Saturday, 30 June 2018

Shine a Light


Ah, a season of milestones have come and gone. My oldest daughter graduated from Dalhousie and my youngest graduated from high school. Both of them have many years ahead of them to hit the books in pursuit of higher education, but today serves as a chance to look around and take in the show. Proud and reflective are the two emotions running through the noise of the day. And looking to tomorrow.

Facebook posts abound with friends and family celebrating the same things in their worlds, the spring right of passage as we move through the seasons and our lives. Watching our kids and the kids of our loved ones grow up right before our eyes. What will tomorrow bring?

The Light That Failed is the title of a book by Kipling that I have never read so this won't be a book review, sorry to disappoint. I bring it up because I am a fan of elegant verse that can mean so much to so many, and this one title has been knocking around for a little while in my melon head. I'm not sure why but I suspect that the words strike somewhere deep for me.

As parents most would agree our biggest fears revolve around our kids safety and happiness. Nurture and nature come to the fore ground as we wish "success" for our babies. What that success looks like is less about stuff and more about the heart. Life is messy at the best of times but if we spend a little time ensuring our hearts are taken care of then those messy bits will, hopefully, be more manageable, not as over bearing as they can sometimes be.

I wonder what the future holds for my three little birds not only in a personal way for them but in the greater world at large. Sometimes it does feel like we are at a cross roads of sorts lately. The orange idiot is doing more harm then most of us could have foreseen and every new day something else happens to darken the horizon a bit with him and people like him at the reigns of power. I'm not going to get into a diatribe about all that now as there might be one or two minor posts about all that already and there may be one more or so in the future. This is about staying in the light.

We all have choices to make in our lives and my hope is that my kids and all of us around them are making choices that are beneficial for all of us, not just a few or for one alone. In this season of prom dresses and grad pictures there is always great hope mixed with terror at what tomorrow brings. For all of us. Taking either baby steps or grand leaps into the future one should know that the only thing that is certain is that the future is coming, the world is spinning on its axis and it ain't gonna stop.

I am both filled with hope and not a little bit of fear for what tomorrow brings. I'm not fearful for myself but for all of us together. But when I hear of the amazing things that people can accomplish, that humanity, sacrifice and love are still the norm I have to believe in the better angels to finally shut down the devils that seem to never sleep.  The good things are often drowned out and simply not broadcast as much because lets face it, if it bleeds it leads, which means we have to work harder and smarter to ensure that the light doesn't fail.

What will tomorrow bring? I don't know. My hope is for more love and laughter and a shift to a gentler version of the world. Fighting everyday to keep that light from failing because darkness is no place for anyone to live a life in.


Bonne chance mes amours
D




Monday, 18 June 2018

Dear Fuckheads 2.0


I feel like a little explosion of aimed vitriol is in order today. And you won't even need to guess at whom. Please excuse me while I lose my shit for a moment or two.

You orange fuck face! You douche canoe of the highest order. I don't even know where to start, what douchey thing matters the most? You, as dotard in chief, have muddied the world of just about everything that you aim your stupid fuck face at. Trade, immigration, international relations, the gun debate, the health and welfare of your people, truth, justice, sanity and everything in-between. You sir have managed to normalise and thus desensitise the world to your bat shit crazy proclamations, antics and twitter rants. By sucking the oxygen out of the world you have changed the environment. Between you and those laughable congressional sycophants "fucked up" doesn't go far enough in describing the world that is around you.

I suppose if you ask any of the the hundreds of families that have children locked up in converted Wal Mart's and quasi concentration camps they would definitely say that their plight needed the most attention. The image of a mural of Drumphs face, the American flag and the saying "sometimes by losing a battle you find a new way to win the war" in one of these facilities is simply chilling to me. "Arbeit Macht Frei" (work will set you free) at the entrance of Auschwitz comes to mind. Or the old Soviet posters from the cold war era proclaiming the glory of the state and triumph of the worker. How is this possible? How can a country founded on the principles contained within their constitution, strengthened by generations of welcoming the world and being a beacon of freedom turn into this fucking mess? When you use the bible to try and justify your actions you are no better, excuse me, you are exactly like the Taliban and their ilk.

If you ask nations that have been allies and trading partners to that train wreck of a country on our border then you would get a whole new set of answers when it comes to incomprehensible trade policies and foreign relations. Canada is a security risk now? Really? We burned down the white house? That stupid Cheeto actually stood there and said that trade wars were easy to win. I know, I can't help but laugh either. They are not you ignorant piece of shit, they cause collateral damage that is next to impossible to quantify and if I was a betting man somehow you and your pals will come out just fine. Instead you cosy up to the likes of Kim Jong Un, Rodrigo Duterte and your pen pal Putin while casting shadows on your traditional allies and strongest trading partners. You don't run foreign policy like a dry run of your insipid show The Apprentice you dumb ass.

Your constant lies and attacks on the free media are simply Hitler's regurgitated and extruded spam like shit. Your lies are making the world an uglier place and unfortunately for the half of your country that doesn't support you America is being dragged down further than anyone thought possible. How sad a commentary is it to say "God I miss W".

What really is the icing on the cake, or in this case the ring around the latrine is the way so called Republicans follow you blindly down that shit strewn garden path you have imagined. I can't fathom how anyone can look in the mirror and lock eyes with the reflection in front of them...shame on you all. If you actually believe and support the shit he spews then you are without a doubt an idiot and a racist. If you are going along because you want to bask in the reflected orange glow then you are simply a piece of shit. End of story.

I admit I have grown weary of the gas lighting and constant barrage of lies and more lies. The brain can take only so much of this. But then I remembered that what these twits want is for you to lose interest, shake your head in disbelief and change the channel. This way they can simply do more of the same without anyone paying to close attention. And I remember this quote from Edmund Burke:

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."

That is everyone. You, me and them. We let this fuck wad win again with his blithering band of supporters and he will be scraping the faces off of Mount Rushmore and replacing them with his head. How he plans to colour that monument is beyond me but you get the sense that he would do it and open up a golf course nearby serving the best chocolate cake ever.

No, I'm afraid we need to turn up the volume and speak the truth about all the ism's this ass hat represents. So join me in a resounding "Fuck Trump!!!"

Monday, 11 June 2018

Elegy for a Chef


When you grow up in an industry such as mine you don't often find role models and heroes
to emulate, sure we had cook books and recipes and history to look back on and learn from but not a lot of the inside scoop as it were. Our traditions were passed through stories about the good old days, every cook you came across would have their versions of the same stories you were living. Epic screw ups, tyrant chefs, idiotic co-workers and the constant hum of foolishness that runs through a younger persons world. Before the advent of the celebrity chef you simply didn't know, on a wide scale, what really went on behind those doors to the kitchen. Anthony Bourdain changed that.

He released Kitchen Confidential in 2000 or so and it spilled the guts on a world that I lived in, minus about 10 years and one incredibly large city as a backdrop. The book was an expression of honesty and debauchery that shined a light on a world that is hard to believe is real. There are chapters contained within that you could easily insert my life into as just about any other cook I know. The people we know and work with, the patrons, the owners and bosses and all the other players in an industry whose sole purpose is to do for others. Service, the good and the bad, is at the heart of it all. I recommend the read highly, Bourdain had a way with words that painted a picture that was both beautiful and raw, no illusions of grandeur or false sense of importance. It was ok that we simply cooked food, did our best to have fun while working in conditions that nobody would willingly want to go into and lived to tell about it. He was the enemy of pretension and froo froo in food and in people. He was authentic and imperfect and he will be missed.

The book not only laid bare the inner workings of the kitchen world but opened up his life to scrutiny. He was painfully honest about his addictions and demons, he struggled mightily to overcome the day to day battles, too often with chemical help. The fact that he was as honest as we was endeared him to many of us in the trenches and in some ways we took his victories as ours because we know how it really is to be surrounded by fire, raw meat and sharp knives. Along the way he shone a light not only on the world of restaurants but on humanity itself and this I fear is where we will miss him the most.

Through his seemingly dream like job of travelling and eating his way around the world he showed us the essence of humanity. As he pointed out we all have traditions around the simple and fundamental act of sharing food. As much as we are different we care for our children and have a need for community, dignity and love in much the same ways. He showed us this by being an honest broker of authentic life around the world. Tales from around the table over dishes both humble and extravagant are at the heart of his ability to connect us all together. This broken and imperfect man did more then tell you how to braise a lamb shank, at the very least he showed that it was more than ok to walk beside uncomfortable waters and experience the dark, because in the end that was the way to truly see and appreciate the light.

It's interesting to me that Scott introduced me to his book all those years ago because in many ways Scott and Bourdain are alike. Iggy Pop fans, off kilter anarchists and left leaning truth speakers, as hard as it may be to hear that truth sometimes. No reservations indeed.

Bourdain transitioned from crazy ass chef to world travelling conscience of the common man. Winning awards and walking the red carpet didn't take away from the fact that he wanted to bring everyday stories to us all, for in those stories he was sharing not only authentic food but authentic people with the rest of us. And saddened as we may be by his end, with questions and disbelief, I think we are better for having him here for a small part in our lives. His wit, his view and his humanity will be missed.

R.I.P. Chef

Saturday, 9 June 2018

The Dance of Love and Freedom


If you were to look through the multitude of posts I have written here you may come away with the notion that I am a cockeyed optimist and a not so secret hopeless romantic at heart. Well, you'd be right. My rantings about a multitude of things aside, the over arching message in the tapestry of my life, especially over the past 5 years or so, has been about being the way I am. Always.

Putting words here has been cathartic and enlightening, helping me to process the things I needed to process. In the same way putting myself out there in the dating world since my separation and divorce has been at times illuminating, invigorating, frustrating and to say the least interesting. I've learned things from every single relationship I have had and I have also learned that there is no one right way to do this, it simply is a case of putting yourself out there and waiting for the right person to walk in to your life.

And then it happened, seemingly out of nowhere I met her and the world became a different place. None of the "rules" I had come to know and expect were being followed. The heart decided and the mind followed closely behind, as "they" say, "when you know, you know". I knew, with very little doubt, that it would happen for me at some point. I always kept an optimistic outlook when it came to matters of the heart so when we met and we knew, it wasn't at all scary or shocking. What was shocking was the way it took hold. Almost instantaneously, as if we saw in each other exactly what we wanted and even more importantly we saw the other person whole.

So this is what it's supposed to feel like? Totally raw and exposed and yet without fear. The words to describe this sometimes do not do it justice but being utterly and completely in love sure goes a long way. Truly I am feeling blessed that she has come into my life, allowing me to be myself, both free and completely open. Everything I have said over the past few years here about living life out loud and without fear or regret is being played out in real time, for both of us. There is nothing we can't deal with as we journey together to whatever our future is. We do things for each other not to score points on some virtual tally sheet but because we want to. It brings us pleasure to do for the other. To know these things and to understand them is the essence of what I feel true love is.

Tammy my love, I get lost in your eyes and in your smile so much that I feel I might miss something if I look away. Your open and wide heart is full of a love that I didn't know existed and you have made me a better person simply by walking into my life that brisk March day. You have me completely and fully. Always.


Je t'aime Bella

Daniel


Thursday, 7 June 2018

RFK and The Little Pill


In the world of medicine there is something known as The Placebo Effect, essentially the mind is convinced that the pill or shot you just had will take away your pain. There is no active medicine that actually does so, as they are generally sugar pills, but your mind believes it to be true and acts accordingly, calming you and reducing your pain. On the face of it all this sounds like voodoo medicine but it has been proven that the mind can and will convince itself it is no longer in pain because it believes that the little pill is actually a very real pain killer. The effect won't cure you of cancer or reduce your cholesterol but it might take the edge off of that round of chemo. The brain, simply amazing.

While we are just scratching the surface of its capabilities, the mind has already shown itself to be a  powerful and amazing thing. An infinite capacity for greatness in many forms, one would need only to open their eyes to the wonders that have sprung forth from that grey matter between our ears. Art in a myriad of genres and scientific and technological discoveries that have sent men to the moon and injected tiny nano robots into our blood stream, truly a wonder to behold.

And no less deserving of our appreciation is the heart. Not our beating muscle deep in our chests but our humanity and compassion. The look of love as a mother holds her child to the love on full display between soul mates, this to me is the mortar for what our minds can construct. The yin and yang of our lives, the heart and mind.

Yet, despite all that we are often crippled with a world seemingly bent on destroying itself. Wars rage out of control confirming two facts only: 1) War is profitable and 2) The human body is no match for hot metal. The art of division based on just about anything seems to have grown more bold lately, as if they are emboldened by the actors around us that figure they can say and do as they please. The environment, depending on who you listen to, is on the verge of collapse with scant chance of redemption or already past the point of no return. We have garbage islands floating around the ocean, rising sea levels and "weather events" that inflict ever greater damage. Shit, there was video released a few weeks ago of a Budweiser can sitting at the bottom of the ocean in the deepest trench on earth. Can't even go in style, we are drinking Bud as the planet gets sick...ick!

But hark, what is that noise over yonder? Hope is gesticulating wildly in the corner. Look here, look here she pleads! What if we try this? Or maybe try that? Maybe if we do this we can stem that red tide? Our grey matter got us into this mess so one would hope our grey matter can help to get us out. Maybe we can take a lesson from the past and simply decide that this is the way we want to go? A path towards the light, towards love, towards one another. Maybe, almost certainly, the mind could use a helping hand from the heart. I believe that the heart is all too often forgotten in this equation. Oh that crazy heart! The struggle is real and the struggle is eternal but really, in the end, we have to get them, the brain and the heart, working together for the betterment of not only ourselves but for us all.

Today marks the 50th anniversary of the silencing of a progressive liberal lion in the making. RFK cut down in the prime of his life while looking to be subject to others. Warts and all, his dream was the one that was meant for all of us. He chose to walk on in life searching for the positive and working for a better tomorrow. What if he had lived? What if Martin Luther King had lived? Where would we be?

"Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance."

Robert Kennedy

Today was also the anniversary of D-Day. The beginning of the end for the Nazi's and the last time that a war of such magnitude was fought for "the right reason" if there ever was one. As a world we stood up to a genocidal bully and much was lost in the battle for freedom from tyranny. Abraham Lincoln had said, in the Gettysburg Address, that we owed a debt of honour to those that had given their last full measure of devotion and I can think of no better way to honour all those that had given theirs in WW2 to truly find a way to build a better world for all. Let slip ancient divisions and ideological entrenchments, throw off the yoke of ism's and let peace find a way.

It seems almost too easy to shut the door on the outside world and all of its ills, but that is when we need to get up off the mat and try even harder. We are our best hope for the future, no magic pill to do the work, nothing more than our hearts and minds coming together with others and doing what needs to be done. For a better tomorrow we just have to decide to do it, individually and together. No more and no less.

Ciao
D