Monday, 30 December 2013
Friday, 27 December 2013
A Few Season Bites
Close Encounters at the Mayfair Mall on Boxing Day
This is actually the ceiling design at the Food Court but looks like a space ship about to swallow up all the greedy Boxing Day Sale shoppers or those ungrateful souls who are taking back unwanted gifts etc etc.
This ship would carry them off to Santa's "Work House" (a little bit of Dickensonian allusion ) which is a small snowy planet a little outside and to the left of Rigel, - part of the Winter Hexagon of the night sky. Once there they would have to make gifts with their own hands and imaginations in Santa's sweat shop for a whole year or until they find the true spirit of giving in their hearts.
I have no idea why I wandered into this Mecca like pilgrimage on Dec 26. I actually got a touch of vertigo as I was swept along in a circular wave around the Mall reminding me of those devoted who swirl around the Ka'aba except that this was not a spiritual quest and of a decidedly more mundane and less noble nature. I finally got the bedsheets I wanted after standing in line for 1/2 hour and then headed exhausted and confused outside to Starbucks for respite. But alas, the lineup for a life giving jolt of dark roasted caffeine went right around the corner, so in a daze I managed to drag myself to the bus stop and homeward to my eventual collapse - but with a nice espresso and eggnog with a dash of rum on the couch - much better than Starbuck's!!
" A small matter to make these silly folk so full of gratitude"
Every year I watch "A Christmas Carol" on Christmas Eve - the best one- with Alastair Sim! I have a collection of Christmas movies that are a must, including "A Christmas Story" and Disney's "Narnia" and the "Polar Express." The all time fave though has to be "A Christmas Carol". I still weep at the ending. I am so old to remember singing aloud carols and my parents and friends dancing in the rec room. - Oh, the days before computer games and uncensored television ( and we had a time limit on how much we could watch!)
Fire truck toy run in View Royal Christmas Eve

a few happy and grateful celebraters at Christmas
Thursday, 19 December 2013
a poignant season and Christmas Past
"Nothing is ever really lost to us as long as we remember it"
the jeweled tree at Butchart Gardens
This last week has been full of memories, as my mother's birthday and then my brother's came and went. There is a deep sadness and longing for the ghosts of Christmas past. I still feel and remember the anticipation, the hope, the magic, the baby Jesus, and our family
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our little drummer boy |
One Christmas eve night Toto the dog ripped open all the presents looking for dog treats which she knew were there somewhere but instead found a box of chocolates and we woke up to a mess of Christmas wrapping and vomit and her hiding behind the couch looking so miserable and ashamed.
Every year Mom made what she called the "wife saver" breakfast, put together the night before with a hodge podge of ingredients similar to Scottish "stovies" or hash but with eggs included in the mixture. So after Mass we ate, and then the treats were laid out and we ate again and ate all day long. It was a raucous time with the mix of Celtic and Latin temperaments and I won't deny that many got into their cups as well.
But something was special there as even after we had grown and moved out we all came home every Christmas for years as though we never left.
In later years I watched my own daughter in squealing delight, pull the wrappings off a Barbie doll house with a battery run elevator!!! This year I go to her place for Christmas dinner.
How many Christmases are we given? We never know who will be lost but also who we will gain. Children grow and have children of their own. We celebrate in different locations now as ordained by our own life's circumstance. We can drift apart and come together as in a dance.
In the blink of an eye filled with the sparkle and light of this magical and holy season we enter a new year. May this angel and the baby Jesus hold in the warm light those who are loved and missed this Christmas, father and mother, grandparents, all- and our dear brother who made us beautiful stained glass birds one year and gave Dad (as one fisherman to another) a fish mounted on a plaque that sang "Take me to the River" which gave us all a good laugh. God bless us everyone
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a very old clip from the family movies-Dean was a wee baby and Vicki got her dress. |
More Christmas Past
I'll be home for Christmas if only in my dreams-A Tribute
More Christmas Past
I'll be home for Christmas if only in my dreams-A Tribute
"Yes, the newspapers were right: snow was general all over Ireland. It was falling softly upon the Bog of Allen and, further westwards, softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves. It was falling too upon every part of the lonely churchyard where Michael Furey lay buried. It lay thickly drifted on the crooked crosses and headstones, on the spears of the little gate, on the barren thorns. His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe and faintly falling, like the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the dead."- James Joyce
Tuesday, 17 December 2013
An absolutely silly and wonderful season
the ridiculous
with my little garden buddy "Indy" the adventurous earthworm
and the sublime
the winter path
the winter path
by CybeleMoon
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Wishing you a magical Christmas ( I said he'd be back) and more of the same from last year http://dreamshadowexcursions.blogspot.ca/2012/12/so-far-so-good-on-dec-21-2012.html |
Sunday, 8 December 2013
a little phantasmagorical at the Uptown Centre |
One magic night of many
The Royal Theatre which opened in 1913, Victoria's first cultural venue,
it has been home to concerts, operas and plays and later, movies,
but is now live performance only.
This is my first Christmas event this year.
I remembered what a magical delight the ballet Nutcracker really is. The Alberta Ballet put on a spectacular performance last night and it totally swept me away as live performances often do. In spite of the incredible special effects of modern film (which I love) there is a special electrifying energy that flows between audience and players at a live performance. Whether it is the soaring sounds of opera or symphony, the driving rhythms of Rock or the liberating motion of dancing bodies you find it takes a little longer to come back to earth after being beamed up into that other world of mystery and art, story and passion, caught in the living currents of breath and body, sight and sound, time and space.
Downtown in the freezing cold
Yates Street
We grab a bite to eat and warm up at
The Bay Centre Gallery

and then head around the corner to the theatre where we meet a timid mouse.
and a big thanks to Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Victoria who gave lots of children and young people the chance to attend and to go back stage and try on costumes and meet the performers.
including our dear "Tittlemouse." who ?
Hint: she doesn't like cheese!
click on photo to see more Nutcracker Video by the Alberta Ballet-
a visual treat
Thursday, 5 December 2013
This is my favourite season both filled with hope, light and magic and also the sadness that accompanies memories of past joys and camaraderie. This is a season that renews itself with it's symbols of rebirth, salvation and grace and we must constantly reinvent ourselves also.
My favourite path of the heart with a first dusting of snow
Snow berries in the park
Across the cove
and finally the warmth of hearth and home

Tuesday, 26 November 2013
Demeter's Sorrow
Winter approaches slowly and my hill is crispy frosted. They are predicting snow next week! I thought I would like to grab my camera and take a few photos and so...
a road trip to Shawnigan Lake on the island brought back memories of summer holidays long ago with my family. My sister tells me that the cabin is still there but for some reason I could not find it. Many of our family are gone now but the love and memories remain as clear and shining as the lake on a calm day.
It was a typical holiday for us ( mom, dad, my sister and two brothers) with mom still cooking away at the cabin stove - " the cook never gets time off!"- and relatives, grandparents and friends, visiting, dropping in and staying a few days. We swam, sunbathed, waterskied with Dad, ate ice cream in the little village, and put pennies on the railway tracks to be flattened by the historic old E&N which roared by every day -Dad's suggestion- he also claimed we could make peanut butter this way. We explored, spent our days with each other and friends, and sat up at night telling stories. It all seemed timeless.
I was a strong swimmer and one evening at midnight I decided to swim "skyclad" like a mermaid, alone in the lake while others slept- probably not the safest thing to do but something that satisfied the waking romantic girl/woman inside me- called by the stars into the cool dark lake. Another time, our little brother fell off the wharf and I jumped in and pulled him out. All I remember was that he was there playing and then there was a splash and his friend pointing at the water which rippled and churned outward. With relief I hugged him tightly!! Our sweet Dean!!
My mother's last dream was of summer on the lake!!

the summer lake long ago


( a few memories from my dad's collection of old home movies)
and a visit?
and a visit?
This last while has been full of synchronicity. The local news produced on the TV an older political rally which showed my dad participating and talking. A few days later while moving some papers in the closet an old letter from my father fell out that could have been written yesterday!! It was very timely and addressed something I had been thinking about the last few days. The universe speaks!! and it's all good!
What we did find at Shawnigan
Frosted fields
Monday, 18 November 2013
Around Victoria Night and Morning!
Twilight Symphony
an evening walk in Portage Park
As I watched the gusting clouds against the night sky, with the moon winking in and out I grabbed the camera and went for a long exposure. The lights of the Esquimalt neighbourhood became a jewel box and reflected the colours onto the spreading clouds.
Sky clad Nut, queen of the night, her fine flowing muslin gown flung with stars.
The Breakwater Beacon
(another long exposure shot)
Sparklers and painted ships in the inner harbour at Ogden Point
Illuminated Parliament (not sure about it's members)
Monday, 11 November 2013
Wednesday, 23 October 2013
Autumn Hymns of the Morning Warrior
There is something quite magical and mysterious in the early hours of morning and especially when the fog has crept in which it has these last weeks. To wake up to the sound of fog horns on the harbour and see the ghostly outlines of trees and houses always inspires me to grab the camera and head out toward the water or the woods. It's a quest to follow a sunbeam path that splits the mist into glowing ribbons amongst the trees or to listen to the nuances of a bird melody and the symphonies of hidden places.

walking to School
To be true to oneself and to others is not always easy. I almost always try to think outside the box (out in the ethers!) which has at times isolated me but has also brought me some wonderful friends and encounters from the universe. I will stop to hear the singing on the wind but there have been times that the path has taken me to a dead end too. It's important not to lose heart -and as Castaneda said "we can make ourselves happy or we can make ourselves miserable- the amount of work is the same!"
“In a world where death is the hunter, my friend, there is no time for regrets or doubts. There is only time for decisions.” from the Journey to Ixtlan
early one morning
Portage Park


Halloween and Samhain Oct 31, 2013
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