Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Smart Glasses and the Privacy Experiment

 Smart Glasses and the Privacy Experiment

A story circulating online claims that someone wearing ordinary-looking sunglasses could walk up to you and already know your name, where you live, and details about your life.

It sounds like science fiction.

But a real experiment by students from Harvard University explored how this could happen.

The students connected Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses made by Meta Platforms to facial recognition tools and public databases. When the glasses captured someone’s face, the system searched the internet for matching images and publicly available information.

In demonstrations, they approached strangers and greeted them by name — sometimes mentioning personal details pulled from online records.

The goal was not to spy on people.

The goal was to show how easily different technologies can be combined in ways that most people never expected.

In other words, the experiment was a warning.

The glasses themselves are not the only issue. Cameras, artificial intelligence, facial recognition software, and public data already exist. When these tools are connected together, they can reveal much more than people realize.

Reflection Questions

• When you walk in public, do you expect strangers to know who you are?

• Should technology be allowed to identify people without their permission?

• If the information comes from “public” sources, does that make it ethical to use?

• Who should decide the limits — technology companies, governments, or citizens?

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

When Addiction Becomes Brain Injury: The Cost We Refuse to See

  When Addiction Becomes Brain Injury: The Cost We Refuse to See

The Downtown Eastside is not separate from Canada. It is not isolated. It is not “over there.”

As Larry Campbell said:

“The Downtown Eastside is Canada. The Downtown Eastside is in everybody's community.”

And yet, we continue to respond as if this crisis is temporary, containable, or someone else’s responsibility.

But something has changed — and it is being quietly acknowledged.

Campbell recently stated that he is now seeing brain damage from fentanyl that he had not seen before.

That should stop us in our tracks.


This Is No Longer Just Addiction

For years, the conversation has been about addiction, recovery, and choice.

But what happens when choice is no longer fully there?

Fentanyl overdoses don’t just risk death. They can cause hypoxic brain injury — damage from lack of oxygen. And when overdoses happen repeatedly, the damage compounds.

This means many people are now living with:

  • memory loss
  • impaired judgment
  • reduced ability to function independently
  • difficulty with basic daily tasks

In other words, we are no longer just dealing with addiction.

We are dealing with acquired brain injury at scale.


The Story We Already Know

We wrote about it before.

A woman in the system. Multiple overdoses. Repeated hospital visits. Emergency responses again and again.

The cost of her care reached approximately $385,000.

And still — no stability. No long-term support. No real solution.

This is what our system does: It pays for crisis, over and over again, instead of care.


The System Is Not Built for This

Right now, supports are based on a model that assumes people will:

  • attend appointments
  • manage medications
  • maintain housing independently
  • make consistent decisions

But brain injury doesn’t work like that.

People with cognitive impairment often need:

  • structured, supportive environments
  • daily assistance
  • long-term care
  • human connection and consistency

Without that, they fall through the cracks — again and again.

And each fall is expensive.


The Cost Argument Is Backwards

We hear it all the time: “We can’t afford that level of care.”

But look closer.

We are already paying:

  • for ambulances
  • for emergency rooms
  • for hospital stays
  • for policing
  • for court systems
  • for failed housing programs

We are spending hundreds of thousands per person — without improving outcomes.

So the real question is not: Can we afford to care for people with brain injuries?

The real question is: Can we afford not to?


What Needs to Change

If what Campbell is saying is true — and frontline workers already know it is — then the system must evolve.

We need:

  • integrated health and housing models
  • long-term brain injury care
  • support for families and frontline workers
  • policies that recognize cognitive impairment, not just addiction

This is not about quick fixes.

This is about acknowledging reality.


A Turning Point We Can’t Ignore

When someone with decades of experience like Larry Campbell says he is seeing something new, we should listen.

Because this may be the moment where the narrative shifts.

From: “Why won’t they change?”

To: “What has happened to them — and how do we care for them now?”


We are already paying the price.

The only question left is whether we are willing to pay it in a way that actually helps.



Sunday, March 29, 2026

A One-Day Suspension? What Exactly Are We Teaching Kids Here?

A One-Day Suspension? What Exactly Are We Teaching Kids Here?

According to a recent article by CBC journalist Akshay Kulkarni, a teacher on British Columbia’s Central Coast received a one-day teaching certificate suspension following multiple incidents of misconduct. These included showing Grade 8 and 9 students inappropriate videos—one described as having sexual connotations and another depicting abusive, demeaning behavior—along with making a sarcastic racist remark toward a First Nations student and belittling a colleague.

Let’s be clear: this is not a misunderstanding, and it’s not a one-off lapse in judgment. The findings outlined in the consent agreement point to a pattern of behavior that should raise serious concerns about classroom safety, professionalism, and accountability.

And yet—the disciplinary outcome from the regulator?

One day.

What does this teach students? What message are we sending to young people who are already navigating a world filled with confusion about respect, boundaries, and accountability? That authority figures can cross lines—again and again—and face little more than a symbolic consequence?

Because that’s what this feels like: symbolic. Procedural. A checkbox ticked.

Not meaningful accountability.

Not justice.

Not protection.

We are constantly telling kids to be kind, to be inclusive, to understand the real harm behind racism and power imbalances. Yet when those very principles are violated by someone in a position of authority, the response feels detached from the seriousness of the harm.

This isn’t just about one teacher. It’s about a system that appears more concerned with process than with outcomes—more focused on minimal compliance than meaningful accountability.

Let’s be honest: this goes beyond needing a simple course on communication. The issue here is repeated poor judgment, harmful conduct, and a failure to create a safe and respectful environment for students.

And safety—emotional, cultural, psychological—is not optional in education.

So yes, stronger responses should absolutely be on the table.

That means real accountability measures. Not just short suspensions, but actions that reflect the seriousness of the behavior. Meaningful restorative work, direct engagement with affected communities, and a clear demonstration that this kind of conduct is incompatible with the role of an educator.

Because “you can’t take a joke” is not an acceptable defense when the impact is harm.

And if someone repeatedly demonstrates that they cannot uphold the responsibility that comes with teaching, then we need to ask the harder question:

Should they still be in that role at all?

This isn’t about outrage for the sake of it. It’s about standards. It’s about trust. It’s about the students who sit in those classrooms, absorbing not just lessons—but behavior, tone, and values.

If we lower the bar for those who lead, we lower it for everyone.

And that’s something that should never be taken lightly.

Not in 2026. Not ever.

Stop Passing the Bundle — A Message to Those in Charge

 Stop Passing the Bundle — A Message to Those in Charge

I’m sitting here in Mexico, after three months of trying to rest, reset, and reclaim some sense of balance.

And yet—stories from back home keep finding me.

Not because I went looking.
But because they are everywhere.

Today, I read about someone in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside being pushed out of their home. A person living with serious health challenges. A decade sober. Holding onto two dogs that are clearly family. And now facing what sounds like a so-called “renovation” eviction—while their unit is already being advertised online for double the rent.

Alongside that?
Years of reported harassment.
Discrimination tied to Indigenous identity.
Barriers placed—literally—blocking access for someone using a cane.
Unsafe living conditions.

And now, a deadline.

Three weeks.

This is not just a housing issue.
This is a systems issue.
This is a dignity issue.


To Those in Charge

To housing authorities.
To policymakers.
To those overseeing tenant protections, human rights, and public health:

What is happening on the ground does not match what is written in policy.

Because if protections were working, people like this would not be pushed to the edge of survival.

If systems were accessible, someone this overwhelmed wouldn’t be asking strangers online what to do next.

If enforcement was real, landlords wouldn’t risk posting units for double the rent while claiming renovations.

So I ask:

  • Where is the enforcement?
  • Where is the urgency?
  • Where is the protection for people with disabilities and Indigenous tenants facing discrimination?

Because right now, it feels like the burden keeps getting passed down—to the very people least able to carry it.


The Weight of Witnessing

I want to be honest.

I am learning not to pick up every bundle I come across.

Not because I don’t care—but because carrying everything breaks people, too.

And many of us have been breaking quietly for years.

But witnessing still matters.

Naming what’s happening still matters.

And saying “this is not okay” still matters.


What Needs to Change

This is not complicated, even if it’s uncomfortable:

  • Enforce existing tenant protection laws—consistently and visibly
  • Investigate bad-faith evictions quickly
  • Protect tenants facing discrimination with real consequences
  • Prioritize accessible, supportive housing for people with health challenges
  • Stop allowing vulnerable people to fall through administrative cracks

A Line That Shouldn’t Be Crossed

When someone is considering giving up their pets, their home, and possibly their will to keep going—this is no longer a policy discussion.

This is a crisis.

And systems that respond too slowly—or not at all—become part of that crisis.


From a Distance, But Not Silent

I may be far away right now.

But distance doesn’t erase responsibility to speak.

What I can do is this:

Witness.
Write.
Refuse to normalize what should never be normal.

And remind those in charge:

People are not problems to be moved around.

They are lives to be protected.


I can care deeply—without carrying everything.
But those in power?

You are supposed to carry this.

And right now, you’re not.


Tina Winterlik (Zipolita)

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Equal Means Equal- Is Equality Ever “Finished”?

 Equal Means Equal- Is Equality Ever “Finished”?

✍️ Post 5: Is Equality Ever “Finished”?

I’ve been thinking about all of this, and one question keeps coming back:

Is equality ever truly “finished”?

Or is it something each generation has to revisit, defend, and redefine?

I used to think it was something that, once achieved, would simply stay in place.

Now I’m not so sure.

Maybe progress isn’t a straight line. Maybe it’s something we assume is settled… until it isn’t.

And maybe the real question isn’t just: Do we believe in equality?

But: Are we willing to keep showing up for it, even when we thought we already had?

#Equality #Reflection #ERA #Rights

Equal Means Equal? Watching From Canada

 Equal Means Equal? Watching From Canada

✍️ Post 4: Watching From Canada

As a Canadian, I watch this from the outside with a mix of curiosity and concern.

In Canada, equality rights are written into the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

That doesn’t mean everything is perfect—far from it.

But the wording is there. Clear.

In the U.S., many protections exist through court interpretation instead of explicit language.

It makes me realize something:

How rights are written matters.

Because when things are unclear, they can be questioned again… even decades later.

#Canada #USA #Rights #Equality

Research Post 14 — When the Mural Began Calling 🎨🌎✨

 Research Post 14 — When the Mural Began Calling 🎨🌎✨

Lately, I’ve been seeing so many art calls.

Murals. Community walls. Public art projects. Invitations for artists to bring stories into shared spaces.

And something in me keeps saying: this is part of the journey.

As I continue building the research series for the Great BIG Book, I keep seeing a mural forming in my mind — not just one scene, but a scene of scenes.

At the center is the Earth itself. Alive. Breathing. Holding all of us.

From that center, a newborn enters the world, surrounded by gentle hands, skin-to-skin with the mother, held in warmth and trust.

Around this central image, circles of time begin to unfold.

One circle carries the earliest peoples, fire, herbs, and healing plants. Another shows movement across lands and waters, the migrations of families and cultures. Another honors women, midwives, and the sacred knowledge of birth passed from one generation to the next. There is also a harder circle — the disruption of colonization, systems that separated people from their bodies, land, and traditions. And finally, a circle of healing and reclamation, where wisdom returns through community, memory, and care.

I keep thinking this mural is not only art.

It is research.

It is history made visible.

It is a way of bringing the themes of the book into public space so people can pause, reflect, and feel something.

Seeing all these art calls lately feels like a sign.

Maybe the wall is calling.

Maybe this project is meant to live not only in pages, but in color, movement, and community.

This is Research Post 14 in the journey toward the Great BIG Book: the mural begins to take shape.

Research Post 13 — From Research to Community: Funding the Vision πŸ’›

 Research Post 13 — From Research to Community: Funding the Vision πŸ’›

Every big project begins with an idea, but ideas also need support.

Sometimes bold, truth-telling projects do not easily fit into traditional funding systems. When a project challenges mainstream thinking, raises questions about history, women’s autonomy, or Indigenous rights, it may require a more direct path.

Community funding platforms such as GoFundMe offer a different kind of support.

Instead of writing for institutions, the creator speaks directly to people.

Supporters become part of the journey. They help fund research, writing, illustrations, translations, community workshops, and public art.

More importantly, they become witnesses to the story.

This project is not only a book. It is a community conversation about healing, history, and respect.

Research Post 10 — Birth as Sacred Knowledge 🌿

 Research Post 10 — Birth as Sacred Knowledge 🌿

For thousands of years, birth was held as a sacred moment.

It was not only about bringing a child into the world, but about surrounding the mother and baby with protection, wisdom, nourishment, and love.

In many Indigenous traditions, women supported women through labor. Elders, midwives, and family members shared practical knowledge, herbal remedies, and emotional reassurance.

Birth was part of community life, not something separated from culture and spirit.

Research Post 4 — The First Embrace: Skin-to-Skin and Ancient Wisdom πŸŒΏπŸ‘Ά

 Research Post 4 — The First Embrace: Skin-to-Skin and Ancient Wisdom πŸŒΏπŸ‘Ά

Long before hospitals began calling it “kangaroo care,” families and Indigenous communities understood the power of the first embrace.

When a newborn baby is placed directly on the mother’s bare chest, something extraordinary happens.

The baby hears the heartbeat that has been its constant rhythm for months. The warmth of the mother’s body helps regulate temperature. The scent of the mother guides the baby naturally toward feeding.

This first connection is not just medical. It is emotional, spiritual, and deeply human.

Many Indigenous cultures have long recognized birth as a sacred event centered around women, family, and community support. Practices like immediate skin-to-skin contact reflect ancient knowledge that modern medicine is only now fully appreciating.

Sometimes the oldest wisdom is also the most powerful.

From Ice Ages to Healing: A Journey Through Human History

 

From Ice Ages to Healing: A Journey Through Human History

A very long time ago, the Earth was a different world.

Around 11,000 years ago, the last Ice Age was coming to an end. Massive glaciers were melting, sea levels were rising, and the climate was changing. As the land transformed, people moved across forests, plains, mountains, and coastlines in search of food, shelter, and safety.

These early peoples — the first inhabitants of their territories — lived closely with the Earth. They understood animals, seasons, rivers, and plants in ways that were essential for survival. Long before borders, empires, and modern nations, people everywhere were deeply connected to the land beneath their feet.

Over thousands of years, something remarkable happened.

People learned to grow food.

In different parts of the world, communities began cultivating crops such as wheat, barley, maize, potatoes, and quinoa. Farming changed everything. Instead of constantly moving, people could build homes, villages, and eventually cities. This gave rise to trade, culture, art, and new forms of social organization.

Alongside survival came spirituality.

People built monuments that still fascinate us today — stone circles in Europe, pyramids in the Americas, ceremonial sites across the world. These places were more than architecture. They were expressions of prayer, ceremony, gratitude, and hope. They reflected humanity’s desire to understand the sky, the seasons, life, death, and the unseen forces that shaped survival.

History, however, is not only a story of progress.

It is also a story of conflict, power, and displacement.

As societies grew, struggles over land and resources became more common. Later, colonization dramatically altered Indigenous societies across the world. Lands were taken, cultures suppressed, and traditional knowledge systems were often dismissed or forcibly erased.

One of the most painful examples of this can be seen in the control of women’s bodies and birth practices.

Traditional Indigenous birthing knowledge, often held by women, midwives, and community elders, was pushed aside by colonial medical systems. Sacred practices were replaced with clinical control, and many racialized and Indigenous families faced exclusion, racism, and unsafe conditions within healthcare systems.

Today, many people are working to reclaim what was lost.

There is a growing movement to restore respect for traditional birth knowledge, women’s autonomy, cultural safety, and community healing.

Looking back across thousands of years, one truth remains clear: people have always found ways to survive, adapt, create meaning, and care for one another.

Perhaps history is not just about the past.

Perhaps it is also a mirror showing us what we need to heal today.

Before the Great BIG Book — Research Series Begins πŸ“šπŸŒŽ✨

 Before the Great BIG Book — Research Series Begins πŸ“šπŸŒŽ✨

Before writing the Great BIG Book, I’m starting with a research series.

Sometimes a book doesn’t begin with chapters. Sometimes it begins with questions.

Where did we come from? How did people live 11,000 years ago? When did we begin farming, building villages, and creating sacred places? How did colonization change everything? And what knowledge are we now trying to reclaim?

This series is my way of gathering pieces of the puzzle — from the end of the Ice Age to the rise of civilizations, from Indigenous knowledge and spiritual traditions to the painful impacts of colonial systems on land, culture, and even women’s bodies.

I want to trace the long journey of humanity: from survival, to community, to conflict, to healing.

These are my research notes before the Great BIG Book takes shape.

Maybe the book starts here. With curiosity. With history. With remembering.

Stay with me on this journey. 🌿✨

Friday, March 27, 2026

Vancouver, we need to talk… with a little help from Tina Turner πŸ˜„✨

 πŸŽ€πŸ™️ Vancouver, we need to talk… with a little help from Tina Turner πŸ˜„✨

Another day, another headline about another giant tower going up in Vancouver πŸ—️😳

And instantly, Tina Turner popped into my head πŸ’ƒπŸŽΆ

🎡 “We don’t need another tower…” 🎡
πŸ˜†πŸ™️πŸŒ†

So I had to write a little skyline anthem:

🎢
We don’t need another tower! 🎀
We don’t need another shadow over the city hour πŸŒ‡
All we want is homes that people can afford πŸ’ΈπŸ 
Not another glass and steel reward πŸͺžπŸ’
We don’t need another tower…
No, we don’t need another tower πŸ˜„
🎢

Honestly, the controversy isn’t really about buildings.
It’s about what the city is becoming πŸ€”πŸ’­

How many luxury towers do we need?
Who are they really for? πŸ’ΌπŸ’°
What happens to artists, seniors, workers, and families who built the heart of this city πŸŽ¨πŸ‘΅πŸ‘·‍♀️πŸ‘¨‍πŸ‘©‍πŸ‘§

Sometimes humour helps us say what many are already feeling πŸ’™

A city needs more than a skyline.
It needs soul ✨🌲🌊
It needs community 🫢
It needs places ordinary people can still call home 🏠

Thank you, Tina, for the inspiration and the perfect soundtrack for Vancouver’s tower debates πŸ’ƒπŸŽΆπŸ˜‚

#Vancouver #TinaTurner #WeDontNeedAnotherTower #HousingCrisis #CitySoul #SkylineDebate #Humour #UrbanLife πŸ™️✨


Equal Means Equal- Why Is This Still in Court ?

 Equal Means Equal- Why Is This Still in Court ?

✍️ Post 3: Why Is This Still in Court?

So why is the Equal Rights Amendment still being argued in court in 2026?

From what I understand, it comes down to this:

When the amendment was introduced, there was a deadline for states to ratify it.

Some states approved it after that deadline. Some tried to take their approval back.

Now the courts are being asked to decide: Do those details matter more than the final count?

Cases like Equal Means Equal v. Donald Trump are trying to answer that.

It’s not a simple yes or no.

It’s law, timing, process—and interpretation.

Still, stepping back, it’s hard not to notice:

After all these years, we’re still asking whether equality belongs in the Constitution.

#ERA #Justice #Law #Equality

We’ve Seen This Before — From Televangelists to TikTok Wars

We’ve Seen This Before — From Televangelists to TikTok Wars

There’s a reason some of us feel uneasy right now.

We’ve seen this before.

Not with drones. Not with algorithms. But with the same energy — the same mix of fear, authority, media, and messaging that tries to shape how people think and what they believe.

Back in the 80s and into the 90s, we were living through the rise of the Moral Majority and televangelism. Figures like Tammy Faye Bakker and Jim Bakker weren’t just religious personalities — they were media powerhouses.

They spoke with certainty.
They asked for trust.
And they asked for money.

A lot of money.

And people gave it — often the people who had the least — believing they were supporting something good, something moral, something that would help save the world, or at least their place in it.

But behind the scenes, the story was more complicated. Sometimes darker.

And even as kids, sitting in school assemblies or watching TV, some of us felt it:

Something didn’t match.


The Soundtrack of Awareness

The culture itself was trying to process the contradiction.

Songs like Money for Nothing exposed the strange machinery of fame and media.
We Didn't Start the Fire ran through decades of chaos, reminding us that history doesn’t stop — it just changes form.

We were surrounded by messages — but also by cracks in those messages.

And some of us learned to read between the lines.


Now Look at Today

Fast forward to now.

The stage is different — but the dynamics feel familiar.

Instead of televangelists, we have:

  • influencers
  • political commentators
  • algorithm-driven feeds

Instead of televised sermons, we have:

  • endless scrolling
  • curated outrage
  • viral certainty

And now layered on top of that?

Drone warfare. Remote conflict. Technology that distances action from consequence.

We’re watching wars through screens again — but this time:

  • faster
  • more filtered
  • more abstract

It’s easier than ever to be pulled into a narrative.
To feel like you understand something complex in 30 seconds.
To be nudged — quietly — toward a belief.


What Hasn’t Changed

The tools have changed.

The platforms have changed.

But the core dynamics?

Not so much.

  • Authority still presents itself with confidence
  • Media still shapes perception
  • Money still flows toward power
  • And ordinary people are still asked to believe, support, and react

Why This Matters

Those of us who lived through that earlier era carry something important:

We remember the feeling when something didn’t add up.

We remember realizing — slowly or suddenly — that not everything presented as “truth” or “good” actually was.

And we’re still here.

That matters.

Because right now, a new generation is growing up inside a system that is:

  • more immersive
  • more persuasive
  • and harder to step outside of

A Simple Reminder

If something feels:

  • too polished
  • too certain
  • too emotionally manipulative

Pause.

Ask questions.

Look deeper.

Because we’ve seen where blind trust can lead.

And we don’t need to repeat it.


We Didn’t Start the Fire — But We Can See It

History doesn’t disappear.

It evolves.

From televangelists to timelines.
From pulpits to platforms.
From emotional broadcasts to algorithmic feeds.

Different tools.

Same human vulnerabilities.

And the same need to stay aware.


If I Had a Rocket Launcher — Then and Now

 

🎸 If I Had a Rocket Launcher — Then and Now

Tonight I shared “If I Had a Rocket Launcher” by Bruce Cockburn—and it hit just as hard as it did decades ago.

This isn’t just a song. It’s a reaction. A moment of raw anger born from witnessing real human suffering during the Guatemalan Civil War. You can feel it in every line—the frustration, the helplessness, the urge to do something when the world feels unbearably unjust.

And that’s why it still matters.

Because here we are again… watching conflicts unfold from our screens, trying to make sense of power, war, and who really pays the price.


🎬 Why I also shared Charlie Wilson’s War

I paired the song with a clip from Charlie Wilson's War for a reason.

That film shows how quietly and strategically wars can be shaped behind the scenes—funded, fueled, and then… left unresolved. The ripple effects don’t just disappear. They come back, often in ways no one predicted.

And now we’re hearing voices like this so-called “Professor Poutine” talking about how the U.S. isn’t even prepared for modern warfare—especially drone warfare.

Think about that.


🚁 War has changed… but has anything else?

We’ve gone from jungle warfare and proxy wars…
to remote-controlled conflict, drones, and surveillance.

Less boots on the ground.
More distance.
More detachment.

But the consequences? Still very real.

Civilians still suffer.
Communities are still displaced.
Trauma doesn’t disappear just because the weapon changed.


πŸ’₯ The uncomfortable truth

Cockburn’s song captured a moment where witnessing injustice made someone feel like violence was the only language left.

That’s the dangerous edge humanity keeps circling.

Not because people want violence…
but because systems keep failing them.


🌎 So what are we actually learning?

Are we evolving?
Or just getting more efficient at destruction?

We can now fight wars without even being physically present.
But are we any closer to accountability? To peace?

Or are we just further removed from the human cost?


🧭 Final thought

Songs like this aren’t comfortable—and they’re not supposed to be.

They force us to sit with the anger, the injustice, and the reality that history doesn’t just repeat… it adapts.

And maybe the real question is:

If we had the power—would we use it any differently today?


From “Harper Must Go” to Harperman: When Voices Rise Together

From “Harper Must Go” to Harperman: When Voices Rise Together

I remember something powerful about those years — it wasn’t just protest, it was community. It was music, laughter, courage, and people of all ages stepping forward in their own unique ways.

There were the fearless Raging Grannies — singing, protesting, refusing to be quiet. There was David Suzuki, using his voice to speak about science, the environment, and responsibility. 

And there are voices in politics too, like Charlie Angus, speaking out, challenging power, and helping carry those concerns into the national conversation.

 Movements like Occupy movement, where people gathered in public spaces to say: this system isn’t working for everyone.

It wasn’t polished. It wasn’t perfect. But it was real.

And then something unforgettable happened.

A song.

Harperman wasn’t just music — it was a spark. It spread quickly, carried by voices across the country. It brought humour, rhythm, and resistance together in a way that made people feel connected.

“Harperman, it’s time for you to go…
We want our country back, we want it now…”

It was bold. It was catchy. And it made people feel like they weren’t alone.

That’s the part we sometimes forget.

Change doesn’t always begin with anger. Sometimes it begins with a song, a shared laugh, a moment where people realize: we’re in this together.

And yes — it took time. Years, in fact.
But those voices didn’t disappear. They grew stronger. They reached more people. And eventually, they turned into action.

Today, as new frustrations rise and voices begin to speak out again — including leaders like Charlie Angus calling for change — maybe the lesson isn’t just about politics.

Maybe it’s about remembering that energy.

The creativity.
The courage.
The connection.

Because movements don’t belong to politicians.

They belong to people.

So if something doesn’t feel right — speak.
If something matters — share it.
If something inspires you — sing it.

You never know who needs to hear it.

And you never know how far it might go.

Endometriosis: When Women’s Pain Is Not Believed

 “Endometriosis: When Women’s Pain Is Not Believed


🌿 What endometriosis actually is

Endometriosis is when tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus, causing inflammation, scarring, and pain.

It affects about 1 in 10 women globally—that’s massive.


⚠️ Symptoms (and why so many women are dismissed)

Common symptoms include:

  • Severe menstrual pain (not “normal cramps”)
  • Chronic pelvic pain (even outside your period)
  • Pain during sex, bowel movements, or urination
  • Heavy bleeding
  • Bloating (“endo belly”)
  • Infertility
  • Fatigue, anxiety, depression

πŸ‘‰ The key issue:
Symptoms are inconsistent and overlap with other conditions, so many doctors don’t immediately recognize it.

πŸ‘‰ And even more frustrating:
Some women have severe symptoms but “normal” scans.


🧠 What causes it? (Truth: medicine doesn’t fully know)

There is no single confirmed cause.

Main theories include:

  • Retrograde menstruation (blood flowing backward)
  • Immune system dysfunction
  • Genetics (runs in families)
  • Hormonal influence (especially estrogen)
  • Cells transforming into endometrial-like tissue

πŸ‘‰ The deeper truth: This uncertainty is part of why women are often not taken seriously—because medicine doesn’t have a clean, testable answer.


πŸ₯ Diagnosis: where the system breaks down

The hard reality:

  • There is no simple test
  • Ultrasound/MRI can miss it
  • The only definitive diagnosis is often laparoscopic surgery

Time to diagnosis:

  • Global: 4–12 years
  • Canada: ~5.4 years delay on average

πŸ‘‰ That means years of women being told:

  • “It’s just bad cramps”
  • “Your tests are normal”
  • “It’s stress”

πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ In Canada (including BC)

The Canadian system reflects a broader issue:

  • Long wait times for specialists
  • Heavy reliance on trial treatments (like birth control) before diagnosis
  • Limited access to endometriosis specialists
  • Surgical diagnosis not always accessible

πŸ‘‰ Result: many women are treated without ever being fully believed or confirmed


🌎 Global issue: not just medical—cultural

The World Health Organization highlights that:

  • Period pain is often normalized or dismissed
  • Lack of awareness delays diagnosis
  • Mental health impacts are significant

πŸ‘‰ This is not just biology—it’s gender bias in healthcare


🌿 Indigenous knowledge & perspectives

This is where things get really important—and often ignored.

While research is limited in Western literature, many Indigenous traditions emphasize:

1. Listening to the body

Pain is not something to ignore or suppress—it’s communication.

2. Cycle awareness

Menstrual cycles are seen as rhythms connected to land, food, and stress

3. Inflammation & balance

Some traditional approaches focus on:

  • Anti-inflammatory foods
  • Plant medicines
  • Rest during menstruation
  • Emotional/spiritual balance

πŸ‘‰ Key difference from Western medicine:

  • Western system: “prove it with a test”
  • Indigenous approach: “honor the lived experience”

That matters deeply for a condition like this.


πŸ’” Why women are told “you don’t have it”

This is the part that feels almost gaslighting—and you’re not imagining it.

Reasons include:

  • Tests can be negative even if you have it
  • Doctors rely on visible lesions
  • Pain is subjective and often minimized
  • Lack of training in complex pelvic pain

πŸ‘‰ So yes: You can have symptoms, advocate, and still be told “no”


πŸ’‘ How women can navigate the system

This is where power comes back to you.

1. Track everything

  • Pain timing
  • Cycle patterns
  • Food, stress, sleep
  • Impact on daily life

πŸ‘‰ This builds your evidence


2. Use strong language with doctors

Instead of:

  • “It hurts”

Say:

  • “This pain stops me from working or functioning”
  • “This is not manageable”
  • “I want a referral to a specialist”

3. Ask directly

  • “What are you ruling out?”
  • “Could this be endometriosis?”
  • “What’s the next step if symptoms continue?”

4. Seek specialists if possible

General doctors often lack training in this area.


5. Community matters

Women sharing experiences is powerful—and often ahead of research.


🌱 Supporting young women

This is critical.

We can:

  • Teach girls that severe pain is NOT normal
  • Encourage early medical advocacy
  • Talk openly about menstruation
  • Reduce shame and silence

πŸ‘‰ The earlier it’s recognized, the better the outcomes.


🌊 The deeper truth 

Endometriosis exposes something bigger:

  • Medicine doesn’t fully understand it
  • Women’s pain has historically been dismissed
  • Diagnosis relies too much on proof instead of experience

πŸ‘‰ So women fall through the cracks.


❤️ Final thought

Endometriosis is not just a medical condition—it’s:

  • A system problem
  • A research gap
  • A women’s rights issue

And the shift is already happening because more women are speaking up, comparing notes, and refusing to be dismissed.


Have you or someone you love experienced this?

Were you believed—or dismissed?

Let’s start talking about it. Women deserve better. πŸ’›

Normalization of Suffering – Post 5: Body Image & Control

Normalization of Suffering – Post 5: Body Image & Control πŸͺžπŸ§ 

Not all suffering is visible.

Some of it happens quietly.

Internally.

Shaped over time… by what we see, hear, and absorb.

This one is personal for me.

Because I didn’t always realize how much influence was happening in the background.

There was a time in my life when everything shifted.

I was home more. Injured. My environment changed.

And suddenly, I was exposed to something I hadn’t fully noticed before:

Constant messaging πŸ“Ί

On TV, it was relentless.

Lose weight.
Fix this.
Take that.
Eat this.
Change yourself.

And here’s the part that still stays with me:

I wasn’t overweight.

But the messaging made me feel like I was.

Not all at once.

Not dramatically.

But slowly… consistently.

That’s how influence works.

Not by forcing.

But by repeating πŸ”

And I responded.

I started eating differently. Thinking differently.

Seeing myself differently.

Until one day, I looked back and realized:

I had changed… without ever consciously choosing to.

That’s the quiet power of repeated messaging.

It doesn’t just sell products.

It reshapes perception.

And it’s everywhere.

From commercials… to social media… to ads you pass without thinking.

Even in places like Vancouver, where billboards and transit ads fill the spaces we move through every day 🚏

But here’s the turning point:

When my environment changed again—less TV, more focus, going back to school—something else shifted.

The noise got quieter.

And for the first time in a while…

I could hear my own thoughts again.

That’s when I started to understand:

Not everything I believed about myself… came from me.

And that realization?

It’s both unsettling… and freeing.

Because if something was learned…

It can be unlearned.

So this post isn’t about blame.

It’s about awareness.

About asking:

What messages have I been living under?

And are they actually mine?

Because your body is not a problem to be solved.

And your worth was never meant to be decided by repetition.

Sometimes, the most powerful thing you can do…

Is step back long enough to see clearly again πŸ‘️


πŸ” Reflection Questions

Have you ever felt dissatisfied with your body without knowing exactly why?

What messages about weight, beauty, or health have been repeated in your life?

Do you believe your self-image has been influenced by media or advertising?

Can you remember a time when your perception of yourself changed based on what you were exposed to?

How often do you compare yourself to images you see online or in ads?

Do you feel pressure to “fix” something about yourself—and where do you think that pressure comes from?

What happens when you remove yourself from constant media exposure, even briefly?

Can you distinguish between your own thoughts and those shaped by repeated messaging?

What would it feel like to trust your body instead of trying to change it?

If no external messages existed, how would you see yourself?


Keywords (comma separated):
Normalization of Suffering, Body Image, Self-Perception, Media Influence, Advertising Pressure, Mental Conditioning, Beauty Standards, Emotional Awareness, Self-Worth, Unlearning Beliefs

**********

This marks the end of Part 1—Posts 1 through 5—of the Normalization of Suffering series.

If these reflections have made you pause, question, or see things differently… that’s where it begins.

Part 2 (Posts 6–10) continues April 15.


Thursday, March 26, 2026

Floating Sauna in Kits… seriously?

🌊 Floating Sauna in Kits… seriously?

So now they want to put a floating sauna barge near the Vancouver Maritime Museum.

Hot tubs. On a barge.
In a marina full of old wooden boats.

Okay. 😐


Look—I get it.

Saunas are great. Cold plunges, community, wellness… all of that. πŸ§–‍♀️🌊

But this?

This feels like a joke.


One local said it better than anyone:

“I'm Norwegian, I believe in the health benefits of saunas and cold plunging very deeply. But this solution here is not about health and it's not about revitalization.”

“To have one of the most beautiful settings in the world essentially, and then putting a steel wall in front of it… it’s one of the most curious decisions I’ve heard in my lifetime.”


And honestly…

That’s exactly it.


Because people who live here aren’t just thinking about “wellness experiences.”

They’re thinking:

🌬️ wind
🌊 rising water
🚒 what happens when something that size breaks loose


And we already know that happens.

Not “maybe.”
Not “unlikely.”

Happens.


Those boats there? πŸͺ΅
They’re not replaceable.

They’re history.


So the real question isn’t:

“Do we want a sauna?”

It’s:

πŸ‘‰ Why here?
πŸ‘‰ Why risk it?
πŸ‘‰ Why do this again?


Because putting a giant barge in a tight, historic harbour…

and hoping nothing goes wrong…

isn’t wellness.


It’s denial. 😐