And as such, I made this:
This Friday I went and watched Marc’s last soccer game of the season (he coaches the senior boys at his school) and for an hour and half I had the chance to enjoy the late October sunshine and cheer on the team.
Standing there, basking in that golden glow, all I wanted to do was pack a bag, grab our tent, and head off into the woods somewhere for a weekend of autumnal camping.

CAMPING. My love!
But boy did I ever used to loathe this pastime.
It’s true – I was definitely a late-bloomer when it came to my love of tent life. For many moons I openly rejected the idea of sleeping in a bag, eating with sporks, and wearing long-johns as pants.
I was firmly averse to forest-bound adventures.
And now?
NOW I ROCK A LONG-JOHN LIKE NO OTHER.

Camping as a kid just always seemed to conjure up images of frigid downpours, mouldy tents, leaky tarpaulins, awful food, soggy socks, and over-cramped quarters.
It was the worst.
Factor in that I was a bit of a prima donna, and you can imagine just how awful it was to have me hanging around whatever campsite my dad and sisters happened to be visiting.
As soon as I ate what little junk food we had managed to persuade my dad to purchase for us, I would settle into a deep, dark sulk that would last right up until the moment we pulled up stakes and headed back towards civilization.
I remember one trip with my dad and my little sister. One morning we woke up and I demanded that we go to White Spot for breakfast. I was adamant in my claim that I would not eat one more dry bunch of shredded wheat (you know the ones – they look like mini bales of hay) for my morning meal.
My dad, who remains until this day a truly passionate anti-White Spot kind of guy, tried his best at negotiation, and offered up this doozy:
“How about we go to a bed and breakfast, and see if we can pay for just the breakfast?”
I sat there, mortified.
JUST THE BREAKFAST!?
What kind of person would even think of such a thing?
I told him flat out that I would in no way partake in this ridiculous scam. If he even attempted such a charade I would hide in the backseat of the car.
Of course he called me on my bluff (either that or he just didn’t have any energy to deal with my drama queen behaviour).
So there I sat, trying my hardest to remain unseen as I peeked out of the car’s back window, watching as he and my little sister (whose sweater was so dirty that she was now wearing it inside out) rang the bell of the first bed and breakfast we had come across.
Seriously, they looked like they had just jumped off of a passing train car. All they were missing was the bandana tied to the end of a broom stick.
Hey buddy – can ya spare a dime?
Needless to say, they didn’t get the breakfast.
And we ended up eating at White Spot.
VICTORY!
After that, I really didn’t camp again for a long, long time. Not until I started dating Marc and he made it very clear that he loved spending time (sleeping time especially) in the great outdoors, and he very much wished to share this love with me.
I thought it was high-time to give ye olde tent extravaganza another try (it had been a good twelve years or so since my last camping trip), and I agreed to head to Harrison Hot Springs for a weekend.
The plan was to participate in a slow-food bike tour around Agassiz that morning, and the camp that evening.
It was going to be all fires, and hot chocolate, and sleeping bag snuggles.
Instead, we bicycled through a monsoon, Marc forgot the sleeping bags, and our air mattress leaked.

We spent the entire night shivering under our car’s emergency blanket, taking turns pumping up the mattress, and listening to the thunder storm wreak havoc on our surrounding environs.
But you know the craziest thing?
I actually loved it.
And to this day, we laugh just thinking about that weekend.
Since them, we’ve camped a number of times, all around BC and Oregon, and each trip has been absolutely fabulous.
I’m also happy to say that I no longer eat at White Spot.
And I’d probably still only eat the breakfast, if prefaced by “Bed and.”
Because you know what they say – some things will never change.
Three days in a row last week I woke up at 4:30am.
This is never fun.
You see, I arrived back home from Halifax on Tuesday night, and after cramming my face full of delicious artisan cheese bread, lemon squares, pink lady apples, and coconut water, I fell into a sleep coma around 9:00pm.
Canada is known for many great things – healthcare, maple syrup, Rick Moranis – but ease of cross-country travel is definitely not one.
5000 km in a day will really leave you knackered.
It’s enough to make one dream of moving to Lichtenstein.
Anyway, back to that first night, despite heavy night sweats brought on by the whack-load of food I ate before bed (which normally tucker me out like crazy and bring on the second (sleep) wind like nothing else), I couldn’t get my snooze back on.
So as the clock quietly blinked four, I slipped out of bed, put on my sweat pants and a thick wool sweater, grabbed my water cup and tiptoed out of bed.
The kitten, unused to such early-morning activity, poked her little head out from behind her chair of rest and looked at my quizzically, as if to ask, “What’s up mum?”
I sat down in the darkened living room and watched a couple of episodes of 30Rock, sipping on a piping hot cup of coffee, as the kitten purred in my lap.
Then I did the exact same thing the next day.
And the next.
Jetlag is never fun, and after three days of interrupted sleep and early mornings, I crashed hard on Friday and slept straight for eleven hours.
Eleven hours!
And after a solid eight and a half last night, I finally feel as though I am back on an even keel, sleep-wise.
YAY!
Now, as mentioned in my previous post, there are a few things in my life I very much love, that maybe previously I definitely…didn’t love.
So, on the subject of jetlag, early mornings, and terrible sleeps, let us move onto thing #2 that I used to hate, but now adore – COFFEE.
I remember so perfectly the first time I ever tried a cup of joe.
I was eleven and it was at the TD Bank on 10th and Alma in Vancouver. (That branch eventually moved to 10th and Sasamat a couple of years later.)
I was there to open my first bank account because I had won $50 dollars for taking home the aggregate title in a highland dancing competition the week before.
Talk about a lucrative day of hoping about in a kilt, over swords and other Scottish battle detritus. Especially for the 12 and under set!
I was super stoked to be taking part in something so unbelievably grown-up (bank accounts were such a huge deal! I mean, you got debit card and everything!), that I figured what better way to celebrate my new found adulthood than by drinking my first cup of java?
So with little fanfare (but with many, many little butterflies flitting about in my stomach) I picked up one of those small, white Styrofoam cups and filled it full of steaming coffee. Then I dropped in a few sugar cubes, and added enough Coffeemate to make the colour of the liquid change to a milky, chocolate brown.
I thought it would taste like magic.
NOT LIKE THE BITTER ACID OF DEATH.
All I could think of is, “WHY WOULD ANYONE EVER DRINK THIS POISON?”
Seriously, this experience was enough to turn me off coffee for the next fourteen years.
Talk about trauma.
In high school, or university if I was ever with friends and they grabbed cappuccinos, I would drink hot chocolate or chai lattes.

All throughout grad school I drank nothing but tea (heaps, and heaps of tea) to stay awake during my mad hours of studying, researching, and writing.


I even worked at two different coffee shops making AMAZING espresso drinks for two years, and yet never once managed to sample my wares.
(Well, that’s not entirely true – on my last day of work at Petit Ami Coffee, I tried a tiny sip of a mocha and then basically passed out from an overwhelming mouth sadness.)
It wasn’t until my first “office job” post grad-school that I started my long march down the dark, beautiful, and addictive bean juice path.
On my first day of work I was SUPER early and very nervous, so I figured I would stop at the Second Cup at the bottom of my office building and get something to drink.
I was just about to order a hot chocolate when my eye caught sight of a “vanilla bean latte” and I thought, “eh? Why not? Vanilla bean sounds like it might be alright.”

So I threw my inhibitions to the wind, ordered it up, and took a sip.
And you know what?
I still didn’t like it all that much.
But for some reason, I went back the next day and ordered the same thing.
And then the next.
I just kept doing it.
I know. WHAT A WEIRDO, right?
But, slowly and surely I started to like the stuff.
I started to look forward to my morning vanilla bean.
Nearly every day, for almost two and a half years, I bought that drink and on the weekends I made surgery, sweet café-au-laits.
And while I don’t work that job anymore, I still enjoy waking up every day knowing that before I start anything (big or small) I will get to warm myself over a milky, sweet cup of coffee.
Especially on mornings when I’m up at 4am.
And I have a kitten in my lap.
Isn’t it funny how we, as human beings, change?
Sometimes transformation happens quickly, and other times it is both painstakingly slow, and, well, just plain painstaking.
Sometimes changes happens and we aren’t even aware that it is happening.
Sometimes it happens because a judge has ordered it so (although hopefully not that often!) or because outside factors (non-court sanctioned of course) have come to dictate that the current path we happen to be travelling is no longer viable.
(Picture a giant Gandalf impersonater shouting, “YOU SHALL NOT PASS!” – or whichever knock-off literary reference you think most fitting.)
In the end, the result is the same: we as human beings change.
We grow.
We adapt.
We react.
I was thinking the other day about just how different my life is from this same time last year.
Sure, at the root of it all, many of the larger pieces that make me “me” are still the same: I am still with the love of my life, living in the same house, with the same mad cat.
But I have a different job, different friends (although I am lucky that many of the same old friends are still bopping about!); I am running more, and running faster.

I started comedy, and am having a harder time sticking to a regular blogging schedule despite the fact that I am trying to do more writing.
I play soccer.
Seriously.
I play soccer.
Now, for those of you who don’t know me – well, this is quite the departure from where I used to stand in terms of this sport.
I used to think it was pretty much the worst.
And now I absolutely love it.

Please let me explain.
But before I do, I will present to you the formal title of a three-part rant:
Things I used to hate, but now I love: How I came around to soccer, coffee, and camping
Part 1 – Soccer.
Or “football” in the parlance of all you readers residing outside of North America.
(Funny side-note: I also used to hate watching our version of football until a few years ago, and now very much enjoy it.)
Sporting evolution! It happens!
Anywho, back to soccer.
Like 99.9% of West Coast kids, I played this sport as a youngster. This meant weekends spent driving around in the fall and winter rain, running up and down soggy pitches, and trying my darndest to keep away from any and all actual ball-related action.
I was terrified of the ever-clashing elbows and ankles and shins and knees, and preferred to steer clear of both my fellow teammates and adversaries alike.
However, I did really love running, so most of my time was spent sprinting from one end of the field to the other as far away from the scrum as I could non-conspicuously manage.
I distinctly remember overhearing one of my coaches remark to a parent, “Vanessa is fast – but doesn’t seem to do much else besides run.”
Too true sir.
So – not as inconspicuous as I had hoped.
After a couple of years of this charade, and hours spent toodling around on different rec teams, I threw in the proverbial soccer towel and concentrated on the sports I actually cared about – running, badminton, and volleyball.
Fast forward to 2003, when I met the man that I would eventually marry – a lovely fellow who absolutely loved soccer, having played it at a very high level all throughout high school and who still owns two pairs of cleats (best be prepared I am always told) to this day.
During our formal courtship, he inquired if I would ever had any interest in playing soccer with him.
I promptly responded no.
But my reasoning behind my decline was no longer my fear of getting of getting hurt, or receiving a rogue elbow to a lip.
It was everything to do with the fact that, at that point in my life, I couldn’t partake in non-regulated exercise. My eating disorder dictated everything in my life (including any and all physical activity) to such a degree, that anything outside of my normal “controlled” environment was enough to bring on a panic attack.
The few times that I did try and play, everything felt awkward and wrong.
It was almost as though I could feel my body rebelling the moment I walked onto the pitch.
My skin crawled, and my stomach cramped.
In the end I told Marc that I didn’t like playing, that I thought the sport was boring.
It didn’t help, I elaborated, that I wasn’t any good at it. If I couldn’t win at the game, I said, what was the point in playing?
I passed on years of Friday night soccer matches. I watched Marc would go off and play with friends, while I stayed at home.
After my health improved I still stayed away from the pitch, afraid that the ghosts of times past would come to haunt me, the second my foot made contact with the field, the ball.
That was until, at the end of this summer, when a friend (a new friend, but a fab friend) invited me to his birthday party, the first half of which was a pick-up game of soccer.
Amazingly enough, I knew that this situation was a no-brainer. I didn’t just want to go out and play that Friday night, I needed to.
And you know what?
Despite the fact that I was the only on there without soccer cleats AND was clocked in the eye with another good friend’s shoulder, I had an absolutely fabulous time.
Instead of feeling clammy and self-conscious, I felt exhilarated and at-ease.
I actually ran towards the ball.
And I have played at least one a week since.
Marc and I like to head to the many parks in our neighbourhood and practice passing, dribbling, and penalty kicks.

I have a sweet pair of cleats that make me feel like a superstar.
And heck, when I feel like it, for old time sake – I’ll go out and wind myself, sprinting the length of the field.
Again and again.
Because goodness knows, that never gets old.
Ladies and gentlemen, do I ever have a treat for all of you!
Feast your eyes and ears on this majesty:
IT’S GUNS ‘N ROSES ON THE GUZHENG.
Holy smokes.
So, in my former life (a when I actually had time to sit down and troll ridiculous things on the interwebs) I used to come across lots of cool and irreverent videos, and enjoy parcelling them out to friends and families in the form of facebook posts or late night e-mails.
(Seriously, I always tell people that I have both an MA in Political Science as well as an MA in YouTube, what with the amount of time I spent surfing this website during my time in grad school.)
Now, I have to get my cool stuff from the radio (re: listening to As it Happens betwixt the hours of six and eight on CBC Radio 1) when I am careening about from one post-work activity to the next.
URG I’M SORRY DUDES.
I totally don’t want to be that girl who just talks about how busy she is all the live long day.
It’s just that I am.
I am so that girl.
And the crazy thing?
Even when I try not to be busy – when I put real effort into streamlining my life, and make a conscious effort to take on less extracurricular activities, it doesn’t seem to make a darn difference.
Not one iota.
In the words of the immortal Liz Lemon: What the what?
How is this even possible?!
Anyways, I’ve had my mini-rant, and I’m not going to mention it again (for at the very least the next week and a half.)
And if I do, it is totally your prerogative to call me on my crap. There are just way too many fantastic, funny, and fundamentally freaky thing going on in the world these days, and I need remember that my exhaustion meter ranks about 0.1 on the importance scale.
Coolcoolcool?
Cool.
So what else has been happening?
Well, Breaking Bad finally ended.
(Finally broke?)
Marc and I watched the series finale last Sunday night, and then spent a good couple of hours dissecting the episode (and the show as a whole – as we were wont to do after the majority of season five episodes.)
Do any of you cats watch the show?
I honestly think it is the best thing I have ever watched in my entire life.
(Yes, even better than The Wire.)
OH YEAH. I SAID IT.
I’ve also been reading a lot of Voltaire and listening to Franz Ferdinand’s newest album on repeat like a maniac.
THAT BAND IS MY VINCE GILLIGAN OF MUSIC.
Phew.
This post is a veritable dog’s breakfast of topics, is it not?
And in that vein, I want to end with a memory:
The year is 1998. I am twelve years old and I am in grade seven. As a newly pubescent human being, I am cognisant of the existence of the male sex, but mostly just think that all the boys in my class are weird, smelly, idiots.
Despite this, I still desperately want all of them to fall in love with me.
The fact that I am approximately seven to ten inches taller than all of them further complicates things.
My favourite outfit consists of a tight long sleeved black shirt that has a red and white stripe running across the chest (a hand-me-down from my older sister), levi blue jeans (!!!) and red Doc Martin boots (purchased after saving up eleven months of my allowance money.)
One spring night, my mum asks me if I want to go see a movie with her.
What movie? I inquire.
Les Miserables, she responds.
Sure, I say. Why not?
We walk to the Varsity movie theatre, just up the street from where we live. We buy popcorn and drink water.
My immediate reaction to the start of the film is that I have never before seen a man like Liam Neeson.
Watching him on the screen makes me feel a weird and shirty.
It’s a sensation I’ve never before felt.
And I kind of like it.
When we leave I try and nonchalantly tell my mum that I think the guy playing Jean Valjean is very handsome.
She nods and agrees with me.
He’s definitely nothing like any of the boys in my class, I think.
And probably taller than me too.
…
So that’s all friends!
Happy Friday to each and every one of you.
I wish for you all the love.
And all the weird, shirty feelings you can handle!