in my top 5 George's nights of all time. It was that good.
September, The month of school. I forgot just how much I resented feeling like every moment I'm sitting down and not doing anything I should technically be reading something... anything. It's been a week and a half, and I'm actually getting back into the swing of things which is quite comforting, as I thought I would be wandering around lost and forgetting to go to classes. As it stands, Ducky's and George's Fabulous Roadhouse have been my constant refuge. There have been plenty of shows and malt liquor to help me forget that I'm expected to learn for the next 8 months. But town is busy, my friends are back, I've seen Cuff the Duke and Shotgun and Jaybird, I've donated plenty of money to the estate of Alexander Keith, Film Society has started, and The Acorn is playing next month. I'm sure I'll survive. Oh yes... and I have all that reading to keep me occupied.
Today is August 28. In 4 days it will be September. In 9 days I will be back in classes. I haven't decided how I feel about that. But that doesn't really matter, because school will start and I will go to school no matter how I feel... The gods of academia don't give a damn about my personal preferences. They are vengeful gods. The real problem here is that my sleepy little town becomes daily less sleepy. It's strange, because I bitch and bitch all summer that there is no one around, but then they come back and make Ducky's and Bridge St. And campus all busy. Hmmm... Maybe I can prevent the return of all but about 10 people. That would really improve my year. I can truly see myself in a future as a hermit.
I claim daily that I am not maternal. I'm not. Anyone who's seen me anywhere near a small child can attest to this; I'm impossibly awkward. Yet, there are many times in which my apparently non-existent maternal instincts kick in. The conversations with my dog, Digby, are one of these situations. But it is almost worse when it comes to the plants in my bedroom.
This weekend a large part of Sackville burned down; it was the last historic wooden building left downtown. An entire corner is now gone, at least three business destroyed, and 30 apartments reduced to rubble. It's an interesting walk into town now, with brick walls visible that were previously hidden and the charred outsides of the remaining structure. It wasn't all lost, though. Ducky's and Joey's, plus a few others are still standing.

I have a friend who is about to start medical school. She's almost a year younger than I am. This frightens me despite the fact that I am overwhelmingly happy for her. And I'm by no means frightened about her capabilities as a doctor, more so about my own inability to ever accomplish anything that takes that kind of determination.
Just a reminder"We live in an age when unnecessary things are our only necessities"
My dear friend and fellow student of politics Mark has recently called me "lame" because my blog is about, well, nothing. In honour of Mark I am going to write just a little about two of our favourite politicos, Nicolo Machiavelli and Friedrich Engles.
This one is pretty old-school. I thought it was pretty funny, though, so I am going to post it and open myself to vast amounts of mockery. Hell, what else are these things for. I believe this one was once part of a song, but I forget how it went.
70 people have looked at my profile and read my silly online journal. Who are you? Let's solve this mystery once and for all.
(To be read as a recitation to small school children)
ENNUI. Always one of my favourite words, which I am only now beginning to grasp the meaning of. Something that is not quite boredom; it is less immediate than boredom. It is a general disillusionment with daily life. A constant feeling of "been there, done that" that can plague the kind of quiet day that we all wish for at other times of the year. Three weeks in a small town in summer provides the perfect image of ennui. Come September I will be thrilled to have any day in which my biggest plans involve walking for a coffee and sitting for two hours in the sun. Yet today, this idea hits me with the sense that a little bit of stress, or speed, or drama is necessary to keep me going, and to keep me interested. As much as Bridge St. will always provide me with coffee and conversation, and that a quiet walk is guaranteed to put me in a good mood, I have begun to avoid my favourite school-year pastimes of relaxation. I am creating for myself the elements of drama and conflict that are such constants for me in situations where they are not present. The part of me that remembers Saskatoon and the exaggerated importance of the smallest events has spoiled me for complicated experiences. I realize (with the most logical and reasonable part of me... which does not always receive the most attention) that I should be perfectly content with this month of respite from stress and action. I should treasure spending my days working and writing and sitting before I have to deal with all of the other people and activities who will eventually and undoubtedly demand my time. Yet I also feel like I am missing out. I am missing out on the kind of social contact that keeps me sane throughout most of the year. But for now I will continue to remind myself that slow can be good, that I don't always need drama to survive, and come November I will be glad for even three hours spent as I have spent this week, let alone an entire day.
I should begin this with a warning, Occasionally very bad poetry will be posted. Most of these are pretty old; I recently found them in a journal in my bedside table. I thought I'd get them out in the fresh air and see if they improve with the new perspective.
In considering the thought of starting a blog I realized the three ideas, or possibly fears, that made this a rather daunting process for me. One, which is the most likely scenario, is that no one will read anything I write here and that that my attempts at recognition and permanence will useless. The second is the exact opposite, that my words will be read; automatically opening myself to the judgment and criticism of others. My final worry is that of my thoughts and musings becoming permanent. The words that I write here will be permanent. They will last long after I have forgotten them and long after the emotions that inspired them have passed. But, In my own vanity, I will continue - and be constantly curious about whether I am still as anonymous as I believe myself to be.