Theatre – Fallstaff

Chris and I made it to another show at the NAC last week. We barely made it too. We left late because Trevor took a while to fall asleep and I wanted to make sure he’s out before Maria and Dan take over. He’s a great kid when he’s happy, but when he is sleepy and cranky…

Chris really likes the show, I enjoyed it well enough. I haven’t seen any of the plays with Fallstaff in it so I could not make up my mind.

Film – Jane Austen Book Club

The return of the blog!!! Yay!!!

I went for a mini Ottawa high school reunion the other day and had a blast. Like any other geeky introvert I had the worst time in high school. By the time the last semester rolled around I would find an empty classroom at the end of the day and bawl my eyes out. CEGEP, apart from being refreshingly educational and fun was sweet, sweet salvation.

I was just thinking about all those high school movies that show your standard high school with their cliques and mean girls and what not. I don’t know whether there are high schools out there that are actually like this, but they’re nothing like my high school. For one thing, most of the kids in my class were really nice. If I ever had lunch by myself, by the end of the day one of girls from my class would invite me to have lunch with her and her friends next time. Yes, there were cliques, but I never really saw a problem with that. People would socialise outside of their clique quite often. There were a couple of real bitches, but with 80 kids in the class, it was the easiest thing in the world to avoid them.

At 16 I really did not belong there. I had pretty decent relationships with about 20 or 30 other girls, but I was not truly close with any of them. I did not share common interests or any particular affection with anyone. Being in groups was even worse. I was a clique drifter and would stay within a particular group of friends for about four to eight months during which I would slowly get bored with any conversation. I would blame this on me having had recently immigrated to Canada and therefore being alien in things that I thought and valued. However, since I am not alone in having hated high school, I conclude that this was just cherry on top of a difficult stage in life.

Hanging out with Alex and Maja the other night was great. We’ve all had hard time in high school and it was nice to be able to look back at it and laugh. Alex and Maja are the first two people I met when I showed up at Sacred Heart. Alex was standing next to me in gym class and Maja was my “big sister”. Big sister is usually an older student you get paired up with on your first week there that helps you integrate into school. Maja is the same age as me, but had an edge because she is Serbian and was therefore the only person in the school who could actually communicate with me in any meaningful way.

Breastfeeding Challenge

This is a bit of old news by now, but I wanted to blog about it. Also, I promised Marina to give her more details so I’m killing two birds with one stone.

Several weekends ago Trev and I joined our Mom & Baby friends at the Ottawa Breastfeeding Challenge. This is a yearly event that is intended to make breastfeeding in public more socially acceptable and educate public on the benefits. Every year moms and babies arrive at malls across North America and start breastfeeding exactly at 11AM. Once you have a latch you raise your hand and nurses count the babies currently feeding. It is a bit of competition between cities and Ottawa came in fourth after Montreal, Quebec City and some place in Quebec I’ve never heard of.

There was an article in Ottawa Sun, and apparently I was in the picture, but they didn’t put the picture on the web and after a few days they removed the article as well so I can’t link it.

Overall it was fun. There were just under 200 babies feeding at the same time. Here’s a link to the final results. Quebec and Ontario did great, but where did the rest of the continent go?