June 29, 2011

Albert Camus

I'm sharing some Albert Camus quotes today. He was a French philosopher, and the more I read of his words, the more I think about the world and the smarter I think he was.
Sometimes I really feel like the soul of a blog and the purpose of writing one is all about telling stories, which I don't get to do all the time here. I worry too much about what people will/won't want to read. That's probably stupid, and I probably shouldn't care. If I started a blog to write, I should write...right?

I mean, the interesting thing about online journals is that they can be unfiltered, there's no need to edit them or restrain them. You show as much or as little of yourself as you want. The result is a fairly pure perspective of someone's world and their feelings. How they wish to be seen by the rest of the world. Wishes fulfilled.

Sometimes I feel a lot like content suffers here for the sake of 'blogger commercialism', trying to appeal to the masses. So to remedy this, I'm going to try and update with anecdotes or other written pieces just as I post about outfits or DIY projects as much as I can manage. Just thinking aloud. Anyway, here's a little Camus for you:


"In the depth of winter I finally learned that there was in me an invincible summer."

"Nobody realizes that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal."

"You will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will never live if you are looking for the meaning of life."

"Beauty is unbearable, drives us to despair, offering us for a minute the glimpse of an eternity that we should like to stretch out over the whole of time."

June 28, 2011

GOING STREAKING

I went and saw Super 8 last night with my friend Tyler. It was not mind blowing, but VERY entertaining and well conceived. The movie itself is about a bunch of kids shooting a movie in the summer of 1979. They witness a catastrophic train accident that unleashes an unknown terror on their town. While all these crazy events are happening they're trying to shoot their film and deal with each other and their parents, plus solve the mystery of what happened on then night of the wreck. I loves me some good old fashioned period piece mystery flicks, and J.J. Abrams is a great writer/director.

Watching the kids in the movie try to piece together their independent film project lit something up in me. I remember being like them in high school, throwing together HILARIOUSLY BAD films with my friends. The scripts were bad and the acting was worse, but we worked hard and we enjoyed ourselves like nobody's business. It was a total blast. I remembered filmmaking before it got complicated by everything. Inciting incidents, crossing the axis, lighting, casting. It was like hitting refresh. Now I want to write a script without worrying about how bad or good it is. I just want to go crazy and write SOMETHING... even if it's silly. Especially if it's silly. ANYWAY.

You know what else I used to do in high school? Dye my hair crazy colours. This included a fire engine red phase, a purple/pink phase, and a bleach blonde phase. Well kids, I'm bringin' it back!

I've been jonesing for a little aesthetic change as of late, so I enlisted Rebekah to help me set about injecting a little colour into my palette. (A big thanks to her for basically doing all the hard work while I sat there and laughed at Batman & Robin.) SO, this is a mini tutorial about streaking-- with your hair that is. (If you want one for the other kind: get naked and run around in public. Now try not to get caught and arrested. Your mother will hear about it or see it on the news.)

It's not step by step because I know you're smart enough to read instructions on the boxes of stuff you buy.

THINGS YOU WILL NEED
1 hair bleaching kit. (I used Manic Panic Flash Lightning!)
1 bottle of eccentric hair colour
1 shower cap (Note: the Flash Lightning kit comes with one, plus one pair of gloves, as well as a tint brush.)
2 pairs disposable rubber gloves
1 comb you don't mind getting messy

Also,
tin foil
clothes you also don't mind getting messy.
bobby pins

PHASE ONE: BLEACHING
Pick the section of your hair you want to streak and brush and pin the rest of your hair away from it. Far, far away...like...the other side of your head. I picked a section underneath, just behind my ear and we went to work. Follow the instructions on the bleaching kit, basically. I'll leave that to the experts.

HINTS
• DON'T be shy getting at the roots, it's important to get them! If it makes your skin itch a little, it's doing it's job properly. If it's BURNING UNNATURALLY, you should STOP IMMEDIATELY, like it's hammertime.

• Keep the gloves from the application handy so you can check the progress without getting any of the bleach on your fingers.

• Check the progress of the bleach under the foil every 20 minutes or so. It took me about an hour to go from my brunette hair to what we thought would be a suitable dye shade of blonde....

PHASE TWO: COLOURING
The nice thing about semi-permanent hair dyes is that they aren't as chemically harsh, so they're less intimidating and kinder to your hair after bleach charges in and takes no prisoners. HOWEVER, they'll stain quickly. Translation: Gloves are a must. Unless walking around with red/blue/green/purple/pink muppet hands is your thing.

We used Beyond the Zone: Raspberry Kamikaze.

HINTS

• Use a comb to make sure the colour gets all the way through and the entire section of hair is saturated.

• Introducing heat to the colour will make it sink deeper. Do this with a hair dryer, then let it sit for as long as the bottle tells you. I only had this in for about 10 minutes, out of a recommended 20. When I get around to recolouring it, I'll leave it in longer.

• Before applying the colour, get some vaseline or some oil based lotion to put on your skin near the hairline site of the dye. It'll just wipe right off without staining.

After that, it's simple. Rinse, dry and BAM.
FIERCE.

Have you seen Super 8? What are YOUR adventures in hair colour comprised of, if any?

June 23, 2011

21

It was my birthday on Tuesday! I had an excellent but low key birthday DAY. Rebekah and a friend of ours went out to Chez Cora's for brunch. Then my sisters and I made chocolate cupcakes filled with marshmallow cream, using a recipe from my dessert homegirl Martha Stewart.

Then after that, we all got ready and headed out to one of my favourite local restaurants to celebrate in style. I'm just gonna say there was chèvre (goat cheese), risotto, and a little sangria by way of celebration. At the end of the meal instead of bringing a huge cake or sundae like other restaurants, they brought out a miniature creme brulée. I'd never had it before (somehow) but it was AMAZING. AMAAAAZING. My yoga and 10K training were out the window as I found true love with caramelized sugar and smooth vanilla filling.

At home we sipped champagne (champagne birthday 21 on the 21st!) and I got to open my gifts. I got some workout gear, some yoga classes, some pieces from Forever 21 & H&M and some bling bling! Then we lit the candles and I made the twenty-first birthday wish I've ever made. I can't tell you what it is though...;D

June 19, 2011

5K AWAY!

Today I ran my first road race EVER. I woke up at 7AM to eat a decent breakfast and get ready. Then my mom, my sisters and I headed off to the stadium, to kick our collective butts and to see if we were made of tougher stuff. (Where was my dad in all of this you ask? It's Father's Day! Dad went off golfing instead. He's a golfer, not a runner so it's a perfect arrangement.)

The world of racing was new to me so I just tried to think of a regular run but it didn't keep me from getting nervous. I looked at all the chiseled, hard core runners around me and I thought, gord dermitt, what've I gotten myself into? These people had athlete written ALL OVER them and I....well.... let's say at least I was trying.
My sister Jill snapped this picture of my mom and my little sister Kacy just before the race started. Note the shirt collar tug- oh, nerves!

The run was hard. I couldn't run the whole thing, so I opted to walk for a little every now and again. My body isn't used to all the hard work yet... even though I've been working out for almost two months now, it takes years of dedication to become a great runner. So I guess this is a good starting place! I've only practiced the 5K two or three times before today, because I wasn't sure I would be here for race day.
This is a picture Jill snapped. She finished up 6 or 7 minutes before me so she saw me walk into the stadium and then proceed to plough the track to the finish. Action shot! (Note: The song I'm listening to in this picture is Pain by Jimmy Eat World. Appropriate since by now my lungs and legs were aching.)
It turns out that I beat my personal time by 3 minutes or so! We're still waiting for official chip times to be posted online, so that's approximate... But I was pretty proud of myself for cutting those off. And now I'm only going to get faster. I'm determined... and I think I'm hooked. I'm already eager to run another one!

Oooh, a participant medal!

June 16, 2011

Countdown

Lately even though I feel like I haven't been doing much, there seems to be lots of different stuff going on in the near future, which will surely turn into blogs. For now, we're going to have to sit and wait for them to all unfold. Welcome to the FINAL COUNTDOWN post. [Insert Will Arnett dancing here.]

Waterloo 5K Classic Race: 2 days
Did I mention I'm running a 5 kilometer race on Sunday? Well here it is: I'm running (or trying to) a 5K race this Sunday! As part of my new fitness routine, I've signed myself up for it. My sisters and my mom have also signed up, so we're all in it together. This is the first road race I've ever run, EVER, so I'm hoping it's going to be good... Of course by good I mean that I finish with a reasonable time for myself, I don't fall down, burst into tears or puke anywhere... and I'd still like to enjoy the whole thing because I'm thinking about running a 10K in October.

My 21st Birthday: 4 days
I love clip art so much!
It's my champagne birthday (turning 21 on the 21st!) in four days! I don't really have any big plans, but I'm hoping whichever ones I do have involve cake and dancing.

New Tattoo: 8 days
On the 25th, I'm getting my 3rd tattoo done. I won't say what it is because I'm definitely going to take pictures and write a post about it, but I will say I am PUMPED about it! P.S. The picture is a hint, definitely.

PRIDE: 16 days
JULY 3rd is the PRIDE PARADE in Toronto! This year, instead of just watching, I'm volunteering at one of the Human Rights booths, informing people about rights (and violations of them) for homosexuals in countries around the world, and at home. Lots of my friends are big supporters of the movement so it's going to be a big colourful party!

June 15, 2011

Graduation Daze

Dear Media Arts,
Sometime between my first day and my graduation ceremony, I thought you were never going to end. I wasn't happy about this. I thought you were going to drag on, while I waited to get all my grades and pay my dues. You were this limbo of late nights that became early, scrambles for equipment, and memorizing acronyms for business class. Endless. Day in and day out. Good god, I thought, we’re not getting out alive.


Now, on the day my classmates and I officially become alumni and walk onto the huge production that is life after college, I realize my true feelings. I love you. Even if you can be the biggest bitch I’ve met in my whole life, I love you. A lot.


I love you because of the collection of people you’ve brought to me. This family I’ve become a member of without trying, an eclectic mosaic of visionaries, music makers, comedians, freaks, geeks, lovers, and haters. A clan of wild children, day and night looking for ways to tell their stories. These people who tap into every sense they have to experience the world around them. These people who love what they do so much they put endless tears, sweat and time into it. Thank you for each and every one of them. Not just the ones who I call my close friends, but the ones I call by first and last name, the ones I know by reputation or by iconic hats. Thank you for not just fellow students, but teachers who became mentors who became friends. Subjects who became ideas, who became people, who became the best bear hugs I’ve ever had. Thank you for you my first real love.

I love you for pushing me to the edge of my sanity. For challenging me to go above and beyond what I thought was possible and reasonable. I learned to look at something that might be pretty good, and then to carry it even further. Pretty good was just not good enough for you. I love you for looking at the script that was my life, taking out your red pen and giving me a major rewrite. You gave me challenges to over come, and it was either fight back and succeed or bail and resign myself to the fact that I quit. Whether it was directing a short film or falling out of a tree in Texas, I never stopped trying. I'd get up and go again. I saw our relationship through all the way to the end. I grew.

I love you for being you. While my friends were stressing about 20 page essays, I was writing stories about Jack the Ripper. They were listening to music, but I was mixing it. They had class, I was out on film shoots in the big wide world. They suffered through midterms, and I suffered through Wavelength. Thank you for being the mixed bag that allowed me and my fellow students to find their niche.

In fact, Media Arts, the only thing I don’t love about you is the fact that you’re officially over. Now you belong to someone else. You were difficult, but anything worth having is not easily attained. You may have been hard, but you were mine. Now you’re off to seduce younger minds, newest victims, who will also take you for granted. What I don’t love is that you took up my whole life, and now you’ve left me with big dreams, and the skills to achieve them, but not a hand to hold. Not a stable schedule. Come September, I won’t be seeing you again. I’ll miss you, but I'll never forget you.


-Riley


[I wrote this last Thursday, but I'm only posting it now.]

June 08, 2011

Ballad Of The [Girl] In The Red Shoes

Ten years is a long time. If a wine is ten years old, it's usually considered to be great wine. If a kid is ten years old, they'll never be single digits ever again. If a friendship is ten years and going strong, there's a good chance you've got a friend for life. Yesterday I had the pleasure of seeing my good friend Rebekah of Eden A La Mode graduate from college. We've been friends since the sixth grade, which is about half of our natural lives at this point in time. We went from little girls talking about Lord of the Rings to twenty somethings talking about dreams of living in Montreal, life, love, shoes and things-as-geeky-as-but-not-so-much-Lord-of-the-Rings.

As it happens, her parents are on vacation in the Bahamas right now. When she asked me if I would like to go in one of their places, I was immediately on board. After negotiating for the car we drove out of town and headed for the future. (Mmm, cheesy.) I've never been to a real graduation before Tuesday. I didn't go to my high school one, so it was cool to experience it first hand... You know...before mine...which is tomorrow.

I was proud to be a witness to this once in a lifetime event, the day my best friend left her college days behind her and got to wear an itchy blue robe to celebrate it. I was also very much like a parent, beaming from ear to ear when she accepted her diploma and graduated WITH honours. Then I went back to being a frantic best friend and cheered and screamed like it was my full time job.
We call it the graduate face.
Even though it was Bek's big day and moment, we also managed to snap a few outfit pictures while we were waiting for post-convocation dinner plans to take shape. She was kind enough to take hold charge of the position of photographer, and snapped some good shots despite the fact that I'm awkward and suffer from behin hyper aware when I'm in front of the camera. (Thanks bebe!)
Dress: BCBG Outlet
Necklace, Bracelet and Tights: Forever 21
Bag: Stolen from my mama
Shoes: Local shoe store

Give me my red shoes, I wanna dance!

June 05, 2011

Hot Hot Heat


Before Saturday, I'd never done yoga, and I'd really never done hot yoga. So when big sister Jill woke me up with an invite to try a class with her and her boyfriend Steve, it seemed like an innocent, ambitious change to my fitness routine. I was on the 7th day of a workout binge and the gym seemed about as interesting as blah flavoured oatmeal. So I threw on some workout clothes, grabbed a bottle of water and we headed out to face our destiny. (You think I'm being overdramatic here, but I'm really, REALLY not.)

We arrived at Jill's usual Moksha studio to find it under renovation. This would have been the end if not for a high strung yoga junkie who rolled up in a white car and with a neurotic snap of her cell phone, had her husband googling the schedules and addresses of other studios nearby within minutes. She told us about a Bikram studio nearby, but said she didn't go there often because you weren't allowed to wear green and they kept the room hotter. (At this point, not for the last time that day, I wondered what the hell we were walking into.) We decided to check out the Bikram place; but it turned out they didn't have a class until 4, so we had hours to kill.

We returned home to eat and rest up. Killing time, I checked out the website for the studio, which said things like: "Bring a positive mental attitude and sense of adventure." And if that wasn't enough, it also promised "...you’ll laugh, cry, moan, groan, [and] sweat...” And I thought, how cheesy. Then the website said not to eat 2-3 hours before coming, because you might feel nauseous. My second pang of worry struck. The website was also how I learned that ALL Bikram classes were 90 minutes in length. Jill usually attends 60 minute classes, and avoids 90 minute classes out of a sense of sanity, so I decided to keep this information to myself. I was curious to experience my first yoga class and I wasn't letting something like an extra 30 minutes in 105 degree heat put me off.

When we finally found ourselves in the line to sign up. It was 15$ for one class, but 30$ for a beginner's pass, unlimited class for two weeks. I figured even if it sucked, the benefits and the challenge were tantalizing. So with that, goodbye, money. People lingered in the reception area in various states of minimalist workout clothing.
We picked up our mats and walked into the studio. It was filled with people lying on mats all over the floor. It was dead silent. Oh yeah, and did I mention it was HOT? We were stepping into a sauna on the sun. The air was thick, a humid, summer day without any wind. The kind of hot where you sweat by doing nothing. If the heat had been a celebrity, it would have been the product of a threesome between Rihanna, Scarlett Johansson and Brad Pitt.

I laid down flat on my mat to wait, and it wasn't so bad. Wouldn't it be cool, I thought, if I actually had some super immunity to heat and the class was a breeze? Still and warm, this seemed possible. That's when the instructor came in. Apparently the only rules were to try and stay in the room the whole time, and to lay down if you felt dizzy. Uh oh. Then she said we were going to start with a breathing exercise, laced her fingers beneath her chin and took a deep breath that made her sound like she was sucking the soul out of a small orphan. (Poor little Timmy!) The deepest breath you've ever taken in your whole life. Soon the whole class joined in, and it was a terrifying orchestra of wraiths. I heard a whole orphanage of poor, wounded children having their souls hoovered clean out of them.

After this, came the poses. We began transforming our bodies from bone and muscle into toothpicks and rubber bands. Suddenly my arms and legs were a Rubiks cube that I could not for the life of me figure out how to solve. I was a pretzel, twisting. A puzzle, not sure what was supposed to lock in where. I was an extra hard bonus question at the end of the test.
It was both mentally and physically trying. There was no music to pull you out of the moment, and the 40 degree heat forced you to have the concentration you couldn't ask of 100% orange juice. You had mentally direct your body into the pose, hold it with your muscles, and meanwhile, be hyperaware of each and every drop of sweat literally pouring out of you, sliding down your skin and pooling in a tiny ocean at your feet. The pounding of my heart swallowed my entire head whole. I forgot to breath.

Over the 90 minutes I went through a couple of stages:
• At first I was fine.
• I began to feel like a baked potato, wrapped in foil, easy to pierce, probably capable of melting butter on my skin.
• I was amazed at how by body was capable of stretching and folding in the heat. I was a psychedelic lawn chair.
• I distinctly remember a moment where I thought I was going to break down and cry. I didn't know if yoga had hit a soft spot or I had just lost hope of ever seeing the light of day again. I kept it all together, but that feeling of vulnerability was a cocktail of anxiety and panic.
• Just after the instructor told us we have 40 minutes left, some part of me began to come to terms with my own mortality. Everyone else seemed to be in the same state.

When I looked into the mirrors on the wall, the red faces of my comrades were stony and serious, glistening with a lacquer of sheer-goddamn-strength of will. Jill's eyes were glazed over and black, like a doll's eyes, having just committed murder. Steve's face said he was about to take on his own death in a showdown at high noon. Then I met my own stare the mirror. I was smirking. Smirking. Maybe I was refusing to let Bikram break me, or I had tapped the inner echelons of my own madness, but whatever it was, whoever it was in that mirror happened to be a shiny, frightening stranger. Someone more powerful, more dangerous than me. Someone armed with either a lot of firepower or rabies. I was Tyler freaking Durden.

We were so sweaty it looked like we had showered. I had to close my eyes because sweat was pouring into them. I could taste the salt in my sweat when I opened my mouth to breath, and Jill noted later, that her fingers had gone prune-y, like she had taken a long hot bath. In way, we sort of had. A long hot soak in our own sweat and a tub of WHY DO PEOPLE DO THIS? But, at the end of it all, we walked out of the studio, I realized the answer to that question.

I felt light as a feather, like I wasn't walking but gliding instead. It was like suddenly I was graceful. The air was cool and fresh. Every breath I took felt like a gift. Life was a waking dream. I felt strong, powerful and accomplished and once again, mentally stable. There was not a drop of anxiety in my whole body. It all made sense. I was a Simon and Garfunkel ballad if it woke up from a nap and was still sleepy. Then, at the same time I felt as though I was a deer, powerful and ready to trample the guys who shot Bambi's mom. I think it's on that weird cocktail of feelings that people become physically hooked. I can understand it completely. In fact, I'm going again tomorrow...and I'm getting up EARLY to do it. In the words of Chuck Palahniuk: "It's only after we lose everything that we're free to do anything."

And in the words of me: "Bikram yoga: go for the workout, stay for the chance to face your own death."

Inquiring minds want to know: have you tried hot yoga? What did you think of it? If you haven't, would you ever?

June 01, 2011

Norma Jean

I feel as though I might have plenty to write about, but not the energy to do it! (How I can be so wiped and unemployed is a mystery.) Between job hunting, writing, working out and other things, I guess I might be able to try and justify it. Either way, I thought today deserved a small post. It's National Running Day, but also Marilyn Monroe's birthday. Had she been alive, she would have been 85, and still radiant, I'm sure.

Instead of going for a run (sorry, running) I ended up going to zumba class, and rocking my curves instead. You know who was famous for hers? You got it, kiddies.
(Source.)

As you might have drawn from James Dean on the right side bar, I have a thing about old Hollywood. I love how classy and glamorous and genuinely talented everyone was. Everyone was a triple threat, with that flawless silver screen glow. I love so many things about it, except for the way it destroyed so many young, amazing, beautiful people.

In the words of Elton John:
I would have liked to have known you
But I was just a kid
Your candle burned out long before
Your legend ever did.