Saturday, May 9, 2026

🌷 Mother’s Day Thoughts 🌷

 🌷 Mother’s Day Thoughts 🌷

Mother’s Day is complicated for many people.

The woman who helped create Mother’s Day later became deeply upset by how commercialized it became. In many ways, I understand that. Behind the flowers, advertisements, brunches, and happy photos are many untold stories — grief, estrangement, infertility, sacrifice, survival, and love that never really disappears. 💔

In BC alone, thousands of families have lost children to the toxic drug crisis. Many parents are estranged from their children. Many mothers quietly carry heartbreak nobody sees. I am one of them.

My own mother passed away years ago, and although our relationship was not always easy, I still miss her deeply. As I get older, I understand more about how hard life can be, especially for women trying to hold families together while carrying their own pain and struggles.

Over the past 20+ years, I’ve spent countless hours researching census records, archives, photographs, church records, and family stories to piece together my Indigenous, Bohemian, and European ancestry. So much history disappears when elders pass away and stories are not shared.

Through this journey, I’ve learned that almost every family carries both joy and heartbreak — babies born, children lost, migrations, poverty, survival, love stories, and incredible resilience. 🌎✨

I was incredibly fortunate. I didn’t really try to have a child until I was 39, and somehow, after years of uncertainty about my body, I became pregnant. I joke that we worked very hard to make that baby 😄🤣 but I also truly believe I prayed them into existence. Even though I was no longer closely practicing Catholicism, I said the rosary over and over, hoping with all my heart.

I had a beautiful pregnancy, a difficult C-section, and thankfully a strong, healthy baby. For that, I will always be grateful. 🙏

Life does not always unfold the way we imagine. Vancouver has become an incredibly hard place to raise children and build stable family life. Housing stress, financial pressure, isolation, addiction, technology, and modern life itself have strained many relationships and families.

But today, I still want to honour mothers — not as perfect people, but as human beings.

The mothers who stayed. The mothers who lost children. The women who longed to become mothers. The grandmothers. The aunties. The foster mothers. The exhausted mothers trying their best. The mothers separated by distance, conflict, addiction, or time.

And I want to say how grateful I am to still be here, able to uncover these stories and share them before they disappear. ❤️

🌷 Happy Mother’s Day to everyone carrying love in their hearts today — even if it hurts a little too. 🌷

————————————

🌿 Mothers Day Reading List 🌿

• Rozalie Kundratova – Life in Bohemia and Beyond
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2026/03/rozalie-kundratova-life-in-bohemia-and.html

• The Polasek Family – Generations of Strength
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2026/03/the-polasek-family-generations-of.html

• Ellen Thomas Brule Poirier (1856–1925)
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2026/03/ellen-thomas-brule-poirier-18561925.html

• Edith Paulina Persson Anderson (1882–1955)
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2026/03/edith-paulina-persson-anderson-18821955.html

• Anna Nancy Anderson Enos (1902–1982)
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2026/03/anna-nancy-anderson-enos-19021982.html

• Mary Polasek Vinterlik (1878–1949)
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2026/03/mary-polasek-vinterlik-18781949.html

• Eliza – Songhees Woman, Mother of Joseph
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2026/03/eliza-songhees-woman-mother-of-joseph.html

• Three Women, Three Worlds
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2026/04/three-women-three-worlds.html

• Part 1 – Roots: Oregon Beginnings
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2025/12/part-1-roots-oregon-beginnings.html

• Part 2 – First Marriage & The Brule Family
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2025/12/part-2-first-marriage-brule-family.html

• Part 3 – Second Marriage & The Larger Vautrin Family
https://tinawinterlik.blogspot.com/2025/12/part-3-second-marriage-vautrin-larger.html

————————————

#MothersDay #FamilyHistory #Ancestry #IndigenousRoots #BohemianHeritage #Genealogy #MothersLove #IntergenerationalHealing #VancouverLife #FamilyStories #RememberingOurMothers #HealingJourney #WomensStories #GenerationalTrauma #LoveAndLoss #CanadianStories #Motherhood #HonourTheMothers #TruthAndHealing #RootsAndResilience



Reflective Questions 🌸

  1. What stories about your mother or grandmother do you wish had been preserved?

  2. How has motherhood changed over generations in your family?

  3. Do we place too much pressure on mothers to appear perfect?

  4. How has commercialization changed the meaning of Mother’s Day?

  5. What family stories disappeared because nobody wrote them down?

  6. How do grief and love continue long after someone passes away?

  7. What challenges do modern parents face that previous generations did not?

  8. How does housing insecurity and financial stress affect families today?

  9. What traditions or beliefs helped your family survive difficult times?

  10. What memories would you want future generations to know about your life? 🌷

When Vulnerability Becomes Exposure

 When Vulnerability Becomes Exposure: Crisis, Custody, and the Normalization of Suffering

So a person in Vancouver gets drunk — a youth. Maybe she had already been assaulted before that. Maybe someone gave her the alcohol. She ends up outside a school, police come, and they take her into custody.

She is taken to jail and then beaten up.

What happened to her? And what kind of system allows that?

A child in crisis ends up in the hands of authorities already vulnerable, already intoxicated, already at risk. Instead of care, protection, or medical support, the situation escalates into force and harm.

This is what people are struggling to understand. How does someone in that state end up being harmed while in custody?

It raises serious questions about how vulnerable youth are handled in moments of crisis. What alternatives exist to detention in these situations? Was medical care even considered first? Was there a safe way to return her home or connect her with family or support services instead of custody? Or has detention become the default response to social crisis?

Because when crisis is treated as criminality, vulnerability becomes exposure to harm instead of protection from it.

And when that happens, trust in institutions begins to fracture.


The Question of Custody and Care

Custody is supposed to mean safety under supervision. It is supposed to mean temporary protection while a situation stabilizes.

But what happens when that system fails?

When someone already in distress is placed into a controlled environment and still experiences harm, it forces a deeper question:

Is the system responding to risk — or simply managing it?

Because managing people in crisis is not the same as caring for them.

And the difference between those two approaches can determine whether someone is protected or further harmed.

In cases involving intoxicated youth, especially, the expectation is that responses should prioritize de-escalation, medical attention, and safeguarding. When that does not happen, it is not just an individual failure — it reflects broader systemic choices about how crisis is handled.


The Normalization of Suffering

What makes these situations even more difficult is how quickly they become part of a larger pattern.

A headline appears. A report is released. A few details circulate. Then silence.

Meanwhile, the underlying conditions remain:

  • youth in crisis
  • housing insecurity
  • addiction and substance exposure
  • trauma, often unaddressed
  • over-reliance on custody and enforcement systems

Over time, this creates something many people are now naming in different ways: the normalization of suffering.

Suffering becomes background noise. Incidents become “isolated.” Accountability becomes procedural. And systemic questions remain unresolved.

This is not about one case alone. It is about how frequently vulnerable people encounter systems that are not designed to fully hold their complexity — only to contain their crisis.


Vancouver Under Pressure

At the same time, Vancouver is preparing for a major international moment: the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Across host cities, hundreds of thousands of visitors are expected, with Vancouver receiving a significant surge in tourism, infrastructure demand, and security presence.

Large-scale events like this typically bring:

  • expanded policing operations
  • increased surveillance and enforcement
  • heightened public order strategies
  • pressure on already stretched housing and social systems

On paper, this is about safety and global readiness.

But in practice, it raises another question:

What happens to vulnerable people when systems are expanded for visibility, but already strained in capacity?

Because cities do not experience pressure evenly.

When enforcement increases, it is often the most vulnerable — youth in crisis, unhoused individuals, people struggling with addiction, and marginalized communities — who feel that pressure first and most intensely.


A System Under Question

This is where the deeper tension sits.

We are told that systems exist to protect the public.

But when a vulnerable youth in crisis enters custody and leaves the situation harmed, people begin to question what “protection” actually means in practice.

It is not only about one incident. It is about the conditions that allowed it. The decisions that led there. And the safeguards that failed to intervene.

It is also about transparency — what is known, what is not known, and what is only briefly acknowledged before disappearing into official language and short reports.

Because without transparency, accountability becomes difficult to fully assess.


What People Are Really Asking

Beneath the anger, beneath the shock, beneath the public reaction, there are consistent questions emerging:

  • Why are vulnerable youth entering custody instead of care systems?
  • What alternatives exist, and are they actually being used?
  • How are decisions made in moments of crisis?
  • What happens inside institutions that the public rarely sees?
  • And how do we prevent harm when systems are already under strain?

These are not abstract questions. They are practical ones about how society responds to human vulnerability in real time.


Closing Reflection

At its core, this is not just about policing or custody.

It is about what kind of response a society chooses when someone is at their most vulnerable.

Do we respond with containment, or care? With force, or support? With procedures, or humanity?

Because the measure of any system is not how it handles order — it is how it handles crisis.

And right now, many people are asking whether the balance has shifted too far away from protection, and too close to control.

That is the question this moment leaves behind.



WHAT WE ARE NOT BEING TOLD IS JUST AS IMPORTANT AS WHAT WE ARE TOLD.

 WHAT WE ARE NOT BEING TOLD IS JUST AS IMPORTANT AS WHAT WE ARE TOLD.

Recently there was a lockdown at Fraser Valley Institution for Women in BC. Most people only saw a short news blurb. A few lines. Then silence.

That raises a bigger question:

What happens inside institutions when the doors close and communication stops?

Lockdowns in prisons are often described in technical language: “security measures” “search procedures” “contraband recovery” “operational reasons”

But for the women inside, especially Indigenous women who are already disproportionately incarcerated in Canada, these events are not abstract procedures. They are lived experiences of confinement within confinement — loss of movement, loss of contact, loss of certainty, and often increased trauma.

And the public rarely sees what happens beyond the official statement.

This is part of a larger pattern:

We are increasingly learning to accept fragments instead of full accountability.

A violent incident in custody becomes a headline. A lockdown becomes a notice. A use-of-force incident becomes a court excerpt. And then everything fades into silence.

Meanwhile, Canada continues to face deep structural concerns about: • Over-incarceration of Indigenous women
• Mental health crises inside correctional institutions
• Isolation practices and their psychological impacts
• Limited transparency during critical incidents
• The gap between policy language and lived reality

This is where the idea of “normalization of suffering” becomes important.

When people only ever receive partial information, suffering becomes background noise. Not something to investigate deeply — but something to accept as routine.

And when violence, confinement, and institutional control become routine, accountability becomes harder to demand.

We have to ask difficult questions:

Who decides what the public gets to know? What happens inside during lockdowns that is never fully reported? How are Indigenous women specifically impacted in these systems? Why do major correctional events so often appear in “small blurbs” instead of full transparency? And what does it do to a society when suffering is contained, managed, and rarely fully seen?

This is not just about one prison. This is about how systems of confinement operate in the dark edges of public attention.

If we are serious about justice, reconciliation, and human rights, then we cannot only respond to what is visible.

We also have to ask about what is kept out of view.

Because what we don’t see still shapes lives.

#FraserValleyInstitution
#IndigenousWomen
#MMIWG2S
#PrisonJustice
#HumanRightsCanada
#CorrectionalTransparency
#NormalizationOfSuffering
#Vancouver
#JusticeReform
#AccountabilityNow

When Violence Is Recorded and Trust Still Breaks: What Happens Behind Closed Doors?

 One of the most disturbing parts of this case is that it was recorded.

People saw it. There was video. There were witnesses. There were multiple staff and officers present.

And it still happened.

That leaves many people asking an uncomfortable question:

What happens in places where there are no cameras? No media attention? No public pressure? No witnesses willing to speak?

What happens in small towns where everyone knows each other? Where power structures are tighter? Where people may fear retaliation, isolation, losing work, or being labeled a troublemaker for speaking out?

This is why transparency matters. This is why independent investigations matter. This is why whistleblower protections matter. This is why civilian oversight matters.

Because public trust cannot exist if institutions are seen as investigating themselves behind closed doors.

Most people working in policing, healthcare, emergency response, and public service are not abusing their power. But when abuse DOES happen and others stay silent, minimize it, or protect colleagues instead of victims, trust erodes for everyone.

Many Indigenous families, vulnerable women, youth, poor people, and marginalized communities already carry deep historical trauma and mistrust tied to institutions in Canada.

Cases like this reopen those wounds.

People are not angry simply because one officer crossed a line. People are angry because they fear the system itself too often protects power before protecting vulnerable human beings.

And if this could happen in a major city, on camera, in front of multiple people — many are left wondering what never gets seen at all.


Reflective Questions:

How can communities trust institutions if violence occurs even when cameras and witnesses are present?

What additional risks exist in small towns where people may fear speaking out against authority figures?

Should Canada have stronger independent civilian oversight of police, jails, and detention facilities?

What responsibilities do political parties and elected officials have when public trust in policing declines?

How can politicians address public safety without increasing fear, division, or over-policing of vulnerable communities?

What role should doctors, nurses, and healthcare staff play when witnessing violence or mistreatment in custody settings?

How can trauma-informed care improve outcomes for intoxicated youth, Indigenous women, and people in crisis?

Why do many human rights activists argue that systemic reform is needed rather than isolated punishments?

How can authors, journalists, filmmakers, and artists help document and expose abuses of power?

What happens to a society when suffering, inequality, and institutional violence become normalized?

How can whistleblowers and witnesses be better protected when reporting abuse by authorities?

What reforms would help rebuild trust between marginalized communities and institutions in Canada?

Why do some people feel accountability systems are harsher for ordinary citizens than for those in positions of authority?

How should schools and young people be taught about human rights, justice, and state power?

What kind of Canada do we want future generations to inherit?

#PoliceAccountability #IndependentInvestigation #JusticeForIndigenousWomen #MMIWG2S #HumanRights #EndPoliceViolence #TransparencyMatters #NoMoreSilence #ProtectTheVulnerable #Vancouver

NOTHING IS MAKING SENSE ANYMORE.

 

NOTHING IS MAKING SENSE ANYMORE.

We keep hearing the same words: “mistakes were made” “lessons will be learned” “internal review” “mental health issues” “paid leave” “not criminally responsible” “isolated incident”

And meanwhile the violence, suffering, addiction, poverty, fear, and hopelessness continue growing around us.

A restrained 17-year-old Indigenous girl is punched repeatedly in custody. People overdose alone. Families live in tents while luxury towers rise around them. Women disappear. Random violence rises. Communities fracture. People stop trusting institutions. And ordinary citizens are told to simply adapt to all of it.

What we are witnessing is the normalization of suffering.

Many Canadians grew up believing this country stood for fairness, human rights, safety, compassion, and accountability. But more and more people feel like there are now two systems: one for ordinary people, and another for institutions and people connected to power.

We have spent years hearing about reconciliation while Indigenous women still experience violence, over-policing, neglect, and systemic discrimination.

We hear endless talk about public safety while vulnerable people in custody are assaulted. We hear about mental health while traumatized people are left suffering in streets, shelters, and overcrowded hospitals. We hear about justice while sentences and outcomes leave the public stunned.

Nothing feels proportional anymore.

People are exhausted watching governments expand policing powers while housing collapses, healthcare strains, and communities feel increasingly tense and unequal.

Now Vancouver prepares for massive international events and increased security presence while trust in institutions is already deeply damaged.

Many residents remember the Stanley Cup riots and other moments where frustration, anger, alcohol, economic pressure, and distrust exploded into chaos. People can feel tension building again — not because citizens want violence, but because so many feel unheard, financially crushed, emotionally burned out, and alienated from decision-makers.

And beneath all of this is a deeper question:

What kind of society are we becoming when suffering becomes background noise?

When people step over overdoses on sidewalks. When youth lose hope before adulthood. When workers cannot afford rent. When women fear violence. When Indigenous families keep hearing apologies instead of change. When people stop believing accountability exists.

This is not just about one police officer. This is not just about one case. This is about a society under strain.

People want real accountability. People want independent investigations. People want systems that protect the vulnerable instead of protecting themselves. People want leadership that understands social breakdown cannot be solved with PR campaigns, surveillance, or force alone.

A healthy society cannot be built on fear, inequality, despair, and normalized trauma.

At some point, governments and institutions must ask themselves: Why are so many people losing trust? Why are so many people angry? Why does everything feel like it is fraying?

Because when people stop believing systems are fair, stable, or humane, the social fabric itself begins to unravel.

And many people in Vancouver can already feel it happening.

#NormalizationOfSuffering #PoliceViolence #JusticeForIndigenousWomen #MMIWG2S #HumanRights #Vancouver #SystemicRacism #AccountabilityNow #HousingCrisis #MentalHealthCrisis #NoMoreSilence #ProtectOurYouth #EndPoliceBrutality

THIS CANNOT BE INVESTIGATED ONLY FROM WITHIN

 

THIS CANNOT BE INVESTIGATED ONLY FROM WITHIN.

When violence happens against vulnerable people in state custody — especially Indigenous women and youth — the public deserves FULL transparency and INDEPENDENT oversight.

A restrained, intoxicated 17-year-old Indigenous girl was punched repeatedly while surrounded by officers and staff. Another restrained detainee was stomped, kicked, and beaten.

This is not a minor misconduct issue. This is a human rights issue.

Too many people no longer trust internal investigations when police investigate police.

We need: • A fully independent external investigation • Public transparency about what happened • Review of supervision and training failures • Accountability for everyone who witnessed and allowed the violence • National and international human rights attention on violence against Indigenous women in custody

Canada has already faced international scrutiny over the treatment of Indigenous women and girls through the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

People are asking: How many warnings existed before this happened? Why was someone with prior aggression complaints still working with vulnerable detainees? Why are violent acts against restrained people resulting in house arrest?

This is about more than one case. It is about public trust, state violence, and whether vulnerable people are truly safe in custody.

No one should be beaten while restrained. Not in a democracy. Not in Canada. Not anywhere.

Reflective Questions 


  1. What protections should exist for vulnerable people in police custody?
  2. Why do cases involving Indigenous women often create such public outrage and distrust?
  3. Should assaults committed by law enforcement carry harsher penalties because of their position of authority?
  4. What message does house arrest send to victims and the public in cases involving police violence?
  5. How can communities rebuild trust after incidents like this?
  6. What role does systemic racism play in policing and detention practices?
  7. Why are so many people disturbed by the idea of paid leave after violent misconduct?
  8. What reforms would actually reduce violence in custody settings?
  9. How should society balance rehabilitation of offenders with accountability and deterrence?
  10. What responsibility do ordinary citizens have when witnessing injustice in public institutions?

#JusticeForIndigenousWomen #MMIWG2S #HumanRights #PoliceViolence #IndependentInvestigation #EndPoliceBrutality #ViolenceAgainstWomen #ProtectIndigenousYouth #Vancouver #AccountabilityNow #NoMoreSilence #RedDressDay

HOW MANY TIMES DOES THIS HAVE TO HAPPEN?

 

HOW MANY TIMES DOES THIS HAVE TO HAPPEN?

A restrained, intoxicated 17-year-old Indigenous girl was punched FOUR TIMES in the stomach by a Vancouver jail guard while in police custody.

Another detainee was stomped, kicked, and beaten while restrained.

The judge called it: “gratuitous violence” a “gross abuse of trust” and an attack on public confidence in justice itself.

Yet the sentence was house arrest.

Many people are asking: Would this outcome have been the same if the victims were wealthy? White? Connected? Would ordinary citizens receive the same leniency after assaults captured on video?

This is bigger than one officer. This is about power, accountability, racism, violence against women, and how vulnerable people are treated once behind closed doors.

An intoxicated Indigenous teenager should have been protected. Instead, she was harmed while restrained and surrounded by authorities.

People are tired of apologies without change. Tired of “investigations.” Tired of paid leave after violence. Tired of systems protecting themselves.

We need: • Independent civilian oversight • Trauma-informed policing and custody practices • Real accountability for violence in custody • Mandatory de-escalation and anti-racism training • Transparency when force is used • Stronger protections for youth and Indigenous women

If this disturbs you, do something: Contact elected officials. Write the police board. Support Indigenous organizations. Attend peaceful demonstrations. Refuse silence.

Because silence protects systems — not victims.

#JusticeForIndigenousWomen #MMIWG2S #PoliceViolence #RedDressProject #EndViolenceAgainstWomen #JusticeForYouth #EndPoliceBrutality #Vancouver #AccountabilityNow #ProtectOurYouth #NoMoreSilence #SystemicRacism

ENOUGH.

 ENOUGH.

A restrained, intoxicated 17-year-old Indigenous girl was punched FOUR TIMES in the stomach by a Vancouver jail guard while surrounded by officers and staff.

She was handcuffed. Restrained. Defenceless. In state custody.

This was not “protection.” This was violence.

The judge called it “gratuitous violence,” a “gross abuse of trust,” and another example in Canada’s long history of mistreatment of Indigenous women.

And after all this? PAID LEAVE. HOUSE ARREST.

People are furious because this sends a devastating message to youth, Indigenous communities, women, and the public: that violence committed under authority is treated differently.

We need real accountability. We need independent oversight. We need protection for vulnerable people in custody. And we need the culture that allows this brutality to end.

If this happened to your daughter, your sister, your niece, your friend — would six months at home feel like justice?

Speak up. Do not normalize this. Do not look away.

#PoliceViolence #JusticeForIndigenousWomen #ViolenceAgainstWomen #JusticeForYouth #RedDressDay #MMIWG2S #Vancouver #EndPoliceBrutality #AccountabilityNow #ProtectIndigenousWomen #NoMoreSilence

De-escalation in Real Life: Skills We All Need in a Crowded, Emotional World

 De-escalation in Real Life: Skills We All Need in a Crowded, Emotional World

In times when public spaces are becoming more crowded, more diverse, and more emotionally charged, de-escalation is no longer just a professional skill—it’s a life skill.

Major events like the FIFA World Cup bring together huge crowds, celebration, alcohol, language differences, cultural misunderstandings, and intense emotion. In these environments, small moments can either settle or spiral quickly.

The same is true in everyday life: workplaces, transit, hospitals, housing offices, community spaces, and even online interactions.

Your response to difficult behaviour is often the turning point.

Why de-escalation matters more than ever

Most conflict doesn’t start as “violence.” It starts as stress, misunderstanding, fear, or frustration.

People may be:

  • Overstimulated (noise, crowds, alcohol, heat, stress)
  • Misunderstood due to language or accents
  • Feeling unheard or disrespected
  • Carrying past trauma or systemic stress
  • Reacting to loss of control or uncertainty

And sometimes, what could have been calmed with patience, space, or even a moment of humour or humanity escalates into something far more serious.

We’ve also seen in public discourse and legal systems that outcomes are not always immediate or clear. Cases like that of Myles Gray in Vancouver, which continue to experience delays and public concern, are reminders that justice systems can move slowly, and that prevention—especially at the human interaction level—matters deeply.

Not everything can be solved in the moment. But many situations can be softened before they reach a breaking point.


Top 10 De-escalation Techniques (Practical and Human-Centred)

These are widely used strategies, including those taught by organizations like the Crisis Prevention Institute:

  1. Stay calm under pressure
    Your tone and energy can either lower or raise the emotional temperature.

  2. Respect personal space
    Crowding someone can increase fear or defensiveness.

  3. Use non-threatening body language
    Open posture, relaxed hands, and no sudden movements.

  4. Listen without interrupting
    Let the person fully express themselves before responding.

  5. Acknowledge emotion
    “I can see this is really upsetting” helps people feel seen.

  6. Keep communication simple
    Short sentences and clear language reduce confusion and overload.

  7. Offer choices, not ultimatums
    Restores a sense of control: “We can talk here or step outside.”

  8. Set respectful boundaries
    Calm, clear limits without escalation or threat.

  9. Reduce stimulation when possible
    Move away from crowds, noise, or audience pressure.

  10. Know when to step back and call support
    Safety comes first. Sometimes disengagement is the safest option.


Why this matters in diverse public spaces

In large gatherings like international sports events, festivals, protests, or busy city environments, misunderstandings are more likely:

  • Different languages and accents
  • Alcohol lowering inhibition
  • Cultural differences in expression
  • High emotional investment (sports, politics, identity)
  • Overcrowding and fatigue

Many conflicts are not rooted in intention—but in interpretation.

A raised voice may not mean aggression. A direct tone may not mean disrespect. But in stressed environments, perception becomes reality.

This is why de-escalation skills are becoming essential not just for security or healthcare workers—but for everyone navigating shared public life.


Reflective Questions

  1. When I feel challenged, do I respond or react first?
  2. What does calm actually look like in my body under stress?
  3. How do I interpret tone or language that feels unfamiliar?
  4. Have I ever misread someone’s intention in a tense moment?
  5. What helps me feel safe when I’m overwhelmed?
  6. Do I create space for others to be heard before responding?
  7. How do crowds, noise, or alcohol change my own behaviour or judgement?
  8. What boundaries help me stay grounded in conflict?
  9. When is stepping away the most responsible option?
  10. How can small acts of patience change the direction of a situation?

Closing thought

Not every situation can be prevented, and not every outcome can be controlled. But many moments can be softened.

Sometimes de-escalation is not about “fixing” anything—it’s about creating enough space for a moment not to become a crisis.

And in a world where so many systems feel slow or out of reach, these small human skills matter more than they seem.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Two Truths Can Exist at Once: Trust, Birth, and the Vitamin K Debate

 Two Truths Can Exist at Once: Trust, Birth, and the Vitamin K Debate

There is a growing debate happening around newborn care, especially in the United States, where some parents are refusing Vitamin K injections for their babies. Tragically, some infants have suffered severe bleeding or died as a result. These stories are heartbreaking, emotional, and deeply polarizing.

But perhaps part of the problem is that society keeps forcing people to choose only one side.

What if two truths can exist at once?

The first truth is that modern medicine has saved countless lives. The Vitamin K shot was introduced because doctors observed a pattern: some newborns, even healthy ones, were suddenly experiencing dangerous internal bleeding. Once Vitamin K supplementation became standard, those cases dropped dramatically. For many healthcare workers, this is not theory or politics — it is something they have witnessed firsthand.

The second truth is that many people, especially Indigenous communities and marginalized groups, have legitimate reasons to distrust medical systems. Across North America, there is a painful history of forced sterilization, residential schools, medical experimentation, racism in healthcare, and decisions made without informed consent. These are not “conspiracy theories.” They are documented historical realities that continue to affect trust today.

When people dismiss all concerns as ignorance, they ignore that history.

At the same time, when misinformation spreads online claiming that all medical interventions are dangerous or evil, real babies can be harmed.

Many parents today are trying to navigate an overwhelming world. They want natural births, healthy food, less chemical exposure, less corporate influence, and more control over deeply personal decisions involving their children. Some are reacting to a healthcare system that can feel rushed, impersonal, profit-driven, and traumatic.

But rejecting every intervention simply because it comes from modern medicine can also become dangerous.

The challenge is learning how to separate genuinely lifesaving care from unnecessary overmedicalization.

That requires something society seems to be losing: nuance.

Nuance means acknowledging that:

  • hospitals can save lives and still cause trauma,
  • public health can matter while institutions still deserve scrutiny,
  • traditional knowledge has value,
  • and scientific evidence also matters.

Indigenous cultures survived for thousands of years with deep knowledge of nature, birth, healing, and community. But it is also true that infant mortality in the past was far higher than it is today across all cultures. Some babies undoubtedly died from causes people could not yet explain scientifically, including bleeding disorders.

This conversation should not become a war between “natural” and “medical.”

It should become a conversation about rebuilding trust, improving informed consent, respecting cultural perspectives, reducing fear-based misinformation, and creating healthcare systems that feel more humane and transparent.

Because parents are not statistics. Babies are not political arguments. And fear should never replace thoughtful discussion.

Maybe the path forward is not blind trust. And maybe it is not total rejection either.

Maybe it is learning how to hold two truths at once.

#VitaminKShot

#NewbornHealth

#InformedConsent

#MedicalTrust

#IndigenousHealth

#BirthChoices

#PublicHealthMatters

#ParentingAwareness

#HealthcareTransparency

#TwoTruthsCanExist

When Tiny Creatures Become a Big Threat: Living With Ant Allergies and Invasive Species

 When Tiny Creatures Become a Big Threat: Living With Ant Allergies and Invasive Species

I’ve had some bad experiences with aggressive ants over the years, especially in Mexico. People laugh about ants sometimes, but certain species can sting or bite HARD, and for people with allergies, it can become serious very quickly.

Now hearing about the spread of the Asian needle ant in parts of the U.S. is honestly concerning to me because their sting can trigger severe allergic reactions in some people.

I’ve learned the hard way to stay calm around ants instead of panicking. There seem to be different “jobs” in ant colonies too — sometimes you see one larger scout ant first, then suddenly the others arrive. And those tiny black ants? Some of them are REALLY mean and leave painful burning stings.

One thing I’ve learned is that water works surprisingly well. Instead of spraying tons of chemicals everywhere, I often use a bucket of water or wash ants away from objects carefully when possible. I don’t enjoy killing them — I know they have a purpose in nature — but after being hurt enough times, you learn to protect yourself.

If you’re highly allergic to stings or bites, please take reactions seriously. Stay aware, especially as invasive species spread through warmer climates and shipping routes.

#Ants #InvasiveSpecies #AllergyAwareness #Nature #Vancouver #Mexico #ClimateChange #HealthAwareness


Reflective Questions:

  1. Have you ever experienced a severe reaction to an insect sting or bite?

  2. Do people sometimes underestimate how dangerous allergic reactions can be?

  3. How should cities prepare for invasive species spreading due to climate change and global trade?

  4. What role do insects play in ecosystems, even when humans fear or dislike them?

  5. Have you ever had to overcome panic or fear after a painful experience with animals or insects?

  6. Are chemical pesticides always the best solution, or should safer alternatives be explored first?

  7. How can people protect themselves from invasive insects without harming the environment unnecessarily?

  8. Should governments do more monitoring of invasive species entering Canada through shipping and trade?

  9. How does living close to nature change the way people think about insects and wildlife?

  10. What lessons can difficult experiences in nature teach us about resilience and adaptation?

#AsianNeedleAnt #InvasiveSpecies #AntAllergy #AnaphylaxisAwareness #NatureAwareness #ClimateChange #VancouverBC #EnvironmentalAwareness



Awareness Is Important — But Youth Mental Health Needs Real Action

 

Awareness Is Important — But Youth Mental Health Needs Real Action

It’s good to finally see more public acknowledgment of the growing mental health crisis affecting children and youth. Families, teachers, counselors, youth workers, and young people themselves have been sounding the alarm for years.

The pandemic may have intensified things, but many of the struggles were already there long before COVID.

Young people today are carrying enormous pressure:

  • school stress and academic competition
  • financial anxiety within families
  • housing insecurity
  • loneliness and isolation
  • online bullying and social media pressure
  • uncertainty about the future
  • climate anxiety
  • difficulty accessing affordable support
  • long waitlists for counseling and services

Many youth now say their mental health feels worse than their physical health — and that should concern all of us.

Awareness campaigns are important, but awareness alone is not enough anymore.

Young people do not simply need to “cope better” in increasingly stressful environments. They need communities where they feel safe, connected, creative, supported, and valued.

Real action could include: 🌱 Faster access to counseling and mental health services
🌱 More youth drop-in centers and safe gathering spaces
🌱 Arts, music, sports, gardening, and cultural programs
🌱 Better support for families under financial strain
🌱 More school counselors and trauma-informed care
🌱 Peer support and mentorship programs
🌱 Affordable housing and food security initiatives
🌱 Mobile youth crisis response teams
🌱 Prevention-focused care instead of only emergency intervention

Even small things can make a difference: 🐶 Therapy dogs and animal visits
🌿 Community gardens and nature programs
🎨 Creative outlets and safe spaces for expression
💬 Adults who genuinely listen without judgment

Many young people are exhausted in ways adults often cannot see.

Mental health support cannot only appear once someone reaches a crisis point. We need to build healthier communities long before youth reach burnout, despair, or hopelessness.

The conversation is finally happening more openly now. The next step must be meaningful action.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

To Vancouver Coastal Health Mental Health Services

 To Vancouver Coastal Health Mental Health Services,

I am writing to raise concern about the current situation affecting students following the recent Canvas cyberattack impacting multiple universities in British Columbia, including UBC and SFU.

During final exam season, many students are already experiencing extremely high levels of stress, anxiety, and burnout. The sudden disruption of academic systems — including access to coursework, grades, submissions, and communications — is adding significant additional psychological pressure.

There is a concern that this situation may increase distress among vulnerable students, including those already struggling with anxiety, depression, or housing and financial instability.

I am respectfully urging Vancouver Coastal Health to consider:

  • increased availability of crisis and drop-in mental health supports
  • proactive outreach messaging to students through universities
  • coordination with UBC, SFU, and other institutions to ensure counselling services are adequately resourced
  • clear public communication about where students can access immediate help if they feel overwhelmed

This is not only a technical disruption — it is also a human and psychological one. Students should not be left without adequate mental health support during this period of uncertainty.

Thank you for your time and for the work you do in supporting community wellbeing.

Sincerely,
Tina aka Zipolita 


The Canvas Cyberattack: When Education’s Digital Nervous System Fails

 The Canvas Cyberattack: When Education’s Digital Nervous System Fails

Students study for years.

They sacrifice sleep, relationships, mental health, and often thousands of dollars hoping their hard work will build a future.

Then suddenly, during final exam season, a single cyberattack can throw everything into chaos.

This week, reports emerged that Canvas — the online learning platform used by thousands of schools and universities worldwide — was hit by a major cyberattack allegedly connected to the hacker group ShinyHunters.

For many people outside education, Canvas sounds like “just another app.”

But for students, Canvas is often their entire academic life:

  • assignments,
  • grades,
  • instructor communication,
  • lecture notes,
  • exams,
  • deadlines,
  • and personal academic records.

When the system goes down, students can lose access to the very structure holding their education together.

Universities including UBC and SFU have reportedly experienced disruptions or warnings connected to the incident. Students were advised to change passwords and remain cautious while investigations continue.

What feels unsettling is not only the hack itself.

It is the realization of how fragile modern systems really are.

Over the past decade, schools rushed into centralized digital platforms because they were efficient, scalable, and profitable. Education increasingly became dependent on cloud-based systems controlled by outside corporations.

But centralization creates a dangerous weakness: one failure can affect thousands of institutions at once.

For students already under pressure from tuition costs, housing insecurity, debt, and job uncertainty, these disruptions hit especially hard.

And many students know the irony firsthand.

Modern education systems often feel clunky, stressful, impersonal, and exhausting. Students pour blood, sweat, tears, and years of their lives into institutions while navigating overloaded systems that sometimes seem designed more for administration than human wellbeing.

Now many are asking: How secure are these systems really?

What happens when education becomes too dependent on fragile digital infrastructure?

And who carries the consequences when those systems fail?

The attack also raises larger questions about privacy.

Even if financial information was not exposed, reports suggest names, emails, student IDs, course information, and private messages may have been compromised.

In an age where identity theft, phishing scams, and surveillance are growing concerns, even “basic” personal information has value.

What makes this story especially emotional is timing.

Final exams already create enormous stress. For some students, grades affect scholarships, graduation, visas, employment opportunities, or future applications.

A system outage during that period is not just inconvenient. It can feel catastrophic.

The Canvas cyberattack may eventually be repaired.

Servers will come back online. Passwords will reset. Universities will issue statements.

But the bigger issue remains: our society has built critical systems that are deeply interconnected, centralized, and increasingly vulnerable.

Education is supposed to create stability, opportunity, and growth.

Yet many students today are navigating systems that often feel unstable themselves.

Perhaps this incident is another warning sign that convenience without resilience comes at a cost.

— Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita

How “The Alchemy of Ivy Mae” Began

🌱 How “The Alchemy of Ivy Mae” Began

Sometimes creative projects begin with a plan.
And sometimes they begin because you simply need somewhere for your mind to go.

Last winter was a difficult one for me. ❄️ December and January were cold, work was hard to find, and there was a lot of stress around housing and everyday survival. The house I was staying in was crowded, people were dealing with their own struggles, and everywhere I went I seemed to see the same thing—people on the edge.

On the bus 🚌
On the streets
In conversations

Homelessness. Addiction. Loss. Families dealing with illness and dementia. A lot of people just trying to get through the day.

Originally, The Alchemy of Ivy Mae ✨📖 was meant to be a year-long interactive writing project, where readers could help shape the story.

But something unexpected happened.

Bundled up in a cold room 🧣, trying to stay warm, I started writing.

And I kept writing.

What began as a small idea turned into a whole world—a post-electric future where young people are rebuilding after the Great Solar Collapse ☀️⚡. The story follows Jas, a non-binary teen, discovering fragments of the old world and trying to understand how things went wrong.

In a way, writing it became a kind of mental health project 🧠💛. Instead of focusing on the chaos around me, I focused on imagining a future where communities learn from the past and try to do things differently.

I ended up writing most of the series in about three intense weeks.

Then I scheduled the posts slowly over time so the story could unfold piece by piece.

I thought readers might help guide it.

But I have to admit something.

I got a little carried away with the story. 😄

It kept growing.

And now it’s finished.

The final post has been shared, and the full story stands as a complete arc.

If you’re curious about this storytelling experiment, you can still read it here:

🌿 The Alchemy of Ivy Mae
https://thealchemyofivymae.blogspot.com

Sometimes creativity grows in the hardest seasons. 🌧️➡️🌱
And sometimes the stories we write to survive a winter become something bigger than we expected.

— Tina Winterlik (Zipolita) 📷✍️

Blueprint for a Life-First Vancouver

🏗️ Blueprint for a Life-First Vancouver

If we imagine Vancouver not as it is, but as it could be after a full systems reset, the goal is not perfection.

The goal is alignment. 🧭

A city that treats survival as the foundation layer, not the outcome of success.

This is one possible blueprint.


🏠 1. Housing as civic infrastructure

Housing is redesigned as a public foundation system, not a speculative asset class.

Key principles:

  • Starter homes designed for 2 adults + 1 child 👨‍👩‍👧
  • Tiny-home and modular housing systems integrated into neighbourhood planning 🏡
  • Co-operative ownership models instead of speculation
  • Community land trusts that permanently protect affordability

In this model, housing is treated like roads or water systems:

not something you compete for, but something you collectively maintain.


🏡 2. Life-cycle housing design

Homes are not static—they evolve with human life stages.

  • Youth housing integrated with education systems 🎓
  • Starter family units designed for flexibility
  • Elder housing embedded within community clusters 🌿

People don’t fall out of housing systems—they transition within them.


🧠 3. Immediate care as the default entry point

No one enters the system through rejection.

They enter through stabilization.

This means:

  • Immediate access to shelter 🛏️
  • Immediate food security 🍲
  • Immediate medical and mental health care 🧠
  • Voluntary detox and recovery options without barriers

Care is not a reward for progress.

It is the starting condition for it.


🚓 4. Public safety as a highly educated field

Public safety roles are restructured as long-term professional education pathways:

  • Multi-year academic training 📚
  • Psychology and trauma-informed practice
  • Mediation and de-escalation specialization
  • Supervised field training comparable to health professions

At the same time, crisis response is diversified:

  • Mental health crisis teams
  • Medical responders
  • Community mediators
  • Police as escalation-only support layer 🚨

The goal is not fewer tools—but better-matched tools.


🌱 5. Cities as learning ecosystems

Education becomes physically embedded in city systems.

Students participate in:

  • Building small-scale housing units 🏗️
  • Maintaining food gardens 🌿
  • Repairing infrastructure systems
  • Practicing conflict resolution in real environments

A city is no longer just where education happens.

It is something education actively builds.


🌾 6. Distributed survival systems

Food and water systems are decentralised:

  • Rooftop agriculture 🌿
  • Indoor hydroponic networks
  • Community-managed food hubs
  • Redundancy built into essential utilities

The system is designed to withstand shock, not assume stability.


⚖️ 7. The shift in logic: from economy-first to life-first

This blueprint does not remove economics.

It reorders priority.

Old hierarchy:

Market → Housing → Health → Safety → Education

Rewritten hierarchy:

Survival → Housing → Health → Education → Economy

Everything else becomes possible only after survival is guaranteed.


🧭 Final idea

A city is not broken because it lacks intelligence.

It becomes unstable when its priorities no longer match the realities of human survival.

A life-first Vancouver would not be utopian.

It would be functional.

And the shift required is not the invention of new systems—but the realignment of existing ones into something that finally works together instead of against itself. 🧩

Stepping Back — Vancouver as a Broken Rubik’s Cube

🧩 Stepping Back — Vancouver as a Broken Rubik’s Cube

If you step back far enough from Vancouver—or any modern city—it stops looking like a collection of isolated crises and starts looking like a system that has drifted out of alignment. 🧭

Housing crisis. 🏠
Overloaded health care. 🏥
Addiction emergency. 💔
Undertrained frontline systems. 🚓
Rising inequality. 📉

It’s tempting to treat each one separately, as if they are unrelated problems with unrelated solutions.

But they aren’t separate.

They are different sides of the same cube. 🧩

When a Rubik’s cube is scrambled, you don’t fix one face at a time in isolation. You rotate the whole system until the pieces begin to align again.

Cities are similar.

When they become unstable, it is rarely because people individually failed—it’s because the structure they are living in no longer matches the reality it is trying to support.


🏠 Housing stopped being shelter

Housing is the foundation layer of everything else.

But in Vancouver, it has shifted into something else entirely: an investment vehicle, a scarcity asset, a financial anchor.

When shelter becomes speculation, everything built on top of it starts to destabilize.

People are forced into survival mode:

  • working not to live, but to remain housed
  • delaying families
  • delaying health care
  • delaying stability itself

In a stable system, housing is not the reward for success.

It is the starting condition for life. 🌱


🧠 Systems that respond too late

Health care and addiction support often operate downstream—waiting until crisis before intervention becomes possible.

But by the time someone reaches visible crisis, the system is already late.

In a stable design, support is not conditional on being “stable enough” to receive it.

It begins at instability.

Food, shelter, care, and detox are not rewards for compliance—they are baseline stabilizers that make recovery possible in the first place. 🛟


🚓 Public safety without structural depth

One of the clearest signs of systemic imbalance is when a role is given responsibility for problems it was never designed to carry.

When frontline responders are trained for months—but expected to manage:

  • trauma
  • addiction
  • mental health crises
  • domestic violence
  • social breakdown

—then the gap between expectation and preparation becomes dangerous.

Not because individuals fail, but because the system overloads the role.

In a more balanced design, public safety is not the first response to every crisis.

It is one layer in a wider ecosystem of care. ⚖️


🎓 Education disconnected from reality

Education often exists in parallel to the city rather than inside it.

But imagine if it wasn’t.

Imagine students learning:

  • how housing is designed and built
  • how food systems function
  • how conflict is mediated
  • how infrastructure is maintained

A city is not just studied.

It is participated in. 🏗️


🌊 The deeper issue: misaligned priorities

At the core, the problem is not that Vancouver lacks resources or intelligence.

It is that the system prioritizes:

market logic over survival logic

When that happens, everything essential becomes secondary to cost.

But survival systems do not negotiate with economics.

They either function—or they fail.

And when they fail at scale, the result is visible everywhere: housing instability, overloaded services, and rising social tension.

The cube is not missing pieces.

It is simply rotated out of alignment. 🧩

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Vancouver’s Addiction Crisis: People Want Solutions, Not More Division

 Vancouver’s Addiction Crisis: People Want Solutions, Not More Division

The debate over overdose prevention sites in Vancouver has become deeply emotional and politically charged. Many residents are frustrated, exhausted, and heartbroken watching the crisis continue year after year.

Some support harm reduction as a life-saving emergency response. Others feel neighbourhoods have carried the burden while recovery, treatment, housing, and mental health supports have fallen behind.

The truth is, this crisis is bigger than politics.

Right now, many people are asking a simple question:

Why can’t we focus more on treatment, recovery, prevention, and long-term healing alongside emergency overdose response?

The overdose crisis did not appear overnight. It is tied to trauma, toxic drugs, homelessness, poverty, mental health struggles, isolation, and a housing crisis that continues to push vulnerable people to the edge.

If we truly want change, we need a system that helps people survive — but also helps them rebuild their lives.

What Could Actually Help?

Faster Access to Treatment

Many people reach a moment where they finally ask for help. But if detox beds or treatment spaces are unavailable, that opportunity can disappear quickly. We need rapid-access treatment available when people are ready.

Long-Term Recovery Housing

Treatment is only the beginning. Without stable housing, support, and community, relapse becomes far more likely. Recovery housing with ongoing support could make a major difference.

Mental Health Support

Addiction and mental health are often deeply connected. Trauma, depression, anxiety, psychosis, and brain injury cannot be ignored in this conversation.

Prevention and Youth Support

Young people need hope, mentorship, recreation, food security, education, and community connection before addiction takes hold.

Indigenous-Led Healing

Many Indigenous leaders and communities continue calling for culturally grounded healing programs that address intergenerational trauma and reconnect people with identity, land, and belonging.

Shared Responsibility Across Communities

Many residents feel overwhelmed when services are concentrated in only a few neighbourhoods. A more balanced regional approach may reduce pressure while improving access to care.

Accountability and Real Results

People want measurable progress:

  • fewer overdose deaths,
  • safer streets,
  • less visible suffering,
  • more people entering recovery,
  • and stronger communities.

Without visible improvement, public trust continues to erode.

Beyond Political Slogans

This issue cannot be solved through anger alone, and it cannot be solved by pretending one approach fits everyone.

People struggling with addiction are human beings.

Families grieving loved ones are human beings.

Residents worried about safety are human beings too.

The goal should not be endless division between “sides.” The goal should be helping people heal while creating safer, healthier communities for everyone.

Maybe it is time to stop arguing over which single approach is “right” and start building a system that includes prevention, treatment, recovery, housing, mental health support, and compassion together.

Because clearly, what we are doing now is not enough.

#Vancouver #BC #AddictionCrisis #MentalHealth #Recovery #HarmReduction #HousingCrisis #OverdoseCrisis #CommunityHealing #BritishColumbia

📖 From Bible to Newspapers to Algorithms: The Evolution of News 📰📡📱

 📖 From Bible to Newspapers to Algorithms: The Evolution of News 📰📡📱

Long before newspapers existed, information moved through:

  • spoken storytelling
  • community messengers
  • religious and royal announcements

One of the earliest forms of mass communication was the printing of religious texts, especially the Bible, after the invention of the printing press in Europe in the 1400s (often associated with Johannes Gutenberg).

The printing press didn’t create newspapers yet—but it changed everything:

  • ideas could be reproduced
  • knowledge could spread beyond local communities
  • information became standardized

This was the foundation of modern media.


📰 The rise of newspapers (1600s–1800s)

As printing became cheaper and cities grew, early newspapers emerged.

They began as:

  • pamphlets and bulletins
  • focused on trade, politics, and war
  • often influenced by governments or elites

Over time, newspapers became structured institutions:

  • daily publishing
  • editorial boards
  • advertising systems
  • professional journalism

They became central to public life—shaping politics, identity, and accountability.


📡 Radio: news becomes instant voice (1900s)

Radio changed everything.

For the first time:

  • news could be heard instantly
  • information reached entire nations at once
  • live updates became possible

It transformed news into something immediate and shared in real time.


📺 Television: news becomes visual (mid–late 1900s)

Television added image and emotion.

News became:

  • visual storytelling
  • evening broadcasts in homes
  • anchored by trusted presenters

People didn’t just hear about events—they saw them unfold.


📱 Internet + digital news (1990s–2000s)

The internet broke the old model:

  • news became constant and global
  • print schedules disappeared
  • audiences moved online

Newspapers shifted from physical papers to digital platforms, while competition increased dramatically.


🌍 Social media + distributed storytelling (2010s–now)

Now we are in a new phase.

News spreads through:

  • social media platforms
  • independent creators
  • algorithms instead of editors

This creates:

  • faster reporting
  • more voices
  • but also more fragmentation and misinformation

We now live in a system where:

anyone can publish, but not everything is verified before it spreads


🧠 The bigger pattern

Across history, each stage increased:

  • speed
  • reach
  • access

But also introduced new challenges:

  • information overload
  • loss of shared truth
  • attention-driven content
  • weakened gatekeeping structures

The question is no longer just how news is delivered—but how trust is built.


🤔 Reflective Questions

  1. What did society gain—and lose—when storytelling moved from oral tradition to print?
  2. Did newspapers create shared truth, or controlled versions of it?
  3. How did radio change the emotional impact of news compared to print?
  4. Did television make news more truthful—or more performative?
  5. What happens when news becomes constant instead of scheduled?
  6. Who decides what is “important” in the age of algorithms?
  7. Are we more informed today, or just more exposed to information?
  8. How do we maintain trust when anyone can publish instantly?
  9. What role should journalism play in a world of distributed storytelling?
  10. How do we protect shared reality in an attention-driven media system?

🔑 Keywords

Printing Press, Gutenberg Bible, Newspapers, Journalism History, Radio Broadcasting, Television News, Digital Media, Internet News, Social Media, Distributed Storytelling, Media Evolution, Information Age, Media Literacy, Algorithmic Influence, Public Discourse

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Red Dress Day — More Than Awareness

 🟥  Red Dress Day — More Than Awareness

May 5 — Red Dress Day

Today, across Canada, red dresses hang in trees, on porches, along roadsides.

They move in the wind like spirits.

They are not decoration.
They are reminders.

They represent the lives of Indigenous women, girls, and Two-Spirit people who are missing or have been taken—many without justice, many without answers.

This is not just history.
This is ongoing.


Today, leaders like Marilyn Slett are in Ottawa pushing for change—real, measurable change.

At the center of this is Bill S-2, a proposed amendment to the Indian Act.

Let’s be clear about what that means.

For over 150 years, the Indian Act has controlled identity—deciding who is legally recognized as “Status Indian.” But built into that system is something called the second-generation cut-off.

It’s a rule that slowly erases identity over generations.

If status isn’t passed down in a very specific way, it disappears.

Not naturally.
Legally.


This isn’t just paperwork.

The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls made it clear:

When women lose status, they can lose connection to community, housing, health supports, and safety.

And when people are disconnected and unsupported, they become more vulnerable.

This is one of the root causes behind the MMIWG2S+ crisis.


Think about that.

A law—still in place today—can contribute to whether someone is safe… or at risk.


Bill S-2 aims to remove that second-generation cut-off.

To stop the legal erasure.

To correct discrimination that has disproportionately harmed Indigenous women for generations.

And yet—this still hasn’t been fixed.

In 2026.


Red Dress Day is not just about mourning.

It’s about truth.

It’s about asking why systems that caused harm are still standing.

It’s about recognizing that “awareness” without action changes nothing.


We cannot keep saying “Never Again”
while allowing the conditions to continue.


Today, we remember.

But we also listen.
We pay attention.
We speak up.

Because these are not just statistics.

They are daughters.
Mothers.
Friends.
Family.

And they deserved—and still deserve—better.


#RedDressDay #MMIWG2S #NoMoreStolenSisters #IndigenousWomen #TruthAndReconciliation #EndTheViolence #JusticeForIndigenousWomen #BillS2 #Canada #HumanRights #EveryChildMatters #StopTheSilence