Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The Sahel Situation

Here is something I hope you know about, but is not getting a lot of press in western media.

I do not have much commentary to add, only that there are at least two major intertwined stories one of hunger, and a second of a collapsing nation state. Other then that I'll let the news do the talking.

Location: Sahel (the orange strip)
More specifically: Mali, and surrounding area


April 13


May 5th


June 20



July 3rd
 

Now today, July 31, the first sharia killing took place. http://allafrica.com/stories/201207310128.html

Here at the UN the situation in the Sahel is very much on people's radar. NGOs are concerned with the worsening humanitarian crisis, both hunger and refugees/internally displaced persons. Nations are concerned about the development of a geographical location that will harbor "terrorists".  African nations are concerned about a further destabilization of the region.

So why talk about this? Information is the first step to action. Financial giving is directly correlated to how much media coverage a topic receives. If you feel compelled write to an MP. Let them know you are concerned, tell them people are watching the situation and their country's response.



Saturday, July 28, 2012

O Canada...


In light of the Olympics (wait, can I say that without being sued??), I thought I would show my Can-pride by posting my Top 5 Canadians.

5.  Michael Snow: The Everything-Artist.  I cannot help but hear his name now that cultured-me listens to CBC radio.  Also, his name even testifies to the land he lives in.  Plus, he went to Upper Canada College.  Seriously.  How much more Canadian can you get?
4.  Leonard Cohen: Hallelujah.  Need I say more? 
3.  Diana Krall: Making jazz even more beautiful with her sensual singing and articulate piano playing.  You go, girl (although I don’t really get the Elvis Costello thing…).
2.  David Suzuki: I have heard that it is a regular occurrence for Vancouverites to spot Mr. Suzuki (can I call you Dave?) on the bus around the city.  I have not yet had that pleasure and quite frankly feel a little ripped off.  I have much admiration for what he is doing to help educate us on how we all can live and make this world a more beautiful and sustainable place.  He’s also extremely adorable.



And the Ultimate Miss. Canada? 

1.  Margaret Atwood, of course.  There are countless reasons why Margaret Atwood is my favourite woman in the world.  These include the fact that she is a successful woman, an informed individual, a creative artist, and an intelligent thinker (all things I want to be when I grow up…).  Many people do not like her and I say that’s a crying shame (but then I would probably apologize afterwards).  My current recommendations for her are:
  • The Handmaid’s Tale (in fact, BBC radio has made an amazing dramatization of this on audiobook, that I highly recommend).
  •  Survival: A Thematic Guide to Canadian Literature – This is a fantastic survey of Canadian literature.


I know I missed other awesome Canadians (sorry, Celine) so post your homage to them in the comments section.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Missing the Point

If you haven't been following Christy Clark and her band-wagon style attempt at recovering her ever dwindling support in the polls, you should be. More often than not, political drama enthralls me; but this just irks me in a whole new way.

Recently, Clark and the BC Liberals announced 5 demands that must be meet before they consider giving the go ahead to Enbridge's infamous Northern Gateway Pipeline. If you're not from BC - or if you've been living under a rock for the past couple of years - the Northern Gateway Pipeline is a proposed pipeline that would carry bitumen oil from the Alberta tar sands to Kitimat BC. From Kitimat, it will then be loaded on to super tankers and shipped down BC's precious, fragile, and perilous coast. The pipeline has faced a great deal of opposition from BC residents for a number reasons: a fear of the pipeline bursting and destroying the world's largest intact temperate rainforest, increased tanker traffic along BC's coast and the ensuing damage to the precious ecosystems along the way, and increased development of the tar sands and the environmental and economic concerns surrounding that. Furthermore, a staggering number of First Nations communities along the pipeline's proposed route have stated their adamant opposition to the entire project- while pointing to their exclusion from talks between Enbridge and the Government.


While other political parties have come out and declared their support for or against Enbridge's pipeline, Clark has remained fairly quiet on the issue - that is until recently. As previously mentioned, the Liberals have announced 5 demands that must be meet before they approve this project. They include a full environmental review, a detailed plan for oil spill response, another detailed plan for oil spill prevention, a recognition of first nations legal rights and their inclusion in the economic benefits from the pipeline, and greater compensation to the BC Government for the economic and fiscal benefits Enbridge will receive.

Although I applaud our premier for finally taking a stance on an issue she's avoided for quite sometime now, I wonder if her demands go far enough. An environmental review is a great place to start, but doing an environmental review does not ensure that Enbridge and the BC Government will follow through with the recommendations of the review. Furthermore, having plans for oil spill recovery and prevention does not excuse the number of spills Enbridge is already responsible for. Even further - and despite conflicting reports - Enbridge claims to already have support from 60% of the First Nations communities along the pipeline's proposed route. All 60% have supposedly signed agreements with Enbridge. These claims go against what First Nations leaders have been stating in the media calling Enbridge's claim a sham.

There is one demand, however, that Christy Clark seems to be focusing on; Clark would like to see a bigger share of the profit - that will presumably flow from this pipeline - in the province's hands.
While BC is expected to receive $6.7 billion in revenue over 30 years, Clark argues that this is not enough compared to the $32 billion Alberta would receive and the $36 billion Ottawa would receive. The whole obsession on this point has sparked a political drama between BC's premier, Clark, and Alberta's premier, Alison Redford. Clark has gone as far as walking out of meetings at the gathering of premiers in Halifax, during the Council of the Federation.

Clark's tantrums and verbal spats are silly and ultimately a distraction. I would like to argue that no amount of fiscal compensation and no amount of emergency spill planning and preparation is enough to gamble with BC's wilderness and the lives of the people who live there. No amount of money is worth forgoing the rights and sovereignty of the First Nations people who inhabit the areas along the pipelines proposed route. We have the largest intact temperate rainforest, the Great Bear Rainforest, and one of the most beautiful coastlines that is home to such amazing sea life, including humpback whales and orcas. No amount of demands, no matter how high the standard, is worth gambling away these precious ecosystems.

I pray that you don't get distracted by such silly political dramas.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Joy is Returning

The absolute best parts of life this fortnight:
1) Growing sprouts in a mason jar on the kitchen counter.

2) Dancing for hours on end in the garage, my backyard, the kitchen, and to the beat of the office photocopier.

3) Making one of the best purchases of my life, a German-made mandolin slicer, for $2 at a thrift shop. Admire the fancy cuts. Today I made eggplant and zucchini chips using the finest slice.


4) Playing mom for a day caring for a 20 month old and spending time with one of my mom friends.

5) Receiving confirmation that Interfaith work will carry on in Abbotsford until December 2013.

6) Reading a feminist magazine from Portland.  

7) Sharing Turkish coffee with a new friend

8) Discussing the ethics of cross-cultural adoption and poverty reduction with colleagues and friends. 

9) Watching Delhi to Dublin preform live at the Fusion Festival.
 




Tuesday, July 24, 2012

So what exactly am I doing in New York?


So what exactly am I doing in New York?

Here is a brief answer:

I am working for the Mennonite Central Committee’s United Nations Liaison Office. In which there is the director, a program associate, and myself. Together we attempt to act as intermediaries between MCC’s personnel in the “field” and those creating the policies at the UN.

So what that looks like on a day-to-day basis?

For me it has looked like skimming about a hundred news articles a day, mainly focusing on Africa as well as the highlights from the rest of the world. Knowing the contexts, the relevant developing events, and the limitations of the countries/governments where MCC is working.

It also looks like skype calls with MCC personnel, getting updates on the local perspective.

It looks like working with  missions to the UN from various countries, and their Ambassadors; editing, critiquing, and advocating for changes in upcoming UN resolutions.

It looks like participating in a food-security working group, made up of representatives from other NGOs, which lobbies for agricultural practices that are environmentally sustainable, small scale, local market, enabling women, and productive.

It looks like attending briefings, hearing directly from Special Representatives to the Secretary General or Ambassadors from various countries. Getting the inside scoop on various world issues.

Highlights so far:

After a skype call with MCC Haiti, Kayon (the program associate) and I met with Ambassador Noel Sinclair of the Caribbean Community - Caricom. We discussed talking points he would bring to his evening dinner the next day. By the end of the meeting, he was taking seriously the integral human capital and knowledge that Caribbean countries could offer Haiti, which large western counties are unable to offer.

Sitting in an off-the-record meeting with the Ambassador France.

Two lunch briefing with the Special Representatives of the Secretary General - Burundi and Libya.

Beyond that, I have a few projects I am working on:

I am working on compiling a short paper that will be given to college students who are coming to visit MCC UN in October. The topic of this year’s conference is, “Where do we go from here? Refugees, Internally Displaced Persons, and Migrants”.

I also am editing, adding to, and fact checking a paper that will be presented in Winnipeg in October. It is on the how human rights, specifically the responsibility to protect, has become a new justification for war.

I am also writing an article for Global Scholarly Journal called, “A Mennonite Vision for Tolerance and Global Peace”. Global Scholarly Journal is a publication that focuses on the globalization of knowledge, bringing together eastern and western thought. It  is putting together a journal in honour of an Islamic Shia scholar, in which the essay I am working on will be a part.

Just for fun, here are three of my favourite New York songs.




Branding Police - Corporate Facism

As a follow up to my last post: Branding - this news item caught my eye...

Once you have created a brand and you have trademarked it and own it... You must now defend it and destroy all who would seek to infringe upon it for personal benefit.

The London 2012 Olympic committee has organized their own enforcement army, clothed in purple, which is in the midst of investigating, fining, prosecuting or intimidating into submission the likes of 81 year old grandmothers, local florists and butchers, long established English businesses have been forced to change their names or face fine up to $60 000.

French fries have been banned at over 800 retailers at the behest of McDonalds who hold exclusive rights.

The the imperial (based on their purple uniforms) international corporate olympic army and are not only attacking local business but are investigating the British 'Royal family'... Kate Middleton's parents business, an online retailer is selling unofficial olympic themed merchandise that has caused concern.

Here is the list of banned/controlled words/symbols:

The Olympic Symbol (the five interlocking rings)
The Olympic Motto (Citius Altius Fortius' / 'Faster Higher Stronger'
Olympic (s)
Olympiad (s)
Olympian (s)
The Paralympic Symbol (the three 'agitos')
The Paralympic Motto ('Spirit in Motion')
Paralympic (s)
Paralympiad (s)
Paralympian (s)
London
Games
Summer
Two thousand and twelve
2012
Twenty Twelve
Medals
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Sponsors

One clever owner has avoided prosecution and is being hailed as a hero for this clever work around:


The Olympics was once a celebration of human achievement, international peace and camaraderie... The games were reborn from ancient Greece, as an idea for social reform in Victorian Britain...

It has become the most blatant example of corporate harlotry and fascism: thus perfectly reflecting our narcissistic consumer culture. In perfect unity with the prevision of goodwill and clean sports to corporate profit, the mascots of the games are two giant one eyed monsters...

That's right penises.

Apparently that mascots charge 1000 British pounds to attend school events... but somehow marketing  these abominations for bachelorette parties seems more profitable.

Why the nearly bankrupt country of Greece has not sued the IOC for usurping their moral and historical ownership of the Olympics or at least the name Olympics is beyond me... If it is possible to own single words certainly Greece should have a claim on that one.

Woe to you daughters of England! For the language you birthed in your youth has been sold into slavery in Egypt, it has been exiled to whore in the palaces of Babylon and bleeds for the pleasure of Rome. As you find your tongue and your pen bound and silenced, only your sword will stand between you and the corporate apocalypse. 

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Blow your horn


What makes a great musician?  In my opinion, it is creativity – pushing the boundaries of the musical genre or even the instrument itself.  Oh, it also helps if they are Canadian.  Ok, so Colin Stetson was not born Canadian, but he is one on paper, having become a Canadian resident as a result of falling in love with a certain Sarah Neufeld (Vancouver-born violinist of Arcade Fire).  I can accept that – a Canadian in the name of love.
Stetson is a prodigy saxophonist and has found his success through playing with various artists such as Arcade Fire, Bon Iver, Feist, and has recently broken out as a solo artist in 2008 with his album entitled New History Warfare, Vol. 1 and a follow up in 2011 with New History Warfare, Vol 2: Judges.  Here is an example of Stetson’s solo work from his most recent album.  Some love it (myself included), others hate it. 
What say you?

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Branding...

I would be surprised if many of you upon reading the title of this post had visions of the burning of a cows flesh with a unique iron design in order to indicate ownership.

cattle brand
"to make a mark by charring" - and can be administered to wood, livestock or humans...

This original meaning is almost entirely lost in our modern hyper-corporate, advertising drenched, consumer capitalist culture.

It now means (basically exclusively):
the act of giving a company a particular design or symbol in order to advertise its products and services
Both a name, logo, and slogan are part of the "branding" process to create for a company a unique, recognizable and memorable identity.

Names, logos and slogans can be trademarked and owned.

Trademarking is a formal registration process which costs somewhere between 100-300 dollars and gives you exclusive rights to the trademark for 15 years at which time it is open for renewal for another 15 years etc.

So while there are legal aspects there is also practical ones. Regardless of legal trademarks choosing a name that is the same as another company is problematic and liable to cause confusion. However, as the internet shrinks our world, the amount of other companies that one is competing with for online recognition expands.

Naming things is a very human activity. Both knowing names and giving names.
Naming the animals was the task Adam was given by God in Genesis 2

I like naming things. Coming up with a name for a band or website or piece of art is one of my favourite parts.
Coming up with funny baby names is fantastic!
I feel awful when I forget people's names...

Often people use their own name in creating a brand:
Real Estate Agents, Actors, Directors, Photographers, Artists, Contractors...
Your name has the advantage of, most of the time, already being unique.
I have often put the title "a Duncan Ris film" at the beginning of my video projects

As I am slowly and hesitantly embarking on creating my own small production company, I have the exciting task of picking a name...

The production company name I used in high school was "Shoe Nazi Productions" - a double reference to Seinfeld's "soup nazi" and a prank my cabin, at Charis Camp, pulled involving stealing everyone's shoes...
Other names I have used have been:
Endurance TV
Broken Laughter

and most recently: Camosun

Camosun Productions. (Its too bad I don't have a website yet I could add a link here)

I live near Camosun street and Camosun Bog.
“Camosun”, a local Lekwungen (Songhees) First Nation name meaning “where different waters meet and are transformed.”
This idea of gathering and transformation captures much of my hope and vision of the power of film and television.
Choosing the name Camosun is also a way in which I was trying to embrace my locality.

Am I stealing and repurposing First Nations culture? I don't think so. Although I welcome First Nations input on the matter. I am trying integrate myself into the land and people I find myself in...

However this leads me to another point: Is there something inherently problematic with the idea and reality of branding. The coopting of language for the purpose sales...

Is there something in that process that drains meaning out of the very words we are using/stealing?
"Marketing is essentially feeding the poop back to diners fast enough to them think they're still getting real food. Its not creation, really, but theft, and no one ever feels good about stealing." - Generation X, Douglas Coupland
Do I want to be a brand? If I become a brand do I become less of a person? How do I navigate and separate my work and my identity well? How does using my name as a brand impact this already challenging task?

Also while I really like the name Camosun Productions for a variety of reasons. I am concerned that it is too close to Camosun College. And while using my name would be simple, I don't want to do that either.

As I tried to think up other names, checking them with 'Our Lord and Saviour' Google, I found that most of my ideas are already taken including "Big Tree Productions," which I thought was one of the less obvious ones.

So here is my list:

ALREADY TAKEN:
Endurance Productions – (USA/Korea)
    - This is a reference to Disce Pati - Learn to Endure, which I have branded on my wrist as a tattoo.
Grey Sky Productions – (New Jersey)
    - Whose skies are greyer? Vancouver or New Jersey?
Meaningless Productions – (youtube)
    - Ecclesiastes baby! oh well... its also kinda negative... especially if I want to shoot wedding videos.
Sound and Fury Productions – (somewhere)
    - Macbeth reference via Slings and Arrows
Dunbar Productions – (here)
Big Tree Productions - (somewhere)
Why Not Productions – (France)
Typewriter Productions - (USA)

KINDA ALREADY TAKEN:
Stump Productions Greg Stump Productions exists and dominates Google
Applehill ProductionsApple Hill Productions Inc. exists with a bad website... (New Brunswick)
    - The street I grew up on...
Sleepy Tree ProductionsSleeping Tree Productions exists in San Francisco
    - There is a tree that is lying down in a park near Lacarno. Its picture is currently at the beginning of Rise and Fall.
Camosun Productions – Possibly too close to Camosun College (Victoria)
14th Avenue Productions - 14th Street Productions already exists...

NOT TAKEN:
Broken Laughter Productions - This feels old... I have moved on.
Blue Sock Productions - I like this one but it's kind of weird...
Disce Pati Productions – Already part of my email and tattooed on my body and related to my name... BUT I don't like the way it sounds!
Baby Beard Productions - In desperation for the unique, the weird becomes more prominent (this might become a blog post). Also this is a reference to my first video in film school Candy.

OTHER:
Smoke, Mirrors and Cigarette Productions - Not great for weddings and I would need permission...

I am open to votes, thoughts, advice and ideas...

Three Paragraphs from the News

"Tehran is the main regional ally of Assad's regime, advocating dialogue between the government and opposition.

According to IRNA, Salehi called for "an immediate end ... to foreign interference and arms shipments ... to Syria and the support of some regional and international parties for terrorist action".

"The Islamic Republic of Iran condemns all violence and destructive action and believes that dialogue is the only solution to end the Syrian crisis," the minister said.

Meanwhile, the White House said Wednesday that President Bashar al-Assad was losing control of Syria, after a deadly attack on his inner circle, and that the United States was working urgently with international partners to push for a political transition there."


I thought they were very interesting. Who is advocating for dialogue, who is for arms, who is for violence? It once again made me ponder my ethnocentric perspective.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Where in the world…


 Am I?

This is the question I have continued to ask myself over the past few weeks. Not in some profound philosophical way (although that is always a good thing to question) but more so in a very physical sense. Many a blog might have been written about my journeys, but I have been pressed for time, so I find myself summarizing a few of the notable moments in these exploits.

It began a month ago. A weekend trip to Whistler, with a twofold purpose: one, to ride bikes; and two, to take my brother in for knee surgery. (The surgery went well, thanks for your mental concern). The bikes were also great, even though I needed a friend, Rabbit, at a shop to help me keep my noble steed running.

One moment, however, will stick with me far longer than the plethora of exciting and adrenaline producing moments the bike park offered. It occurred on the chairlift. I was regaling, to my brother, the story of the changes we were about to make to the blog. Whether he found them as exciting as I did, I am not sure. Nevertheless, he engaged me and we were in the full rundown of new authors, a new layout, and new sections. At about that time, I told a story about Greg challenging my peer group about jokes with misogynistic traits, specifically one of my favourites – “Stop being a little girl!” (I know sexist and ageist, I ought to be ashamed). As the story ended, the other person on the chairlift piped up (he had joined us from the singles line).

“What is your blog about?” Up until this point, I had not spoken of content. So, I proceeded to tell him about the blog’s content, how it originated, and some of the topics we had covered of late. He seemed genuinely interested, even though faith, politics, and justice are not common chairlift-ride conversations. He disclosed that he was American, beginning to question some things, think about others, and open himself up to new perspectives. He said he was genuinely ashamed of his country, the country that should stand for liberty, but now has no relation to the idea behind the word. So with that short conversation our chairlift-ride was over. But before he rode off for another lap of speed, turns, and multiple airs he made sure to get the name of the blog. He said he would like to read it, and as he rode off, I saw him repeating it repeatedly. Thus ended our interaction, but the event has stuck with me.

A week later. I am in Whiterock, hanging out with some friends and meeting new ones. Whiterock does not hold another tale, but it spawned a spontaneous trip to the Calgary Stampede. So before I knew it (well really it was almost two weeks later), four people piled into my little car and drove east. Friday night we left, Sunday we returned, and Saturday we Stampeded! We spent approximately three more hours in Calgary then we did on the road, but it was the road that left me pondering.

Leaving the west coast at 6pm on a summer evening, traveling through the night for 10-11 hours, places one at the edge of the Rocky Mountains for daybreak. With little or no sleep, we burst out of the burdensome mountains onto the great plain at dawn. As my eyes began to accept the newfound light, I bore witness to mists rising from the fields, steam wafting off ponds and sloughs, and the delicate light greens of early summer.  The windows kept the chill of the 5-degree air outside and the sky opened itself as a boundless dome. I was nearing home.

Big sky, it turns out, I really do miss it. The west coast certainly holds a piece of my heart, but nothing can wrangle the sky out of my soul. As I drove the last 100 km to my old stomping grounds I was left speechless, which I assume was appreciated by my dozing passengers. I found a new a sense of awe, a knowledge of finiteness, and the calming certainty that I am very small. These sensations elude me more often in the lower-mainland. The low-hung cloud repels upward gazes, and the valley strangles the spirit that roams. Often I find myself head down, closed in, consumed by my myopic self; resulting in a small world that moves from work to a huddled corner of my apartment. Alberta, and its big boundless sky, offered the freedom of space. The road finishes with a large hill, and as I drove up it, the gain in elevation sped up the rising of the sun, thereby showing all of sunrise in under two minutes – simply splendid.

West coast for a week, but the time was meant to pass. As I write this, I am in Manhattan, New York. What brings me here? Opportunity. What am I doing? Keep your eyes open for future blogs. How long am I here? Five weeks. First impression? I’m glad you asked.

This being my third time to New York I thought I knew what to expect, but circumstances and perspectives change. As I braved one of the two most uncomfortable times I will have (coming and going on the subway with suitcase in tow). I was floored by the sheer volume of people. People, more people, and even more people. What do they all do? Where do they all go? Once again, small city Abbotsford shields my eyes from the daily, insect like, movements of millions of people. We are a weird species: we congregate in hives, we transport our food and ourselves, visibly there is no order or hierarchy, and for the vast amount of time we coexist as isolated and non-communicative individuals. But under the seeming chaos, is a network of social systems, values, and contracts that allow such coexistence.

New York is large. The towers are tall. The people are many. It is here I find a common humanity. Though distracted by our modern-day, and incredibly impressive, ziggurats; our daunting and seemingly impenetrable systems of class; and our remarkable feats of dominance; one can glimpse the unmistakable wonder that is civilization. A contemplative posture yields a view of civilization grounded upon an incredibly connected and social creature. Homo-sapiens are quite something.

Un-expectantly personal, boundless transcendence, and dauntingly social. Three destinations, three experiences. Where in the world are you?


Monday, July 16, 2012

6 Weeks: Part 1

So it's time for me to break the ice and write my first post. Let me start out by referencing something my roommate said to me today. He kindly pointed out that in just over 6 weeks from now, I will no longer be his roommate.

I am extremely excited!

You see, in six weeks I'll be packing up my belongings and moving to a city that is unfamiliar to me in order to continue my pursuit of an undergraduate degree. I've enrolled at University of Victoria where I hope to finish my degree in Political Science while pursuing a minor in Social Justice Studies.

It's not that I won't miss this place. I agonize over the idea of leaving this city prematurely. I feel as though I've just come to a place where I can start calling Vancouver home. I have a lovely community here who continue to teach me so much about the world, I live in the best house with the most amazing people, and I feel as if I've only begun to explore this place that I call home. But man, is it ever exciting to leave.

I've been putting off school for far too long now. When I finished my spring semester at community college and got a job in fundraising, it was only supposed to last the summer. I'm now in my second summer at this job and although I love the clients I work for and the people I work with, I need out of this job. It alone has been the biggest stress of my life as I have moved up and down that corporate ladder disguised as a tree full of hippies and good ideals. Not to mention the fact that a 40 hour work weeks get monotonous, stale, and utterly exhausting. Maybe I'm in the wrong job but at least in school my entire schedule changes every four months and with each change comes a change in focus.

I'm also very excited for a fresh start. I've been through a lot over the past few years and each time my life is faced with crisis, I've felt the urge to leave and start over somewhere new. I've done this in the past, it's how I ended up in BC in the first place. A combination of stagnancy, heart break, and wanderlust drew me to the west coast and it was here that I discovered new adventures, friends, and a whole wealth of knowledge and understanding of myself. I feel as though I've come to that place again. Victoria will be a chance for me to start afresh, meet new people, experience new things, and discover a whole lot more about myself and the world I live in.

How is this not one of the most exciting moments of my life?

Part 2 comes soon.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Baby names...

My name is Duncan Ris (pronounced like kiss).

From a young age I discovered that certain names combine with my last name to create great hilarity and possible embarrassment if such person came into existence.

I had the opportunity to "help" a friend at the SFU radio station. I introduced myself on the radio as "Danger" because my full name would become Danger Ris. Awesome.

I also realized that it would be problematic to marry a girl named Tara. Her name would become:
Tara Ris.

Since Amy and I have been married nearly 5 years, we have discussed baby names on a variety of occasions. She was very disappointed to cross the name Mattias off of our list as it would become:

Matt Ris.

Amy: I know that it's a "thing" for some parents to name their children in the place they were conceived but I just thought that would be a little too far...

Other great names we have thought of are the following:

Greg Gary
Dexter
Misty
Addi
Kalama
Bonaventure
Polly Amour
Walter (shortened to Wal)
Jennifer (shortened to Jenn) 
Louis Richard (shortened to Lou Dick)
Kant (after Immanuel Kant)* Anka (after Paul Anka)
(*this has the added bonus of refuting my family's great thrill in telling my sister and I, as children, that "'can't' was dead" and therefore we could and had to do whatever it was they were requiring of us.)

Any additions to the list for possible review?
Favourites?

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

What do you want to be when you grow up?


Now that I've arrived at the end of an undergrad degree from UBC, I think I want to be a farmer.
I put together this 10-minute podcast for a final project in my last semester of university, explaining a bit about why I think being a farmer would be a good way to spend my time.
I hope you enjoy the story.



Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Happy Birthday!


A literal blank page is before me as I first typed this post on my typewriter.  A blank page is kind of a metaphor for where I am at in life, too, perhaps.  So, I turn to my "Pocket Muse" book which provides ideas for writing (or life??).  Today's suggestion?  "Write about finally giving in."  What about finally giving up?  I have been learning a lot about myself in the recent months and in a sense, I am giving up on a few things in my life.  I feel like the experience is like being birthed: disorienting, terrifying, but also liberating.  This birthing is propelling me forward into a new kind of life, really.  Perhaps it will also parallel a life of infancy (continuing with the birthing metaphor) - where I don't understand the language and I struggle to make my body move in ways that will actually get me places.  But slowly, surely, I will get my footing and, stumbling, I will learn to walk and talk with increasing confidence.
I am curious to hear your stories where you have felt like you were coming out of a tight place (I can keep on going with this one...) and emerging (hopefully successfully) into a new and exciting world.  Happy birthday to me and to you!

Monday, July 2, 2012

Video: Rise and Fall

I made this video by myself on Saturday. It is sort of a sequel to No Parking Fire Lane. I made it almost compulsively. It had to be made. I am happy with way it turned out. I am not entirely sure how I feel about posting it... but I am happy with the way it turned out. I watched a movie this morning called The Art of Getting By and in it the protagonist's art teacher gives the assignment to make something "honest and fearless" otherwise he would fail the class and not graduate. Anyway with such encouragement to be bold I place this video before you.


I am exploring ideas of seeing, repetition, futility, striving, exhaustion, failure... I also am trying to juxtapose both the linear and circular... Why do I get up to fall down? Why do I open my eyes to close them? Why do I run up the stairs to run down them? Why am I running? What am I working toward? How do I see my self? How do I see the world? How do others see me? Does my effort get me anywhere? How do I learn to be aware of where I am?

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Tolerance

I want to continue the tolerance tangent begun in “Pejorative Pagan Piss Off” a little further. I think it is a deeply important conversation. For pejorative usages of words become unimaginable slander without a worldview drenched in tolerance.

Responding to Greg’s comment: “I agree that over time people grow and mature but that doesn't necessarily mean that inherent in that growth is coming to the realization that your view is flawed (it might be), and I think you can still believe you believe something better and be tolerant.”

I think I disagree. I am not a fan of absolute statements, but I am about to make one here. I think that growing and maturing REQUIRES one to come to an understanding that one’s view is flawed. For it is when one critiques oneself, often with the help of others, that one is challenged to come to the end of dogma, and forced to realize one’s own epistemological fallibility.

I am not saying this will be a pleasant experience; often it is ripe with emotional turmoil. But when one comes to the end of self, it is there he/she is forced to meet the divine. Through complete deconstruction, one enters the void where he/she can no longer be the deity of his or her own universe.

Only once an individual has come to the realization that one’s own views are completely flawed, relative, and completely private/subjective; then one can re-enter the public sphere, speak convincingly, and interact with humility. It is then that one can tell persuasive stories, enact compassion and believe with force.

It is with a firm grasp of one’s flawed view that one can enter into tolerance and disagreement. One may still disagree with others, but rooted in the disagreement will be an understanding of one’s own lack of understanding of the “other” and the “other’s” views. As one cannot fully “posses” the other, one will never truly understand the other. It is this same inability to know another that draws people to love one another. For there is a longing to know and be know, but often the closer one gets to the “other” the more clearly he/she sees that he/she cannot ever fully know the other. 

Tolerance then stops being “you can’t tell me your right and I’m wrong” and instead becomes “we are both wrong! Lets talk, maybe we can come to a place that suits both of us”. It is in this change that we stop attempting to force others to become mini replicas of ourselves; rather two people/ideologies/beliefs have the opportunity of becoming something new. To use a metaphor: A coupling occurs; in essence, tolerance becomes “belief sex”. This coupling is a move away from ideological and belief replication (ideological masturbation).

If one is engaged in ideological sex with another (rather then attempting to create “mini mes”), the use of terms in a pejorative manner becomes unimaginable. What husband slanders his wife in a marriage bed? What wife character assassinates her husband, calling him “a lowly janitor” while coupling? Such actions surely would “break the mood”, if not destroy the relationship all together.

In this view of tolerance, one goes beyond the acceptance that other people are different from one; and moves toward a welcoming posture, an action that makes a move towards the other. A move not rooted in the hope of coercing the other to become like oneself, but a move made with the possibility of persuasion. The possibly, to be persuaded both ways: that one might be persuaded, as well as the other might be persuaded.

I think this form/understanding of tolerance emulates a God who is constantly pursuing humanity. A God who yields and asserts in relationship. A God who is both other and known.

The Best Of Year One

Silas:
As I began to think about what I would choose as the “best of” regarding the blog, I came back stumped. Not because there was not any worthy pieces, rather there were far too many blogs that I deeply enjoyed.

Reflecting on what has all been posted on this blog in the last year I am floored. The range of topic we tackled, the new and old ideas we laid out, the offensive, the funny, and the forgettable, it was all here. I have a hard time comprehending how we accomplished what we did, and I do not even want to know how many cumulative hours the tree of us have spent writing, reading, and commenting (what else could I have done with that time??? I guess I will never know).

Readers, you make us excited. I know we (the authors) all keep an eye on the statistics running in the background, it is thrilling and puzzling to know how many people are stopping by to read, yet not always knowing whom? I want to say thanks to all you reading this, for reading it. I am always surprised when someone I least expect comes up and “confesses” they read our blog. What a thrill! Also a specific thanks to some of the dedicated readers who continue to interact with us and the ideas posted here, either through comments or conversation. Though not always pleasant at the time, the discussion have been valuable. To get biblical “as iron sharpens iron…”.

Our Favourite Posts by Danielle:
Canada Needs Economic Reform Too
- I love the force of this post. Sharp and to the point. Silas.
Mustache Tattoo Video
- Fantastic! There was serious discussion regarding Danielle actually getting this tattoo. I think we had someone lined up to do it for free... But alas cooler heads prevailed. Duncan.
"Is Monogamy Making Us Miserable?"
- This was one of our first Sh!t disturbers. I remember it ruffling feathers, therefore it has to make my top three. Silas.
How Do You Share Your Faith with Others? 
- This, I thought, was a brilliant, ironic and interesting reflection on the way we think about evangelism. Duncan.
Pejorative Pagan Piss Off
- Rounds out the top three. I think I really like Danielle's more provocative posts. Challenging me to think about things from alternative angles. Silas.
- Again the combination of poignance and irony make this one of my favourite posts. Duncan.


Our Favourite Posts by Duncan:
Talking to Trees
- Part of my love for this was eaves dropping on Duncan while he imagined this, before it came into reality. The other part of my love for this was watching Duncan become more passionate about place and trees.  Silas.
What is the Gospel?
- What a fun journey of disagreement that was! Shaking the pot hard, and I am not sure we have yet settled down from that disturbance. Silas.
No Parking Fire Lane
- We had a good time making it. Duncan did a good job putting it together, and now it will last as our reminder Olam-eternal (such is the intertubes) of our unemployment.  Silas.
- This is one of my favourite memories. I think we really captured/created something interesting and perhaps even important here.  Duncan.
Hidden and Revealed
- This was a really personal post. I'm still working through these ideas of place, family and identity. This is one of my favourite posts on these themes because the poetry turned out well. Duncan.
- This was a fun post and one that sparked probably the most discussion in my real life. :) Duncan.

Our Favourite Posts by Silas:
You and I By Gaga – My reading of this text
- I had fun writing this, enough said. Silas.
Stories Pt. 12, 3
- I know I am cheating because technically it was 3 posts, but it all runs together in my head. Silas.
- My favourite of the three was #2 with the Fire Chicken. But this was an excellent reflection on narrative and it importance, role and unique strengths. Duncan.
CYOA: Genesis 37-50 – The Egyptianization of Joseph
– Though this post might not be the most fun to read, but it was incredibly formative for me while writing it. With Joseph as a negative example I have been forced to rethink some to the themes of the patriarchs. In doing so I have found a faith that is more compatible to human experience, more relevant to everyday life, and altogether a more exciting story to join. Silas.
Harry Potter Hermeneutics
-The first of the Harry Potter heresy and I think also the best. My favourite part is Silas's claim to have learned scepticism through Harry Potter's unreliable narrator. Duncan.
The Wild Goose
- This image of God as a wild goose stopping by and playing in the mud with us has stuck with me all year. Duncan.
Allah and Compassion - I found great encouragement and hope in Silas' engagement in interfaith dialogue. Danielle. 

Collaborative Post:
CYOA: Timothy 2:1-15 - Egalitarianism!
- This was an invigorating discussion over a number of posts back in December 2011. It is our blog so we got the final word. Duncan.


Duncan:
This has been an interesting project and it has been good to go back and reflect on what we have written. Remembering is a very Biblical theme. It has been good to take time to remember and reflect on our journey. It is exciting to look back and watch Danielle transition from processing Africa to working toward positive communal change in the way we think, talk and act toward each other especially the 'other'. It is exciting to see Silas continue to explore and extrapolate ideas of empire and narrative into areas of faith, life and culture as well as make the transition from immersion in the academy toward integration of skiing and walking and reading and biking; gardening and harry potter and pop music. I feel like, for me, this year has hopefully been the beginning of rebuilding and defining ideas about place, identity, vocation and family. Along with Silas I echo my appreciation for your readership and participation as we journey out loud and online here at Smoke, Mirrors and Cigarettes.

Which posts from this last year were your favourite? And why?