Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Sitting On A Story


1. Finding The Bench
The Seawall in West Vancouver is a place where people, old and young, can come to enjoy the gentle sound of the ocean and the beautiful scenery, which surrounds the area. The Bench I have chosen is dedicated to my Grandmother. This bench has a special significance for me since I never knew my Grandmother; she died before I had the chance to meet her. To me, this bench symbolizes my Grandmother because this is the only form in which I have ever known her. My bench is actually three benches places in a shallow semi circle slightly off the Seawall. Covering the benches, as if the protect them, are three small arbors covered in dense vines. The benches bare no inscription; they stand as a symbol of grandmothers caring for others, so that they can sit and enjoy the ocean view as she once did. Behind the benches is a small stone placed among some tall grass. The inscription on the stone reads “From the Friends of Ruth Gram”. I think that the nameless benches’ were being placed in front of the inscribed stone to tell story about my grandmother’s personality, a personality that always put others before her.

2. Describing The Bench
From my bench it fairly obvious I am in a very urban part of town. There is a constant stream of people walking by, sometimes more, sometimes less, but there are always people. Maybe that’s is how my grandma would have preferred it, maybe that’s how she lived her life. Looking past the people there is the ocean, full of tankers, there are usually at least 2 large ships anchored out there. I often wonder who is on those massive ships and what they are doing. I wonder what these people might be like and what living on a ship for months at a time would be like. Beyond the ships there is East Vancouver. A place where I haven’t spent much time and usually overlook while sitting on my bench. Looking at it now I wish it was different somehow. I wish it had more character. It’s all so residential; all the buildings are relatively the same size and from afar they all look to be the same. It’s very boring to look at. This means that while sitting at the bench I tend to look west, towards Stanley Park and the Lions Gate Bridge. This view is much more exciting. You can see where all the trees fell in Stanley Park during the windstorm in 2006. This stretch of the Seawall is one of the best places to see all the damage. Look further west and you see the Lions Gate Bridge, which always seems so far away. Along the Seawall are a series of ten or so large apartment buildings. First thing that strikes me about these buildings are how unattractive they are. Secondly I wonder how much the people living there pay to live in these ugly buildings with fantastic views. Then I realize how surreal these buildings look. Lined up along the coast as if we lived in Miami. After I have taken in all there is to see around me I realize that I want all these people who are walking around me to go away. I want this place for myself. I want to be able to just sit there and gaze into the distance without having anyone walking by judge me.

3. A Bench Dedicated To Me
I think that by the end of my life, which is sure to be filled with exciting adventures and worthy endeavors, I will be awarded with a beautiful bench in my name. Whoever it is that is dedicating the bench to me will look back on this paper and create the bench of my dreams for me. My bench would be constructed from mahogany and have a polished aluminum frame which would be maintained religiously by my family or whoever it is that dedicated the bench to me. As for its location I would want it in Mahon Park, maybe overlooking a soccer field or the water park. The idea of someone sitting on my eternal monument watching soccer, a game I take great pride in playing, or watching their children frolic in the water park as I did when I was a child is appealing to me. I would want it placed somewhere very convenient yet not right in the centre of activity. Somewhere it could be seen and utilized. For my inscription I would want simple yet moving. Something people reading it would understand right away and hopefully be moved enough not to vandalize my bench. I spent a lot of time in Mahon Park as a child and I would want my inscription to honor that. “Fraser. G. Pike – Lived His life With a Smile,” I think that this inscription best describes how I would want to be remembered both by my family and friends, but also but by people I have never met who read my inscription. I would want people to know that I lead a happy life through all types of weather.


4. Dedicating A Bench
I am the kind of person who would want to dedicate a bench to every person who I have ever known. A bench seems a small yet meaningful way to remember someone you cared for. I am going to use my mother as an example of someone I would defiantly dedicate a bench to. For my mother I would spare no expense in getting her the best bench possibly. Though I know she wouldn’t want me spending a lot of money or going to the trouble. I would want the bench on Salt Spring Island. She and my father have both spent a lot of time there throughout their lives. We have also spent time their as a family because my grandparents live there. I would want the bench in Ruckle Park, overlooking the ocean. My mother has been very partial to that park. It was where she and my father went camping a lot earlier in their relationship. She is also very fond of the ocean. Swimming and being on the beach are some of her favorite things to do and I think that for her bench to be overlooking the ocean would be very special to her. As for the inscription “Margo Gram – Loved” is what both she and I would want. She is naturally conservative and wouldn’t want the inscription to ramble on about how she ill be missed. To know that she is loved is good enough for her. For my mother it is the thought that counts, and everything else is icing on the cake.

5. Journal Response
At first I didn’t know what bench I going to do this assignment on. It quickly became obvious what bench it was going to be. It is a beautiful bench is a great location. On Tuesday January 13th my father and me drove me down to the Seawall equipped with the Nikon. It was not a particularly nice day, it was cloudy and cold, and it was starting to get dark. There were still plenty of people walking along the Seawall, which bugged me because it made taking pictures of the bench difficult. I sat at the bench taking in my surroundings and looking at my green criteria sheet while my dad took pictures of the bench and waterfront. I then took a couple of photos I thought I could include with this assignment, which I think is a nice addition. My Dad and me then proceeded to argue about which photos will suit this purpose the best. My Dad and I don’t always see eye to eye when it comes to educational matters. We were only down on the Seawall for about 15 minutes because it got quite cold. My Dad worked in the parks department of West Vancouver for twenty some years so I get a short history lesson about each bench on the Seawall while down there. I learned a lot from my short visit to my bench. I really got to know the area and pinpointed different pieces of scenery that I could use in my assignment. The pictures, though not necessary, are a great visual aid for the reader so he/she can also get to know my bench.

6. Choosing A Poem
I chose a poem called “The Last Picture in the World” by Al Purdy. Its imagery suits my bench perfectly. It paints a serene picture of a heron “framed by leaves.” To the left of my bench there is a wind vain in the shape of a heron. It towers above all else and can easily be seen from my bench. “Almost sculpture except that it’s alive,” the heron is motionless until the wind spins him around majestically. The wind vain has been there for as long as anyone can remember. It was there before my grandmother’s bench was put in place. “…If I were to die at this moment that picture would accompany me wherever I am going.” It is certainly a beautiful picture that my grandmother will carry with her wherever she is.

The Last Picture in the World

A hunched grey shape
Framed by leaves
With lake water behind
Standing on our
Little point of land
Like a small monk
In a green monastery
Meditating
Almost sculpture except that it's alive brooding immobile permanent for half an hour 
a blue heron 
and it occurs to me that if I were to die at this moment that picture would accompany me wherever I am going for part of the way

By Al Purdy

7. My Philosophy of Life
There are a couple of ways in which this connects to my personal philosophy of life. I don’t know if you could call it a philosophy but I am very resistant to change in my life. I like to stick with something for a long time if it is working for me. The heron in the poem also seems to stick with things that are working for him, such as his perch on the point of land. The heron enjoys standing there and is reluctant to move. This is indicative of the way I live my life. “almost sculpture except that it’s alive” Though I am unchanging, I am always very alive and it is easy to see.


8. The Purpose Of A Park
What is the purpose of a park? A question not often asked by most people. Parks are there to provide an escape from the urban lifestyle most of us lead. They offer us a serene and peaceful place to go. Parks can be for children to play, or a peaceful place to take a walk. Parks also serve as wildlife reserves, somewhere untouched by human influence, besides the fact that humans are preserving them. I think that parks are a necessary part of society. We all need a place where we can go to get away from the industrialized world. People aren’t meant to spend their time in wooden boxes, they need get out into the wild every once and a while. If parks didn’t exist how would people be able to see nature? Normally we are all shut into our houses on our computers or playing video games. Parks give us a balance in our busy lives, a balance between urban and natural scenery. Personally I enjoy forested parks that I can walk through on roughly made paths looking at the huge old growth trees covered in moss and funguses. The parks I am describing are usually provincial parks. Huge expansive forested areas protected by the government. These parks are full of a variety of wildlife, which produce melodious sounds as if singing with a tune.

9. My Poem

A Better Man

As i ponder the inevitability of leaving high school
It occurs to me that school shaped me
All the teachers I despised
All the awkward social graces
All the work I have not completed
Has shaped me into
A better man?

The memories now seem distant
Yet they were only a short time ago
What will now become of me
Now that i am
A better man

Fraser Pike

Monday, January 5, 2009

Coral Chaos


Australian scientists doing tests on the coral on the Great Barrier Reef have found that has been a showdown in coral growth. This has been attributed to global warming.
The Great Barrier Reef is located off the east coast of Australia and is both a heritage site and one of the countries biggest tourist hot spots.
Scientists have found that the corals growth rate has slowed by as much as 14%, this has not happened in at least 400 years. The coral is home to thousands of plants and animals which would be in danger if the coral were to slowing dwindle away. The cause of this growth slowdown is that ocean temperatures are raising and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is making the water more acidic. A UN report stated that the Great Barrier Reef “could be killed by climate change within decades.”
I have never personally been to the Great Barrier Reef so I cannot say first hand how beautiful it is but I believe it would be a great tragedy to lose such a wonderful natural monument. But the coral seems to an unfortunate casualty of global warming. We’re not going to end global warming; we’re probably going to make it worse in the future. So folks get out there and enjoy the coral while you can because 20 years from now it might not be around to offer all of its marine wonders.

http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/environment/Coral+decline+warns+ocean+changes+Australian+scientists/1134866/story.html

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Can Grandparents And Videogames Co-Exist?


Grandparents these days are boring. Ok, some people might have exciting grandparents but the majority of us don’t. They sit around in their rocking chairs, do crosswords and eat sugar free ice cream. One thing that probably bugs the average kid is that his grandparents don’t even know what a computer is, let alone an Xbox or Play Station. Now kids the world over have some hope that their grandparents could learn to be “cool” or “hype”. A recent study in New York on 40 adults in their 60s and 70s showed that those who played a strategic video game improved some cognitive functions such as memory and ability to multi-task.
This could be great for a couple of reasons, it could help introduce older folks to technology, grandparents and parents would be able to understand what their kids are saying whenever their ranting about their video games, and their basic cognitive functions would be improved in the process.
The test is not completed though, further studies must be done to determine whether cognitive abilities would be improved playing all video games or just the one tested. Either way this is the first step to ushering our grandparents and parents into the 21st century.


http://www.theprovince.com/technology/gaming/Videogames+aging+brain+good/1105410/story.html

Z2K


Apple and Microsoft have been fighting over the technology market for years now. They both have computers, and MP3 players. I am an Apple fan myself. I find that Apple products just seem to work better then anything Microsoft can produce, though I am a fan of the Xbox which is a Microsoft product.
In 2006 in response to Apples widely popular IPod, Microsoft released the Zune, a 30-gigbyte MP3 player. On New Years Eve thousand of Zune’s around the world froze. Many forums described this as “Z2K” and “Zunesday”. Microsoft released a statement shortly after saying that there was a problem with the devices internal clock. Devices released later with increased storage capacity were not affected.
Microsoft stated that the problem with the internal clock was that it improperly handled the last of the leap year and that the problem would resolve itself in due time.
The way I see it, this is just another sign that Microsoft is really not the machine to be buying anymore. I think people are just scared of switching over to a different machine simply because it is different. We are all so used to Windows and its errors and we think that that’s just the way it is. My opinion is Apple is the better machine whether it is MP3’s or computers. You don’t hear of any world wide IPod failures do you?


http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Leap+year+zaps+Zunes/1134822/story.html

Saturday, January 3, 2009

The Beginning Of The End


The Internet is and has been for sometime now, a source for all information. Anything you want to learn or look at can be found on the Internet with generally no restrictions. Now the British legislature is trying to have some sort of sensory system put upon the Web. One idea is to have ratings on websites similar to movies and television. Another is to have Internet service providers offer packages where the only sites available are those that are “deemed suitable for children”. The British government doesn’t just want these restrictions in Britain either, “the government was planning to negotiate with the administration of President-elect Barack Obama to draw up new international rules for English language websites”
I can see that some parents don’t want their children seeing “offensive” material online, but I don’t think that making this content unavailable to these children is the answer. My view on censorship is that it should be as minimal as possible. I don’t see how shielding children from this content somehow makes them better people, if anything it only makes them naïve about the world around them. I know that this move to put ratings on websites will really not affect me in any significant way, but it is the idea of censoring internet in any way that bugs me. I can’t help but thinking that it is just a first step to actually censoring content that is put up on the World Wide Web.

http://www.theprovince.com/technology/Websites+could+ratings+system/1123827/story.html