Thursday, April 25, 2019
RIP JOE FAFARD
Wednesday, April 24, 2019
HOT CROSS BUNS RECIPE
This is a recipe from Company's Coming Holiday Entertainment, p. 55. Makes 24 small buns.
From a Great British Baking Show episode, I think turning the fruit inside so that only the smooth dough shows would keep them from burning, but I did like the sweetness the exposed ones had and didn't seem to burn them.
1/2 cup warm water (body temperature will do)
1 tsp sugar
1 T yeast
Stir water and sugar to dissolve. Sprinkle yeast and stir. Let stand 10 minutes.
1/4 c margarine
1/4 c sugar
1 egg
3/4 salt
1/2 t cinnamon
3/4 warm milk
1 c flour
Cream margarine and sugar. Beat in egg until fluffy. Add salt, cinnamon, and milk. Beat in 1 cup flour. Mix in yeast mixture.
1/2 cup currants (important)
2 T finely chopped candy peel (I used candied fruit. Candied cherries would work fine too. Not optional, even if Jean Paré says they are!!)
2 1/4 c flour
Mix in currants and candied fruit. Add remaining flour. Mix well, adding a bit more if necessary to make a soft dough. Let dough rest 10 minutes, then knead until smooth and elastic. Place in greased bowl, and turn in grease before covering. Let rise for about an hour, to allow dough to double in size.
Punch dough down. Shape into small balls. Place on slip baking sheet. Cut a wide cross into each bun with greased scissors. Cover and let rise again until double in size.
Bake at 400F for 20 minutes. Brush with margarine and cool on a rack.
GLAZE
1/2 c icing sugar
1 1/2 t water
1/4 t vanilla
Mix all glaze ingredients together until barely pourable. Add a drop of water at a time as needed. Pipe or drizzle into crosses.


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Wednesday, April 17, 2019
FIRE IN THE NOTRE-DAME CATHEDRAL
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| On walking in under the arches of saints with ribbed arch |
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| One of the massive rose windows (this one's North) that needed those buttressed supports |
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| Joan of Arc, the patron saint of girls and executed by fire. Many art pieces had a fire escape plan. I recall she was near a door. I hope she was able to escape! |
Saturday, April 13, 2019
MARATHONS AND OTHER RACES
The writing marathon is in preparation of November's feat of writing a 50,000 page novel, and it seems like a great way to get in some practice with exercises all year long. 10 minutes was easy. 20 minute went pretty fast. 30 minutes didn't happen and 60 minutes won't either. There is no way tomorrow is going to have 2 hours of time to write, and I find the suggested "training schedule" a little intense. So I am taking 7 minutes, which will likely turn into 10. Anything is so much better than zero.
What inspired me to sit down and write, even if it has nothing to do with a novel? It was the moment I came inside from gardening, and saw that the sky was, at the same time, darkening and lightening into the colours of sunset on a sunny day. It was beautiful, and strangers and neighbours were in accordance that this was a great day. For me, the last two weeks when the streets finally cleared of the ice that covered them for the last 4 months were just fine, but it was consensus today, and I had to agree. The wind was noisy and gusty, just like I like it from my prairie days. The water was running freely through the drains and I even found a spider in the soil as I unearthed grass growing in the wrong place that wasn't dealt with from last year. It was the kind of spring day that I remember rejoicing in as a child, in rubber boots, with toothpick boat races and kite-flying. It was the moment that I came inside from an hour of gardening that I almost didn't do. I was dirty and am still tired, but I wasn't sad anymore. I was alone in my house, and I wouldn't call it happy, but there was a complete lack of sadness in my aloneness, and, honestly, that was a great relief.
One insight that I recalled while gardening and dreaming of hosting baby showers and having friends over and widening my social circle was that I didn't have to be done. I can no longer wait until my garden or my house or my body is in shape. I am a total believer in the philosophy of starting before I am ready. Why else would I be a marathoner, half-marathoner, triathlete, doctor, or mother? The act of signing up is the beginning of something great, and being ready has never been the point at which to start any of those things.
So, I am 17 minutes in, and I really do need to sleep, but I want to remind myself, and anyone reading this blog, that spring is a perfectly wonderful time to start something that you are totally not ready for. If you don't start it, you will be never complete it. So just do it! Start something that scares you a little today!
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
MOVIE REVIEW: TADOUSSAC
An unusual piece by a male writer director. A simple story with satisfying closure, and few fabulous views of the St. Laurent River.
MOVIE REVIEW: PARIS CAN WAIT
The extras included a feature on the film's director, Eleanor Coppola. It was her debut, as the story was told, but a quick wikipedia search credits her directing 5 other films, albeit documentaries based on Francis Ford, and his work or their life together. She had written the screenplay, Hello Anne, and was 80 years old when she directed this travelogue.
It was an enviable adventure that begins in Cannes, travels through Provence with its lavander fields, fabric museum, and Roman aquaduct Pont du Gare, visits Bourgogne (Burgundy) with its wine and Vezelay Abbey, and finally ends in Paris. The draw are France and the food obsessed couple who talk and photograph their way through some of the finest food on the planet.
BOOKCLUB : MURDER ON THE BALLARAT TRAIN
I had hoped to start at the beginning of the series but the library only had the third in house, so I took it. The book did not disappoint. It was as sensous and beautiful as the sets on the show, and Phyrne's level head and moral heart was even more apparent.
Each chapter began with a quote Lewis Carroll. I'm still not sure what most meant, nor did I discover where Ballarat was, but it was a fun read nonetheless, and I look forward to another in the series in the near future.
Friday, April 5, 2019
TODAY I AM A DIVORCEE
I picked a nice man, with reasonable potential. I used to say that couldn't have seen this coming if I had the same information. But what I know now are the following:
When things fall apart, and your family fixes things for your marriage to stay together, you can find yourself somewhere you shouldn't be. If you can't do it alone, step back, take your family out of the picture, and then decide.
Most friends can't tell you the truth. Most friends you invite to your wedding won't be your friends in 15 years. Ask the hard questions, expect discomfort and lies, but better to know who your true friends and what they really think at the beginning of the relationship, because if you don't, you will only know it for sure it at the end.
Some men regress after marrying you. Mine did, in the most extreme way I have ever seen. It paralleled living with an alcoholic, without the unpredictability. Major failures at the beginning of your marriage can be enough to derail it permanently. If you are the cause of these events, take account and act early. Be honest, responsible, reliable, sorry. Make reparations. They will never be enough, so you can never stop. Commitment is patience with sacrifice. This will be enough in time.
If you are the injured party, be kind, open and strive to teach, not judge. But your ideal of marriage is not a reason to prop up your uncommitted partner. Your commitment will never be enough, if your partner does not step up. Allow yourself to grieve, but leave. Your pain will only be in proportion to your ongoing stupidity. You deserve more.
I knew I had a romantic notion of love. I had thought about it from a young age. I have read about it, dreamed about it, lived it. I know my role is never to be taken for granted as a woman. I am an afterthought in our society still. I am not mistaken for the leader. I am often not asked my opinion. My opinion, when voiced, is often dismissed. Women have gained many things in society. My university education was never in question. My acceptance to medical school was not about my gender. But despite being the sole breadwinner in a household for over a decade, I still did more housework then my "stay-at-home househusband", and not because I wanted to.
Men also have a romantic view of love. They have expectations that they may never have thought about. They more than likely have lived a naive entitled existence, and will act accordingly. They will think that "helping you" is sharing responsibility. They are too often taking the easy road and sharing much less of the cognitive responsibility. They were taught to act sexually and confidently, without having many tools to meet woman's emancipated understanding of struggle. Philosophy degrees do not connote more understanding. You will have to insist on not being their mother, their prostitute, their subjugate. It is their fault, but not until they see it is it conscious. Consciousness is the first step to true communication. This process is slow, and if you are lucky, their mothers and sisters and colleagues and girlfriends will have done some of the work before you.
We are in an era where the ideal of marriage is less of a pressure, and in Quebec, the legal obligations so unfairly protected, that a long term relationship is more likely taxable than legal. I am not sure I am proponent of marriage anymore, but I do think committed relationships are ideal. For more on the history and thoughts from author Elizabeth Gilbert, her book Committed is a great read.
The success or struggle of marriage is decided in the events of conflicts. It doesn't matter about your compatability in the good times. It is decided in the bad ones, which are more marked if they happen in the early years. Some interesting factors are raised to be predictable in these cases, and can be seen in a TED talk I recently watched by a psychiatrist Dr George Blair-West. He believed that divorce can be prevented, and that while you are dating, you can see whether this might be a relationship that lasts. He starts with a list of most distressing human experiences. Number one was death of a spouse. Number two is divorce. Number three is marital separation. Number four is being imprisoned in an institution. I am proud of my insistence to stay in mediation where I was disadvantaged, because divorce felt better than separation, although separation from my child was the true suffering. This is the interesting take home message in 3 points:
1. Get married older.
I picked the right age. Marrying at 30, you are more likely to be the personality that you will stay, to some degree. It was not enough.
The next two points are what I learned myself. I thought I knew the factors involved in a happy successful marriage. But what counts, really, is how to see the things that destroy a marriage. Apparently it had nothing to do with me. Women are influenceable. Not all men are. But what they are matters.
2. You husband needs to be influencable. The most stable and happy relationships are those where the couples share power. Men who allow women into the decision-making process are called influenceable. This trait also make better fathers.
If your husband holds all the power, it is like drowning. If he quits his job, leaves every responsibility to you, vetos your decisions, you may be an emancipated woman with income and intelligence, but if you don't have influence, you are more impotent than the unemployed man on your couch.
3. You both have to be reliable. The older we get, the more important this is. It doesn't matter if your partner can make you believe all things are possible. It matters that when the opportunity arises, you can rely on them. That means no task can be passed off. You need to learn how to cut your kid's nails when they are too long. You need to see the house needs cleaning, not be asked. And when you mess up and need to be asked, you can't take 7 months without an answer or update or explanation.
Dave Williams says it best, in his book, Defying Limits: "Commitment demands two things: patience and sacrifice". If your partner doesn't make sacrifices on your behalf, but you do for them, say good-bye. Your endurance will only make things harder for longer. You will have to forgive yourself the image you had of your ideal. It will not solve the problem of a bad relationship. You are worth it.
Wednesday, March 20, 2019
HOW TO LIVE LONG AND HEALTHY
Men: marry and stay married.
Stay active. Stand when you can. Move often.
Exercise daily.
1. Cardio 30-90 minutes per day.
2. Weight training three times per week.
3. Stretching/flexibility regularly.
Avoid sleep deprivation/nightshift work.
Eat 5-10 fruits and vegetables each day.
Stay your ideal weight.
Avoid toxins like drugs, tobacco, and alcohol (there is some debate about alcohol. One glass of wine a day may be reasonable).
Eat minimal sugar.
Don't over eat salt. <3g day="" p="">
Get vaccinated.
Avoid STIs.
Get cancer screening: PAPs, cscope after 50, mammography
Get regular screening over the age of 35-50, depending on your family history: BP, glucose, cholesterol.
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Friday, March 15, 2019
13 MOONS ON THE BACK OF A TURTLE SHELL AND HOW TO RENOVATE IN A YEAR
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| Map Turtle |
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| Map of a Turtle Carapace (plastron is the front) |
13 ROOMS TO RENOVATE, 1 EVERY 28 DAYS
INDOORS - smallest to largest room
1 POWDER ROOM
2 FOYER
3 BATHROOM
4 LIBRARY
5 CREATIVE ROOM
6 ATELIER
7 MINOR BEDROOM
8 MASTER BEDROOM
9 KITCHEN
10 LAUNDRY/FURNACE
11 LIVING ROOM
12 DINING ROOM
13 PLAYROOM
7 GARDENS TO RENEW
OUTDOORS - front to back
1 CANAL
2 TUILERIES
3 PIAZZA SAN MARCO
4 CABANA
5 TAVERN ON THE GREEN
6 POTAGER
7 THE BACK 40
BILLS TO KEEP, AND OTHER SIMPLIFICATIONS
Tax Credits
Under Warranty
Potential Returns
Car
House
Princess Pirate
In an attempt to follow the advice of an introvert who preferred his own company to others, but made brilliant sense in his classic book Walden:
"Our life is frittered away by detail. An honest man has hardly need to count more than his ten fingers, or in extreme cases he may add his ten toes, and lump the rest. Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity! I say, let your affairs be as two or three, and not a hundred or a thousand; instead of a million count half a dozen, and keep your accounts on your thumb-nail. In the midst of this chopping sea of civilized life, such are the clouds and storms and quicksands and thousand-and-one items to be allowed for, that a man has to live, if he would not founder and go to the bottom and not make his port at all, by dead reckoning, and he must be a great calculator indeed who succeeds. Simplify, simplify. Instead of three meals a day, if it be necessary eat but one; instead of a hundred dishes, five; and reduce other things in proportion. "
BACARO PIZZA, LASALLE
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| My primavera pizza covered in rocket (arugula). |
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| 5 divided by 3. Tough math, but generous tablemates! |
"WAR CAKE" FOR AN AUSTERE BIRTHDAY OR A NUTTY EVERYDAY LOAF TO SHARE
CAFEXO, VAUDREUIL
MONT SAINT SAUVEUR
It was great fun, although it was just a little too little time! But I am glad that we had a lunch in the sunny cafeteria, and a little break before hitting the slopes.
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| View onto Jay and Cote 70 Est run |
The technology at Sauveur was impressive. Given a Go Card, you put it in a pocket (best at your hip) and it lets you through the gates on your way to the chairlift. No person trying to scan your badge that flaps in the wind. Very convenient! But most impressive were the bathroom fixtures. I took out my phone to take a picture of the beautiful bathroom stalls, then noticed the bespoke mirror. It was only on the way out, I went to wash my hands and found the most incredible bathroom hygienic fixture that I am convinced is more superior than any other I have ever seen in hospitals, airports and public places!
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| Bathroom stalls as wall art |
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| Mountain Mirrors |
I hope to return next Tuesday and actually get the $23 ladies pass. Summit Gabriel is advertising $15 for ladies on Mondays, but is a further drive and smaller hill, but what a great deal!
Funny thing about weather. It may be melting and raining in Montreal, but drive a little higher into the hills, and add some snow guns, and you have skiing for another few weeks to make the end of winter a little easier to bear!
Friday, March 1, 2019
THINGS RATTLING AROUND IN MY HEAD
"Do you know why most investigators fail?They refuse to extend their basic knowledge beyond the bounds of basic investigative procedure."
Elementary's Sherlock Holmes
Said to me in the staircase after rounds on my way out
"I didn't recognize you. You look so pretty!
The biggest communication problem we have is we don't listen to understand , we listen to reply.
Beauty is not an option.
You never know.
Poverty is sexist.
Wednesday, February 27, 2019
VAN GOGH INSPIRATION
Today, I watched a film, hand painted by a hundred painters, that brought his death to life. It was at time's childish in precision, but powerful in its execution of drawing me in to places and paintings I had seen. There are characters brought to life from his portraits. There are places you walk into. There are rooms you already know, and others that you believe you have seen before. And then there are the fields of gold, and the starry night, with their vibrant colours and believable movement, now animated, as if they were meant to be all along.
I hadn't realized how late Vincent had come to painting, and how short his prolific career was. Starting at 28, he had 9 years to paint 900 paintings. He wrote daily letters to his brother Theo, who died of tertiary syphilis within months of Vincent's death, that was argued as an accidental death brilliantly, even though it has been largely accepted, with his own confession, of self-harm, and the septic death that was typical post trauma in the era before antibiotics.
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
SKI TRIP TEAM BUILDING EXERCISE
February 12
Storm Mia coming from US
We still show up - each individually. Strangely, we all ski together. We mixed up and call out for each other, staying as a pack.
I feel like a dolt, only once coming second last; all the other runs I am last. I lose my pole, crash into a seat mate, almost miss the chair, forget to lift my feet, lower my poles , sit in the right sport. This all related to chairlifts.
I relearn to bend forward into my boots, point my navel downhill, hold my poles out like a shopping cart. I enjoy turning and following the ups and downs. I try and get off icy slopes and avoid snowjets. I learn the zen of skiing in trees - don’t think of the trees, but following the white space between (even around the trees). I learn tips to survive a fall from a chairlift. Turn downhill to ski down a slope. Don’t lift the bar - use it to hang off of to get closer to the ground. Put both feet in your snowboard. Let go of your poles first.
Driving up, I was feeling lonely but I had a great playlist and I was singing along by the 5th song.
I felt validated when the crew waited for me. The first run they thought I’d gone the wrong way, and were chasing after another girl in pink when I caught up with. N waited for me at the top of the hill, but had I followed, I would have been on a double diamond. The Northside was the best, and we took the black Jasey Jay with good views. It was icy, but for another another. La Griffe is apparently the best views.
At the end, I went off too soon and walked down the street instead of skiing the last of the route ( at least two bridges). I realized then that N gaslights. Who is -9678? Weren’t you at that supper party? I didn’t know you were here.
But he looks at me when JM gives him advice about kids. Texts when I am lost. Waves me to the group waiting to take the lift.
I want him to want me. I want him to choose me. I want to him to tell me how he feels. Tell that story again because it gives me such great pleasure to hear it. I want to have inside jokes (What took you so long? Did you see that black bear!?) I want his company for the drive. I want to know his body and he mine. I want to know why he loves this song.
Thursday, February 14, 2019
KIRBY'S MACARONS FOR VALENTINE'S DAY
The important things to remember are:
Room temperature eggs
Beat them for longer than you think - she swears by 8 minutes
Sift your almond meal
Leave to sit at room temperature for at least 30 minutes
Take them out just before they change colour. White is the toughest colour. These were too brown.
Saturday, February 9, 2019
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
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| A plentiful table |
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| Steamed naked dumplings |
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| Steamed dumplings |
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| Fried dumplings |
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| 8 Treasures - Just pour in the Jasmine green tea! |
Friday, February 8, 2019
SECOND IMPRESSIONS
I couldn't find the video, and I'm not even entirely sure what song she played. She sat at a keyboard. She was absorbed in her playing. This was the era where she would dress with Ascot hats and Japanese geisha lips. But despite her carefully crafted appearance, when she began to play, her talent was raw and humble. She was entrancing. She was a natural performer, with nimble fingers, and she slowly built up the acoustics. Then she started to sing, and her voice was more powerful than her melody. By the end of performance, she was playing with her feet. It exceeded all expectations and was a testiment to her incredible skill. But that moment was a culmination of years of planning, hard work, and passion. From that moment on, based on my second impression, I have been blown away by her work.
This is not that song, but the drama is similar: Paparazzi
I haven't seen her in the movie A Star is Born, but the videos of the songs sure look like it might be worth a watch. Here is my favorite dramatic moment: Shallow. Even if you don't buy her nerves, watch her break out that all star voice. I don't think Bradley Cooper has to act out his pride and joy at that moment. Kudos to you, Gaga! You earn every performance.
So, as much as I am a big believer in first impressions often being the truest one, it is fun when it takes a second impression to really knock your socks off.
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
REACH FOR THE STARS
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| Rocket ship inspired by NASA |
Since my memory failed, I did a little google search. Turns out the local connection to NASA was not an astronaut, but an educator who did a great job named Brian Ewenson. It was quite an event, and it impacted me as a parent, as well as my kid. But she didn't remember much, so it was fun to go tonight and hear again about space.
The message of the night was really about planetary stewardship. This is a theme close to my heart, and link to a movie and an exhibit called Anthropocene that friends across the country have recommended to me.
Dave Williams was raised in the West Island, in Beaconsfield. He referred to another Canadian aquanaut, Dr. Joe McGuinness. He was a great speaker, and sure had an inspiring story to tell. His career started as a dream, when it was literally impossible for a child from Canada to become an astronaut. But it became possible, after he became an aquanaut, and then a neuroscientist and then an MD after applying more than once, and being told he might struggle, but graduating top of his class. So when the next mission for NASA was looking to sent a crew to study neuroscience, he was a perfect fit. I had actually heard him speak in a medical forum, about the culture at the Southlake Health Centre, where he was CEO for several years following Emergency Medicine at the Toronto trauma centre Sunnybrooke. He had also been diagnosed with cancer and came back from treatment for a second spacewalk voyage.
He travelled on the space ship Columbia in 1998. I was able to see a launch space shuttle Discovery while on vacation with my family when I was 13 on January 12, 1986, so I remember the excitement was amazing. This was before the Challenger flight was lost in 1987 with first teacher on board, that still weighs on my memory each time a shuttle is launched. He lost friends on the final failed mission of the Columbia in 2003. His second trip, after cancer treatment, and that flight, was on a shuttle named Endeavor in 2017. He had four space walks totally over 17 hours and operated on animal nerves in space.
There was a lot of name-dropping, from Tom Cruise to Rick Hansen. I liked the term he picked up from Rick. Be a difference-maker!
"Each of us has the ability to make a difference."
--Rick Hansen
His life really was proof of this statement:
"It is difficult to say what is impossible, for the dream of yesterday is the hope of today and the reality of tomorrow."
--Robert H Schuller
There were a plethora of other meaningful quotes.
"You can live a lifetime in a moment."
--Ted Rosenthal
"A ship in harbour is safe, but that is not what ships are built for."
--John A. Shedd
"I want to stand as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all the kinds of things you can't see from the center."
--Kurt Vonnegut
A few thoughts of the peculiarities of space: when they first arrive, their faces are congested and their legs provide the fluid, so that their taste and smell takes a while to come back. Blood in a surgery floats in a sphere not far from the field, so it's not hard to clean up. The space station orbits the earth every 90 minutes, with a sunset and sunrise every 45. They travel at Mock 25 speed, so 8 km a second to start, and continue to do so up in space, but it feels like they are moving slowly, like you see in the footage. There is statistically life on another planet, but this is our best one. We need to take care of it! If you want to see the difference, NASA has images of earth over the last 40 years for public access, and it's not hard to see the changes.
Take a look at his books: Defying Limits, and a series of four for kids that sound really fun (To Burp or Not to Burp).
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| Trying on a spacesuit, a little big |
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| Our solar system |
So thanks to Dr. Williams tonight for an inspiring talk and an autograph for a teen he inspired to believe that nothing is impossible, take care of the planet, and don't give up when others discourage you. Try again, dream big, and reach for the stars!
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
DECLUTTERING IN FOUR BOXES
Here is the basic idea.
Take everything, and without getting involved in your stuff, put in one of these four containers/boxes/spaces on the floor:
1. Trash/recycling
2. Give away/sell
3. Storage (elsewhere than in your space)
4. Put away
I am actually pretty great at this, but where it falls down is getting to the put away stage, which takes a LOT more time.
In parallel threads:
Four boxes of liberty, to use in order!
1. Soapbox
2. Ballot box
3. Jury box
4. Ammo box
Four secrets to organizing information in your brain:
1. Don't focus on the detail
2. Chunk it down (group, like between hyphens in a phone number, or four digits of a credit card)
3. Don't forget the power of story (my favorite method. Think of the mind palace mnemonic)
4. Find a single word for each thought. This is tough for me, but essential to great clinical decision making.
CHERPUMPLE
Maybe it was because of a New Year's eve skit when two "hipster chefs" attempt in vain to stuff a beaver into a turkey into a moose (with a sprinkle of "KD dust"), but when I stumpled upon Merriam Webster's word "Cherpumple", with it's outrageous photo of a perfectly executed example, I need to blog the thread.
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| From Copy Me That |
In the spirit of Lewis Carol, who gave us the strange stories of Alice in Wonderland, and Through the Looking glass, concocting great combined words and referred to these words as "portmanteau" from the mouth of his character Humpty Dumpty. He also gave us such winners as "chortle" (chuckle and snort). These food examples follow a proud lineage of two meanings crammed together in one word.
I particularly like this list, with more authors that have originated terms we use everyday. I figured Dr. Seuss must have invented a few, but didn't know we have him to thank for the term "nerd"! Here are 86 others for fun. Wikipedia has a large collection also.
If that's not enough, you can even use an online generator to fuse your favorite words together and even make your love one's name partner with yours! Brangelina may be no longer, but the portmanteau lives on!
ON THE SEVENTH DAY OF CHRISTMAS
For years, I have tried to set a resolution and do them daily. It always failed.
Now, I have learned of the "Tarzan method", which better suits a lifestyle like mine with an irregular schedule. Instead of doing the impossible daily chain, you start today (I hope you have the day off, but if you don't choose the next free day you have), and then, like Tarzan, you plan for your next day like he looked for his next vine to swing to. This way, you never stop moving forward, but you also won't fall off the vine immediately.
I like this with friends I see infrequently. We are always planning our next outing when the current one is underway or just finishing. That way a year doesn't go by before the next communion!
Monday, December 31, 2018
Sunday, December 30, 2018
ENCOURAGING WORDS FROM OTHERS WHO LOVE ME
You have a gift for writing. Your delight in making, displaying and enjoying food is palpable.
Is there life after divorce? The woman I remember was a fun, beautiful, energetic woman. I have
faith in her.
I have a different memory of our time together. You were definitely the teacher. I learned a lot
from you, how to laugh, how to care. I hold my time talking along the trails in Saskatoon, slicing up preserved flesh under your scrutiny, and the early visits with you in Montreal as some of the highlights of my younger life.
You are an amazing person.
PP has a pretty amazing mom.
Thx for a lovely day! Food, presentation, conversations, service and your pretty face all adding up to a great tea time, totally enjoyed it!
You blessed me with your words! You have encouraged me and reminded me of what I treasure most. :)
I also have taken time as I have been waiting to go over the memories we have made together in the last few years. We live apart but the distance is nothing when we connect by text, phone or in person. I have been blessed to have you as a friend through so many years and changes and times of growth we each have had.
Breath by breath be blessed my friend. đŸ’—
















































