I Loves the Army and Navy Shoe Sale


So around 5 p.m. Thursday night I was sitting at the office frantically trying to meet a deadline and doing too many things at once. The phone rang. I answered brusquely and in the best I'm-busy-don't-bother-me voice I could muster: "Dani Lemon." It was Annie: "It's the Army and Navy Shoe Sale." Silence. Then: "They're putting out new stock at 7 pm." "Done," I barked. "We're there." I slammed the phone down. Deadline bedamned. This was a Vancouver tradition I was yet to experience and the siren call of cheap designer shoes was too strong to ignore.


We tore through the racks in Army and Navy's grungy basement with half of the female population from Vancouver, protecting our prospective purchases with our lives. I grabbed probably 8 pairs on my first go-round, and Annie, Mel and I raced for a vinyl bench so we could try on our finds. First, a Steve Madden sandal. Too narrow. Then, a BCBG purple suede open-toe pump. Too high. The next pair looked like hooker heels. As I went steadily through my basket, it continued: too wide, too blister-inducing (a sensitive subject anyway), too tacky, too slutty, too long, too cheap, not cheap enough.


I was in despair; it was like the Rime of the Ancient Mariner, reimagined. It was the Rime of the Ancient Cobbler, or the Rime of the Not-so-Ancient Shopaholic:


Water, water, every where,
And all the boards did shrink ;
Water, water, every where,
Nor any drop to drink.


Dammit, I wanted cheap designer shoes! I was surrounded by cheap designer shoes! Why didn't any fit?! Mel came back with a great pair of Michael Kors shoes, black leather with a wedge heel, open-toed, and a gold "Michael Kors" plate glistening on the back of the heel. Why couldn't I find cute shoes like those?! I decided to make it my mission to FIND. THOSE. SHOES.


I prowled through the racks. Size 6 to 10, over and over again, with razor-like focus. I was determined to find a deal. To find my dream designer shoes. I limped from rack to rack, pushed through the sea of women. It was extreme shopping. I started to tire. I was weary. For the first time in my life, I was getting shopping legs, and thought it might be time to give up...


There passed a weary time.
Each throat
Was parched, and glazed each eye.

A weary time ! a weary time !
How glazed each weary eye,
When looking westward, I beheld
A something in the sky.

Suddenly I saw something glinting gold, tucked away at the back of a rack I had already ransacked. There they were. The Michael Kors pumps.They were tucked away inconspicuously with their heel out, the gold logo plate the only thing to alert me to their presence. And next to the Michael Kors pumps? Metallic Kenneth Cole Reaction wedge sandals! Yes! Things were looking up! And next to the Kenneth Coles, black leather Point Zero Mary Janes! Yes! Surely it would be smooth sailing from here!


And so it 'twas, dear reader, that Dani sallied forth from Hastings Street, six shoes richer...her faith in the Army and Navy Shoe Sale restored. Was it worth the struggle, the lost hope, the despair? Only the fashion gods can tell...

From the 26th Floor, I Can See Summer...

...it's right outside my office window...hints of it...I can see it coming. I'm looking out over downtown rooftops, past the West End highrises, all the way west to English Bay. The sun is shining, the water is sparkling, a deep blue at the Bay, lightening to a pale cornflower blue as the Bay opens up into Georgia Strait. I can see the sand of Spanish Banks and my feet are wistfully wishing they could be padding down the warm sand as I skip rocks into the ocean. It won't be long now, though, until I'll spend some lazy Saturday afternoons leaning up against a driftwood log at the beach, reading a book...oh, come on Summer, come on...

One Down, One to Go


So Al and I completed phase one of the Brother-Sister 10K Extravaganza we planned while out for a run this past December. We did the Sun Run 10K here in Vancouver yesterday (with 54,315 other people), with Al clocking in at 62:02 and me at 75:28. I'm a bit disappointed as I wanted to beat my time of 76:40 (or so) from last year by at least 6 minutes...but I had some technical difficulties. At about kilometre 4 I started to get noticeable blisters, despite the fact that I've been running 3-4 times a week on these shoes for about 6 weeks. Then, at about the 6.5 K mark, the blisters burst. So now my feet are in agony. I had three choices: 1. Quit. 2. Limp to the finish line in my shoes and forget about beating my time. 3. Take off my shoes and run like hell.

So, one shoe was sacrificed at a water station on West 6th, I slipped my other shoe, which had my time chip zap-strapped to it, onto my hand, and I ran the rest of the race in my pink socks, and managed to clock in around 75 minutes. I think but for the blister issue and then the dilemma of abandoning my shoe in the road, I would have made my goal of finishing in under 70 minutes. So overall, I'm...satisfied, if not happy, with my result. Al's just happy he didn't have to take a puke break, which happened on last year's 10K.

The people manning the New Balance booth in BC Place post-event heard my story and awarded me a brand new pair of socks. So, hey, I got something out of my Rocky Balboa moment. All I can say today is thank god for Band-Aid Blister Care...

Shooting on Sweeney the Movie Begins! Wait, Why Aren't I In This?!


Ahhh, the Sweeney Todd Movie. I'll try and get over my bitter disappointment at not being cast in it (couldn't I just be an extra in Fogg's Asylum?!)...Sweeney is by far my favorite show and the ONLY show I've ever done two separate productions of. Of course Tim Burton casts Johnny Depp as Sweeney and Helena Bonham Carter as Mrs. Lovett. I only worry that Tim Burton will make Sweeney TOO campy...sure, it's Halloweenishly funny and over-the-top, what with the whole killing-people-and-putting -them-in-pies motif, but it's meant to be dark and sad and Victorian; I would hate to see Sweeney look like a cross between Edward Scissorhands and Willy Wonka. Oh, wait. Too late. He actually looks like a cross between Edward Scissorhands, Willy Wonka and Cruella DeVille. My bad. Nice razor, though.


I am a Bad Mother.

OK, so I'll admit I've been working long hours lately and haven't been home as much. That's why I have a cat, not a dog or a child (!). BUT, correspondingly, Currie has been worse and worse behaved. It's culminated in the last few nights with her meowing all night. And I mean, ALLLLLL night. Even when shut out of the bedroom, she's meowing and crying in this really pitiful I'm-too-upset-to-even-meow type of moan. And she's biting my feet. Alot. That was the straw that broke the camel's back, when she started attacking my feet as I walked around the house. Today I was lying on the bed talking on the phone and she jumped at my face. I was starting to freak out that maybe she had rabies or something (nevermind that there hasn't been a case of feline rabies in BC in...decades). Where had my happy, sunny little cuddly kitten gone?

So I did a bit of a Google to find out why the hell my cat seemed to think my feet were new items of prey and why she all of a sudden had a temper. Turns out...she's neglected and acting out. I'm not playing with her enough and the fact that I carry her around like a sack of potatoes when I AM home is apparently not enough...the kid needs exercise. She's the kitten equivalent of an obese 7 year old playing videogames instead of playing outside. The foot-attacking is the main symptom of neglected kittens.

Do I feel like a crappy mother now? Yes I do. And my hopes of ever trying to balance this job with, oh, I don't know, a healthy home life, have gone out the window (at least for tonight) when I can't even keep my frickin' CAT happy. To assuage my guilt, Currie and I have just wrapped up half an hour of playing with her Cat Dancer (read: a piece of string stuck to a wand), topped off with a few rounds against Uncle Skunk (a little catnip skunk). Then, in true bad mother fashion, I plied her with treats to make her feel REALLLLLY loved...

I Am Changing...

I like to read Jann Arden's online journal. In her latest entry, she said the following about changing:

What I have thought about myself, I have surely become. It's hard coming to terms with that. What you think you are, you are. What you think you can do, you will do. What you think you can't do, you won't.

I like it. It makes sense. I would say I believe it to be true. I guess my challenge is, how do you get to a place where you THINK you can do something that right now, you think you can't? Where do you get the strength to go from thinking one thing about yourself, something destructive, to thinking something positive? Where does that journey start? Who starts it? Can only YOU start it for you? That's a little daunting. There are things about myself I have wished for years that I could change, and yet I feel they are unchangeable. How do I go to a place where I can think what I am, and become it?

Jann Arden: www.jannarden.com

Television Confessions Part 2

My new TV drug of choice is Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. I know, I know, I've come to it a little late when it's been put on indefinite hiatus and it's too late for me to spearhead a Saving Aaron Sorkin campaign. But damn, that show is good. It combines all your favorite Sorkin elements...brisk, witty walk n' talks, Brad Whitford, sarcastic quips, Timothy Busfield, sarcastic quips, Brad Whitford...and minus all that pesky U.S. politics, pro-America stuff! And with SHOWBIZ! Could a show be any more tailor-made for me? I don't think so. Anyways, I watched 16 (yes, I said 16) episodes in a row on Saturday.

Yes, I have no life. But I have good TV. And that's all that matters.

You Never Know What's Under the Couch...

...it could be some spare change, or it could be something more, uh....substantial? So my friend Zak in New York told me the best "what the hell is that under the couch?!" story tonight. He was cleaning up last night because his parents were coming for dinner, and turned one of the couch pillows over and found what appeared to be...a chicken breast. Then he found another one, and was understandably bemused at he and his roommate's horrific housekeeping blunder in allowing what appeared to be two chicken breasts rot under the couch cushions.

Upon closer examination, he realized they were the largest silicone bra inserts he had EVER seen. A few weeks earlier, Zak and his friend had brought some lovely ladies home from some New York club and Zak's friend and some girl had gotten busy on the couch...and obviously at some point mid-makeout session she distracted Zak's friend by shouting "Hey, what's that?!" and pointing in the opposite direction so she could slip 'em out of her bra and under the couch unnoticed. But, from Zak's account, these puppies were so big there's no way he COULDN'T have noticed.

So the inserts have pride of place on Zak's bookshelf at the moment, but he's planning on delivering them to his friend at work, in a Tiffany's box. Classic.

At the Dog Park



People are crazy about their dogs here. I mean, craaazzzee. More crazy than I am about my cat... today I went with Annie and Drew when they took Stoke to the beach at the Maritime Museum for a swim, and there was a birthday party in full swing. Yes, Logan the Pug was one year old, and there were balloons, "pupcakes," goody bags and coffee for the parents. I met a very nice black pug named Herbie. I have always said that if I get a dog, it will be a black pug named Iggy. I don't know why but Herbie's mom got mad when I kept calling Herbie Iggy and tried to smuggle him away in my overcoat...



Revelstoke Kaderly-Demerse, aka My Favorite Dog, with a Big Stick (also-the snout of his friend Brody the black lab).



And, just because, Ms. Currie the Kitten, in the laundry basket. Unimpressed by all this dog talk and wondering when Vancouver will have its own Kitten Bakery, since we have like, 4 dog bakeries...

Indian Night


Last night I tried my hand at following in my dad's footsteps and cooking Indian for my friends. On the menu: chicken korma, pilau rice, masala green beans with fenugreek, naan with homemade raita, and a dish my dad made up called Fish Curry Dani. I think everything was edible and fairly enjoyable (at least my friends made a good attempt to make me feel that way); I have to work on my timing so that I can, you know, feed everyone by midnight...

Rick aka Popo's Fish Curry Dani

1 medium onion, sliced in strings
1 1/2 cups chopped tomato
1 1/2 tbsp. vegetable oil
1 1/2 tbsp. Biryani curry paste
1 1/2 cups Rogan Josh sauce (tomato, buttermilk, masala spices)
white fish such as cod, snapper or halibut (2-3 small pieces per person)

Heat the oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add the onion, and cook for 2-3 minutes, until soft. Add the Biryani paste, and fry onions in Biryani paste for another 2-3 minutes. Add the tomatoes and Rogan Josh sauce. Heat to a soft boil; add the fish pieces, cover, and simmer for 20 minutes.

Serve with basmati rice.