Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Monday, November 22, 2010
Hallelujah!!
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
6:14 PM
2
comments
Sunday, November 21, 2010
An Early Christmas Present...
Is what occurred in the food court of the Seaway mall in Welland, Ontario last week. Shoppers were given a surprise early Christmas gift, courtesy of the most awesome "Chorus Niagara".
I hope you will join me in actually ANTICIPATING the beginning of the shopping portion of the holiday season this year...
Because if magical things like this can happen in Welland, Ontario?
They can happen ANYWHERE, people.
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
11:08 AM
2
comments
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Novembersong.
For my dearest friend, who is far away from me.
Because I'm more than just a little bit cold here without you.
xoxoxo
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
8:42 AM
0
comments
Monday, September 27, 2010
The Great Escape?
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
9:38 AM
5
comments
Monday, September 13, 2010
The Exterminator
And so... with our weekend away looming before us, I reflected upon the track-record of hamster survival under my parents' roof. It was not that they did anything deliberate to seal the fates of their small, furry guests... but it was undeniable that they seemed to induce the "touch of death" among all who visited.
"I don't know, girls... I'm thinking that this hamster holiday thing might not be such a good idea, after all. I think Pip and Freckle might have a much better chance at surviving a weekend with your father, than a weekend at Gramma's. Don't you?"
I watched as the penny dropped for Wee Three. She turned her enormous brown eyes to me.
"I don't think I want to go to Gramma's, either."
After assuring her that it was only small ANIMALS that were at risk, not small PEOPLE, it was agreed that Pip and Freckle would remain at home, in Child Number Two's bedroom, with the door firmly CLOSED.
"KEEP THIS DOOR CLOSED" read a large sign, scrawled in orange crayon, scotch taped to the door.
"Don't ferget to giv Pip and Frekle water and CLOSE THE DOOR," read a hand-written note, left on the kitchen table.
Wee Three even insisted on telephoning her father's cell phone every half hour or so, to leave messages reminding her father of all his various weekend duties. (As well as being the Hamster Police, Wee Three also patrols the activities of Maude and Charlotte, the cats, and administers love and attention on guinea pigs Toot, Puddle and Cupcake. She's our resident Doctor Doolittle.)
We had a blissful weekend. Perfection. The weather was lovely, the theatre was in full swing, we visited all manner of toyshops, chocolate emporiums and farmer's markets. Then, as daylight faded, we lay on our backs on the grass in my mother's back garden, listening to crickets chirping, and watching shooting stars streak across the sky.
It could not have been better.
To top it off, the husband was reporting complete success on the home front: no animals had yet perished, and everyone was happy and well fed. Doors that were supposed to remain closed, remained closed. Everyone was present and accounted for.
We made our triumphant return on the Sunday evening. Husband was helping me to haul the luggage from car to back door, as the children went pealing into the house to greet their furry friends.
"Everything REALLY ok?" I asked, as we crossed the threshold.
Before my spouse could respond in the affirmative, their was a blood-curdling shreik from upstairs.
"PIP!! Mummy!!! My hamster is GOOOOONE!"
oh, God...
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
9:22 AM
1 comments
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
In which I disregard The Gospel...


Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
11:22 AM
3
comments
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
The Universe and Me.
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
9:37 AM
2
comments
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Announcing...
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
8:51 AM
4
comments
Thursday, June 24, 2010
The end of the beginning.
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
10:20 AM
6
comments
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Good-bye.
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
9:59 PM
8
comments
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
The BEST of the Grammys, 2010...
Divine, Dave.
Divine.
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
10:35 PM
0
comments
Sunday, January 17, 2010
And Now, The News.



Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
3:13 PM
1 comments
A hell right here on earth.

The people of Haiti are living a hell right here on earth.
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
2:38 PM
0
comments
Monday, January 4, 2010
Of pride. And prejudice.

I sh*t you not, dear readers.
Just took a peek at my online transcript, and this is what I found, as my average for the first half of this academic year.
My pride? Simply knows no bounds.
And trust me, with a past heavily steeped in all things Austen, I KNOW where pride tends to lead one.
BUT.
This old dog needs to pat herself on the back, with the one good arm she has at her disposal. Because going back to university after being at home with three children for thirteen years, and cracking past the "Aged 40" due date on my personal expiration label...
THIS?
Is a big deal for me.
Now, to set my sights towards the immediate future:
Today was my first day as a grade six teacher. Scary, seeing as my entire career experience thus far (apart from rearing my own eldest child) has been with students between the ages of two and eight. To say that this considerably more "mature" classroom (although... come to think of it, I'm not entirely certain that this is an apropriate word to describe ALL of the students I met today. But hey, it's the only the first day, and I like to give everyone the benefit of the doubt) was a bit of a shock to the ol' system is an understatement.
I am secretly panicking that these kids are going to eat me alive.
AND.
I have to teach gym. Every. Single. Day.
Gym is not my forte, to put it mildly. When it comes to sports, I am the spectator.
But, it's an experience, right? And besides, what does not kill me will make me stronger.
Or, as my darling grandmother used to say, in full-on Scottish brogue:
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
9:05 PM
4
comments
Monday, December 28, 2009
Freedom!! (Sort of.)


Now. All I need is a physiotherapist who will work during the holidays...
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
7:15 PM
2
comments
Friday, December 25, 2009
The Heart-in-Waiting
The Heart-in-Waiting
Jesus walked through whispering wood:
‘I am pale blossom, I am blood berry,
I am rough bark, I am sharp thorn.
This is the place where you will be born.’
Jesus went down to the skirl of the sea:
‘I am long reach, I am fierce comber,
I am keen saltspray, I am spring tide.’
He pushed the cup of the sea aside
And heard the sky which breathed-and-blew:
‘I am the firmament, I am shape-changer,
I cradle and carry and kiss and roar,
I am infinite roof and floor.’
All day he walked, he walked all night,
Then Jesus came to the heart at dawn.
‘Here and now,’ said the heart-in-waiting,
‘This is the place where you must be born.’
-KEVIN CROSSLEY-HOLLAND
from Selected Poems
Enitharmon Press 2001
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
10:25 PM
2
comments
A Happy Christmas to you all!
How do you count all the stars in the sky?
How can you measure the love of a mother,
Or how can your write down a baby's first cry?
Candlelight, angel light, firelight and star glow
Shine on his cradle till breaking of dawn,
Gloria, gloria in excelsis Deo!
Angels are singing; the Christ Child is born.
Shepherds and wise men will kneel and adore him,
Seraphim round him their vigil will keep;
Nations proclaim him their Lord and their Savior,
But Mary will hold him and sing him to sleep.
Candlelight, angel light, firelight and star glow,
Shine on his cradle till breaking of dawn,
Gloria, gloria in excelsis Deo!
Angels are singing; the Christ Child is born.
Find Him at Bethlehem laid in a manger:
Christ our Redeemer asleep in the hay.
Godhead incarnate and hope for salvation:
A child with his mother that first Christmas Day.
Candlelight, angel light, firelight and star glow,
Shine on his cradle till breaking of dawn,
Gloria, gloria in excelsis Deo!
Angels are singing; the Christ Child is born!
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
7:34 AM
1 comments
Thursday, December 24, 2009
A Joyous and Blessed Christmas Eve...
DET är en ros utsprungen av Jesse rotoch stam.
Av fädren ren besjungen den står i tiden fram,
En blomma skär och blid,
Mitt i den kalla vinter i midnatts mörka tid.
Lo, how a Rose e’er blooming from tender stem hath sprung!
Of Jesse’s lineage coming, as men of old have sung.
It came a floweret bright amid the cold of winter,
When half spent was the night.
GERMAN TRADITIONAL
Swedish translation, THEKLA KNÖS
English translation, THEODORE BAKER
Music, MICHAEL PRAETORIUS
Arrangement, JAN SANDSTRÖM
Gerhmans Musikförlag
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
4:43 PM
1 comments
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
December 24

performed by The Elora Festival Singers
'Twas in the moon of wintertime
when all the birds had fled
That mighty Gitchi Manitou
sent angel choirs instead;
Before their light the stars grew dim
and wondering hunters heard the hymn:
"Jesus your King is born, Jesus is born:
In excelsis gloria!"
Within a lodge of broken bark
the tender babe was found;
A ragged robe of rabbit skin
enwrapped his beauty round
But as the hunter braves drew nigh
the angel song rang loud and high:
"Jesus your King is born, Jesus is born:
In excelsis gloria!"
The earliest moon of wintertime
is not so round and fair
As was the ring of glory on
the helpless infant there.
The chiefs from far before him knelt
with gifts of fox and beaver pelt:
"Jesus your King is born, Jesus is born:
In excelsis gloria!"
O children of the forest free,
O seed of Manitou
The holy Child of earth and heaven
is born today for you.
Come kneel before the radiant boy
who brings you beauty peace and joy:
"Jesus your King is born, Jesus is born:
In excelsis gloria!"
Even after Jean de Brebeuf's death in 1649 at the hands of the rival Iroquois, the destruction of the Sainte-Marie settlement, and the dispersal of the remaining Huron people, the survivors of the brutal attack still celebrated the nativity each winter and kept the carol alive through the oral tradition. Almost 100 years later, another Jesuit priest heard the carol and wrote it down. It was translated into French under the title "Jesus est ne". In 1926, poet J.E. Middleton wrote an English interpretation that is widely known today.
I highly recommend the spectacular book, "The Huron Carol", which is beautifully illustrated by Frances Tyrrell. It includes the music for The Huron Carol, the only surviving verse in the old Huron language, and two verses from the eighteenth century French translation.
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
7:16 PM
1 comments
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Monday, December 21, 2009
Because I owe you one...
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
9:10 PM
0
comments
Sunday, December 20, 2009
December 20

"The Twelve Days of Christmas"
sung by Dame Kiri te Kanawa
Confession?
I have always HATED this song.
It's redundant, redundant, redundant. To make matters even worse, it's one of the most frequently recorded carols, and seriously overplayed.
Listening to this song in all of its nauseating varieties, in every major shopping centre from Wal Mart to Holt Renfrew, makes me feel as though my brain is going to rupture and leak out of my ears.
So imagine my shock and surprise when I discovered this particular recording, featuring the sublime New Zealand opera star, Dame Kiri te Kanawa.
This recording? Takes my breath away.
Dame Kiri is clearly in her element, and her soaring, lilting voice is full of all of the good humour required to make this song successfully engaging for the listener. Even more brilliantly, each verse has its own little musical theme which is carried along through each successive verse, and culminates into a wonderfully inspiring finale.
"The Twelve Days of Christmas" originated as a children's rhyme that was published in a book called "Mirth without Mischief " in about 1780. It was used as a memory and forfeit game, wherein each player took it in turns to say the rhyme, and more lines were added with every round. It is also rumoured to have been written as a "catechism song" to help young Catholics learn their faith. However, this would have been at a time when practicing Catholicism was discouraged in England, and there is apparently no substantive primary evidence that supports this claim.
The date of the song's first performance is not known, though it was used in European and Scandinavian traditions as early as the sixteenth century. Frederic Austin wrote an arrangement in the early twentieth century, which can be found in The New Oxford Book of Carols. He added his own melody from the verse "Five gold(en) rings" onwards, which is why the latter part of the song sounds quite different from the beginning.
The Twelve Days of Christmas, and the evenings of those twelve days ("Twelve-tide"), are the festive days beginning the evening of Christmas Day, through the morning of Epiphany (January 6). This period of time is also known as "Christmastide".
Posted by
Candygirlflies
at
8:48 PM
0
comments