Tuesday, August 29, 2006

DROOL!

I found a great chicken sauce online but can't find the exact recipe for it. I just make it to taste. It's a combo of the following ingredients:
  • Peanut Butter (3-4 tblsp ??)
  • Salsa (3-4 tblsp ??)
  • Soya Sauce (1-2 tblsp??)
  • Minced Ginger (1-2 tblsp??)
  • Lemon Juice (1 tblsp??)

Pre-heat oven to 350. Brown the chicken in a pan then place in a backing dish. Mix the ingredients above together into a thick paste using a fork. Coat the chicken with paste and bake. Chicken thighs take about 15-20 mins. Adjust the amounts and chicken to accommodate your diet.

Holiday

I'm coming to the end of my holidays. There was a wedding, celebrations and some camping followed by a three day intesive workshop which was both brilliant and draining.

I'm back in Vancouver (YAY!) but, of course, now miss Prince George because my love, Motion, and my other love, Tron, are both there (POOH!).

A few days off and a greater effort to smile at people, dogs, gardens and life will do me some good!

Oh and some good, old bicycle riding!

SMILES EVERYONE :)

Friday, August 11, 2006

Hey Lazy! Park that car!

Photo: that's me in the Daintree Rainforest, Northern Queensland (July 2004)








As gas prices continue to soar with no end in sight I have to tell you about two cool people who are traversing our globe under their own steam:
  • Jean Beliveau is halfway to meeting his goal of walking around the world. Yes, after six years, Jean is walking to London, England after completing North and South America, Africa and western Europe. Born in Montreal, Canada, this middle-aged man is on a mission to walk for peace. Read more and lend some support on World Wide Walk.

  • Russian cyclist, Vladislav Ketov, just rode through Prince George. He's a 55 year old artist who's been circumnavigating five of our seven continents since 1991. His only sponsor is some air cargo company from the UAE and he has no website I can find online. Now on his way down to Vancouver, Vladislav has completed Asia, Africa, South America and Europe and only has Canada's far north before he's all done. He doesn't seem to be raising awareness for anything, just enjoying the journey of life. Here are some short articles about him in the St Petersburg Times, RIN.com and the PG Free Press.

If PLANET EARTH (say it like Ron Burgundy) seems like too big a place for you, think about taking small trips with your bike and/or feet. Check out Cycling Around the World a site maintained by a Dutch couple who take their bikes to different destinations each year. Also visit Bicycle Fish for tips on cycle touring, gear, routes, links and more.

In 2004 I cycled around Tasmania, Northern NSW and Queensland in Australia. If I can do it, anyone can! In fact, you no longer need to be looking for reasons why you should be bicycling +1000km. Have a look online: everyone's doing it; anyone can do it. Why aren't you doing it?


If you need some inspiration to take on the world then check out the following people:
  • Tim Harvey- Vancouver to Vancouver with out fossil fuels (in northern Mexico on his way home by bicycle after 2+ years)
  • Jason Lewis - Expedition 360, around the world by human power (on his way from Southeast Asia to England (via northeast Africa!))
  • Alistair Humphreys - Round the World by Bicycle! Just about done- great photos!

Psychedelics are good for you!

Photo: Ayahuasca ingredients (Jan 2006)









According to an article in The Tyee, Psychedelics Could Treat Addiction Says Vancouver Official.

Of course this information isn't new. A variety of people, groups, and institutions have been using non-recreational psychedelics such as Ayahuasca and peyote for therapeutic and other ritual ceremonies and have successfully treated people with substance abuse and/or emotional/psychological issues.

Ayahuasca.com has a great forum where you can share recipes and experiences. Ayahuasca ingredients can be purchased in Vancouver a The Urban Shaman.

This is not a recreational drug, it causes massive nausea often followed by full on purging and complete self-awareness (read awareness of faults, guilt, lies etc) and does not always lead to bliss, understanding and acceptance of self. In Peru and Brazil, Ayahuasca is administered in a ritualistic manner by a Shaman with care takers or vigilantes looking after participants and might be preceded by fasting and collectively brewing the tea. It tastes absolutely disgusting!

I don't know a thing about peyote!

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Groundhog Lake Camping


IMG_0652
Originally uploaded by globalhammock.
Photo: This outhouse is built for winter camping I guess!

Motion and I went to Groundhog Lake (about a 3 hours hike from Barkerville in Central BC) a few weeks ago and camped out at the Snowmobile Club Cabin. We had the whole place to ourselves! Click here to see our the slide show (10 pictures)

Monday, August 07, 2006

Used Bodies

Photo: Daultabad Village, Haryana, India (August 2004)








I haven't had a chance to blog in a while as I've been absorbed in writing my thesis (FINALLY!). My thesis title for now is "Using Bodies: Negotiating Reproductive Health in one Village in India."

The following is an excerpt from my DRAFT of Chapter 1:

This thesis explores how the Indian state shapes women’s bodies, how the place and space of the village shapes women’s bodies and where these processes correspond and diverge. For example, women may access an illegal abortion against the wishes of the state and in doing so, be committing female infanticide, conforming to village patriarchal preference for sons. The goal here is not to untangle this messiness and suggest that women are either conformist or resisting, but to highlight the everyday strategies employed by women and in doing so to emphasize the spaces of hope created by and with bodies.

In terms of these performances of resistance and conformity, I refer to what Hynman and de Alwis (2004: 552) call the “calculated presentation of self in everyday life.” While these authors speak in reference to survival techniques of Tamils moving about in a Sinhala-majority Sri Lanka, recognizing intentional performances of people can be applied to understanding the ways in which women negotiate their sexual and reproductive wellbeing. Highlighted in the sociological work of Goffman (1959), this view of individual performances as deliberate mechanisms for adapting to different social settings differs from feminist approaches to performativity presented by Butler in her seminal work, Bodies that Matter (1993). Butler views performances not as calculated and/or premeditated but as reiterative acts based on socially constructed scripts within what call “‘regulatory fictions’” (Butler, as cited in Hyndman & de Alwis, 2004: 550).

Hyndman and de Alwis combine the theories of Goffman (1959) and Butler (1993) by showing how “identity is enacted through regulatory regimes that expect certain performances from specific people” (2004: 551), but these scripts can be subverted. The authors demonstrate the ways in which people’s tactics “sometimes make explicit and at other times disrupt the interpellatory scripts of Butler's regulatory fictions by acknowledging the everyday survival strategies of people…” (2004: 553). With this view of performance, Hyndman and de Alwis illustrate spaces and places of and for individual agency, which are downplayed by Butler. Butler writes that performances cannot “be a human act or expression, a wilful appropriation, and it is certainly not a question of taking on a mask; it is the matrix through which all willing first becomes possible, its enabling cultural condition” (1993, p. 7). Combining Goffman’s humanistic, agency-oriented understanding of performance with Butler’s poststructuralist one enables recognition of people’s individual intentionalities within a socially produced context of regulatory frameworks and scripts. Indeed, feminist research shows that people use their bodies in ways that are simultaneously resisting and conforming.

With this understanding of calculated subversions of governing scripts, it is possible to recognize that women are both produced by and produce their sexual and reproductive health and wellbeing. The concept of choice in the activist claim for reproductive rights is therefore problematic. Dominant discourses on sexual and reproductive choice and rights, which I examine in detail below, make simplistic and often false assumptions that the provision of reproductive rights and choice with a liberal human-rights framework can ‘free’ women from existing, gendered regulatory frameworks (Viswanath, 2001).

Following performative theories presented by Butler (1993), my work shows that while women may act in ways that rearticulate dominant social systems of heterosexual reproduction, dualist gender roles, male dominance, and so on, they also act in ways that subvert these systems in subtle, yet critical and often intentional ways (Goffman, 1959). While an apparent lack of individual options and freedoms for these so-called ‘third world’ and ‘poor’ women could easily be construed as disempowerment, the women I present here demonstrate intentional defiance of laws and norms that do not mesh with their sexual and reproductive intentions. Within sexual and reproductive health regulatory fictions produced by the village and the state, women find alternatives in both discreet and overt ways, using the “geography closest in”, their bodies. In presenting women as actively opposing state and village imperatives, however, I also do not wish to gloss over the overwhelming oppression that most women in India face.

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

UPDATES

Here are a few much needed updates and add-ons to some of my previous posts:

A Sea of Plastics the Size of Texas:
You can read this previous plastic posting or read some current articles about this crisis in our waters: Plastic Sea article in The Tyee by co-founder of Greenpeace and obvious environmentalist Paul Watson. Also check out the LA times piece, Altered Oceans, kindly provided by Anna at BringYourOwn.org!

Lebanon for Dummies:
Read my previous post here. For more info head to Today's Effort by r. w. twain to peruse some excellent and thorough accounts of what I'll call the 'construction and destruction of the middle east'. He also writes about history of Lebanon as a political entity and it's relationship with other states here.

The body has become a war zone:
Read this previous post here.
I jmade the DELICIOUS Cilantro Chelation Pesto and it's awesome! I cheated and added a handful of pine nuts and about 3 tablespoons of grated parmesan! Yum, Yum, Yum. A caution however comes from The Kitchen Doctor that you should read before embarking on a toxic cleanse. The key note here is that even though the ingredients are natural, you are going to put your body through a serious purge of volatile crap which might make you feel like serious pooh!! Be warned, get informed!

We added it to salads, wraps, toasted pumpernickel and eggs but it tastes fine all on it's own too! Don't heat it, just mix it into already cooked stuff!

Use Your Body
(about parkcour and crossfit!)
You can read my previous post here.
I want to share an amazing video with you:
B-boy dancer Junior (2mins)- watch for the finger push ups near the end! SWEET!!
Also, if you would like to use your body, definitely check out Stumptuous.com Women's Weight Training. This site is not just for 'women' as the title might suggest. My man, Motion, who's all over the functional fitness program of Crossfit.com thinks it's cool too!


FINALLY:
I Love Tron! Tron, Tron, Tron!!
the old post is here! Just in case you're wondering how my dog is, here's another photo!


Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Conspiracy 9/11

PHOTO: Lemmings, we are all lemmings! Edgewood, BC (Dec 2004)








Why is it that any news of a conspiracy surrounding 9/11 is automatically defamed? Maybe people are scared of being cast as some conspiracy theory nut a la Mel Gibson (yeah, that's right, not just "Conspiracy Theory" with Julia Roberts, but "The Passion of Jesus Christ" where he goes all apeshit about a Jewish plot to kill the man.. er son... whatever).

If you can handle a bit more conspiracy stuff in your life then here goes...

Things we don't know about 9/11:

Watch the video "Loose Change" (2nd Edition) 1hr 22mins). This low budget video, posted online, raises questions concerning 9/11 attacks, like how the buildings could have fallen like they did and a whole lot more! Even skeptics will have their interest tweaked!

Also, you can SKIP THE CONSPIRACY SHIT SARAH! and listen to MIT engineer Jeff King (15 mins video) examine the structural collapse of the World Trade Towers and that other building next to it, Tower 7, (which was never hit at all!) from a physics perspective.

Michael Meacher (British Member of Parliament) and Andreas von Buelow (Lawyer and former German Secretary of Defense) provide a great video discussion of the politics of 9/11 (16 mins).

Controlled demolition theory (i.e. some one planted bombs to bring down those three buildings) is also supported by David Ray Griffen, Stephen E. Jones, Robert M. Bowman, James H. Fetzer, Wayne Madsen, John McMurtry, Morgan Reynolds and other academics who form Scholar's For 9/11 Truth.

They point out that The official conspiracy theory--that nineteen Arab hijackers under control of one man in the wilds of Afghanistan brought this about--is unsupportable by the evidential data, which they have studied."

Don't let yourself get too crazy with all this conspiracy crap though because some civil rights bashing nut might attack you. Rep. Steve Nass thinks University of Wisconsin-Madison lecturer Kevin Barrett should be fired because he has told students that 9/11 could be a US government conspiracy. Barret is co-founder of the Muslim-Jewish-Christian Alliance for 9/11 Truth who suggest the 9/11 attacks were a ""fabricated war-trigger event" designed to justify military operations in Iraq." Wow, I guess we should assume that university students are lemmings. I know I am.

Please don't send me a message telling me I'm crazy (I already know that silly!). I'd rather be presented with more information than your own, personal "it couldn't be true" comments.