Category: Holidays

  • World Crokinole Championships – The Great Paternal Experiment

    The following piece was featured on Ominocity.com out of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.

    Crokinole 4

    If you’ve never heard of crokinole, you’re likely not a citizen of the disintegrating Canadian countryside. If you are from the North of 49 and you still haven’t heard of crokinole, you either a) are from a city, b) didn’t grow up in a church, c) grew up with a Nintendo, or d) had unloving parents. Crokinole is a two or four person game played on a 66cm-diameter circular board, in which each player has a determined number of discs made of lathed wood. Each player purposefully flicks these buttons with a finger or wooden cue towards a hole in the centre of the board a quarter-of-an-inch deep and only slightly larger than the button itself, attempting to avoid the eight stationary pegs that guard it like pawns on a chess board.

    It is a game you may have played with your loud uncle and your wrinkly aunt before Christmas dinner. A game in which your grandpa is likely indomitable in between heavy naps in a dusty cardigan on an itchy couch. It is a game you may have tinkered with not knowing the rules (of which there are perhaps three), or, as previously determined, a game you may not have ever even heard of. For myself and my father, it is the game in which we competed at the World Championship in Tavistock, Ontario on June 1, 2013. The World Crokinole Championship, widely revered as the Stanley Cup of crokinole tournaments, the Kentucky Derby of the forefinger stallions, centre stage of peculiar rural males aged 39-88, was obscurity and sportsmanship perfectly defined.

    Crokinole 3

    After driving straight through six U.S. states and two Canadian provinces, we pulled into Tavistock, home of the oldest known crokinole board dating back to 1876. During the drive, when our periods of silence (often reaching four or five hours at a time) were broken, we discussed religion in many contexts; traditional theology, silage and dairy production in devout farming lives, and most importantly, righteousness through crokinole techniques. We made our ecclesiastical pilgrimage, fasting from sleep and whole foods in the goal of reuniting westerly disciples with the holy land of immaculate wooden conception. We were pilgrims for the board of life. The home of crokinole was like I had dreamed it would be as a kid of twenty-four years old. An established farming community of dairy producers with a Main Street that boasted a two-decade old Chinese Restaurant, local credit union, and butcher shop. As one might expect, side streets were dotted with various forms of seniors’ homes.

    Upon arrival, silence was broken by John Schultz, the bald, wiry, extremely pleasant chairman of the World Croknole Championship, asking, “Are you folks here for the crokinole tournament?” He woke us napping in the park—our first hours of horizontal sleep in two days—and it finally occurred to me what we’d done. We drove twenty-two hours for crokinole. In the same amount of time I could’ve driven to the flawless forests of northern California. I could’ve driven to Nunavut. “Holy shit,” I thought, “I could’ve just travelled an hour and played a game of crokinole with my grandpa.” But instead I drove twenty-two hours to play with all of the grandpas of southern Ontario. John Schultz continued to tell us that other folks drove in from Michigan, New York, Ohio, P.E.I.. We cleaned up, grabbed our board, and began our pre-tournament practice on a picnic table in the shade of Queens Park.

    Crokinole 2

    On Saturday morning when I woke up at dawn to practice before competition began at 8:30, the Ontario air was thick. The humidity weighed down the crokinole buttons as if Mother Nature rubbed each one on her sweaty chest. After a breakfast fine-tuned for finger endurance I followed my father into the arena which housed over 64 freshly waxed, previously untouched boards set up in a grid on the concrete slab of the dried up hockey ice, all partitioned by yellow rope. Competitors and spectators in jean shorts and agriculturally branded caps floated around the merchandise on the perimeter of the rink. Those keen on capitalizing on the lucrative crokinole market sold World Championship t-shirts, ballcaps, boards and board accessories. People competed in the skill shot competition and captured photos of the trophies which were handmade for the event (it is difficult to find a golden plastic figurine of a man playing crokinole to fix to the top of a regular trophy). When tournament competition began, over 280 competitors showed their masterly applied-geometry skills and muscle memory. Each competitor sat down at a table with ten strangers for eight minutes at a time until the horn sounded, shaking hands and wishing luck to people they hoped to blank eight points to zero. Saturated in Canadian politeness, if crokinole isn’t a game of true sportsmanship, it isn’t anything at all.

    Crokinole

    As for the competition, unfortunately the prophesy from aged-competitor Dave Skipper that, “people with beards and moustaches shoot better on these boards,” didn’t prove true. I, one of the few participants with a gnarly beard, didn’t even place in the top half of the draw, and the eventual singles champion, John Conrad, had the hairless face of a teenager, although he was surely approaching his golden years. My father proved to be worthy competition, scaling the ranks of eleventh of 86 participants in the main draw, making the playoff round with the true elites. The final match drew crowds upwards of forty, those who had already sweat through their crokinole team jerseys and sweat bands, groaning and whispering with the final shots of the game. Hands become shaky with such pressure. For one of his final shots, Conrad made an incredible triple take-out. Someone in the crowd said in praise, “I think that was a statement.” In the finals, fathers sat behind the yellow rope, watching sons in competition, offering familial support. My father and I participated in the great paternal experiment that is crokinole.

    While discussing board consistency during the final round, a man who placed third in the doubles category, making no excuses, commented: “The heat, the humidity—we have been battling the elements all day long,” as though it were an Ironman competition, which, in a way it was. The oldest participant was 88-years old, and was celebrating his 50th wedding anniversary at the tournament. He had competed in all previous fifteen World Championships that had been held.

    If it were a televised event, and if the champions were interviewed and asked to describe their feelings, I imagine that like any other world final, they would stumble and mumble in speechlessness. There is no way to properly explain a world championship of any sport, and it only becomes more grueling when it is a celebration of nearly-perfected obscurity. We travelled knowing full-well that we were participating in an antiquated parlour game that itself was competing against screen-bright technologies for space in the family room. What we didn’t know was that our hands would shake and that we would miss shots from fried nerves in a game usually as relaxing as a free massage. We didn’t know that we’d have to practice for another year to make even a dent in the crokinole kingdom.

    Back to the grind. Back to the board.


    Crokinole 1

    Crokinole, The Finals

    Crokinole Boxes

    Crokinole Cues

  • Hump Day Leap Year

    Thus far it has been a leapable year. A year that I will remember as one that was somewhat wasteful, somewhat unaccomplished, somewhat unfortunate.

    However, when I speak of ‘this year’ I speak of the past two months, because like it went in elementary school when I remembered things by grade, I now allot the time based on full years, which pass like bunches of days and are remembered in that way also. Of the past twelve months, the past full year, I have broken my lifetime record of lowest income. It has been on a steady decline since I quit my job as a mindless labourer of ten-hour workdays of fifteen hours a day. One that I left purposefully because working with a group of undesirable cocaine addicts who hated their jobs but grinded their way through it for the paycheques wasn’t worth it.. And now as tax season rolls around again I hope for at least a decent payoff so that I can use my springtime governmental bonus to make this so far forgettable calendar year one that counts.

    Of the past four years I would leap none of them. I would hump them all. Hump Day, as far as I’m concerned, was invented by a friend, Lucas Roelfsema. For some time it was customary of him to send Wednesday messages to those he loved, “Happy Hump Day. Who are you humping?” and my response often included his name or the name of someone he knew.

    But of the leapable start to this calendar year I created a project to prove to myself down the road that although it was possibly  leapable, it still yielded a very functional, very ugly hand-sewn blanket. Of old pieces of sweater and found threads and needles, I will block out the memories of uselessness and self-pity with an eight-foot by eight-foot misshapen square of wool.

    I remember at a family Christmas when I was younger, one my aunties gave my grandparents all the pieces to make a quilt, including the quilt squares, already sewn and embroidered, wrapped in different packages for all the different necessary parts of a quilt. She cried when my grandparents opened the last package. I never understood why; my parents told me it was because she had put so much work into the gift. I thought of this notion once I finished my book, and again when I started my quilt/sleeping bag/ragged-ass mess of chopped up sweaters. For the completion of my book, something that I have been working on since before the last leap year, I didn’t cry. I barely got sentimental. I mostly got angry and began to deny the book’s existence. It likely wasn’t my crowning achievement. This quilt is likely just that. I expect to cry in joy for several days after it is finished.

    It would be a shame to have an entire year that could be considered leapable. A year without a single moment worth clinging to. I think years that are impossible to leap often depend on those people which you are metaphorically humping, which means, upon further review, this year has yet to be a calamity enough to leap. That, plus a quilt, a life lesson, a few good stories of shoplifters and you’re off. An admittedly somewhat wasteful, somewhat unaccomplished, somewhat unfortunate two months that I wouldn’t leap for much. Maybe a Klondike bar.

    //

  • Failed States

    When history is crafted in the service of power, evidence and rationality are irrelevant.

    -Noam Chomsky, Failed States, p100

    I am in the business of joy. Lowercase j. I am directly employed by Santa himself to greet the masses of joyless souls and bring the rapture of new merchandise to their lives. Running a business as if it were a business makes sense, as long as a service is provided or goods are traded for money. People convinced they they have a right to demand things in the form of a Christmas list because they believe that forced giving is the thoughtful thing to do, are running their lives like a business, taking advantage of situations and people and money. This does not make sense.

    In structure, the political counterpart to a corporation is a totalitarian state. There are rewards for loyalists, and quick punishment for those who “cross party leaders.” The antidemocratic thrust has precedents, of course, but is reaching new heights. It should surprise no one familiar with history that it is accompanied by the most august missions and visions of democracy.

    -Noam Chomsky, Failed States, p238

    Running a government as if it were a business frightens me. It makes humans commodities and necessities marketable. More regard for the dollars earned than the humans living in conditions where it is impossible to earn enough for basic human comforts. The past and the present have been crafted in the service of power. The connection between the system governed by the powerful and wealthy and the consumerism of this season is not coincidental. Someone, or a series of someones, have carefully crafted this holiday season that is loved by so many into a two-month shopping obligation. Our love for one another that is best expressed through fellowship and merriment has been changed so that we feel the only way to express it is through the giving of unnecessary items. And it has only strengthened their position of power. They have taken what we love more than anything and inverted it into another means of profit. Power is a business.

    Among the most salient properties of failed states is that they do not protect their citizens from violence—and perhaps even destruction—or that decision makers regard such concerns as lower in priority than the short-term power and wealth of the state’s dominant sectors.

    -Noam Chomsky, Failed States, p38

    Violence can be demonstrated in many ways. A boot stamping on a human face forever. An army occupying another country to control the energy reserves and elections to stifle the power of a population. Several levels of government building a handsome yet useless multimillion dollar sidewalk ignoring a housing crisis that continually worsens. Poverty is violence.

    Our state has used garlands and lights and parades to help us forget that it has indeed failed. And these lights and garlands have trained us to continue to support the failed state through red Santa hats and a marketable ‘Christmas Spirit.’ Either each year the situation becomes more grave than the last, or each year my cynicisms mount even higher than Santa’s pyramid of elf skulls that he compiles at year end, a physical exposition of the slave labour that his capitalist methods require.

    We can demonstrate our power by running our lives as the human lives they are, not as the businesses that they are told to be. We can take back the power from the failed state by refusing to participate in the season that characterizes their abuses and violence more than any other time of the year. We can go a year without ‘celebrating’ to show that our Joy (capital J) is founded in something more than a self-serving system that they created for us to mindlessly follow. We can buy nothing and be better, more generous, less selfish people because of it.

  • 11/11/11 11:11

    This blog was posted at 11:11 on November 11, 2011.

    Once every one hundred years this simple minute passes (11/11/11 11:11) and rolls on the same as any other minute that ever existed. I consider 11:11 my daily time to brood on the future, as if once a day I was drawn to my rug for the call to prayer, and like a prayer, the energy that I exude is positive and harming no one. Today, however, seems more weighty, like the pure rarity of this moment will ensure my 11:11 wish is to come true, no matter how grand or obscure.

    We give meaning to certain days in a year because of events that occurred in the past. This day, November 11, 2011 is recognized in several countries as Remembrance Day, where we think of war, not in order to glamourize it, but rather to realize why we do not want to be a part of it, now or in the future. A day that we remember people like my grandpa who travelled by boat across the Atlantic to unknown lands. The day is important, however the minute of 11:11 during this day is important for no reason other than it will not occur again for one hundred years.

    At this exact moment (11/11/11 11:11) I am not sitting on a couch, writing more nonsense to share with you. These words were scheduled to display at the exact time. During the moment this is displayed I will be sitting somewhere quietly listening to a song of hope, waiting for the stars to pass the cloudy sky in the exact way, waiting for the snowflakes to be settled just so, waiting for the exact moment where all the minds in the city are in motion, and I will make a wish for the ages. At the time of writing, I was sitting in deep deliberation as to what my one wish in one hundred years could be, as if a magic genie popped out of a one hundred year-old bottle of enchanted beer to the one loser on earth who will put in a specific effort to make a wish on the one minute in one hundred years that means as little as the one before and the one after. I’m trying to decide if I will be doing something specific during the minute, as if it were my own sort of celebration, leaving my old self of indecision and selfishness behind with a DQ Blizzard or a Boreal Beer or cup of chai. Or if I should be listening to my favourite song during the entire minute. Should my wish be to never have another reason for the creation of a Remembrance Day, that is, to wish for world peace? Should I wish more selfishly, for a quick and painless end of my neurosis? For direction in a lifelong trip of wrong turns? Better posture? Relationship clarity? A Stanley Cup? An end to a long lasting loneliness?

    It becomes redundant to celebrate every day or every week as an event. Like when the month of November is simultaneously Alzheimers Month, AIDS Month, Lung Cancer Month and Epilepsy Awareness Month. The Sweet Potato Awareness Months, the National Flag Days, the International Fig Weeks, the Plan Your Epitaph Days make it hard to take serious any day with a title. And to recognize a single moment in time because it will not occur for another 100 years does not acknowledge the moment just before and the moment directly after, which will never occur again either. But to live every moment greatly, whether it be numerically interesting or not, can be difficult when the first thing that comes to your mind when you wake up are words cursing the light of day, and then when you lay back down to sleep it feels like you had just woken up, although it was eighteen hours ago.

    It seems to me that it is important to live as though one single moment is no more important than any other. If you don’t do this, you value most of your moments less than they are worth. It is, however, healthy and recommended that you routinely take a moment to briefly ponder the past, look forward to the future, and to be comfortable in the exact moment of the present. This is that moment, and I am doing so. Right now.

    11/11/11 11:11

  • Old Costumes

    My past is haunted.

    The places I once frequented have become places of evil. The old Western dorms in which I raised hell as a youth have returned to the den of sin that they were when I was there, the difference is that now the patrons are forced to worship the god of money. The old WOT Outlet has become a retailer of foreign-made costumes and costume accessories, open one month of the year selling lead-based products to exhibitionists and children. Whether it is just coincidence, or whether the empty vacuum of my soul sucked the decency out of each place, I do not know. But capitalizing on the holiday of the devil is maybe the most evil thing there is to do. Or do two evils make a holy? Ask the Tim Horton’s inside of the Walmart.

    Returning to a familiar place, one expects things to stay relatively the same. I got back, I told myself to make things different. To avoid falling back into the habits that I decided to leave behind in the first place. To not slip back into the hole of unclimbable negativity. I decided that upon arriving back to Regina (which made me feel like I had failed, not because of Regina, but because no one moves here by choice), that things would need to be different. Starting fresh in a new city is common, but starting fresh in an old city is more rare, I didn’t want to let comfort and my selfish being let me return to the mindset that I purposefully left almost two years ago. My attitude, my leisure activities, my transportation habits would have to change

    I am feeling haunted by these old ghosts. Watching television that I don’t even like to reward myself for the twenty hours a week of hard labour or the three hours every two days of writing that I invest. Zombieing out to Dr Mario and digital Scrabble. I am trying to learn the balance of leisure and entertainment because when I’m not working on something with purpose, I feel like I am falling back into that haunted place that I so badly want to avoid.

    Human progression occurs. Human failure occurs more often. Halloween weekend is the time that we get to fantasize about who we wish we could be and dress up like them. Or dress up like a complete douchers or sluts. Pretty well everyone has one costume that they’ve used several times in the past and that they keep for back up, in case they can’t come up with anything better. Easy back up plans. A cowboy: plaid shirt, cowboy hat. Hunter: plaid shirt, gun. Hockey referee: dad’s ref jersey, hockey helmet. It is always easy to be the cowboy that we were last year, but this year I want to progress to something new.

    A cowboy rockstar. A referee astronaut. A slutty lumberjack princess.

  • The Gypsy Life

    Tourists are scum. I have no reason to believe the opposite.

    When I am in the realm of travel, I easily get lost in the ticket booking, bus catching, cathedral gazing, street food eating, intestine cleaning, photo taking routine. But in the time I take to sit in the park or wander the back streets, I quickly become ill. Not physically, at least not right now (that tripe taco sat with me alright, actually). The fatigues and ‘responsibilities’ of a traveler can allow a fog to settle over their view of this grand old mountain of unequal and unbalanced lifestyles. Traveler and travelee. Tourist and the people of the tourist ravaged nation. Any traveler without some underlying guilt is far too lost in the personal, expensive, hiking boot fantasy that traveling has no negative side. I want to travel, I don’t want to be a tourist. What does this mean?

    It means I need to remember things like this:

    The poor already knew that they were poor and did not need the wealthy people of another wealthier country to come support the ‘industry of tourism’ or ‘bestow charity’ through volunteering or proselytizing. Unfamiliar faces simply reminding them of the places they will never go, the foods they will never try, and the ‘blessings’ and ‘luck’ that they will never have. It’s not like visiting dozens of ancient ruins and walking through market places makes a man knowledgable or worldly; traveling is just the logical step when you’re sick of your job and tired of your home. So, subconsciously or not, I personally seek purpose by attempting to document my time with a camera that I didn’t pay for, or by writing words that drown in cynicism. Or, I seek to legitimize my selfishness in travel by trying to help where I can, volunteering, which only further deepens the make-believe hierarchy of foreign power and wealth being all that matters and all that can save.

    A friend emailed and said that I am ‘so lucky that I’m living the gypsy life’ and although I don’t neglect to see the luck I have, I doubt each day that the life of most travellers could be seen as meaningful. It is a form of mockery, flaunting wealth in the face of locals, eating churros and drinking beer. The locals make fun of tourists in languages that they can’t understand, but the tourists don’t know it, or if they do, must know that they deserve it in response to their mockery of wealth.

    It could be seen that our options are either to be ignorant sitting at home, or to be ignorant away from home, as long as we are trying to stave off ignorance in either setting. As long as different culture is more than just novelty, but is understood as real life. Not just a playground for the well to do, nor just a sideshow for our better off, more advanced lands. But the line is thin and I’ve been walking it for far too long.

    I will find myself in this same place if I continue to travel, trying to enjoy myself with new friends overtop of my ever present, unwavering guilt. The more I try to avoid this guilt and see my travels as unendingly positive, the closer I become to a tourist, and the scum begins to build. The life of a gypsy, when oblivious, can be wonderful, but when an understanding is reached of the inequality of it all, scum is evident and inevitable.

    This scum embitters the fruits of travel.