Showing posts with label celebration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label celebration. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Baby Steps

Great big, innovative, world-changing ideas are plentiful don't you think. Everyone seems to have the latest and greatest idea or is busy chasing the latest and greatest idea. But people who take tiny little baby steps toward them are rare.

If you are one of those who are taking baby steps you are so acing this life.  There is a quote from the Chinese Philosopher Laozi (604 BC) which says a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.  In this quote, Lao Tzu is trying to express the idea that great things start from humble beginnings. For many of us, this is common sense, but in our everyday quest to solve the problems of our world, we forget this idea. For example, if a person is lonely, it is hard to make new friends, but it is a small step to smile every time you see someone, or just say hi and smile when you see the same person every day. If you repeat this small gesture, over time a relationship may build and a friendship may be forged.

My six-year-old grandson was frustrated that he could not do a particular flip on his trampoline at home, but he started small and continued to work at it each day until he could do it. Small steps toward a goal are just as important as the big leap, and I sometimes think that slow and steady progress is easier on us than chaotic and rapid change. We are creatures of habit and although we say we like change, or we say we believe that the only constant in life is change. Change and progress bother us if they are done too quickly, we prefer to move slowly toward a future or a destination that creeps up on us, rather than one that jumps out at us. By moving slowly we can see how the change or the journey will change us, and we can begin to adapt to that new version or the new way of doing.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

What kind of people?



It's easy to look around at all the people who already have what you want, notice how they differ from you, and then think that they are the "kind of people" for whom having what you want comes naturally. Whereas you are not, otherwise you'd have it too.

This is very rational thinking, and a super way to avoid responsibility, rest on the sidelines, and watch more TV.

Adventurers, on the other hand,  understand that they are exactly the kind of people who should have the things they now want. Otherwise, they wouldn't be blessed with wanting them.  


Are you one of the blessed? Start your adventure now, life is short but full of fun adventures if you are the kind of person who understands the adventure starts with your first dream and your first step.


Sunday, July 1, 2012

Celebrate Canada Day


Here is how my town is celebrating Canada Day, I hope you have the opportunity to join in your own community celebrations for Canada Day or for my American friends July 4th.
Enjoy the day and celebrate your country.
 
Port Coquitlam Celebrates Canada Day - Sunday, July 1
Lions Park 
Time: 8 - 11:30am
Lions Club Pancake Breakfast
Enjoy a great start to Canada Day with a delicious breakfast served by the local Lions Club. $4 for adults and $2 for children under 12.
10th Annual Fishing Derby A great opportunity for children under 12  to test their fishing skills. Expect prizes and lots of family fun! Free admission.
Castle Park
12 noon - Dusk
Free admission! See below for info about free shuttle and parking restrictions.
Noon:
Opening Ceremonies & Cake Cutting

12:30-5:30 pm:
Community Showcase featuring local talent (see below for evening entertainment) 

3:30pm - 6:30pm
Firefighters' Salmon Barbecue
- this Canada Day favourite is being served once again by our local firefighters. Proceeds go to the Burn Fund.
 

12:30 - 5:30pm:
Children's activities - including Bell E. Buttons the Clown, free face painting, a creation station, castles and a climbing wall.
International bazaar - displays and vendors


6:00-10:00pm:
Musical entertainment:
Enjoy the Big Yahoo followed by Andy Lorimer (formerly with Prism) backing up
Susie McGregor, an animated and expressive performer whose vocals have drawn Canadian audiences from coast to coast. This duo is back after being very well received at last year's event.


Dusk
Grande Finale Fireworks:
Enjoy the thrill of fireworks coordinated by Port Coquitlam Fire & Emergency Services and sponsored this year by Onni Group.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Advice for Ryder (my grandson)

The following is a Quote by Rilke that one day I hope my grandson will understand.

You are so young, so before all beginning, and I want to beg you, as much as I can, to be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves,like locked rooms and liked books that are written in a very foreign tongue. 



Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.

 







Resolve to be always beginning—to be a beginner! 

Friday, July 1, 2011

Happy Canada Day

My community will join the rest of Canada in Celebration of Canada Day, so if you are in the area here is a list of what we are doing as a community to celebrate


Port Coquitlam Celebrates Canada Day - Thursday, July 1, 2011



Ninth Annual Fishing Derby in Lions Park (map & directions)

8 - 11:30am

A great opportunity for children under 12 to test their fishing skills. Expect prizes and lots of family fun! Breakfast available on site by the Port Coquitlam Lions Club.

Lions Club Pancake Breakfast in Lions Park (map & directions)

8 - 11:30am



Enjoy a great start to Canada Day with a delicious breakfast served by the local Lions Club. The cost is $4. each and $2. each for children under 12.



Castle Park (map & directions)

12 noon - Dusk

Opening Ceremonies & Cake Cutting



Community Showcase: 12:30 -5:30pm



•Other entertainers are The Big Yahoo (grads from Terry Fox Senior Secondary) and Susie McGregor and many more . . .



Children’s Activities: 12:30 - 5pm



International Bazaar: 12:30 - 5pm



Firefighters’ Salmon Barbeque: 4pm start

This Canada Day favourite is being served once again by our local firefighters. Proceeds go to the Burn Fund



Evening Entertainment: 6 -10 pm

Enjoy the Big Yahoo followed by Andy Lorimer (formerly with Prism) backing up Susie McGregor, an animated and expressive performer whose vocals have drawn Canadian audiences from coast to coast.



Grande Finale Fireworks: Dusk

Enjoy the spectacular thrill of fireworks coordinated by the Port Coquitlam Fire & Emergency Services.



Save the hassle and take the FREE Shuttle Service

A free shuttle bus service will be provided between Castle Park and the West Coast Express parking lot on Kingsway Avenue, every half hour from 11:30 am to midnight. Extra free parking is available at the Port Coquitlam Recreation Complex, 2150 Wilson Avenue





Parking Restrictions in effect 6:00pm to midnight



No Stopping 6pm - midnight

•Along the north side of Citadel Drive (from the east leg of Castle Crescent to Pitt River Road)

 •Along both sides of Castle Crescent

•Along both sides of Citadel Drive from Confederation Drive to Castle Crescent (east leg)











Temporary Street Closures, 8 pm - 11:30pm





•Citadel Drive from Pitt River Road to Confederation Drive

•Colonial Drive from Citadel Drive to Moody Court

•Castle Crescent

Vehicles will be towed at owner's expense if parked in prohitbited area.
Temporary Street Closures, 8 pm - 11:30pm
•Citadel Drive from Pitt River Road to Confederation Drive

•Colonial Drive from Citadel Drive to Moody Court

•Castle Crescent
Vehicles will be towed at owner's expense if parked in prohitbited area.

Sponsorship Opportunities

If you would like to show your support for community events and get your company's brand in front of thousands of people, please contact Sandra Battle at 604.927.7935 or battles@portcoquitlam.ca.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Appollo missions revisited

For those interested, a free documentary on Hulu: (Note not available in some locations, thanks to Stacy for the link and idea)


"It’s been almost four decades since the last moon landing, but you can relive them with 1989’s For All Mankind, a documentary that presents a stunning and even surprising portrait of the Apollo missions. The best part? It’s now available in its entirety (for free!) on Hulu.

Perhaps sensing the shelf life of such a program, NASA had the good sense to thoroughly tape each journey to the moon. Surprisingly, they also promptly filed this footage away, until director Al Reinert found it and
turned it into a feature-length documentary. The film, composed entirely of the NASA footage, communication recordings and astronaut interviews, provides an intimate perspective on the program and the men who flew in it. To see the actual footage—the room-size early computers, the rough-and-ready emergency fixes, the astronaut’s giddy reaction to the lunar surface (“Look at the size of that rock!”), the smoke-filled command center—is to see how amazing, dangerous and perhaps naive these missions were, and how far, indeed, we’ve come."

Saturday, September 18, 2010

A Note from the Universe

From time to time I will share Notes I received from the Universe,  and I will share the more interesting ones here. If you like the notes then you can join at the link above.
Little can ease the suffering or stem the pain over lives lost and careers  halted, Royce, but human nature is every bit as resilient and courageous as mother Earth, and we are simply awed by what we see unfolding from here. All hail... before humankind.

On the very bright side, Royce, never in peace time history has there  been such a gallant effort, by so many people, spending so many billions of dollars with no end in sight, to rapidly clean up your environment.

Never before have numerous heads of state and representatives of a corporation as large as many smaller nations, pledged to work together, sharing expertise and resources to get a job done.

Never before have so many prayer and meditation groups suddenly formed, amongst and in between every religion and those belonging to none, to foster healing of your precious planet.

Never before have finger pointers, conspiracy theorists, and blame mongers been so idle and unnecessary in the face of such a tragedy.

Never before have industry titans across every sea chosen to reexamine their own safety procedures, revisit their own environmental safeguards, and expend their own fortunes to voluntarily reflect upon and demand that they do an even better job from this day forward.

And to top it all off, Royce, your planet has a loving, brilliant consciousness all her own, and of her countless balancing acts, healing herself is one in which she truly shines.

Of this, and so much more, you can be very, very proud.  Yee-haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!

The Universe

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Support circles

One of the most effective ways to incorporate what you are learning in your developmental opportunity or your path to self awareness, is to surround yourself with people who give you strength - people who have committed to living positive and thoughtful lives..

One of the biggest factors in your success is the people that you associate with. In particular, your five closest friends.The five people I am closest to help form my Support Circle.

As you undertake the journey to self awareness I would recommend that you take a look at YOUR "Support Circle", the five people you are closest to. It's crucial to your success that you have some positive - aligned people in the five to support you. If you have five positive aligned people cultivate and keep them, if you do not have five positive aligned people one of the first steps you will have to take is to leave people who are no positively aligned behind as you move forward in your journey.

I believe that the people you allow to make up this group are so instrumental to your success consciousness, that they truly become crucial to your path. They color your goals, expectations, and what you believe is possible for you.

Be honest with yourself, would you describe the people you now have as the five closest people in your life as people who are living in the "flow" or as people who are negative and struggling? Who are the five people in the group closest to you now?
If most of the five are not on the same path, can you think of two or three NEW people that you currently know, that you can actively work at developing a deeper relationship with and bring them into your Support Circle?

Take a moment NOW and form your Support Circle. Your Point of Focus right now is surrounding yourself with llike-minded people that will support and inspire you on your journey.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Canada Day

I just got back from the Port Coquitlam Canada Day celebration fireworks in Citadal Park, I have been going to these since they started a few years ago. Every year they get better and better. This is a fund place for family, I watched the families with small children, as the children  played with their light sabers and the parents watched them and relaxed. There was not any sign of drinking, or pot smoking that I could see and there were tons of families with small children.

The organizers need to be congratulated for the wonderful day and the firefighters should be congratulated for their work on the actual fireworks. It was fun watching the crowds pulsating back and forth. Technology is interesting when the fireworks started, people would wonder back and forth searching for their friends, today people stand and phone their friends, asking where are you, with the discussion going back and forth about how to identify the spot where their friends are or have move to.

As I watched the fireworks, there was a pause and then I noticed that off in the distance I could see more fireworks and I realized that I was watching the fireworks from Surrey, and I thought this is great, two for the price of one.

The fireworks ended, the rain held off  and the crowd slowly started to leave wanting more--many will come back next year and hopefully bring their friends and family. A wonderful day and a wonderful way to celebrate the day. I hope you enjoyed the celebrations.

Something to think about

Canadian English has words or expressions not found, or not widely used, in other variants of English. Additionally, like other dialects of English that exist in proximity to francophones, French loanwords have entered Canadian English. This page comprises words — proper English terms, French loanwords, and slang words — that are distinctive for their relatively widespread use in Canada. Here sis a partial list of Canadian words with our own definitions. For more go to http://www.canadaka.net/content/page/124-canadian-slang--english-words

Canadian English words, expressions, and terms


ABM, bank machine: a common term for an automated teller machine. Short for automated bank machine.

allophone: a resident whose first language is one other than English or French. Used only by linguists in other English-speaking countries, this word has come to be used by journalists and broadcasters, and then by the general public, in some parts of Canada.

bachelor: bachelor apartment ("They have a bachelor for rent").

Bunny Hug: Term used in Saskatchewan that is a hooded sweatshirt with or without a zipper that has a pocket in the front. Also refered to as a Hoodie in most other provinces

Bytown: the original name of Ottawa before its designation as national capital, often still used in the same context as Hogtown for Toronto or Cowtown for Calgary.

Canuck: A slang term for "Canadian" in the U.S. and Canada. It sometimes means "French Canadian" in particular, especially when used in the Northeast of the United States and in Canada. Adopted as the name of the National Hockey League team in Vancouver. Sometimes jokingly pronounced can-OOK (not used this way for the hockey team, aka "the Nucks").

chesterfield: a sofa or couch. Used somewhat in Northern California; obsolete in Britain (where it originated). Sometimes (as in classic furnishing terminology) refers to a sofa whose arms are the same height as the back, but more usually to any couch or sofa. The more international terms sofa and couch are also used; among younger generations in the western and central regions, chesterfield is largely in decline.

Chinook: a warm, dry wind experienced along the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains in the United States and Canada. Most common in winter and spring, a chinook wind can result in a rise in temperature of 20 C° (36 F°) in a quarter of an hour. In Alaska, the word is pronounced with an affricate ch instead of the fricative sh sound as used in Canada, and means an extremely wet, warm, constant southwesterly, which actually is the same weather pattern as the drying wind that it becomes when it hits Alberta. The use of the word to mean a wind is from the Chinook Jargon, "i.e., the wind from the direction of the country of the Chinooks" (the lower Columbia River), as transmitted to the Prairies by the francophone employees of the North West Company, hence the Frenchified pronunciation east of the Rockies. A Chinook in BC is also one of the five main varieties of salmon, and can also mean the Chinook Jargon, although this older usage is now very rare (as is the Jargon itself).

concession road: in southern Ontario and southern Quebec, one of a set of roads laid out by the colonial government as part of the distribution of land in standard lot sizes. The roads were laid out in squares as nearly as possible equal to 1,000 acres (4 km²). Many of the concession roads were known as sidelines, and in Ontario many roads are still called lines.

dayliner: a Budd Rail Diesel Car, a self-propelled diesel passenger railcar on the former British Columbia Railway, also called "Budd Car" after the company who made them (the dayliner is now out of service). Dayliners also saw service in Ontario on the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) and the Canadian National Railway (CNR).

deke: A word derived from decoy and used to decribe a fake or feint intended to deceive a defensive player, often drawing that player out of position, usually in hockey, as in "I deked him out and scored."

double-double: a cup of coffee from Tim Horton's with two creams and two sugars

eaves troughs (also Northern & Western U.S.): grooves or channels that attach to the underside of the roof of a house to collect rainwater. Known to most Americans and to Britons as gutters.

eh: a spoken interjection to ascertain the comprehension, continued interest, agreement, etc., of the person or persons addressed ("That was a good game last night, eh?"). May also be used instead of "huh?" or "what?" meaning "please repeat or say again." Frequently mis-represented by Americans as A, or hey. May have its origins from the French hein, which is pronounced in a very similar fashion.

Family Compact: a group of influential families who exercised substantial political control of Ontario during part of the 1800s. The Quebec equivalent was the Chateau Clique.

fire hall: fire station, firehouse

fishfly: mayfly

garburator: a garbage disposal unit located beneath the drain of a kitchen sink.

homo milk: homogenized milk, particularly with a fat content greater than 2%, usually 3.25%. Referred to in the U.S. as whole milk.

humidex: measurement used by meteorologists to reflect the combined effect of heat and humidity.

hydro: (except Alberta, Saskatchewan, and the Maritimes) commonly as a synonym for electrical service. Many Canadian provincial electric companies generate power from hydroelectricity, and incorporate the term "Hydro" in their names: Toronto Hydro, Hydro Ottawa, etc. Usage: "Manitoba Hydro... It's not just a Power Company anymore."; "How long did you work for Hydro?" "When's Hydro gonna get the lines back up."; "The hydro bill is due on the fifteenth."; "I didn't pay my hydro bill so they shut off my lights." Hence hydrofield, a line of electricity transmission towers, usually in groups cutting across a city, and hydro lines/poles, electrical transmission lines/poles.

joe job: a low-class, low-paying job. Not to be confused with the American term joe job.

Kokanee: British Columbian name for a species of land-locked salmon (accent on first syllable). Also the name of a popular beer made in the Kootenay district, also known as "Blue Cocaine."

Kraft Dinner: Kraft macaroni and cheese. Sometimes called "Krap Dinner" or "KD".

loonie: Canadian one dollar coin. Derived from the use of the loon on the reverse.

lumber jacket: A thick flannel jackeolett either red and black or green and black favoured by blue collar workers and heavy metal/grunge afficinados. This apparel is more commonly referred to as a mackinac (pron mackinaw). In parts of British Columbia, it is referred to as a doeskin.

Nanaimo bar: a confection named for the town of Nanaimo, British Columbia and made of egg custard with a Graham-cracker-based bottom and a thin layer of chocolate on top; however, this term is now common in the United States and elsewhere, thanks to the efforts of Starbucks in popularizing them.

Newfie, Newf: A colloquial, often derisive term used to describe one who is from Newfoundland and Labrador. Historically used with light humour in "Newfie Jokes", similar to "Dumb Blonde Jokes". Use of the word is now considered to be offensive and in very bad taste.

parkade: a parking garage, especially in the West.

pencil crayon: coloured pencil.

pickerel: This is a slang word for walleye.

pop: the common name for soft drinks or soda pop.

quiggly hole and quiggly town: remains of First Nations underground houses in the Interior of British Columbia

rad: Short for radiator in a car or home heating, but pronounced like the first sylable of 'radical'.

regular: used to denote a coffee with one cream, one sugar ("I'll have two double doubles and a regular")

runners: running shoes, sneakers, especially in Central Canada. Also used somewhat in Australian English.

serviette: a small square of cloth or paper used while eating, a napkin. Derives from British English.

Timbits: a brand name of donut (doughnut) holes made by Tim Hortons that has become a generic term

toonie: Canadian two dollar coin. Modelled after loonie (q.v.). Also spelled tooney, twooney, twoonie, twonie, or twoney

tuque: a knitted winter hat, often with a pompon on the crown. Sometimes misspelled "toque", which is in fact an unrelated type of hat.

washroom: the general term for what is normally named public toilet or lavatory in Britain. In the U.S. (where it originated) mostly replaced by restroom in the 20th century. Generally used only as a technical or commercial term outside of Canada. The word bathroom is also used; the term toilet is generally considered somewhat indelicate in Canada and is avoided. [1]