A Girl in the World

olympics

Goodbye Vancouver

March 8, 2010

Our last day in Vancouver was stunning.  Sunny, warm, beautiful.  We went for a long walk from Kits beach to Granville Island with Miss JDC =).

I love this place. It grounded me, brought me amazing beautiful peace and helped me to see a wonderful abundance of joy and love everywhere, everyday. I can’t wait to come back!

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This is my Canada

March 1, 2010

I don’t expect anyone, who isn’t Canadian and who hasn’t spent time in Vancouver during the last 16 days of these games, to fully understand the feelings I’m feeling tonight about what these Olympic games have meant.  What an incredible two weeks it has been.  We are so so blessed to have had the time and the resources to be in Vancouver during this historic, once-in-a-lifetime occasion.

Canadians have, for the most part, been a pretty understated group of people.  I would consider us quite laid back, humble, down-to-earth.  With 32 million inhabitants, we equal the population of the state of California.  We comprise mostly of immigrants, from every corner of the globe (You have no idea how amazing a feeling it is to be in a train-car after a quarter-final hockey game where Canadians of Chinese, African, Indian and Middle Eastern descent together spontaneously break out singing the national anthem).  Politically our dramas don’t compare to those of our Southern neighbours and for the most part, whether the Prime Minister is conservative, liberal or independent, nothing much changes in the way the country is run.  We’re peacekeeping, peace-loving and polite.  We grew up with Polish, Italian and Iranian classmates, boy/girlfriends, teachers, neighbours.  Multiculturalism was so engrained in our upbringing that my brother and I didn’t know the meaning of racism until we left the country as teenagers.  We have the most beautiful backyard anyone could ask for, with the rocky mountains, the great plains, and western oceans all within a day’s reach.  And there isn’t much that we’ll fight over, scream about, boast loudly for, riot over except perhaps hockey.  Canadians are blessed.  And Canada is an incredible place to grow up, to call home, to be rooted to.

The last few weeks have been a testament to our strength, pride and humility as a nation.  I have never seen so many happy, cheery, positive people all gathered in one place ever in my life!  Whether we were winning the gold in speed skating, losing it for the silver in women’s curling or placing 24th in the biathlon, there seemed to be no lack of pride, celebration and joy in the faces and smiles of Canadian fans.  When Canada won over Russia during the men’s hockey quarter finals, the city went wild with celebration, dancing and fireworks in the streets.  You’d think we had won the gold!  When Sheryl Bernard lost the women’s curling gold medal to the Swedes, the hundreds of us in the pub gasped in shock, watched in silence and then all of a sudden cheered in joy for the silver medal, because hey, it’s silver and silver is nearly as good as gold! =) And such celebrations continued day-in and day-out for the entire time we’ve been here.  We celebrate over golds, we celebrate over 5th place winnings, we celebrate because we can, we celebrate for the heck of it!  The positivity is contagious.  Wearing your heart on your sleeve feels good.  Being open, happy, proud is so innately human and raw and real.  The joy joy joy that emanates from this place has the power to change you, to transform you, to lift you up.  It melts your heart.

Tonight, as Sidney Crosby ushered in our 14th gold win of the Games, I sat on the floor of my Auntie Josie’s living room surrounded with two dozen aunts, uncles and cousins enraptured with the TV screen.  Clad in Olympic gear, red shirts, white sleeves, we screamed, we gasped, we jumped for joy.  Pandemonium.  A room comprising of three generations, immigrants from the Pacific Islands cheering on a team whose sport none of us have even played, shrieking with pride and glowing with relief.  The moment could not be more Canadian.  It was so very very Canadian!  Canada is us, is this, is me, is you.  It is one nation and all nations.  It is the coming together with pride and the celebration of differences.  It is being Filipino, Italian, Croatian, Chinese AND being Canadian.  It is the cheering for first place, fourth place, twenty seventh place.  It is a nation mourning the loss of a mother, a nation celebrating the perfect ice dance, a nation cheering a team relay.  It is the always ready friendly smile, the thank you to the bus driver at every stop, the random high five on the crowded street.  It is bagpipes down Granville street, free hot chocolate in Yaletown, Tim Horton’s coffee on a rainy day.  It is the welcoming of the world.  It is this.  And it is incredible.  There is no better place in the whole wide world.

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Hockey in Canada

February 25, 2010

It is hard to explain just how huge hockey is for Canadians.  I try to explain it to Americans and other foreigners but the message doesn’t really get through.  You have to be Canadian to understand why this sport is so important to us.  We spend much of the year in snow.  In some parts of the country, lakes are frozen over 60% of the year.  Kids learn to skate before they learn to walk.  Winter sports are mandatory in every elementary school physical education curriculum across the country.  Hockey Night in Canada, a hockey show that happens every Saturday night during the season, is an institution here.  Families sit around the TV, toasty by the fire, to watch their Canadian teams play (since we’ve lived in the U.S. we’ve paid a special subscription fee to get these games in California!).

This is our game.  It is the one thing Canadians will strip down for, will riot over, will shout about.  It is our pride and joy.  And it is a wonderful feeling to be here, in Vancouver, during these games.  The energy is unbelievable.

Go Canada Go!

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Canadiana

February 23, 2010

We’ve spent the last few days taking in the Olympic sites and the gorgeous Vancouver sunshine. It hasn’t rained at all since we got here four days ago and we’re hoping the trend keeps up for a while. This city is abuzz with so much energy. Thousands of people walk the pedestrian downtown core, red everything is everywhere and there is a friendly, positive national pride in the air. It feels wonderful.

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Last night, for the Canada-USA hockey game, we managed to finally get into a bar somewhere on Davie Street. Most places were packed hours before the game and we were lucky to get inside. And what a small small world it is because in that bar, I ran into a friend from GOOG! He too tried to find a place to watch and ended up there after a long search.

We lost, it was annoying (bad bad bad goaltending) and the bus ride home was quiet. So much for partying in the streets. =)

Below are some pics from the last few days. More to come!

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A for effort

February 21, 2010

You gotta love Canadian positivity. It has been so entertaining watching the games here, on Canadian networks. National pride is the highest I’ve ever seen. There are Canadian flags everywhere, people are always dressed in red, ‘Go Canada Go’ is on every bus, restaurant sign and website. It’s just nuts.

And you really have to love the fact that we are so damn positive. I find it amazing that even if a biathlon athlete comes in 30th, the networks will interview him, will mention his name in newscasts, will post the video replay on the website. Even if you come in last, we still love you, you’re still Canadian and you still rock! =) It’s so cute and sweet and so positively Canadian. Go Canada Go!

USA men’s hockey, you’re going down tonight!

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