Kitty is no one’s fool.

A few weeks ago, kitty had a minor health issue, which meant a trip to the vet, some pills and a diet of their wet food.

Pills were no problem.  Mummy and daddy (“her pushers”) got into a good pillin’ routine.  Every morning and night daddy would turn some snuggles into a wrestling hold, and mummy perfected her aim and long-throw down the gullet.

The problem was the wet food.  Kitteh is our little muffinpants and gets only the best organic pet food (yeah, we roll like that).  As in, it’s made of real ingredients, very little circus animal.

The vet (who are in all other respects amazing) gave us a special formulation of Purina.  I could barely stand the time I had to spend opening the can, portioning it out, and putting her dish on the floor.  It smelled like feet.  Angry, evil feet.

I tried to develop some fast PR skillz.  Talking it up to her as I put it down.  “Yummy yummy wet food!”  “Oh boy, here comes the foot stank macerated pig snouts!” (<-what?  She’s a cat.  It’s all about the tone.  I had good tone.)

No dice.

I’d put the dish down, and she would stop walking towards it.  One paw still in the air, mid-stride.  And she’d shoot me a look that very clearly said: “are you fucking kidding me?”

When daddy fed her he would actually try picking her up and putting her down in front of her dish.  Patting her, and nudging her towards the bowl.  He got more elaborate than me, and tried to shame her “you know, when I was a kid, and we were feeding MrMuffin, he loved his wet food so much that I would hold it up here, like this, and he would try and jump up to get it.”

“Well why don’t you feed this horsecrap to MrMuffin then, I’ll be in my room.”

We told the vet about her insolence, and they said the most important thing is that she eat, not that she eat the wet food.  So essentially, they told us that in their professional opinion, kitteh had thrown an effective temper tantrum, and that we should give in and buy her whatever candy she wanted as long as she’d stop making a scene.

Kitteh: 1, team of grown-ups: 0.  Why am I not surprised.

Nuthin’ says lovin’ like giant Japanese space creatures.

During the day, the EH and I exchange displays of affection virtually via txt, gchat, whathaveyou.

This takes many different forms, but a standard is “MWA!”.  MWA is the onomatopoeia (haha! didn’t even get red wiggly lined, thank you Levar Burton) for a kiss.

But we like to mix it up.  Mostly, I like to mix it up by integrating it with the names of large, fictional (?) Japanese monsters.  “MWAzilla!” is always a popular one.  I recently introduced “MWAgatron!”  And today’s, which I am particularly proud of, is:

“MWAthra!”

Love you baby. 🙂

Cafe magic

Why does the cheesiest, lamest music just… work, so long as it’s played in a cafe?  I caught myself humming along to “Three Times a Lady”.  If I download it when I get home, I’ll know I have a problem.

In my defense, it reminds me of an episode of Dharma and Greg.  Where it was revealed to be Greg’s make-out music.  Chuckle.

My husband accused me last night of being like a 12-year old prepubescent boy.  Why?  Because he brought home the newest Soul Calibur.  Which allows you to customize your character.  And what’s the first thing I did?  Take off their clothes.

I was still tweaking the colour of their underpants when Husband walked past and made the aforementioned declaration.  Whatever.  He knows that I’m designing the best characters ever.  Everyone fights a little bit better when they’re inspired by their orange skivvies.

Bone:Flub ratio

When you join my gym, you get a free “this technology is only available to you and Olympic athletes!” assessment. So I skipped it.

Well, that makes it sound like there was intent. I not so much “skipped” it as much as I “didn’t know about and didn’t do” it. But then I got the EH to join, and they were all “we do this free assessment thing!” and he said “cool” and I said “I haven’t done one yet, can I do it too?” and they said “of course you can!”

(Sorry, got a little caught up in over-quoting there. 😉 Ah punctuation, you’re a saucy mistress…)

Anyways, so we went and did our assessmenty thing. Which consisted of some basic exercises and then hooking you up to eletrodities, and then printing out a PIE CHART. We did the exercises fine, and we both got the same general assessment that we’re in good enough shape, but maybe don’t know tonnes about the exercise options (not shocking). But when it came to the PIE CHART portion of the evening, the software was borked and our poor little trainer guy couldn’t coax a printout out of his computer. So we were booked to come back a few days later. A few days later being today.

This time we got the super head trainer guy, who was very nice and very knowledgeable and very… even-tempered and smart about fitness and fitness goals. Not qualities I associate with people who build careers out of being at the gym, so he surprised and impressed me.

We spent about an hour talking about fitness in general, and breaking down our respective PIE CHARTS (mine and the EHs). The electrodities from last time break down your body weight into body water, lean body mass (LBM) and body fat. The PIE CHART shows your percentage of LBM, put relative to your “goal fat”, which is the percentage of body fat you have that you /should/ have, and finally your percentage of EXCESS FAT: the body fat you have that falls outside of your desired range of fat. (I like the phrase “desired range of fat”, expect it in a sentence near you soon…)

Anywho. So LBM shows up as green, desired range of fat shows up as yellow, and any fat beyond that range shows up as red. My printout showed something like 6% red. Which translated to something like 11lbs of EXCESS FAT on my PIE CHART. I also showed as being about 7L of water short of where I should be in terms of total body water (I had about 37L when I should have more like 44L). My fat burning capacity was also low — lean body mass to fat ratio something in the high 2 point somethings, to 1. The EH was a bit healthier, showing something like 2% red, with better total body water and much better lean body mass to fat ratio.

Overall we were assessed as not being far off the mark, and we both really enjoyed our chat with assessment guy. All in all a decent outcome: not far off of healthy, pretty close to how we felt, good tangible goals. But then… just as we stood up to leave… the EH noticed something…

EH: “Um… did he swap our info?”

Assessment Guy: “What?”

EH: “I’m not 27. And I’m not 5’10”.”

Me: “What? Oh man, yeah, and I’m not 5’5″.”

Turns out there was a /wee/ data entry oversight when we first came in. Just a little one. One that cost me about 5-6″ and the EH a few years of his life.

So Assessment Guy re-ran the numbers, with our correct info, and I’ll tell you, getting a new printout an hour later was hands-down the fastest improvement in my physical health I will ever know.

This time the EH and I’s PIE CHARTS came out all nice and clean and yellow and green. Those targets we were setting to shave the red off? Check! The red went away all by itself! Magic!! That was a life-changing hour. Everyone should join my gym: “give it an hour, you won’t believe the results!”

A scant 60 minutes from my first assessment, and I’m properly hydrated, I’ve lost 11lbs of fat, I’m right smack in the middle of my desired percent fat range, and I have a /better than optimal/ LBM to Fat ratio (more like 3.6:1).

So we celebrated reaching our goals by going out for subs. With extra cheese. Awwww yeah. The sweet taste of a job well done.

Two firsts.

[written w/o editing when I got home b/n 5 and 6 in the morning]

I have lived in Toronto almost all of my life. I’ve lived in downtown Toronto now for going on 8 years. Early this morning was the first time I have ever, ever, felt genuinely frightened here. That’s first number one.

We (my husband and I) were coming home from our friend’s New Year’s party. Taking advantage of the free TTC ride to cross the city — back from the Danforth to the west end. Even before we headed over though, I’d expressed hesitation about what coming home on the Rocket was going to be like tonight. “As though the whole line is the Vomit Comit” I said.

But I always feel better when hubbie cajoles me onto public transit over, say, a warm and speedy cab. So this time I thought I would be urban and savvy and good and we all (husband, I, and another couple) managed to get on one of the last trains running west from the Danforth, at about 3:15.

There was, as predicted, a good amount of vomit. We got onto a subway car total passengers about 6 or 7 (including us). At the far end of the car was one clearly drunk, probably homeless, man. The other couple was riding with us as far as Yonge, and it wasn’t for a couple of stations before the drunk man began being loud, playing a harmonica, yelling and lurching around a little.

But that’s not unexpected on the TTC. It happens all the time, often during the day actually. Drunk, lurchy, loud people are 9 times out of 10, only that. They don’t especially bother you, or accost you. So we weren’t taking much notice of him.

Our friends got out at Yonge. At this point on the car there’s us, another older well-dressed couple, and maybe 3 other people.

At either Bay or St George a group of young men rushes onto the car. I’m sympathetic — there’s probably about 8 of them, and 2 of them are still running down the stairs and the other guys are trying to hold the subway for them. They all make it on.

They start being loud. Whatever. Young teenaged men, New Years. Annoying, but not a big deal.

One of them sits down next to the girl opposite me. I’m not really paying attention and sort of wonder if she got on with them — he’s draped his arm around her back. I catch part of what she’s saying which is that she has someone and she’s good thanks. She’s quite composed. Then I realize that she’s not with them at all and he’s just marked her to harass. It all takes about 15 seconds, and I’m ashamed that I didn’t realize sooner. Her boyfriend comes over and she points him out and between the two of them, they deal with the situation as the guy (slowly) gives up the seat, smiling creepily, and eventually moving on.

Then all of them (about 8, and unfortunately mostly black) start clustering and hooting and clumping at one end of the subway car. The nearly empty end. The one with the drunk homeless man on it.

It gets louder and aggressive sounding. It becomes obvious that at least some of them are harassing this man. Yelling at him to get off the train. Pushing his bike to the ground. Shouting at him that he’s drunk. Telling him to get a house. A job. Jeers to “get him!”.  All the horrible and obvious things you’d expect and still may be shocked to hear thugs saying.

I don’t know what to do. There are 8 or more of them. They’re young, and not huge, but not small. Definitely almost all very aggressive. What do you do?

The train stops at the next station and it continues, but getting louder, as they’re trying to threaten him off the train. One of them I notice is actually shielding the man somewhat. He pushed the thuggier guy away and kept him from actually grabbing the man (I don’t know if they had been successfully grabbing or pulling at him before that). This one keeps protecting him until some of the boys throw the man’s bike off the train, at which point he sort of turns back, shrugs his shoulders and joins in shouting. This guy is one of two who might be partial dissenters. The other being a guy who, when they began harassing the man with the bike, distanced himself physically — going straight to the other end of the car and sitting there.

A woman traveling alone, with far more presence of mind than I had, reached up and pushed the “in case of harassment” button. Which I had completely forgotten existed. It had gotten very very loud, and very threatening. There was definitely shoving, though between who it was hard to tell.

When the alarm sounded you could feel a small anticipatory breath of relief go through the rest of the car (6 or 7 people). But the sound of the alarm did not seem to have noticeably changed the tone of the aggressing thugs. If at all, only slightly.

It is New Years on the subway, on a 3oclockish train. Every Friday night the club district is crawling with police — 3 or 4 patrol cars a block. On our way out I spent a good part of the ride staring at an ad for “Special Constables” — uniformed TTC staff riding the cars, ensuring your safety.

So what do you think happens when you push the emergency alarm?

One TTC employee shows up. One. Not a special constable, not even a team. One guy, on New Years, comes to see what the problem is.

He assesses the situation terribly, and though I don’t blame him for being alone and intimidated, he determines (incorrectly and in about 5 seconds) that the homeless man pushed the alarm, and tells him to get off the train and go home. The TTC employee leaves. The train continues on its way.

Besides that there was only one TTC staffer sent out, that there was very obviously a quasi-gang of thugs on the car (who continued to be just as overt and aggressive the whole time the TTC employee was there), and that the man with the bicycle hadn’t pushed the alarm, he was being physically harassed he would have been entirely justified in doing so.

I don’t frighten easily. I’ve been in many confrontations, though not any that were expressly physical (that I wasn’t heading into knowingly and for recreation). I walk through alleys, deal with drunk guys, lecherous guys, mentally unstable guys who take a swing at you for no reason as you walk down the street. I ride transit with groups of loud and aggressive teenagers all the time. I walk past thugs on the street, stand behind them in line, have to handle situations with them directly and assertively. But I have never, never ever been so scared as I was on that subway car.

I don’t know exactly why. But my husband shares the sentiment. In the whole time we’ve both lived in Toronto we have never felt scared for our physical safety until tonight.

For one, being on a subway can suddenly feel very confining. You are trapped in a very finite amount of space (the size of a subway car) and if the doors aren’t already open at a station, you’re not getting out of whatever’s going on just by walking away. Two, there are people who get aggressive, who get loud, then there are people who are trying to be menacing. Who are clearly practiced at making people feel scared and unsafe, and who get off on it. Three, I was very tired. Being thrust into a frightening situation at 3:30 in the morning is a very unpleasant experience. Four, and maybe most importantly, the pathetic response to the emergency alarm left you with a very palpable horrific feeling that no help was coming. All of a sudden all of the safety of infrastructure falls away and you realize the TTC is operating with a skeleton crew, no security, and no one is calling the police.

After the homeless man is left behind on the platform, the thugs get a bit louder. They don’t have a target anymore, and they’ve had a small victory. Two of them go over to the couple sitting diagonally from us and start aggressively asking for cigarettes, which soon devolves into asking for anything. It’s clearly posturing, trying to intimidate the young man and make him appear weak, and frighten the woman by extension of the same. But the young man handles himself well and they eventually move on.

After the incident with the man and the bicycle, and the harassment of the couples, there’s nothing specific to point to to explain why my hands were shaking. They just continued to be loud (very loud, screaming loud), eventually deciding to move between cars. Though notably they mostly stayed at one end of the car.

So. What do you do? My hands were shaking because I could not think of anything I could do. All logic said that the right thing to do was not to engage. That the more all of us could stay non-confrontational, the safer it was all around. Not to say, in the least, that I wouldn’t have been much more comfortable with a confrontation. I might have been shaking, but all I wanted was an opportunity or excuse to physically make these guys go away, or at least assert my (and all our) space. A verbal confrontation would have made me feel less useless as well. But the people around me were handling themselves well, and no one needed saving.

And so I get to it — the one guy who needed saving, the man with the bicycle, I couldn’t and didn’t help. When that happened there were 8 of these bastards, definitely less of us (counting an older couple). It seemed very obvious that anyone, even a woman, who got in the middle of their exchange, could only have ended up being the target themselves. In a nearly abandoned subway car, with abandoned subway platforms. And for the first time, in my life I have had to really deal with what it is like to watch something horrible happening and know that I wouldn’t do anything about it. That’s first number two.

I feel no peace about it. I wish I had stood between them anyways. Or that I had taken a chance that it would have made a difference that I’m a woman. That I would have thought of the thing to say that would have diffused the situation and everyone would have been fine. But that would have, without question, meant putting myself, quite literally, in harm’s way.

What happened to the man with the bike was awful, but he was not actually physically injured. Is that where my line is? Do I get in the way if I think you’re going to be hurt? What if getting in the way makes this worse, and makes it more likely that you or I, both of us, or us and others will get hurt? I feel quite sure that if I had gotten in the way all I would have done was increased the odds that someone would get hurt. I read situations pretty well and everything about this one said ugly and dangerous, that there was a very real chance it would escalate quickly into violence. Real violence. Herd violence.

For an unrelated reason, the train stayed stopped at the station before ours for a very long time. My husband and I briefly discussed getting off the train and just walking. And I wanted to go. The doors were open, it was still going on, loud threats now being shouted between the cars, pounding on windows and doors. We could just as easily walk home from here as from where we were going.

But then my husband did the thing he does that makes him in some ways a smarter and better person than I am. He said we should stay. Because it was safer for everyone if we did. If we get up and leave, we leave people behind. We start a ‘who’s going and who’s left behind’. If we stay, if we quietly hold ground, we add numbers that actually make a difference. More so than my vigilante desire to fight. We stay, and we make sure that we’re there to actually help people we can, intervene if anything else happens – if anyone gets harassed who can’t handle themselves. As he said, the thugs clustered at one end of the train for a reason. There’s an unspoken barrier that is keeping things from getting even worse.

Inexplicably the thugs decided to get off at the stop we were delayed at. We finally got going, and rode one more stop where we left the TTC and walked home. Really knowing for the first time what it’s like to find yourself suddenly in an un-handleable situation, and knowing what it’s like to really and truly be afraid for your safety.

Private: Cradlerobber

My brother-in-law-to-be just asked for the exact length of time I have been with the EF (everybody waits till the last minute to do speeches…). And the answer is: 7 years, 10 months.

And how old was I when we met?

19.

In a day and a bit, I’m marrying the guy I started dating at 19*.

What do I, live in the deep south? 😉

*Technically. We flirted for about a month before going out — I was 19 on our first date, 20 on our second.

Sugar Café closes its door(s).

(Technically, they only have one door, but you gotta respect the metaphor.)

Sugar Cafe has been open at the corner of Queen & Shaw for the past 8 years. We started going there about 7 years ago, and it has been far and away our favourite brunch spot in Toronto since our first visit (and knowing us, that is saying something). Everything about it. The owner (the beautiful and charming Susanne), the people who worked there (Danyiel, quite possibly the best server in the city), the menu, the atmosphere, the chocolates that accompanied every order of coffee…

Chocolates and coffees

In a city where every menu has a muesli, they had the hands-down best. Their seasonal fruit was actually both seasonal and real fruit. N’er a melon in sight. The muesli was full of berries and peaches and all things sweet and juicy. (Memo to all brunch spots: no one wants melon when they go out for breakfast. No one. If there is a melon-loving populus, they number far too insignificantly to dictate the toppings of the many.)

Sugar Muesli

Their German hot chocolate was redonculously decadent. They served the much-loved Petit Déjeuner (brie, jam, hardboiled egg, ancient grains toast, yogurt with preserves), and the most coveted french toast in the city. They made wicked good lattes, had mimosa casually listed with the juices, and introduced the EF to Americanos (which changed his coffee palate forever).

Latte

It was one of those places that was good in every season. With a postage stamp treasure of a patio out back, naturally shaded in the summer, and a blaze of leaves in the fall.

Sugar patio fall patio

The restaurant’s decor reflected Susanne’s German home, with a quietly European atmosphere. When we bought our dining room table, the choice was not only influenced, but modeled on our favourite table at Sugar (“you know, like the table at Sugar, the big reclaimed worn wood one, with the elbow divot…”).

table

It was warm and comfortable, open and bright and eclectic but cohesive. And it all worked because of the warmth of the people behind it, and the simple deliciousness of what they had on offer.

It may sound overly melancholy to get worked up over the closing of a restaurant, but independent stores and eateries are what give your neighbourhood its flavour. They are part of what define your sense of place. And losing one that is close to you, especially in an urban centre, is like waking up to find that one of the rooms in your house is suddenly sealed off, and you can never go in there again. For several years, we trotted out Sugar as an example of what was so great about where we lived. We were able to point to it back when our strip was mostly populated by used appliance stores, and crowned with the “Stardust lounge”.

We found out over the past couple of days just how much that was reciprocated. We showed up early this morning to ensure we would get a table, only to find a sign on the door saying they were opening at 11 today (a nod to Nuit Blanche). So we decided to wait with a coffee around the corner. But we only got as far as the street corner, before I felt a hand on my shoulder and turned to see Susanne — who had seen us gone by, and run out to make sure we were coming back. Would we like to come in and have a coffee with her while we wait for it to ‘officially’ open?

So we managed to steal the better part of an hour in a private empty version of one of our favourite places in the city. Sitting at the bar with our latte and americano (and chocolates, of course), chatting with Susanne about what it was like to run Sugar, and what was to come. Getting to know her a little better, and making that final connection. She even had a card for us (addressed to me, as she only knew the EF, accurately, as “Americano w. glasses”). Fortunately, we had a card for her too — featuring a postcard she had made up years ago, that we liked so much it has survived multiple ‘simplifyings’ of what we leave stuck to our fridge. Which brought on one of many rounds of hugs.

I’m good with goodbyes and while I say “I hate change” as often as anyone (maybe a little more), in practice I’m actually good with that as well. Everything has its time and everything ends. We got to say goodbye properly, and that’s all you can fairly cross your fingers and toes for.

A last sip of latte, a square of chocolate for the road, and years of good memories.

empty Sugar

From the little vegetarian who ate (and cooked) meat again…

Dijon haddock

Pictured above, tonight’s dinner — courtesy of the good people at Organics on Bloor who had put all meat in their chest freezer at 40% off (just to make room for new inventory, nothing gross or “call the health inspector”-y). Which, as I was in there to buy meat anyways led to a “squh-wee!” and a bit of an insane binge on frozen animal parts (ground bison, what am I going to do with you*).

Which included the above fillet of haddock. Prepared using a mustard marinade (out of Moosewood’s Low Fat Favourites), and sitting with roast red potatoes on a bed of Carolina Kale (also out of Moosewood — thanks big bro).

The photo is of the portions on the EF’s plate. Feel free to note the quantity of potatoes and haddock relative to kale (there are more potatoes hiding under the fish). I give him a speaking to recently. As I now just serve myself more veggies than him, because he never finishes the veggies I give him (unless they’re covered in cheese). And I realized that though the portion sizes have been changed to reflect reality, he was still using the same “percentage” approach to eating his veg. He’s a bad’un. (And if he doesn’t eat his kale his face will get stuck that way and he’ll go blind and a gum tree will grow in his stomach and whatever other old wives’ tales I can throw at him…)

*I’m thinking bison tacos… oh yeah…