Thursday, March 26, 2026

Too Much πŸ’©: A Reflection on Skin, Simplicity, and Respect 🌿

 Too Much πŸ’©: A Reflection on Skin, Simplicity, and Respect 🌿

It started, like many real lessons do… in the kitchen 🍳πŸ”₯

A simple moment—cooking, heat rising, oil snapping—and then…
OUCH 😬πŸ”₯

A splash of grease landed on my forehead.

Not dramatic. Not hospital-level.
But enough to send me straight into…

PANIC MODE 😱😭

Because normally… I would KNOW what to do.

πŸ’œ Lavender oil.
Lots of it.
Like… a lot a lot.

The kind of “this will heal overnight” confidence.

But this time?

I was out.
Completely out.
Not a drop.

Cue the spiral:

πŸ€ͺ “What do I do now?”
πŸ€” “Is this going to scar?”
πŸ™„ “Why didn’t I bring more?”
😬 “Okay… don’t freak out…”

So I did the only thing I could.

I slowed down.

And reached for what was actually there…

🌿 Fresh aloe vera.

Cut it.
Drained it (like we learned).
Put it in the fridge.
Then gently placed it on the burn.

Cold. Calm. Simple.

And honestly?

It worked.


🌿 The Healing (aka the part nobody talks about)

Then came the real process…

The itch 😬
The half-asleep scratch πŸ€ͺ
The “wait… was I supposed to remove that?” moment πŸ€”

I gently peeled away what felt like old skin sitting in the creases on my forehead…

And again:

Was that good?
Was that bad?

πŸ™„ Both.

Because healing isn’t perfect.
It’s messy.
It’s human.


🌞 Heat, Sweat, and Reality

No beach for a couple days.
Shade instead of sun 🌴
Also dealing with a dog scratch 🐾 (because… life)

No 10-step routine.
No expensive products.

Just:
Water πŸ’§
Sweat πŸ˜…
Aloe 🌿

And honestly?

That’s when it hit me…


πŸ’„ We Are Doing WAY Too Much πŸ’©

Too many products.
Too many steps.
Too much fixing.

Blackheads? Problem.
Wrinkles? Problem.
Texture? Problem.

Everything becomes something to correct.

And then…

πŸ” The magnifying mirror.

GOOD GOD 😳

Who decided we should look at ourselves like that every day?!

Pores look like craters.
Lines look like canyons.
Normal skin looks… wrong.

But think about it…

We used to see ourselves in:
🌊 Water
🌫️ Reflections
✨ Soft light

Not under harsh zoom and judgment.


🍍 The Pineapple Thought

Yes… pineapple can exfoliate 🍍
Yes… it can smooth

But also?

⚠️ It can sting
⚠️ It can irritate
⚠️ It can damage healing skin

Just because we can…
doesn’t mean we should.

Same with:
πŸ₯₯ Oils
🧴 Cleansers
πŸ’§ Treatments


🌿 The Real Lesson

This was never about:
Aloe vs pineapple
Oil vs no oil

It was about this:

Do I trust my body?

Because the body:
Knows how to heal πŸ”₯
Knows how to shed skin πŸ‚
Knows how to regulate itself 🌞

What it needs is not control…

But respect.


πŸ’­ Reflective Questions

  1. When was the first time I ever used a cleanser—and why?
  2. Do I remember ads or messages that made me feel like my natural skin wasn’t enough? (hello Noxema commercials πŸ“Ί… I remember singing them so much my family shushed me 🀣)
  3. How much of my routine comes from habit vs actual need?
  4. What am I afraid will happen if I don’t use products?
  5. Do I trust my body to heal—or do I constantly interfere?
  6. How often do I pick, scratch, or “fix” instead of letting things be? 😬
  7. Has magnification (mirrors, cameras) changed how I see myself?
  8. What does my skin actually need in my environment (heat, sun, sweat)?
  9. Am I caring for my body—or trying to control it?
  10. What would respecting my skin look like… in the simplest way?

Sometimes the most radical thing we can do is…

🌿 Step back
❄️ Cool the skin
πŸ’§ Keep it simple

…and let the body lead. πŸ’š

Normalization of Suffering – Post 4: The Business of Attention

 Normalization of Suffering – Post 4: The Business of Attention πŸ‘️πŸ’°

If something feels constant…
It’s probably not accidental.

Every ad you see πŸ“’
Every video that pulls you in πŸŽ₯
Every notification that interrupts your thoughts πŸ””

There’s a reason it’s there.

Because your attention?

It’s valuable.

We like to think we’re just scrolling.

Just watching.
Just passing time.

But behind the scenes, there’s an entire system built around one thing:

Keeping you looking πŸ‘€

The longer you stay…
The more you see.
The more you absorb.

This is the business model.

Not connection.
Not well-being.

Attention.

And attention doesn’t care if what you’re seeing is joyful or disturbing.

In fact—sometimes the more emotional it is, the better it performs.

That includes suffering.

When videos of people in crisis get views, shares, and comments…

They become part of the system.

Promoted. Amplified. Repeated πŸ”

Not because it’s right.

But because it works.

And the same applies to advertising.

From billboards to bus shelters to your phone screen—messages are placed where you can’t avoid them.

In cities like Vancouver, entire networks of outdoor advertising shape what people see every single day.

Companies like Pattison Outdoor Advertising—part of a larger media empire built by Jim Pattison—have spent decades mastering visibility.

Not just what you look at.

But how often.

Repetition again.
Visibility again.
Influence again.

And now, it’s not just physical spaces.

It’s digital.

Relentless.

Personalized.

What used to be a billboard you passed once a day…

Is now something you carry in your pocket πŸ“±

So here’s the deeper question:

If attention is being bought and sold…

Where does that leave your autonomy?

Because the more time we spend reacting—

The less time we spend choosing.

And when everything is designed to pull you in…

Stepping back becomes an act of awareness.

Even resistance ✊

This isn’t about rejecting everything.

It’s about seeing clearly.

Because once you understand that your attention is the product…

You can start deciding where it goes.

And that might be one of the most important choices we have left.


πŸ” Reflection Questions

How often do you reach for your phone without consciously deciding to?

Do you feel in control of your attention… or pulled by what appears on your screen?

Have you ever noticed ads or content repeating across different platforms?

Why do you think emotionally intense content spreads faster than neutral content?

Who benefits from you staying engaged—especially with distressing content?

Do you think attention has become a form of currency? If so, who is spending it?

How do outdoor ads (billboards, bus shelters) affect your thoughts without you realizing it?

Can you remember a time when you consciously chose to look away from something designed to grab your attention?

What would it feel like to take back control of where your focus goes?

If your attention shapes your reality… what kind of reality is being built for you?


Keywords (comma separated):
Normalization of Suffering, Attention Economy, Media Influence, Advertising Power, Digital Manipulation, Consumer Psychology, Desensitization, Algorithmic Control, Mental Autonomy, Social Awareness


Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Equal Means Equal?- Thought This Was Settled

 ✍️ Post 1: I Thought This Was Settled

Equal Means Equal? — A Question We Thought Was Answered

I was born in 1962.

People were already fighting for equality then.

By the time I was old enough to understand the world, things seemed to be changing. I remember watching TV—women working as doctors, strong characters, more diversity. It felt like progress was happening. Like we were moving forward.

So I grew up believing something simple: That equality was coming… and would soon be part of everyday life.

Now it’s 2026, and I’m reading about a federal court case over the Equal Rights Amendment.

And I have to pause.

How is this still a question?

This isn’t anger as much as it is disbelief. After decades of advocacy, organizing, and legal work… how is equality still being debated at the constitutional level?

Maybe the issue isn’t whether people believe in equality.

Maybe it’s how long systems take to catch up with what people thought had already been settled.

#EqualMeansEqual #ERA #Equality #Reflection

Normalization of Suffering – Post 3

 Normalization of Suffering – Post 3: From Compassion to Content πŸŽ₯πŸ’”

There was a time when suffering stopped us.

Now… it gets recorded.

Someone collapses.
Someone struggles.
Someone is clearly not okay.

And instead of stepping in…

A phone comes out πŸ“±

This is one of the hardest shifts to talk about.

Because it forces us to ask a question we may not want to answer:

When did we start documenting pain instead of responding to it?

Scroll through social media and you’ll see it.

Clips of people in crisis.
People bent over in withdrawal.
People at their lowest moment.

Shared. Viewed. Commented on.

Sometimes with concern.
Sometimes with cruelty.

And each time it’s posted… something changes.

Not just for the person in the video.

But for everyone watching.

The distance grows.

The screen creates a barrier.

We are no longer there.

We are observers πŸ‘️

And observation, over time, can replace empathy.

In cities like Vancouver, this isn’t hypothetical.

It’s happening on sidewalks. At bus stops. In doorways.

Real people.
Real moments.

And yet… the response is often the same:

Record. Upload. Scroll πŸ”

Some will say they’re “raising awareness.”

And sometimes, that’s true.

But we have to ask:

Awareness for what?
And for whom?

Because awareness without action can become something else.

Consumption.

When suffering becomes content, it risks losing its humanity.

It becomes something to watch… instead of something to respond to.

And this is where we have to be honest with ourselves.

Have we ever watched one of these videos?

Did we pause?

Did we feel something?

Or did we move on?

No judgment.

Just awareness.

Because this isn’t about pointing fingers.

It’s about recognizing a shift.

A slow drift from compassion… to detachment.

So here’s the question for today:

Are we still witnesses to suffering…
Or have we become an audience to it? 🎭

And if we don’t like the answer—

What are we willing to change?


πŸ” Reflection Questions

Have you ever seen someone in distress and instinctively reached for your phone instead of helping?

When you watch videos of people suffering, what is your first reaction—concern, curiosity, or discomfort?

Do you believe sharing these videos creates meaningful awareness, or does it risk exploiting vulnerable people?

Where is the line between documenting reality and disrespecting dignity?

Have social media platforms changed how we respond to real-life emergencies?

Do you feel more connected to others through these videos… or more detached?

If you were in crisis, would you want someone to film you?

What responsibility do we have as viewers when this content appears in our feed?

Are we becoming desensitized to human suffering through repeated exposure?

What would it look like to choose action over observation?


Keywords (comma separated):
Normalization of Suffering, Social Media Culture, Compassion Fatigue, Digital Detachment, Ethical Awareness, Human Dignity, Bystander Effect, Content Consumption, Desensitization, Media Responsibility



Tuesday, March 24, 2026

When a Mother Had to Do What the System Didn’t

When a Mother Had to Do What the System Didn’t

A disturbing case out of Alaska is raising serious questions—not just about crime, but about protection.

Craig Scott Valdez, a chief of staff to George Rauscher, has been indicted on federal charges including sex trafficking of a minor, coercion and enticement, and child exploitation.

Prosecutors allege he used Snapchat to groom underage girls—something we are seeing far too often in cases involving youth.

But what stands out most in this story… is not the arrest.

It’s what happened before.

A 15-year-old girl—allegedly lured to his home—was found not by law enforcement, not by an institution, not by a safeguard…

…but by her mother.

Using a family tracking app, the mother located her daughter, went to the house, walked in—

and when she saw what was happening, she struck him.

Then she gathered her barely-conscious child and got her out of there.

Let that sink in.

A parent had to physically intervene to stop what was unfolding.


Now we need to ask harder questions.

How is it that someone in a position of trust—working inside government—can allegedly groom children without detection?

What are we teaching young people about grooming, coercion, and digital manipulation?

Are schools keeping up with the reality of apps that parents don’t fully understand or can’t easily monitor?

Because this isn’t just about one case.

We’ve already seen the devastating consequences of online exploitation.

In Canada, cases like Amanda Todd exposed how online harassment and exploitation can spiral into tragedy.
And Rehtaeh Parsons—who bravely spoke out—was still relentlessly targeted.

There was also a young boy whose death helped push conversations forward around online extortion and exploitation—yet here we are, still reacting instead of preventing.


So where are the protections?

  • In schools
  • In community centres
  • In youth programs
  • On public transit systems where awareness campaigns could exist
  • On the very platforms where this behavior is happening

We have opportunities—every single day—to educate, to intervene, to protect.

And yet, case after case, we are hearing the same story.

A child targeted.
A system reacting too late.
A family left to pick up the pieces.


This time, a mother got there in time.

She trusted her instincts.
She acted.
She stopped it.

But we cannot keep relying on parents to be the last line of defense.

Because not every child will have that moment.

πŸ’”

If you or someone you know may be at risk, report it to the Federal Bureau of Investigation or your local authorities.

Because protecting children should never depend on luck.

#ProtectChildren #OnlineSafety #Accountability #EndExploitation

Happy 90th Birthday, David Suzuki!

 πŸŒΏπŸŽ‰ Happy 90th Birthday, David Suzuki! πŸŽ‰πŸŒΏ

Today we celebrate not just a milestone birthday, but a lifetime of courage, wisdom, and unwavering dedication to our planet. πŸ’š

For decades, you have inspired generations to look more closely at the natural world—to understand it, protect it, and cherish it. Through your work with the David Suzuki Foundation, your voice has helped shape conversations about climate, conservation, and our shared responsibility to future generations.

Your message has always been clear: we are all connected—to each other, to the land, and to the future we are creating together. 🌎✨

At 90, your legacy continues to grow in every young activist, every mindful choice, and every person who dares to believe we can do better for this Earth.

Thank you for your wisdom, your passion, and your lifelong commitment to truth and change.

πŸ’« Wishing you a joyful birthday filled with love, reflection, and the beauty of nature you’ve spent your life protecting.

#HappyBirthday #DavidSuzuki #EnvironmentalHero #ClimateAction #Gratitude #Inspiration

🌿 Remembering Great Aunt Mary

 πŸŒΏ Remembering Great Aunt Mary

There’s a very important person in my life we haven’t written about yet: Mary Catherine Enos, my Great Aunt Mary. She never married, and her life spanned so much history, grief, and love.

I was born in 1962, the third child in a busy household, and my sister came just 15 months later. Aunt Mary came to help—my mom had to wean me early, so it must have been hard on everyone. But I have a feeling Aunt Mary filled my head with Indigenous knowledge, even though she was very Catholic.

She shared the same ancestry as my grand-uncle Jimmy and Grandpa John Joseph Enos: Iroquois, Songhees, Kalapuya, Souke, and Portuguese, with French heritage through her mother, Mary Ann Poirier. I never thought of her as brown at the time, but looking back, I realize how her heritage shaped her. Her hair was coarse, and I mostly remember her as older, practical, and gruff.

When my mom was sick—or perhaps after my dad had died, I’m not exactly sure—Aunt Mary came to look after us in Hope, BC, having previously lived in Surrey. She brought care, love, and wisdom, even while carrying her own grief: by 1960, her parents and siblings had all passed. She must have loved me deeply—it was good, but the timing was bittersweet.

Aunt Mary had traveled to Rome around 1970–73 and brought back little Jesus statues for us and a Mother Mary bottle filled with holy water for Mom. She also worked as a telephone operator for BC Tel, with a gruff voice and a love of wine and cigarettes—habits that perhaps influenced the rest of our family.

One moment that sticks with me: in 1979 or 1980, I was studying photography at school and could check out cameras. I brought one to Victoria to visit Aunt Mary. She had my great-grandfather’s diary—her father’s diary—full of day-to-day chores, weather observations, family visits, hunting deer, building fences, tending gardens, working in the blacksmith shop, and waiting for his father. She wouldn’t let me touch it, and at 18, I was hurt.

Eventually, she donated the diary to the Royal BC Museum, and I was the only one who remembered. Years later, in 2016, I finally got a scan of it with the help of a friend. A Portuguese-speaking lawyer friend even found five generations of baptism records in the Azores, all from the same church.

Through all of this, Aunt Mary taught me about resilience, love, memory, and family heritage. She preserved the past and carried it into our lives with quiet strength.


πŸ“œ Ancestry & Family Facts – Mary Catherine Enos

Personal Details

  • Full Name: Mary Catherine Enos
  • Birth: 25 March 1898, British Columbia, Canada
  • Death: 9 October 1983, Victoria, BC, Canada
  • Burial: Ross Bay Cemetery, Victoria, BC
  • Religion: Roman Catholic

Parents

  • Father: Joseph Enos (1867–1918)
  • Mother: Mary Ann Poirier (1870–1940)

Siblings

  • John Joseph Enos (1893–1956)
  • James Charles Enos (1895–1960)
  • Agnes Margaret Enos (1901–1924)
  • Ann “Annie” Enos (1906–?)

Census & Occupation

  • 1901 Census (Victoria, BC): Age 3, living with parents and brothers; recorded as Portuguese
  • 1921 Census (Victoria, BC): Age 23, occupation: teacher; bilingual (English/French); wage: $800/year
  • 1931 Census (Nanaimo/Sidney area, BC): Age 32, occupation: telephone operator; wage: $960/year

Career & Contributions

  • Early Career: Teacher (1921)
  • Later Career: Telephone operator for BC Tel (1931)

Family Contributions:

  • Preserved her father’s diary documenting daily life: chores, gardening, blacksmith work, hunting, and weather
  • Traveled to Rome in the early 1970s, bringing back religious items for family
  • Caregiver to younger generations in her extended family

Notable Life Achievements

  • Maintained family history and heritage through the diary and documentation
  • Ensured her father’s diary was donated to the Royal BC Museum, preserving it for future generations
  • Helped keep alive Indigenous knowledge, Catholic traditions, and Portuguese heritage within the family

⚠️ Disclaimer

I have done my best to document the life and family history of Great Aunt Mary Catherine Enos accurately, drawing from records, census data, and personal memories. Some details—especially dates, relationships, and recollections—may be incomplete or may change as new information becomes available. This story blends both historical facts and personal experiences, and I may update it in the future as I uncover more records or memories.


🀝 To All My Relations

I am on a mission to document our family history. If you have any family-tree information, stories, photos, or documents about our relatives, please share them. Every contribution helps preserve our Enos family legacy.

Normalization of Suffering – Post 2:

 Normalization of Suffering – Post 2: The Psychology of Repetition πŸ§ πŸ”

What we see once… affects us.

What we see repeatedly… shapes us.

This is where it gets uncomfortable.

Because most of what we’re exposed to today isn’t accidental.

It’s designed.

Every ad πŸ“’
Every notification πŸ””
Every repeated message

They’re not just trying to get your attention.

They’re trying to become familiar.

And the human brain?

It trusts what feels familiar.

Even if it’s harmful.
Even if it’s not true.
Even if it slowly changes how we see ourselves.

This is how repetition works.

You don’t notice it at first.

A message appears once:
“Fix this.”
“Improve that.”
“You’re not enough… yet.”

You ignore it.

Then it shows up again.

And again.

Different format. Same message.

Eventually, something shifts.

Not loudly.

Quietly.

You start to question yourself.
You start to adjust.
You start to believe… just a little.

This doesn’t just apply to advertising.

It applies to suffering too.

When we see crisis over and over—on screens πŸ“±, in streets 🚢‍♀️, in cities like Vancouver—

Our brains begin to categorize it as “normal.”

Not because it is normal.

But because it’s constant.

And once something feels normal…

We stop reacting the same way.

This is where compassion fatigue begins.

Not from lack of care.

But from overload 😞

We are not built to process endless streams of distress, messaging, and pressure without pause.

But that’s the environment we’re now living in.

So here’s something to sit with:

If repetition can shape beliefs…

Who—or what—is shaping yours? πŸ€”

And maybe more importantly:

Are those messages helping you…
Or quietly changing you?


πŸ” Reflection Questions

How many ads do you think you see in a single day—and how many do you actually notice?

Can you recall a belief about yourself that may have come from repeated messaging rather than your own experience?

When you see the same message over and over (about health, body image, success), do you question it—or start to accept it?

Have you ever changed your behavior without realizing it was influenced by advertising or media exposure?

What messages have you internalized about your body, your worth, or your lifestyle?

Do you feel more informed by constant exposure… or more overwhelmed?

When you encounter repeated images of suffering—online or in real life—do you feel more empathy, or less over time?

Have you ever caught yourself becoming numb to something that once deeply affected you?

If you stepped away from all ads and media for a week, how do you think your thoughts would change?

Who benefits from your attention being constantly captured—and at what cost to your mental well-being?


Keywords (comma separated):
Normalization of Suffering, Psychology of Repetition, Compassion Fatigue, Media Influence, Advertising Impact, Desensitization, Mental Conditioning, Cognitive Bias, Emotional Overload, Self-Perception


Monday, March 23, 2026

Normalization of Suffering – Post 1: When Did We Stop Feeling?

 Normalization of Suffering – Post 1: When Did We Stop Feeling? πŸ§ πŸ’­

I’ve been thinking a lot about this lately.

Not just about what we see…
But about what we’ve stopped seeing.

Or maybe worse—what we’ve gotten used to.

When I was a kid, we had a black-and-white TV πŸ“Ί

Simple. Limited. You didn’t sit in front of it all day.

Then came color. More channels. Satellite dishes. Then everything.

And somewhere along the way, something changed.

I remember those “Save the Children” commercials.

Images of emaciated children in parts of Africa…
Flies on their faces… empty eyes.

They were meant to make us care.

And they did.

At first.

But then they kept coming.

Again.
And again.
And again.

Different place. Same suffering.

And slowly—without anyone saying it out loud—we adapted.

That’s how normalization works.

Not in a single moment…

But through repetition πŸ”

Fast forward to now.

We scroll past suffering πŸ“±
We walk past suffering 🚢‍♀️
We sometimes even film it πŸŽ₯

From global hunger… to addiction crises in cities like Vancouver…

The pattern is the same:

Exposure without resolution.
Emotion without action.

Until eventually… less emotion.

And it’s not just what we see.

It’s what we’re fed.

Advertising. Everywhere πŸ“’

Bus stops. Phones. Videos. Social media.

What used to be occasional is now constant.
What used to be optional is now unavoidable.

There was a time I didn’t fully understand how deep that influence went.

Until my environment changed.

Injury. Indoors. Constant exposure to TV.

And suddenly, the messaging was relentless:

Take this.
Fix that.
Lose weight.
Eat more.
Be different.

Even when I wasn’t overweight… I started to feel like I was.

And I changed.

Not because I needed to—

But because I was being told, over and over, that I did.

That’s the other side of normalization.

Not just becoming numb to suffering…

But becoming disconnected from ourselves.

So here’s the question for this first post:

What have we normalized… without realizing it? πŸ€”

Because once you see it—

You can’t unsee it πŸ‘️

And maybe that’s where this series begins.


Reflective Questions πŸ“

When was the last time something truly shocked you—and why?

Have you ever caught yourself scrolling past suffering without reacting?

Do you think repeated exposure builds awareness… or numbness?

What messages about your body or health have you absorbed without questioning?

If all advertising disappeared tomorrow… how would your thoughts change?


Saturday, March 21, 2026

Canterbury Nightclub Outbreak: What Travelers Should Know

Canterbury Nightclub Outbreak: What Travelers Should Know

From Canterbury to the Coast: A Reminder About Health, Travel, and Community

Something happened recently in Canterbury, England that’s been sitting with me.

At a nightclub called Club Chemistry, a night out turned into something much more serious. A cluster of meningitis B cases has been linked to the venue, with young people hospitalized and, tragically, lives lost.

It’s being described as one of the largest clusters in a generation.

And it started the way so many nights do — people together, music, energy, closeness. Normal life.


I’m not writing this to alarm anyone.

I’m writing this because right now we are in that same kind of moment in many parts of the world — Spring Break, Semana Santa, people arriving from everywhere, ready to celebrate, connect, and let go for a while 🌊

Places like Zipolite come alive during this time. It’s part of their magic.

But what happened in Canterbury is a reminder of something simple and human:

Close contact spreads things. Sometimes more than we expect.


I remember a co-worker I had years ago.

She didn’t come into work for a few days, which was unusual. Then word started to spread — she had spinal meningitis.

At the time, I didn’t really understand what that meant. I just remember everyone being worried.

She was active, social — the kind of person who showed up for everything. I remember hearing she had missed a big baseball game, and that alone felt strange.

Later, when she came back, she told us what happened.

It started like the flu. Nothing dramatic.

Then her neck became so stiff she couldn’t move it. Her boyfriend kept trying to get her attention — and then realized something was seriously wrong.

She ended up in the hospital.

She told us about the spinal tap — how painful and frightening it was — and how fast everything escalated. Her dad stayed with her, holding her hand through it.

That story stayed with me.

Because it didn’t start as something dramatic.
It started as something easy to ignore.


And thinking about it now… environments like that aren’t just nightclubs.

They can be concerts. Festivals. Even mosh pits.

Back in Vancouver, mosh pits are a huge part of music culture 🎸

They’re high energy, intense, and built on closeness — people packed together, sweating, shouting, sometimes falling into each other and getting pulled back up.

It’s community. It’s release.

But it’s also the kind of environment where things can spread more easily.

πŸ‘‰ Close contact is close contact — whether it’s a dance floor or a mosh pit.

This isn’t a warning to stop living.

Just a reminder to stay aware.


Meningitis isn’t like a cold you brush off.

Early symptoms can feel like a hangover or flu — headache, fever, fatigue — which makes it easy to dismiss. But it can escalate quickly, and early treatment matters ⚠️

Health officials believe the spread in Canterbury was linked to things that are incredibly common:

  • sharing drinks
  • kissing
  • crowded indoor spaces
  • long nights with little rest

No one does these things thinking about risk. They’re part of life.


Travel adds another layer.

We’re often:

  • tired
  • dehydrated
  • out of routine
  • meeting new people
  • and maybe not listening to our bodies the way we usually would

That combination can make us more vulnerable.


That experience also shaped how I made decisions later on.

When it came time to vaccinate my child — for things like measles and meningitis — I didn’t hesitate.

Because I had seen, even secondhand, how serious something like this can become.


This isn’t about fear.

It’s about awareness.

Small choices that don’t take away from the experience, but quietly protect it:

  • don’t share drinks or vapes
  • rest when your body asks for it
  • pay attention to unusual symptoms
  • seek help early if something feels off

What I love about travel — especially in places like Zipolite — is the sense of community that forms so quickly among strangers 🀍

Looking out for each other is part of that.

Sometimes that means checking in when someone doesn’t seem well.
Sometimes it means taking care of yourself so you don’t push past your limits.


What happened in Canterbury doesn’t define travel, nightlife, or community.

But it does remind us:

Even in the most joyful, free environments, we are still responsible for each other.

And that awareness — quiet, grounded, and human — is something worth carrying with us wherever we go.


Friday, March 20, 2026

When Values Matter More Than Idols

 When Values Matter More Than Idols: Why Dave Bautista Covered His Tattoo

There’s something powerful about changing your mind publicly—and even more powerful about acting on it.

Dave Bautista, known to many as Batista from WWE and later as Drax in Guardians of the Galaxy, once had a tattoo honoring someone he respected:
Manny Pacquiao.

At the time, Pacquiao wasn’t just a world-famous boxer—he was someone Bautista admired and had a connection with. The tattoo represented respect, loyalty, and shared history.

But then something changed.

In 2016, Pacquiao made widely criticized homophobic comments, sparking backlash around the world. For many, it was disappointing. For Bautista, it was personal.

His response wasn’t just a tweet. It wasn’t silence either.

He covered the tattoo.

Not out of anger—but out of principle.

Bautista has spoken openly about why this mattered so deeply to him: his own mother is part of the LGBTQ+ community. Supporting equality isn’t abstract for him—it’s family.

That decision—to permanently alter his own body—says something we don’t often see in a world of celebrity loyalty and image management:

πŸ‘‰ You can admire someone… and still walk away when their values no longer align with yours.
πŸ‘‰ You can change your mind—and take responsibility for what you once supported.
πŸ‘‰ You can choose people over idols.

In a culture where people often double down, defend, or stay silent, this was different.

It raises questions worth asking ourselves:

  • What do we do when someone we admire crosses a line?
  • Do we excuse it—or do we reassess?
  • What are our values worth when it becomes uncomfortable to stand by them?

Because sometimes, integrity isn’t loud.

Sometimes, it’s as quiet—and as permanent—as covering a tattoo.


πŸ”‘ Keywords

Dave Bautista, Manny Pacquiao, tattoo cover up, celebrity values, LGBTQ rights, homophobia controversy, standing by principles, celebrity accountability, personal integrity, Hollywood activism


They Burned the Books — But Not the Knowledge

🌿They Burned the Books — But Not the Knowledge

There’s something deeply unsettling about realizing how much has been lost.

Not by accident.
Not by time.
But deliberately.

When the Spanish arrived in Mesoamerica, they didn’t just conquer land—they tried to erase memory. Under Diego de Landa, sacred Maya books were burned during the Auto-da-fΓ© of Mani. These were not just texts—they were entire systems of knowledge: astronomy, medicine, ceremony, history.

Today, only a few codices remain, like the Dresden Codex. The rest—gone.

Or at least, that’s what we’re told.

Because here’s the truth that doesn’t get said enough:

They burned the books. But they didn’t burn the people.

The Maya peoples are still here.
And so is their knowledge—just not in the way Western systems expect.


🌊 Not Everything Is Written Down

We live in a world that demands proof:

  • Where is the study?
  • Where is the documentation?
  • What is the name of the ritual?

But what happens when knowledge was never meant to be stored in books?

What happens when it lives in:

  • the body
  • the land
  • the water
  • the stories passed quietly, person to person

I was reminded of this when I heard a story from a Squamish Nation elder. A woman, grieving, would enter the cold river every morning. Not to “fix” herself. Not to analyze her pain. But to move it. To let the water carry what she could no longer hold.

No fancy name.
No viral post.
Just practice.


πŸ”₯ The Internet Wants a Ritual It Can Package

Recently, I saw a viral post claiming a Lakota ritual called “Star Feeding,” complete with steps, symbolism, and even statistics from Johns Hopkins University.

It sounded beautiful.

But it wasn’t real—not in the way it was presented.

And that’s the problem.

We’ve created a world where:

  • lived wisdom isn’t enough
  • it needs a name
  • a structure
  • a percentage of success

We don’t trust something unless it’s packaged.


🌽 What Still Lives

Despite everything—the burnings, the bans, the attempts to erase entire ways of being—Maya traditions continue.

Not as museum pieces.
Not as perfectly preserved rituals frozen in time.

But as living practices:

  • fire ceremonies
  • offerings
  • herbal knowledge
  • relationship to land and ancestors

Grief is not hidden.
It is shared.
Moved.
Witnessed.


🌱 Maybe We’re Asking the Wrong Questions

Instead of asking:

  • “Is this ritual scientifically proven?”
  • “What is it called?”

Maybe we should be asking:

  • What does it mean to be witnessed in grief?
  • What happens when we let nature hold what we can’t?
  • Why do we need everything to be validated before we believe it has value?

✊🏽 They Tried to Erase It

And in many ways, they succeeded.

Languages were silenced.
Ceremonies were outlawed.
Knowledge was driven underground.

But not destroyed.

Because knowledge that lives in people—in practice, in memory, in relationship—doesn’t disappear so easily.


🌊 Final Thought

We are living in a time where people are searching for healing everywhere.

Apps.
Therapies.
Protocols.

And maybe some of the answers aren’t new.

Maybe they’ve been here all along—just not written in a way we were taught to recognize.

They burned the books.
But they didn’t burn the knowledge.


πŸ”‘ Keywords

Maya codices, Indigenous knowledge, cultural erasure, Diego de Landa, trauma healing, traditional practices, oral history, censorship, spiritual resilience, Mexico culture


🌺

Everyone Remembers the Mask, But Forgets the Women Behind It

🌿 Everyone Remembers the Mask, But Forgets the Women Behind It

I saw a post recently—an Indigenous woman wearing Zapatista-style gear, a powerful image. The caption said something like: the Zapatistas got it right—no single face of the movement.

And then, as always, the comments.

People talking about the pipe.
About Marcos.
About the mythology.

And I thought… is that really what people remember?


🌎 A Memory That Never Left Me

The first time I went to San CristΓ³bal de las Casas, it was around 1990.

It was beautiful—vibrant, colorful, full of culture. Markets, textiles, people moving through daily life with quiet strength. But even then, there was something else underneath it. Something harder to name.

A few years later, the uprising happened in 1994.

Suddenly, the world was looking at Chiapas.

For many people, that was the beginning of the story.

For others—especially the people who lived it—it had been building for generations.


πŸ”₯ What the Zapatistas Were Really About

This wasn’t just a rebellion.

It was about land.
About dignity.
About survival.

Indigenous communities were being pushed further and further into poverty, their land stripped of value unless it could be exploited, their ability to grow food eroded.

Sound familiar?

It should.

Because this isn’t just a story about southern Mexico. It connects to Guatemala. To migration. To the systems that force people to leave their homes just to survive.

It connects to everything we’re still seeing today.


🎭 The Face Everyone Remembers

Yes, there was a man with a mask and a pipe.

Educated. From Mexico City. A storyteller. A communicator.

He knew how to speak to the world in a way the world would listen.

And it worked.

But here’s where the story gets distorted.

People started to believe he was the movement.


🌺 The Leadership People Forget

Behind the mask—beyond the image—were Indigenous leaders.

Women.

Women who organized. Who spoke. Who fought for rights not just as Indigenous people, but as women within their own communities.

One of them was a small, quiet, incredibly powerful woman who helped shape what became the Women’s Revolutionary Law.

She didn’t become a global icon.

She didn’t become a brand.

But she was the movement.


⚖️ Why There Was Never Meant to Be One Face

The idea that “no one is the face” wasn’t accidental.

It was protection.

It was resistance to the exact systems that elevate individuals, turn movements into personalities, and then erase the collective power behind them.

The mask wasn’t about hiding.

It was about saying:

You see one of us, you see all of us.


🌍 Why This Still Matters

The same forces are still at work:

  • Land inequality
  • Food insecurity
  • Economic systems that benefit a few and displace many
  • Migration driven by necessity, not choice

We still see people leaving their homes, not because they want to—but because they have to.

And we still simplify their stories.


πŸ’­ What We Choose to Remember

It’s easier to remember the pipe.

The mask.

The myth.

It’s harder to remember the women.

The communities.

The centuries of struggle that don’t fit into a single image.

But those are the parts that matter.


🌿 A Personal Reflection

I remember buying small souvenirs years later—images of Zapatistas on horseback, symbols turned into keepsakes.

At the time, it felt like remembering.

Now, I wonder if I understood what I was remembering at all.

Because memory isn’t just about what we saw.

It’s about what we were taught to notice.


✨ Final Thought

Maybe the Zapatistas did get it right.

Not because they had no face.

But because they refused to let the world reduce them to just one.


πŸ”‘ Keywords

Zapatistas, Chiapas uprising, Indigenous rights, Subcomandante Marcos, Zapatista women, land rights, migration, inequality, Mexico history, San Cristobal de las Casas



The Truth About the “Filles du Roi”:

 The Truth About the “Filles du Roi”: History, Misconceptions, and the Power of Narrative

There are moments online when a single comment can shift the tone of an entire conversation—especially when it sounds authoritative, a little shocking, and just plausible enough to make people question what they thought they knew.

Recently, I came across one of those comments. It claimed that the term “les filles du roi”—used to describe women sent from France to Canada in the 1600s—could also mean “the whores of the king,” suggesting these women were taken from prisons or the streets.

It’s the kind of statement that sticks. But it’s also a powerful example of how history can be twisted, simplified, or sensationalized—especially when it comes to women.

Let’s slow this down and look at what’s actually true.


Who Were the Filles du Roi?

Between 1663 and 1673, under the reign of Louis XIV, approximately 800 women were sent to New France (primarily what is now Quebec).

They became known as the Filles du Roi—“Daughters of the King”—because their travel and dowries were funded by the Crown.

At the time, the colony had a major imbalance: far more men than women. Without families, there was no stable future. This program was designed to change that.

These women were not random. They were selected.

Many were:

  • Orphans
  • From poor or working-class backgrounds
  • Recruited through religious institutions or charitable networks

They were given an opportunity—one that came with risk, yes—but also with the potential for land, marriage, and a new life.


The Language Myth: “Filles” Does NOT Mean What They Claim

The argument hinges on the word “filles.”

Yes—like many words, it had multiple meanings depending on context. But its primary meaning was “girls” or “daughters.” That is how it was used in official records, church documents, and royal policy.

The phrase “les filles du roi” clearly translates to: “The King’s daughters”—not in a literal biological sense, but as women under royal protection and support.

If the intention had been derogatory, it would not have been used as an official term in a state-sponsored program.


Were They Criminals or Sex Workers?

This is where myth turns into distortion.

France did, at times, send prisoners to colonies—but that is not what defined this program.

Historical records—marriage contracts, parish documents, immigration lists—show that:

  • Most of these women were not criminals
  • Most were not sex workers
  • Many were vetted by clergy or local officials before being sent

Were some from difficult circumstances? Of course.

But reducing them to a stereotype erases their humanity—and their legacy.


Why Not Call Them “Demoiselles”?

Another claim suggests that if they were respectable, they would have been called “demoiselles.”

But that ignores social reality.

  • “Demoiselle” implied higher social status—often noble or bourgeois
  • These women were largely from lower economic backgrounds
  • “Fille” was the accurate and commonly used term for unmarried young women

This wasn’t about disrespect—it was about class.


Why This Matters

This isn’t just about a word. It’s about how easily women’s stories—especially poor women’s stories—are reshaped over time.

It’s about how survival gets reframed as shame.

It’s about how people who took enormous risks to build new lives are reduced to something sensational, something dismissive.

The truth is far more powerful:

These women crossed an ocean into the unknown.
They built families, communities, and futures.
Many people today—especially in Canada—can trace their ancestry back to them.

They were not a footnote. They were foundations.


A Reflection

Before repeating a claim that sounds dramatic or controversial, it’s worth asking:

  • Who benefits from this version of the story?
  • What evidence supports it?
  • And whose voices are being diminished or erased?

History deserves better than distortion.
And so do the women who lived it.

 Filles du Roi, New France history, Louis XIV, Canadian ancestry, women in history, colonial Canada, historical myths, French settlers, genealogy, women’s legacy


Thursday, March 19, 2026

When “Supervision” Fails: Who Is Protecting Women?

When “Supervision” Fails: Who Is Protecting Women?

A man known to be violent toward women is released back into the community in Vancouver — even after cutting off his ankle monitor.

Let that sink in.

This is not a minor administrative mistake. This is not a paperwork delay. This is a person who already demonstrated he does not follow the rules — and yet, the system has decided to give him another chance, in the same society where women and girls are simply trying to live their lives safely.

How does this happen?

How does someone remove a monitoring device — a clear, deliberate act of defiance — and still qualify for release?

Where is the logic?

Where is the accountability?

Where is the protection for the public?

Because let’s be honest: when officials say “the community,” they don’t mean an abstract concept. They mean real people. They mean women walking home at dusk. They mean young girls taking transit. They mean mothers, sisters, daughters.

They mean your family.


If This Were Personal…

What if it were your child?

What if it were your sister?

What if it were your mother — coming home from work, unaware that someone with a known history of violence and a proven disregard for monitoring conditions had been released nearby?

Would you feel reassured?

Would you trust the system?

Or would you feel that something has gone deeply, dangerously wrong?


A System That Reacts — Instead of Prevents

Time and time again, we see the same pattern:

  • A known offender
  • A breach of conditions
  • A release decision
  • And then public concern — after the fact

Why are we always reacting instead of preventing?

An ankle monitor is supposed to be a safeguard. If removing it doesn’t trigger meaningful consequences, then what is it? A suggestion?

What message does that send?


Women’s Safety Is Not Optional

Violence against women is not a “side issue.”
It is not secondary to economic discussions, political campaigns, or policy debates.

It is fundamental.

Because without safety, there is no real freedom. There is no equality. There is no dignity.

So we have to ask:

Why does it feel like this issue is constantly pushed aside?


Leadership — Where Are You?

To leaders and decision-makers:

What are you doing about this?

While attention is focused on economic policies, financial systems, and political positioning — where is the urgency when it comes to protecting women?

Where is the national conversation?

Where are the concrete actions?

Because safety should never be negotiable.


We Deserve Answers

This is not about fear — it’s about responsibility.

The public deserves clear answers:

  • Who made this decision?
  • What risk assessment justified it?
  • What safeguards are actually in place now?
  • And what happens if those safeguards fail again?

Because they already have.


Reflective Questions

  1. What level of risk should be considered acceptable when releasing someone with a history of violence?
  2. Should breaching monitoring conditions automatically disqualify someone from release? Why or why not?
  3. How can communities be properly informed without causing panic — but still ensuring safety?
  4. Do current justice system practices prioritize rehabilitation over public safety? Should they?
  5. What policies would you change immediately if you were in charge?
  6. How can we ensure violence against women is treated as a top priority — not an afterthought?
  7. What role should citizens play in demanding accountability and transparency?

This is not just a headline.

This is a warning sign.

And ignoring it is not an option.

RozΓ‘lie KundratovΓ‘: Life in Bohemia and Beyond

 RozΓ‘lie KundratovΓ‘: Life in Bohemia and Beyond

RozΓ‘lie KundratovΓ‘ was born on a crisp September day in 1826 in the small village of Milotice, Central Bohemia. The daughter of Jan Kundrata and Anna VΓ½letovΓ‘, she grew up surrounded by the rolling fields, dense forests, and quiet rhythms of rural Bohemia. Life here was simple but not easy—hard work from sunrise to sunset, tending to family, farm, and home, was a way of life that shaped her into a woman of endurance and quiet strength.

At the age of 26, RozΓ‘lie married TomΓ‘Ε‘ PolΓ‘Ε‘ek, a man from nearby South Moravia. Together, they began a family, welcoming children into a world where survival was never guaranteed. RozΓ‘lie knew heartbreak intimately—over the years, several of her children died in infancy, a cruel reality of life in the 19th century. Imagine the sorrow of burying little ones while still caring for those who survived—a weight that only a mother could bear.

Yet RozΓ‘lie’s life was also marked by resilience. She and TomΓ‘Ε‘ made the courageous journey from their Bohemian homeland to Clopodia in the Banat region of Timis, Romania, likely seeking better land, safety, or a fresh start. This move meant leaving behind familiar villages, family neighbors, and the landscapes that had cradled her childhood.

Despite hardships, RozΓ‘lie lived to see her surviving children grow, carrying forward the PolΓ‘Ε‘ek legacy into new lands. She passed away in 1888, aged 61, leaving behind memories of a life filled with love, loss, and unwavering strength. Her story is a window into the lives of Bohemian women of her time—women who faced immense challenges, yet persevered, shaping the future of their families in the face of relentless hardships.

RozΓ‘lie’s life reminds us that family histories are not just dates and names—they are the echoes of courage, sorrow, and hope, connecting us to the landscapes, struggles, and triumphs of our ancestors.


The PolΓ‘Ε‘ek Family: Generations of Resilience and Heartbreak

 The PolΓ‘Ε‘ek Family: Generations of Resilience and Heartbreak

The story begins in Milotice, a village in South Moravia, Austria, where BartolomΔ›j PolΓ‘Ε‘ek was born on 11 August 1794. He married KlΓ‘ra KulΓ­Ε‘kovΓ‘ in 1816, and together they built a life in a time of simplicity and struggle, bringing children into a world where survival was never guaranteed. Their son, TomΓ‘Ε‘ PolΓ‘Ε‘ek, was born on 11 December 1817 in Milotice, Central Bohemia.

TomΓ‘Ε‘’s early life was marked by both love and sorrow. He married FrantiΕ‘ka KΕ™Γ­ΕΎkovΓ‘ in 1847, but she passed away just five years later in 1852, leaving TomΓ‘Ε‘ a widower at 34. In 1853, he married RozΓ‘lie KundratovΓ‘, and together they began a family that would face unimaginable hardships. Their first child, Frantisek PolΓ‘Ε‘ek (your great-grandfather), was born the same year, followed by a daughter, KateΕ™ina, in 1855. But life was harsh: their son Jan died in infancy, and TomΓ‘Ε‘ himself would die relatively young in 1873, at just 55 years old, in Clopodia, Timis, Romania.

Life for Frantisek would echo his father’s struggles. In 1877, he married AlbΓ­na KundratovΓ‘, and together they tried to build a family in the Banat region of Austria-Hungary (now Romania). But tragedy followed them closely. Many of their children—FrantiΕ‘ek, FrantiΕ‘ka, Jan, and two sons named Petr—died as infants or toddlers. Only Mary Ann Polasek Winterlik and Josef PolΓ‘Ε‘ek survived to adulthood. It’s heartbreaking to imagine the grief they must have carried, the empty cradles, the hopes dashed time and again. And yet, amidst the sorrow, Frantisek and AlbΓ­na persevered, keeping their surviving children safe, loved, and hopeful.

The PolΓ‘Ε‘eks were not just survivors of personal tragedy—they were part of a larger story of migration, resilience, and courage. Frantisek eventually moved to Saskatchewan, Canada, in 1904, taking a chance on a homestead in Dysart. He left behind familiar villages, languages, and traditions for the open prairies, forging a new future for the family in a land of opportunity and challenges.

From BartolomΔ›j and KlΓ‘ra in 1794, through TomΓ‘Ε‘ and RozΓ‘lie, to Frantisek and AlbΓ­na, the PolΓ‘Ε‘ek family endured wars, migrations, and the heartbreaking loss of children. Yet through each generation, the family’s spirit remained unbroken—a testament to resilience, hope, and love that transcends centuries.

Looking back through photos and records, one can almost imagine them: BartolomΔ›j and KlΓ‘ra walking the cobblestone streets of Milotice, TomΓ‘Ε‘ working the land in Timis, and Frantisek gazing across the vast Saskatchewan prairies, carrying the weight of generations yet still believing in the promise of life ahead.

FrantiΕ‘ek PolΓ‘Ε‘ek (1853–1926) – Great-Grandfather

 πŸŒΏ FrantiΕ‘ek PolΓ‘Ε‘ek (1853–1926) – Great-Grandfather

Born on 20 October 1853 in Milotice, Central Bohemia, FrantiΕ‘ek PolΓ‘Ε‘ek grew up in a small Czech village during a time of change and challenge. Central Bohemia, with its rolling hills, forests, and linden trees, would have shaped his childhood — a landscape where community gatherings often centered around these symbolic trees, celebrated in folk songs and legends.

Early Losses and Hardships

FrantiΕ‘ek’s early life was marked by tragedy. By the age of five, he had already lost a brother, and later in life, he would lose multiple children — sons and daughters who died in infancy. These repeated losses reflect the harsh realities of 19th-century life in rural Austria-Hungary, where disease and limited medical care were constant threats.

Migration to Banat

By his early twenties, FrantiΕ‘ek had moved with his family to Clopodia in Temes Megye, Banat, part of Austria-Hungary. This migration was common among Bohemian families, who sought fertile land and new opportunities. In Banat, FrantiΕ‘ek married AlbΓ­na KundratovΓ‘ on 13 November 1877, starting his own family in a multicultural region that included Czechs, Romanians, Germans, and Serbs.

Family Life and Tragedy

FrantiΕ‘ek and AlbΓ­na had many children, but tragedy struck repeatedly. Among them were:

  • Mary Ann PolΓ‘Ε‘ek Winterlik (1878–1949) – my grandmother, the first generation in Banat to carry the family forward.
  • Several children who died in infancy, including sons FrantiΕ‘ek (1878, 1882), Jan (1887–1888), and Petr (1889–1895), and daughter FrantiΕ‘ka (1885–1886).

These losses must have weighed heavily on him, yet he persisted, continuing to raise his surviving children in a challenging environment.

Later Life and Move to Canada

In the early 20th century, FrantiΕ‘ek emigrated to Saskatchewan, Canada, applying for a homestead on 30 May 1904. This bold move represented hope for a better life — new land, opportunity, and safety for his family. FrantiΕ‘ek lived out his final years in Dysart, Saskatchewan, passing away around 1926, having endured a life full of hard work, loss, and resilience.

Imagining His Life

Picture FrantiΕ‘ek in Banat: walking fields, speaking Czech and maybe some German, hearing the mix of languages around him, tending his land and family while mourning those he lost. Later, imagine him arriving in the prairies of Canada, facing harsh winters but also the promise of a fresh start — a life of toil, courage, and determination.

His life story is more than dates on a page; it’s a journey of survival, migration, and hope. From Milotice in Bohemia to Banat, and finally to Saskatchewan, FrantiΕ‘ek embodies the strength and persistence of your ancestors.


I Knew It Was Toxic — Now Science Is Catching Up

I Knew It Was Toxic — Now Science Is Catching Up

I remember the exact moment.

It was a hot August day in West Vancouver. We were walking past a sports field on our way to Harmony Arts, and as we got closer, I noticed a strong smell—like gas, or something chemical, something off.

I stopped for a second and said to my kid, “Hold your nose and walk fast. This is toxic.”

At the time, I didn’t have scientific proof. Just instinct. Just that feeling in your body when something isn’t right.

Now, years later, I’m reading a study from the University of British Columbia—and it turns out that instinct may have been spot on.


What’s Actually in Artificial Turf?

That “grass” isn’t just plastic blades. The black rubbery material underneath—the stuff kids fall on, run on, breathe around—is made from crumb rubber, which is essentially ground-up old tires.

According to recent research, this material contains a chemical called 6PPD, used in tires to make them last longer.

But here’s the problem:

When 6PPD breaks down, it turns into 6PPD-quinone, a chemical that has now been shown to be deadly to coho salmon and harmful to other aquatic life.


From Playing Fields to Ocean Water

Researchers found that when it rains, tiny particles from these artificial fields wash into stormwater systems.

And here’s the part that really matters:

That water is often not treated before it flows into streams, rivers, and the ocean.

So what starts as a children’s sports field ends up impacting entire ecosystems.

The study found that the levels of this chemical can exceed what is lethal to salmon.

Let that sink in.


My Experience Wasn’t Just About Smell

That day in West Vancouver, the smell was intense—especially in the heat. That “gas-like” odor? It likely came from the rubber heating up under the sun, releasing chemical compounds into the air.

And now I’m thinking about all the kids playing on those fields:

  • Breathing it in
  • Falling on it
  • Absorbing it through their skin

We’re told these surfaces are safe. But safe for who? And for how long?


And Then I Saw It in Zipolite…

That’s when it hit me again.

I started seeing artificial turf being installed in Zipolite.

A place known for its raw beauty. Ocean air. Wildlife. Simplicity.

And I thought back to that moment in West Vancouver.

If these fields are leaching chemicals in a highly regulated place like Metro Vancouver—what happens here, where infrastructure is different and rainwater flows straight into the ocean?

Higher heat. Stronger sun. Coastal runoff.

The risks don’t disappear—they may actually increase.


We Need to Ask Better Questions

This isn’t about panic. It’s about awareness.

Artificial turf may seem convenient, but we need to start asking:

  • What is it made of?
  • Where do those materials go over time?
  • Who is being exposed—humans, animals, ecosystems?

Because sometimes, before the studies are published, before the headlines are written—

We already know.

We smell it. We feel it. We sense it.

And maybe we should trust that a little more.

From Lived Reality to Digital Numbness: What Have We Become?

From Lived Reality to Digital Numbness: What Have We Become?

There’s something I’ve been trying to understand lately, and it’s not easy to sit with.

I’ve been seeing more and more posts online—images of dead animals, blood, disturbing scenes, and people laughing or reacting in ways that feel… disconnected. Almost like it doesn’t mean anything.

And I keep asking myself: Is this normal now?

But to really ask that question honestly, I have to go back.


A Different Kind of Exposure

When I was younger, I made a decision: “I will never be poor.”

That decision came from somewhere deep—somewhere shaped by hardship, fear, and the need to survive. And it pushed me into jobs that most people would never choose unless they had to.

I worked in a duck farm cutting gizzards.
Later, in a turkey processing plant.

This was around 1987 to 1990—and at the time, it was considered good money. $5 an hour, then moving up to $9, even $12. That mattered.

But the work?

It was relentless.

Dead animals all day.
Blood.
The smell of death that doesn’t leave you when you go home.
Repetition that wears down your body and your mind.

And the environment wasn’t just physically hard—it could be emotionally brutal too. People turned on each other. Rumors spread. You had to keep going, no matter what.

I stayed because I needed to.
I pushed through because I believed it would lead somewhere better.

And in some ways, it did. That job helped me fix my teeth, rebuild my confidence, and move forward in life.

But it left something in me too: an understanding of what those images actually mean.


When Reality Becomes “Content”

So now, when I see people casually posting images of death, blood, or suffering, I feel a disconnect I can’t ignore.

Because for me, those things are not aesthetic.
They are not edgy.
They are not entertainment.

They are:

  • labor
  • survival
  • exhaustion
  • trauma, sometimes

And I find myself thinking: “If they had to live this—really live it—would they still post it like this?”


A New Kind of Desensitization

But then I stop and ask a harder question:

What if they’ve already seen too much… just in a different way?

Today, people are exposed to a constant stream of imagery:

  • violence
  • suffering
  • crisis
  • shock

All through screens. All day long.

But without context. Without responsibility. Without the physical reality.

And something happens when you see everything, but feel very little.

You don’t necessarily become stronger.
You don’t become a “war machine.”

You can become… numb.


The Moment That Stays With Me

Recently, I saw people filming someone clearly struggling—bent over, likely affected by drugs—and laughing.

That moment bothered me deeply.

Not just because of what was happening to that person, but because of the reaction.

I thought: When did we start observing suffering instead of responding to it?

But then again—if all you’ve known is watching through a screen, maybe that’s what feels normal.


Generations and Perspective

I’m 64 now.

Even people in their 40s feel like “kids” to me sometimes. I catch myself saying things like “back in 1990…” and realize many people I meet weren’t even born yet.

That creates a gap in understanding.

Not better or worse—just different.

I was shaped by:

  • physical work
  • direct experience
  • consequences you couldn’t scroll past

Many younger people are shaped by:

  • constant digital exposure
  • endless content
  • experiences filtered through a screen

What I Really Wonder

I don’t actually believe people are becoming heartless.

I think something else is happening.

I think many people:

  • don’t know how to process what they’re seeing
  • have been exposed too early, too often
  • are trying to cope in ways that look strange or unsettling

And some are simply pushing boundaries, because that’s what gets attention now.


If I Could Show Them

There’s a part of me that wants to take them back—like in an old story—
to walk them through what those images really feel like in real life.

The smell.
The repetition.
The weight of it.

Not to punish them.
But to reconnect the image with its meaning.

But I also know: that kind of exposure can damage a person too.


So Where Does That Leave Us?

Maybe the real issue isn’t that people are becoming “hard.”

Maybe it’s that we’re losing the connection between: what we see and what it actually means.

And when that connection weakens, empathy can slip quietly away.


A Small Moment of Hope

The other day, I called someone “kiddo” without thinking.

She laughed and said no one had called her that in a long time.

It was such a small, human moment.

And it reminded me: people still want connection. They still want to be seen, not just watched.


Final Thought

I don’t have all the answers.

But I do know this:

There is a difference between
living something
and
scrolling past it.

And maybe what we need isn’t more exposure—
but more understanding, more context, and more moments that bring us back to being human with each other.


Reflective Questions

  1. When you see disturbing content online, how does it make you feel—and why?
  2. Do you think repeated exposure to shocking imagery changes how we respond emotionally?
  3. What is the difference between witnessing something in real life vs. through a screen?
  4. Have you ever felt disconnected from something that should have felt serious?
  5. Why do you think some people laugh or film in moments of distress?
  6. How can we rebuild empathy in a world of constant digital exposure?
  7. Do you think younger generations are more desensitized, or just coping differently?
  8. What responsibility do social media platforms have in what we see?
  9. Can sharing real-life experiences help others better understand the weight behind images?
  10. What does “being human” look like to you in today’s world?

Keywords: digital desensitization, social media culture, empathy loss, graphic content, lived experience, generational differences, online behavior, trauma awareness, human connection, modern society