Conquering once upon a time
Evening trips to the library are the best. Even when I’m being held temporarily captive to some novel or fantasy, I can still peel myself away from my obsession to take the kids to find a new book. Although, is it ever truly just one? No, not even close. Try a back-pack full.
As a young mom, as an emerging lover of better and better literature, I was anxious to help my children read well. But the volumes of Scooby-Doo mysteries, shelves of grahic novels and never-ending series such as Animorphs made me wonder however if I would ever win that war.
I persisted and compromised and tried to remember back to how excited I was to find another new Dean Koontz at my own library as a young teen. Now I get excited to find a Margaret Atwood. Go figure.
Along the way, they have read good books, good literature. But today I want to herald those other books. The ones with the thankless job of winning no awards, garnering zero reviews, sporting no bright shiny metal on the front. Are they simply taking up shelf space that should be reserved for the best books? Hardly. Because it is those books that my children wanted to read so bad that I received enthusiastic shouts when announcing it was library night.
I’d like to say thanks to Nathan Abercrombie, Accidental Zombie for making the library fun for my son. He would later read award-winning Canadian author Farley Mowat’s Lost in the Barrens.
Thanks Ann Martin for the Baby-sitters Little Sister books that inspired my daughter to devour books and join her school book club and read even more.
My kids were not of a reading age when the Harry Potter phenomenon occurred, but I understand why parents supported their children’s interest and the surge of getting back into reading.
The lessons in reading, plain and simple no matter the material are enormous: they have learned to love and to laugh in books, to find books and topics of interest to them (so important to self-esteem), to say no thanks Mom to the ones that don’t (assertiveness), to respect my opinion too and trust that I’ll find them books they’ll love, to wrap little minds around the eternal paradox of the words fiction and non-fiction, to call the library a beloved place, to know where to go when in need of information and to run up the curving staircase to the children’s section with glee…
though last time they did that, the sweetest librarian you will ever meet greeted them at the top with “Slow down guys.” hehe
Library nights are indeed the best!

ps. In the latest episode of Bookrageous podcast, they discuss this very thing! They could have called it the “brain candy versus the GREAT books” episode. It is spun mostly thinking of summer reading and comparing that reading over the ages of one’s life, aka what you read over the summer in high school versus as an adult. You might be surprised which side they fight for.
A journey
How much of a coincidence is it that the one of the few songs I actually have on my ipod turns out to be the feature song for the pilot of Glee? Yes, I am two years behind. Regardless, I am loving the show. Tonight we had a mini-marathon of at least four episodes though in truth I lost count while I attacked a huge stack of gardening magazines, ripping and culling with abandon. The wheat will go into a binder for future reading and inspiration, the chafe to the recycle bin. It feels fantastic to let go of unnecessaries and trim down.
If only my waistline were so easy. I have been a loser at the Biggest Loser, but my hope continues to be that if I pick myself up off the floor enough times, I might actually start picking up myself up every day. In an effort to incorporate exercise sans gymtime, I went kayaking over the weekend, in a storm. It scared the crap of me and made me feel amazing and shiny. The muscle sprain from gripping my paddle so hard was shiny too. Then it met a bag of ice. Don’t stop believing!
i love my ipod touch because, part deux
It’s been one year with my ipod Touch.
Do I still love it? You bet.
Do I still use a dozen apps everyday? No way.
My vision has narrowed but is still dusted with silver. And since my old post regarding the ipod Touch is one of my top pages hit with search results, I feel duty bound to update everyone on what I’m still using – or not using – one year later.
So, what’s changed? I’ve simplified.
(Why does that sound like a spell right out of Harry Potter? I feel like I should be flicking my wrist. Simplify!)
Let’s have a look. Out of the twelve I named as essentials one year ago, only 3 remain in daily use. I’ll go through my list:
In the totally and utterly forgotten category:
- touch to do
- stanza
- mobile rss
- read it later/instapaper
- wordpress
- evernote
(Most of these lost out to a simpler app that I found – and will name later – to do multiple functions. Or I eventually found that I didn’t like doing that thing on my teeny ipod screen as was the case with writing blog posts and reading RSS feeds.
Lucky winners to have been replaced by uber-winners:
- grocery gadget was a fail. now using Grocery iQ –> a faster interface in the app and web app, easier all around, lightening fast syncing. Love it!
- tweetdeck –> replaced by the basic app Twitter makes for itself. I like Twitter but we’re not BFF’s, so there’s no need for the super micromanagement capabilities of Tweetdeck. Neat but unnecessary.
- words with friends –> got old. games usually do with me. these days when i feel like a scrabble sort of game, i’m playing War of Words. It has bombs and crazy bonus tiles, different shaped boards and more mischievousness available.
Still kicking and entertaining me everyday are:
- podcasts. my kids are starting to roll their eyes when i speaker dock my ipod. lol
- goodreads. for bragging rights. i love being around the house reading wherever and being able to update my progress in reading a book.
- alarm clock. for waking up at any hour. has yet to fail me!
But my biggest most terrible addiction is for Simplenote. A – haha – simple text app that has a web counterpoint for easy syncing and cloud storage. I’m in love. And simply can’t say enough about it.
Just recently, Simplenote introduced tags into the system and everything that I loved got easier to find.
When I want to start a blog post, I jot my inspiration down and tag it: blog.
When I find a recipe I want to try but not yet save for future generations, I copy/paste it into Simplenote and tag it: recipe, try.
If it’s worthy and will be staying around, the tags change to: recipe, file.
When I’m achievement chasing and need a guide so as to note forget where the three secret messages are hidden…
When I need to use one of three different library card numbers to renew the kids or my own library books…
When I need to add to my to-do list…
Simplenote’s two most amazing qualities are the speed at which I can be inputing data and the convienence of where I can retrieve it. Comparing it to Evernote, the latter is overkill. Major overkill. I don’t need all those bells and whistles. I need text. And I need it saved.
Which is Simplenote’s other beauty, I can get at the text I need whether I’m at work, at home on the couch or sitting here at the computer. And I do use it everywhere.
Menus, quotes and thoughts from whatever I’m reading, web logins and shopping lists. Simplenote is my most used and beloved app one year later. Cheers!

Book Review: Cinderella ate my Daughter
I am so impressed. Where I thought this book would be some long-winded but ultimately useless rant – based upon the author’s interviews – it actually turned out to be just the right mix of rant and expert opinion in science, history, psychology, gender studies and probably more that I am already forgetting.
She was human and she convinced me. Last night my family and I watched the new Disney movie Tangled, while tonight I spent the night off work devouring the book that makes me want to ban that movie from my home. It’s a short and easy read that had me furiously taking notes and thinking hard about what to say and do and live and teach and breathe with my own daughter.
Spoilers!
Can you say that about a work of non-fiction?
Do you even care what conclusion she comes to, which camp she sides with?
Lay your concerns to rest. She does not in the end embrace the “explosion of pink froth.” (I love that quote, but she does slather it on the cover. What’s up with that Peggy?!)
The princess phenomenon began as a marketing campaign – as I am discovering many long-held and so-called “traditions” did – but the current incarnation from Disney is not the first time it has happened. Did you know that the baby doll was invented to encourage post-Industrial Revolution women to have more children? Without the family farm demanding more hands be born to run it, families were growing smaller. The economy suffered and maternal instincts massaged by a toy. It worked. Did you know that Shirley Temple had her face plastered on any product that could carry it?
I’ve felt uncomfortable with the princesses for some time. Around the time that I realized, walking around Toys R Us, with my children putting together their Christmas wishes and realizing that there was nothing BUT objectification for sale in the girls’ department. And it was wrapped in pink. Peggy shares the same frustration in this book. Aisle after aisle is focused on either teaching a girl how to keep a home or herself pleasing. It might be one thing if the purpose of having an appealing home was because you as a woman liked it that way or curling your hair was your favourite style. But Western society is coming out of misogyny at an earthworm’s pace – I was one of the naive ones who thought this whole issue over and done with in my mother’s time – and the whole point of being female is still to please men. I wish so much that that was not true. But as I read and was reminded of how shallow the news reports got over Hillary and Palin during the 2008 Presidential elections, well… there is still so necessary growth needed.
Yes, I have given my daughter Barbies and an Easy Bake Oven, for I do not count fashion and home skills as negative values in and of themselves. They can be meaningful expressions of individuality, and kitchenry is at least a necessityof life and at best a link that unites generations and provides for a healthy lifestyle and long life. I object however when toy companies value nothing else about my daughter and her interests.
The only way I managed out of that maze was the lucky stroke of genetic lottery that gave me a daughter who adores reading and a son, born a year after her, that loves superheroes. From library bookshelves I can introduce her to all manner of subject. Imaginative fantasy, historical fiction, girls going to a horse academy, graphic novels, we read it all. And a Wonder Woman figurine stands proudly on her bookshelf. As a child she twirled in cotton dresses of gathered skirts and big pockets that I made her then ran outside to climb into the apple tree. Yes, still in the dresses.
Sometimes I wish I’d been a more consistent role model for her, but then I remind myself that if I’m a hodge-podge of traditional and modern values that are my own by choice, then that is indeed the example she needs. Whether she makes the same choices is irrelevant. Knowing that doing so is her prerogative and hers alone is the key.
Peggy opened my eyes with some new thoughts. Will the emphasis on pink separate the genders, making it more difficult for this generation, and future if we continue in this vein, to connect intimately with the opposite sex? Will healthy relationships be possible in an us-versus-them atmosphere? Thinking of all that Pepto-Bismol pink, my own thought followed: I wonder what fashion will be like in twenty years when this contingent of princesses is grown up? What will it be like to walk into a department store? Yuck.
One researcher at the University of Arizona goes one step further calling all this pink a public health issue. Because if men and women understand each other less and less, should we be at all surprised if the incidence of divorce, domestic and date violence, not to mention sexual harassment, rise? This is not a small issue.
And at the end of it all, in a book dipped in too much pink, she talks about teaching girls to be critical, skeptical, aware of their own needs, desires, feelings and how important it is to be able to share those not hide them in relationships. I’m glad she shared the line from her psychologist that fat is not a feeling. Never thought of that one, but wow do I feel it sometimes.
I thought it a neat coincidence that she references the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire that I’d never heard of until last week when Terri posted some amazing shots of an art display in memory of the women who died tragically.
She talks about shopping and how the princess culture presents with innocence while sliding you narcissism and vapid materialism under the table. And how moms and daughters connect intimately only over shopping. A favourite memory of mine, Mom and I on all day excursions to the nearest mall hunting for the deal of the day. I like when my daughter shops with me, but so far she doesn’t like it very much. Maybe that’s a good thing, and yes I will definitely start encouraging more of the other activities we enjoy together – walking, biking, exercising, sewing, baking, trips to the library.
She goes over the real story of Rapunzel as one of the least offensive fairy tales because Rapunzel and the prince save each other, because Rapunzel is beloved before he ever saw her face. I’d almost forgotten about that version. Which is silly of me as I read that one in Golden Book form to the kids over and over again. How I wish I’d kept it!
I’ve written all this and still feel as if I’ve said so little. I’m imagining future conversations with my children while I type. I’m imagining how we need to talk about Tangled.
This image of Rapunzel undergoing treatment for cancer speaks so loudly to me. It is from Vancouver photographer Dina Goldstein’s Fallen Princess Collection. Visit her to see all of the princesses – finally – face to face with real life.

“ planted morning glory seeds along the back fence - can't wait to see the wall of green! 1 week ago

















