Top Notch Dana Day

Long-time readers of my blog (but only those with really good memories) might recall that December 11th is Worldwide Dana Day! (Confession: Dana Day is not exactly a worldwide celebration, but it is a nationally recognized day of festivities in the Czech Republic, so there.)

Yes. Every December 11th, the broadcasters on the morning news in Prague remind every Czech citizen that it’s time to celebrate everyone in the country who happens to be named Dana. Incredibly, there are a lot of Danas in the Czech Republic. In Marty’s Mother Land, we are the equivalent of a “Jack and Diane” couple. In fact, we are one of four couples in Marty’s immediate circle of family and friends to be named either Martin and Dana or Martina and Dan. Seriously!

Anyway. The public announcement of Dana Day on the morning news is mainly for show, because most Czechs don’t need the reminder. Almost every person I met when traveling in the Czech Republic said, “Ah, December 11th!” when I was introduced to them as Dana. It was spooky. They also know that “Martin Day” is November 11th and could probably recite all 365 Czech Name Days in a row if pressed. (In North America, we memorize multiplication tables in school. Czechs learn Name Days instead.)

Name Days can be even more important than birthdays in the Czech Republic, so naturally– being married to a good Czech man– I fully expected to be pampered and catered to from the very moment I woke up.

I was not disappointed.

Still sizzling from the griddle!

As is Czech custom, Marty surprised me with small gifts that I was left to discover as the day went on. He treated me to homemade blueberry pancakes for breakfast, took me to the neighbour’s farm to pick up some Black Market free range eggs (heaven), and then whisked me away to the nearby Kinsol Trestle for a day of hiking and exploring.

Marty wanted some decent shots of the Trestle for future paintings. I wanted some decent shots of Marty at the Trestle. Everyone won.

To be honest, I’ve been a bit of a hermit since moving to the lake. I’ve ventured to the post office a few times (woo!), and we did make it to the local town square Christmas Light Up (complete with a Santa on a barbershop chair), but it took me over a week to even venture out into our own backyard and to the lake itself… which is about 25 feet away from our back door. Ahem.

Our cabin under the full moon

Our town's holiday shindig-- pulling out all the (barbershop) stops for Santa.

Mostly, I’ve been content to curl up on the couch near the woodstove or to putter around in the kitchen, making hearty vegan soups after a long summer of eating mostly takeout food. I must be decompressing and recharging after our busy Harbour season.

Given my reclusive tendencies as of late, I was a bit reluctant to bundle up and head outdoors today, but the fresh air and change of scenery ended up being very good for me. The Kinsol Trestle is the largest railroad trestle bridge in the Commonwealth and one of the tallest railway bridges in the world, and it was recently the target of a conservational facelift. We made ourselves dizzy looking down over the ledge and, later, looking all the way up to the top of the structure from near the river bank. It’s a pretty impressive trestle!

Look up... look WAAAAY up

More shots of Marty taking shots of the Trestle

Later, we meandered around the river and took pictures of the frosty foliage. Everything looked so festive today, rimmed with sugary crystals and glimmering in the sunlight.

I love the fallen maple leaves

Everything looked like a sugared margarita glass outside today!

We logged nearly 10km and then headed back home to enjoy some warm soup!

Maybe I’ll bake a cake later on tonight to celebrate myself… Marty and I can down the whole thing in honour of Danas everywhere. Any excuse to eat cake, right? ;)

Thrift Score Wednesdays: Beggars Can’t Be Choosers

I have been bitten by the notorious travel bug. Again. Funnily enough, this always seems to happen right at the start of the Harbour season, aka right when we should be psyching ourselves up to spend six full months working long hours on the waterfront. Oops! The sun starts peeking out from the winter clouds here on the (gorgeous and scenic) west coast of Canada, and I instantly begin to daydream about exotic locales and faraway destinations: Morocco! Mongolia! Portugal! Croatia! India! Bali! Heck, I’ll even go to North Dakota– I just want to travel! :)

The Dancing Building, Prague

Clearly, now is not the time for jet-setting. Now is the time for hunkering down and earning a good chunk of this year’s income! I think I can, I think I can, I think I can, I think I can. If we were smart and proactive, we would squirrel away enough funds during the summer to head off for 3 or 4 months each winter, but we haven’t developed our intelligence quite that much so far… We’re still trying like neanderthals to survive in regular ol’ Victoria all year round. (Until this winter, perhaps. Maybe this winter will finally be the time for jet-setting again. Fingers crossed?)

Anyway. Today’s edition of Thrift Scores shows off my easy, breezy, traveling-in-the-Czech-Republic secondhand ensemble:

Please, suh-- can I have some mo'?

When we visited the Czech Republic for 3 months back in 2006 (five whole years ago– can you believe it??), we brought a whole assortment of items with us over from Canada. (As you already know, we have a bit of a problem with packing light. You should see our emergency kit here in our apartment– good luck ever lifting that thing up without significant body building experience! Rawr!!) We packed hiking clothes (and hiking gear), cycling clothes (and cycling gear), summer clothes, autumn clothes, sunny weather clothes, rainy weather clothes, and some “nicer” city clothes in which to bum around fashionable Prague. We considered strapping our kitchen sink to our expedition packs as well (you know, just to be prepared and to round things off), but luckily, our home base suite just outside of Prague had a decent bathtub in which to wash our vegetables and dishes. Thank goodness for running water, at least. ;)

Marty prepping our dinner in the boiler/bathtub/laundry room.

Ratty tank tops and short shorts weren’t going to cut it on days when we were taking in the city’s churches and museums, and we also weren’t about to hike on the country’s straight-up, straight-down hiking trails in a skirt… especially not me. (Marty? Maybe. The man looks delicious in a sarong.) So in addition to my quick-dry hiking pants and shorts, I also packed one sort-of-nice outfit: a cotton skirt and a pastel blouse– see above. Both of these items were picked up for less than $5 at two different thrift stores in Calgary. They served me very well every time we headed into a city or town and needed to look somewhat presentable. I could pass as a respectable member of the tourist society… at least when I wasn’t lounging on the cobblestones looking up like a little beggar girl.

(Just so you know, the people of the Czech Republic– as well as the people in most Eastern European countries, though everyone will vehemently deny it– still harbour a lot of prejudice against the Roma people. This can pose a particular problem for people like me, who have darker complexions by default and occasionally sit on the cobblestones to rest, which can look a bit like begging to the average passerby… As the summer heatwave went on in CZ and my skin got darker and darker, I started to feel the disparaging eyes of some locals on me. There was no open hostility towards me– possibly because I was on the arm of a blond-haired, Czech-speaking man– but things might have been worse if I was on my own. Just so you know.)

What are your travel outfit essentials? Any items that you won’t leave home without?

My "Tombraider" look... if Angelina Jolie ever sported a GIGANTIC fanny pack whilst kicking ass! (I'm trying to hide the monstrosity behind a jaunty hand-on-hip pose.)


Half A World Away

Believe it or not, today marks the 5-year anniversary of my escape from the Ivory Tower. (Well, I didn’t so much “escape” from university as I “successfully defended my Master’s thesis”, but the fight-or-flight hormones were pumping all the same that day!) I am so far removed from the person I was in grad school that it’s hard to remember even being there. Ever. Some of my friends like to tease me and say, ‘Hey! If you weren’t such a quitter, you could have finished your Ph.D. by now’, but I can’t imagine having spent the past five years still in school. Talk about torture! :)

Hmmm... five more years in university or a World Cup soccer game viewing in Old Town Square, Prague? Decisions, decisions!

Going to university after I graduated from high school never seemed like an option for me, and by that, I mean I always just assumed that I would go to university. (In retrospect, I’m glad I felt this way, but my parents would have loved me all the same if I announced I was going to take up semi-professional karate after Grade 12. Their love for me is the very definition of ‘unconditional’.) But yes: There was no choice involved in me heading off to post-secondary school– it just was. It was almost as though I believed that getting an undergraduate degree was as mandatory as attending K-12. So I got a Bachelor’s Degree in Communication Studies and then applied for a Master’s Degree in the same field, because WHAT’S ANOTHER $15,000 and 2 YEARS DURING THE PRIME OF MY LIFE when you’re already in that game? :)

Me (via dramatic re-enactment in Prague): Gee, I might as well keep hanging out here...

Well. My lifelong love of school and my mad academic skillz were put to the extreme test about 2 days into my MA studies. Listening to one of my peers babble on and on excitedly about some “critical issue” or another in my COMS of Biotechnology class, I realized with a mixture of surprise and boredom: Maybe I don’t love Communication Studies as much as I thought I did, and Perhaps I’d rather die a slow and grueling death than be a university professor in the future. This was not a fun (or timely) discovery to make, seeing as I had just started the graduate program, so I resolved to “give it some more time” and, failing all else, to force myself to graduate. Unfortunately, time did nothing to soften up my bad attitude, so I ended up undertaking, writing, and defending a 100+ page thesis, hating everything the entire time. I was a smart girl, and I was not a quitter. I would earn those “M.A.” initials behind my name if it killed me!

And it nearly did.

My personal Coat of Arms during my Master's Program. (Actually, this is inside one of the chapels in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic.)

During the 17 months it took me to complete my coursework and write/defend a 105-page thesis on women’s experiences with various methods of contraception*, I transformed from a positive, life-loving young woman into a anxiety-ridden, majorly stressed-out basket case. I carried a gigantic burden of PAIN and SUFFERING with me the whole time, and every. little. thing brought me to ugly tears. I remember my dad phoning to wish me a happy birthday after my first year of grad studies and not knowing how to react when I responded to his cheeriness with high-decibel wails and frustrated sobs (probably about discursive theory or something equally rage-tastic).

I couldn’t help myself.

Me vs. Me

I developed a considerable case of first-time depression during my MA program, and I worried constantly about alienating my remaining friends and even worse: losing my still-new marriage to Marty. (Poor man had a rough go when his blushing bride morphed, almost overnight, into a screeching banshee!) I became hyper-vigilant and continually monitored my behaviours and thoughts, which only made me become more robotic and Not At All Fun To Be Around. I should have more fun. Why am I not having fun? I’m no fun to be around. Why would anybody want to be with somebody so un-fun? I will lose all the friendships I’ve ever had because I’m not fun. BEING NO FUN IS NO FUN AT ALL!!

I can’t pinpoint exactly what it was about Grad School that caused me to become such a horrible shadow of my former self. Was it the workload? Was it the forced classroom dialogues over issues I could care less about? (Foucault again? Really?) Was it the extremely rocky relationship I developed with my former supervisor? The subsequent fallout I had with my former supervisor? The fallout that effectively burned a gigantic bridge between us and precluded me from ever using her as a reference again, forever and ever amen?

In any case, once I became so stressed out and apoplectic about everything, I had a very difficult time recovering. Marty would try to take me hiking on the weekends so I could have a few hours of *not* thinking about my thesis. Of course, the entire time, my panoramic views of the Rocky Mountains would be obstructed with thoughts like “I should be working on my thesis. All of my classmates are probably working on their projects right now. I feel guilty for not working on my thesis.” I’m not even exaggerating the extent of my awfulness. Somebody else from the Legitimate Science Department could have undertaken a quantitative study on “The Degree of Dana’s Horribleness During Her M.A. Program”, and the objective, hard data results would have come back: 98th Percentile of Terrible.

After months and months of withering away into a toxic, shriveled-up crisp of a person, the day finally came for me to defend my thesis. I was the first in my cohort to bring my thesis up for defense, and boy oh boy, was I a wreck! (Aside: I was not the first in my cohort to use academic-sounding words like “cohort”. Not a chance! I just threw that in there to sound smart.) Anyway. I had developed a severe stutter the night before my defense, and as I tried to rehearse my opening speech beforehand, I had poor Marty’s ears panicking (and probably bleeding). C-c-c-critical f-f-f-em-in-in-ist dis-dis-dis-course. I kept telling myself: Three hours and then it’s over. Three hours and then I can have my life back. Three hours of PAIN and SUFFERING and then everything can go back to normal… if I pass. (For the record: failing my thesis would have been soul-crushing. It’s rare for students to fail a defense, unless they plow ahead with the exam against their supervisor’s better judgment. Me? I had tickets booked to Europe for June, so I needed everything done and behind me before I left. PASS OR DIE!!!)

For the record: a nice, long trip to Europe cures any/all school-related blues.

I had allowed my exam to be “open”, meaning that anybody could come and watch. Yes, anybody! (The alternative was keeping it “closed” but risking tougher questions from the panel, who wouldn’t have an audience to hold them accountable for their meanness.) I ended up with an audience of about 5 people– Marty included– plus my panel, which consisted of my supervisor, the Department Head of Qualitative Psychology, and the Department Head of Women’s Studies. Tough. As. Nails.

I managed to get through my opening speech without stuttering, which was a miracle in itself. Then all I remember is saying “discourse” and “discursive” about 8 billion times over the course of a few hours. It was a blur of discursiveness. Marty watched on politely the entire time, trying not to let his eyes glaze over with the residue of Academese. What a champ! The tough questions came to a close. My panel conferred in private. It was announced that I had passed. Just a few revisions needed to be completed on my thesis, but then my program would be over and I could officially have my life back.

WHEEEE!!! Let's go and BE GYPSIES for a few months!

It took me a long time to fully recover from grad school. The program had pulverized my soul and heart with dramatic, overzealous kicks and stomps, so the transition from She-Beast back to Ordinary Woman did not happen overnight. I still have a difficult time staying out of my head, so to speak. It’s natural for me to analyze and over-analyze everything, and as much as I detest debating for the sake of debating, occasionally I find myself making a gigantic deal over nothing, just because I can. (I’m always so ashamed to catch myself doing this!)

If you can believe it, I seriously considered pursuing a Ph.D. in Sociology soon after I finished my Master’s Degree. (Yeah, a Doctorate in Delusional, maybe…) It wasn’t because I wanted to do it, but because I felt I should. My supervisor, channeling a Greek chorus, told me that I belonged in the university and that I could never escape my destiny, and for a while I believed her. But then my paltry iota of Street Smarts finally (FINALLY!) kicked in. I didn’t want to be in school for another 5+ years, and then possibly for the rest of my life!!! I wanted to travel, to work at a ‘real job’, and to just plain old live for a little while. Screw the Ph.D.! I would dig a hole out of my so-called destiny and chart a new path!

My starring role in "The Shawshank Redemption". Just like Tim Robbins, but with a darker tan. And only one leg in this shot (??)

Looking back, I feel okay that I pursued my Master’s Degree. It still doesn’t feel like the *best* thing I could have done with those two years of my life– and I definitely wasn’t rendered any more intelligent or competent by real world standards because of it– but then again, what would have been the best thing to do during that time? Take up semi-professional karate? ;) I take comfort now in believing that I am taken care of by the Universe, even if I don’t understand the bigger picture at any given point (or at all– let’s be honest here).  Part of me also secretly believes that an opportunity will present itself one day and will demand a Master’s Degree (in COMS, no less) as a pre-requisite. Then, won’t somebody be glad she went through hell and back to earn those silly initials behind her name…

Anyway. This was a really, really long way of saying Happy Five Years Of Being Out of Grad School to me! I’m happy to be sharing the more cheerful version of myself with all of you, but I’m certainly not above signing this particular post off with the initials that rendered me decidedly less cheerful than I am now:

Dana, B.A., M.A :)

Inadvertently looking smug. I am the Master of Smugness.

*Don’t ask me how this topic relates, in any way, to Communication Studies. My logic: People spoke to me about their experiences, and Speaking = Communicating, therefore I win COMS thesis writing!

Thrift Score Wednesdays: Matchy Matchy

Back in 2006, Marty and I traveled like true Bohemians around the Czech Republic for a blissful three months. We wandered around Prague and checked out Marty’s childhood haunts (*jealous!*); we hiked and camped around much of the country’s perimeter, seeing more of CZ in 90 days than many Czechs will see in their entire lifetimes; and we managed– rather miraculously– to maintain our vegetarian diet in the Land of Meaty Meats. (This was no mean feat and required nearly-constant consumption of rye bread, cheese, and lemon wafers. Thank goodness for Chinese restaurants and stretchy pants, is all I have to say. Life. Savers.)

Reaching the summit of Mt. Snezka, the highest point in the Czech Republic

In one of the quaint little villages we visited along the Vltava river, Marty bought me a beautiful necklace that had been crafted by a local glass artisan.

Just to ensure I DON'T do justice to this beautiful necklace, let me show you a blurry photo of it. Heh.

This necklace cost something ridiculously low like $15, but our purchase clearly made that artist’s day. She fawned over me like I was an A-list celebrity and ‘got’ that I was dressed way down like a J-lister just to throw the paparazzi off my tracks. Decoy ugly outfits and greasy ponytails– you know how it is… Speaking of looking frumpy, um, on purpose: I was wearing some less-than-flattering hiking clothes that day (see top photo, minus my summit toque), which clashed severely with the necklace when I tried it on. Note to self: dark grey and magenta tops do not look great with fancy red and orange necklaces, even if that particular grey/magenta top was technically one half of your wedding dress. For real.

The blushing bride and her handsome groom, circa 2005. SAME TOP!! I am one of the few women who can honestly say they wear their wedding dress regularly.

In any case, I loved the necklace at first glance but couldn’t wait to get back to Canada so I could find an outfit that could do this amazing piece of jewelry justice. Unfortunately, finding this magical outfit proved to be a bit of a challenge. Yes, I could wear the necklace with a little black dress, but the swirls of colour in the glass tended to get lost against such a dark backdrop. I tried to wear it with a lighter top, too, but then the necklace looked almost garish by comparison. Sadly, my beautiful necklace spent many lonely moons hanging up on a hook by itself– not being worn, appreciated, or admired by anybody. (Cue the world’s smallest violin.)

But then I visited a little town called Rossland, B.C.

Marty and I went on a great road trip in the summer of 2008, visiting our family in Calgary, our friends in the Middle of Nowhere, B.C., and then some other friends in the mountainous town of Rossland. When we pulled into Rossland, we checked out Main Street, which was where everything was happening (probably because Main Street is one of the only streets in Rossland.) We ducked into a thrift shop there for a few minutes, where Marty instantly found nothing in particular and I immediately discovered the perfect skirt to go with my beautiful Czech necklace.

Seriously. Check it out:

Close-up (and yes, blurry! AGAIN!) shot of the skirt fabric, to spare you the awkward-looking full photo, which featured my body/legs bearing striking resemblance to a duck.

Finally, a crisp photo! A match made in heaven.

This skirt is practically the exact same colours as my necklace. Not only that, but this random skirt in the random thrift store in the town of Random, B.C., was also in my exact size and it only cost a dollar. One measly buck!! Coincidence? I think not. Thank you, Universe (or god, or Jesus– whomever was responsible), for sending me the perfect skirt to showcase my perfect Czech necklace.

The skirt in action!

PS: I know you’re probably thinking, Wow! Can there possibly be any less flattering, more creepy photos of you wearing this skirt in this post? Luckily for you, I am a mind reader and the answer to your query is a resounding YES! What about this shot of me looking ghostly in front of the Vital Statistics Office wearing the perfect skirt?

Blinded by the blinds!

Or this shot of me channeling my Inner Mall Spy On A Secret, Covert Op?

Oh dear...

Yes, dear readers, just when you thought my blog had the grainiest, blurriest, and least flattering pictures out of all the photos on all the blogs you know, I had to go ahead and whip out my Sunglasses At Night shot. This is me. At the mall. Wearing my giant sunglasses. In the mall bathroom. And taking a photo of myself in the bathroom mirror. It’s a long story…

But for the record: I win. I dare you to post a worse and/or more awkward photo of yourself on your own blog. It’s not possible. But do it anyway.