Archive for » June, 2009 «

Thursday, June 25th, 2009 | Author: Trevor Ellestad

So it seems to be confirmed– not only has Farrah Fawcett departed us, but also Michael Jackson.  On this cloudy day in the midst of our apparent summer, our flesh is not as red as we’d expect and our undies aren’t filled with sand, but we are now part of a world in which Michael Jackson will forever be late to the party.

Memories of a younger me dancing frantically around my living room will never be the same.

The text that spread the news this afternoon confirmed that 13 year old boys around the world would now be safe, and although it’s a tough one to argue, I can’t help but feel a little sore (gross) for the guy.  It’s a shame to characterize a man that brought so much joy to my childhood with the news that’s surrounded him in recent years.

Perhaps these past years he was slowly preparing to fully embody the ghost of all of our childhood dancethons by fading into a sickly shade of white; slipping and gliding into an insanity that only he would have fully understood.

For all it’s worth Michael, I will always remember you as the musical genius that you were…  The scrawny remnants that remained of you in these times, will always be nothing more than your graceful departure from a life of extraordinary circumstances.

Monday, June 15th, 2009 | Author: Trevor Ellestad

I often dream of the fall.

The slow and graceful escape from the hands of gravity and the float that supports my legs and arms as I drift toward the ground.  The mall in Bangkok and the 7 story atrium that twisted and screwed its way toward the ceiling and the freedom that I found in the fall from such heights.

16_04_2009The unfinished artwork and stories that followed it are now lost in the depths of twisted scribbles in journals, housed in boxes, in stacks, in the living room.

This spring has been enveloped by the scent of decay.  And we’d all be fools to argue that we didn’t see it coming.  The conversations that had been held, the cards that had been pulled, and the endless thoughts that ran through each of our minds… of things coming to an end and new possibilities potentially beginning… this season has surely been ripe.

The weddings that have been planned knew no place in their registers for events such as these that have followed.

I’ve managed to go so far as to create a new story: the ending of the stream of breath.  And all too soon seen the consequences that have manifested themselves.  I’ve blamed my relentless partying on past events, and in turn become the witness of some new tragedy.

Only weeks ago , sitting with you there at the bottom of Main, I was trying to find the words to reassure you that there were fresh beginnings and epic transformations that would show themselves as soon as the gray clouds cleared from the horizon.  But I was telling you the only truth that I knew then.  Because I haven’t quite figured how to separate the real from the fiction. 

Because now, this week, I am the one who fell.

Eyes stricken, and ears that can’t stand the sounds of the street party any longer.

Lips letting loose.

The slow and graceful escape from gravity… The inevitable rush… The speed that confuses the dreaming mind, is something we only know in our waking wanderings.

The bridge and the wind.  The way it must have felt to go rushing and not gliding towards the waiting tide.  And the impact and the way in which the water must have mutated you right there.  The fondling arms of our fair aquatics and your fragile frame.

The loss.

The dream.  My graceful fall from grace.  The gigantic Christmas tree and the waiting arms of every coniferous bow that waited with its fingers outstretched.  The way each and every arm broke my fall so slowly.  And the eventual impact, so graceful… The slide…

And my unscathed body…

That stood, to walk away.

Monday, June 08th, 2009 | Author: Trevor Ellestad

As posted on homorazzi.com

Last year I bought myself a desk.  I thought that at least if I had the proper tools to accomplish my daily writing and reasoning, that perhaps, some actual work might be accomplished within the walls of my home.  Since then I’ve gone to such lengths as to blame the lack of natural light, the absence of fresh air, or even the sound of the neighbours below me when it came to my feeble attempts at getting work done at home.  So as I sit here in the coffee shop far and away from my home, pondering the considerable funds that I’ve dispensed towards just setting up a place to work, it suddenly occurred to me that perhaps, for some of us, there will always be an incapability when it comes to getting anything done at home.  Perhaps for some of us, we will never fully settle into the places that we dwell in, and we will always be looking for a better way of life, or an excuse to rationalize why we haven’t met a personal deadline, the perfect mate, or why we haven’t arrived at where we feel we should be in our lives.

It all started at an early age in my teens.  My parents lived far away from the “hustle and bustle” of downtown Calgary, and for someone who developed an early addiction to the noises of street traffic and chaos, finding any sort of relaxation in my quiet little bedroom at the edge of town was impossible.  Along with my entirely self-created, angst-inspired imprisonment, I was also looking for any excuse for more socializing and more caffeine.  And none of this would be accomplished far and away in the suburbs; a place where I was more likely to hear the sound of a horse’s out breath, than the sparks and excitement of an impromptu street party, or the gentle words of a handsome fellow sitting beside me in a coffee shop.
So I learned over the years the skills and abilities that it took to somehow successfully get work done amongst this “hustle and bustle”, this chaos.  I adapted and adjusted my headphones accordingly, and learned to be completely content for hours on end plugging away at some piece of work; a glance at a hot guy walking by, my only distraction or break.  So when I inevitably tried in my mid-twenties to start trying to get things done around home, you can see that I was in for some struggle.  I sat myself at that new desk of mine and within minutes found myself up and about, making tea, or out on the balcony watching the cars drive by.

So when I take all these bits of information, these repetitious patterns and I start applying them to other aspects of my life, things suddenly start to make sense to me.  I look at the fact that I have lived in no less than 10 different homes and 3 different cities over the past 10 years.  I see the failed relationships and the mental barriers that I’ve built: always looking out the window for something or someone who I would consider a better “catch” or a greater frontier.  I see my anxiety and my lack of focus, and I wonder, for a person trained in the relaxing and fulfilling practices of yoga, meditation, and western herbalism, how truly zen I am.

So I’ve taken this weekend off.  I’ve given myself the rare gift of space from the city and all of its offerings.  Instead of spending my nights surrounded by bumping stereo speakers and the chaos of downtown, I’ve instead surrounded myself with the covers of my bed and the comfort of a constant stream of warm cups of tea.  Perhaps once in a while for the strongest and most durable of us, it takes complete denial of the sensory overload of the city for us to realize that we are not as invincible as we would like to think.  Perhaps, our weaknesses are all too easily hidden below the chaos of a hung-over mind, and the perpetual buzz of our blackberrys.  Once in a while it does each and every one of us a lot of good to take a step back and look at the patterns that we continue to repeat, and the things that we deny ourselves.

So it may take a long time to completely come to terms with my short –comings.  It may take me the rest of my life to settle comfortably into a home that I love or a relationship in which I feel total satisfaction.  But truthfully I must allow myself to be open to the fact that I may always be looking out the window for a better home with a better man and a better future.

Last year I bought myself a desk.  And although I tell myself every day that I’m going to start getting productive around home, sitting down and making things happen in the comfort of my office, that poor desk just sits there, alone,  gathering the dust and clutter of my always chaotic life.

Category: Writing Vancouver  | Tags:  | Leave a Comment
Monday, June 08th, 2009 | Author: Trevor Ellestad

As posted on homorazzi.com

I was raised in a loving and structured environment that was founded on the ideals of exploration and education.  Aunts, uncles, and my mother have all found themselves as prominent players within the educational infrastructure of Alberta.  Each of them have toiled to not only achieve the positions in which they now hold, but time and time again, have also struggled to somehow complete their jobs on a daily basis under the ever-increasing set of standards, requirements, and obligations that have been enforced upon them on a daily basis.

I’ve always imagined being an elementary student in one of the schools in which my mother has held a position.  I imagined her to be the type of hard-assed educator that expects nothing less than excellence from every one of her students.  I’ve imagined the students grumbling under their breath when they discover that they’ve landed in Mrs. Ellestad’s section in the upcoming year, knowing that she will be pushing them harder than the other teachers in school and knowing that they aren’t in for as free of a ride as some of the other teachers might have allowed.  It’s only until years down the road that these same students will realize the diligence, courage, and persistence that such educators have instilled in them at such an early age.

And as much of a hard-ass as my mother has always been, pushing her offspring and students to achieve everything that she knows they can, she’s always allowed for the sort of clarity and open-minded thought that this world not only allows for, but also has come to expect.

So when I started hearing the whispers of Bill 44 coming through the news feeds, I immediately thought of the effect that it would have on my family’s employment.  And to hear of Bill 44’s approval this morning, has not only brought a sense of fear to me for the future of education in Alberta, but also despair about the potential of educators in our country to do the best job possible preparing future generations of young folk for the diverse world in which they are a part of.

My mother returned to school in the early 90’s, a time in which the economics of Alberta were not feeling so gracious towards a hard working couple with two young children.  It was a time in which my self-employed father struggled to not only keep food on the table, but also to keep his wife in University.  But through it all she emerged at the top of her class with optimism towards her change of vocation and a bright outlook on the influence that she could have toward a group of young Canadians that would be at the forefront of a bright new future for our progressive nation.

Since that time I have seen my mother struggle and succeed in her position as an educator.  I have come home many late nights to find her sleeping amongst a pile of half-graded papers.  I have seen her spend long sunny weekends inside developing lesson plans, while still balancing all the work that goes into raising a family.  We have learned so much from each other, her strength and diligence has given me the courage to grow into the independent, intelligent gay man that I’ve become, and I’ve hated to see the pressure that she has felt from parents, superiors, and her province when it has come to what she is allowed to say and do. I have seen my mother retreat into her position, prepared to more comfortably act as a pawn of her government, than the dynamic, creative, and loving individual that she is.

I have always believed that some of the most important education that I have received in my lifetime has come to me through my family.  And although I was lucky enough to be a member of a family that embraced and supported diversity, we were never without our faults.  My mother and I struggled through the worst of my teen-angst, but slowly we learned to come to terms with the fact that neither of us were without our faults. But for all that my family provided me, it was my environment that taught me to not trust the first thing that you hear. I ask myself now where I would be if I hadn’t had an extraneous network of strong educators to help me expand and open my mind.  Before I even came out as a gay man to my parents, I had a strong back bone of support that not only came from my peers, but also from the most incredible set of educators that the Calgary Separate School system could have provided me.  Not once did any of them fear that they might have been overstepping their bounds by providing me with the independent adult thought that I so needed at the time.

We are all a part of a network of incredible connections.  We grumble when we are pushed harder than we would prefer.  More than once I’ve grumbled at a professor whose workload has prevented me from partying as hard as I would like, but I’ve always emerged at the end of the term with a greater understanding of the course material and the world around me.  If we allow our education system to be dictated completely by the diverse set of family values that permeate our lives, how are any of our educators ever going to feel free to take a risk, to push their students to question the world around them, or to cultivate the attitudes of acceptance that our world demands?

And perhaps this is why I find Bill 44 so insulting to Alberta and Canada as a whole.  To see a province of teachers once again be restricted in the ways in which they are allowed to operate, not only takes a blow to me personally because of my mother, but also because I pride myself on the free and progressive society that I continue to believe I reside in.

It’s easy to sit back and relax out here in B.C. and consider ourselves unscathed.  It’s easy to look to our eastern neighbors and scoff at the silly conservative structure that they continue to reinforce themselves within.  It’s easy to think that we have it better without their snow and their structure.  But are we really??  Are we really so immune from the attitudes that reside in the places outside of B.C.??

I guess I can only hope that we are.  And I guess that I can only hope that the youth of Alberta who are most in need of an open-mind and an open-ear find what they are looking for in places outside of the school system, because their teachers may no longer be able to provide for them what they need.

So to every educator who ever forced me to push my limits, to every educator who ever threatened to fail me, and to every educator who ever provided me with a fresh outlook on the world around me, this one is for you.

And to my mother…

The most hard-assed educator of all.

Friday, June 05th, 2009 | Author: Trevor Ellestad

The journalism hits me hard.

And the headlines and the tabloids and the spaces between.

So, I’m kerning the distance from that night to now.

The cement, and the unfinished walls.

The skylights and the honey buckets.

I’m my own personal concubine.

And I learn from mistakes–slow enough to litter the margins, the gutters, and the ditches with all the things I should have held on to–my behaviour is starting to lose its appeal.

I’m my own personal concubine.

Just a glance is all I ask, from my handsome and relentless mind.

This drama runs through my hands and sticks to my fingers.  I clung to your words and they tried to stick to me too.

They bounced.

It was his death that had me stay with you so long, and I sometimes wonder how I can be so foolish.  To think I should have gone!  I tried to drop you then.  right then and there.  Tried to drop you for all the corners and the fire escapes–I couldn’t shake you off my tail.

But, I was never supposed to go in the first place.

So I’m hitting it hard with headlines and tabloids.  I’m facing myself with caps locked characters that all seem to scream at me.

But I’m just waiting until the kerning leaves just enough space to take these words and leave them as letters–

floating, drifting, mixing, and eventually finding the fire escape

Category: Writing Vancouver  | Tags:  | Leave a Comment
Wednesday, June 03rd, 2009 | Author: Trevor Ellestad

The bus driver greets me this morning with the most exuberant “good morning,” that I’ve heard in ages. My sleep-ridden eyes and bed-weary bones seem to immediately protest to his cheery demeanour that’s doing a pretty shabby job of hiding the fact that his bus is 10 minutes late. The computerized voice that announces the next bus-stop rings through the vehicle along with the irritating chime that they’ve installed the last couple of weeks, bringing a confusing nautical charm to an already frustrating daily commute up Main Street. But the bus driver, who’s apparently popping “good-time-sunshine-pills” this morning, feels the urge to announce the stops to the passengers as well, stifling the friendly computerized bus-lady’s voice into the background.

“And here we are at…. 25th avenue… KIIIIIIING EDWARD!”

And with that, I’m all of a sudden transported to a time of trolley cars, stovetop hats and pinwheels, a time when there was more excitement in the little things. This old-timey age in my mind echoes an age of sounder planning and decision making, where I surely would have left more time to catch my morning transport than the thin margin I now allow myself. In this time I would have happily sat on the bench waiting for my ride with a smile on my face and a pipe in my lips, and it wouldn’t have phased me in the least if the bus was 10 minutes late.

But this morning, as gaily and cheerily as I was greeted, I still couldn’t help but be totally gutted by the tardiness of the bus and the added stress that it would add to my morning. Thankfully though, through this fictitious stress I manage to accumulate, I take a moment to think about reliance: reliance on the services that we expect to have available to us at our beck and call, and the reliance that we have on the people in our lives.

I’m always amazed at the ability of public transit to completely fuck itself up schedule wise, when perhaps I should be more amazed at its ability to somehow co-ordinate itself in the intricate manner that it does. Busses, trains, and boats snake their way through our fair city every day creating what would seem to be a massive web of convoluted routes and patterns. So I ask myself this morning, is it fair of any of us to rely on anything other than ourselves, for, well, anything?

I’m sure that each and every one of us has found ourselves at one time, completely fixated on the silent phones in our pockets, or our empty email inboxes. I’m sure at one time each of us has fallen head over heels for someone, or at least convinced ourselves that we’re falling, when we’re in fact just getting hooked on a highly addictive form of sexual narcotic. I’m sure many of us have in an awkward situation, hidden behind the coat-tails of a friend, or sent another to deal with a problem that we don’t feel fully prepared to face ourselves.

Each and every one of us exhibits reliance on something; money, sex, power, and religion all play key roles, becoming enabling agents pandering love on street corners. Happiness, peace, and the devices in which we achieve them, all at once become sturdy crutches for us to rest our weary bones. It’s only when we can’t remember walking on our own that we should concern ourselves with this reliance. Spend too long on your crutches and you’ll all too soon realize that your bones have deteriorated and your legs no longer know how to stand on their own.

But once in a long while, the cell-phones in our pockets begin to buzz, and our inboxes are no longer the deserted expanses of cyberspace that they had so fervently let us believe. Once in a long while things turn around;  the world surprises us, and we find this reliance isn’t such a terrible thing. The busses all seem to come down Main Street eventually. We all get where we need to be day after day. We all put in our time, clocking in and out. We get done what needs to get done, and we do it with the help of an intricate web of connections that all seem to come together when they need to. Once in a while the world surprises us in even the most irritating cheery voice, when all we want is a little peace and quiet.

People surprise us…

And… Once in a while, hopefully, we surprise ourselves.

As posted on homorazzi.com

Tuesday, June 02nd, 2009 | Author: Trevor Ellestad

Floored By Bill 44

I was raised in a loving and structured environment that was founded on the ideals of exploration and education. Aunts, uncles, and my mother have all found themselves as prominent players within the educational infrastructure of Alberta.  Each of them have toiled to not only achieve the positions in which they now hold, but time and time again, have also struggled to somehow complete their jobs on a daily basis under the ever-increasing set of standards, requirements, and obligations that have been enforced upon them on a daily basis.

I’ve always imagined being an elementary student in one of the schools in which my mother has held a position.  I imagined her to be the type of hard-assed educator that expects nothing less than excellence from every one of her students.  I’ve imagined the students grumbling under their breath when they discover that they’ve landed in Mrs. Ellestad’s section in the upcoming year, knowing that she will be pushing them harder than the other teachers in school and knowing that they aren’t in for as free of a ride as some of the other teachers might have allowed.  It’s only until years down the road that these same students will realize the diligence, courage, and persistence that such educators have instilled in them at such an early age.

And as much of a hard-ass as my mother has always been, pushing her offspring and students to achieve everything that she knows they can, she’s always allowed for the sort of clarity and open-minded thought that this world not only allows for, but also has come to expect.

So when I started hearing the whispers of Bill 44 coming through the news feeds, I immediately thought of the effect that it would have on my family’s employment.  And to hear of Bill 44’s approval this morning, has not only brought a sense of fear to me for the future of education in Alberta, but also despair about the potential of educators in our country to do the best job possible preparing future generations of young folk for the diverse world in which they are a part of.

My mother returned to school in the early 90’s, a time in which the economics of Alberta were not feeling so gracious towards a hard working couple with two young children.  It was a time in which my self-employed father struggled to not only keep food on the table, but also to keep his wife in University.  But through it all she emerged at the top of her class with optimism towards her change of vocation and a bright outlook on the influence that she could have toward a group of young Canadians that would be at the forefront of a bright new future for our progressive nation.

Since that time I have seen my mother struggle and succeed in her position as an educator.  I have come home many late nights to find her sleeping amongst a pile of half-graded papers.  I have seen her spend long sunny weekends inside developing lesson plans, while still balancing all the work that goes into raising a family.  We have learned so much from each other, her strength and diligence has given me the courage to grow into the independent, intelligent gay man that I’ve become, and I’ve hated to see the pressure that she has felt from parents, superiors, and her province when it has come to what she is allowed to say and do. I have seen my mother retreat into her position, prepared to more comfortably act as a pawn of her government, than the dynamic, creative, and loving individual that she is.

I have always believed that some of the most important education that I have received in my lifetime has come to me through my family.  And although I was lucky enough to be a member of a family that embraced and supported diversity, we were never without our faults.  My mother and I struggled through the worst of my teen-angst, but slowly we learned to come to terms with the fact that neither of us were without our faults. But for all that my family provided me, it was my environment that taught me to not trust the first thing that you hear. I ask myself now where I would be if I hadn’t had an extraneous network of strong educators to help me expand and open my mind.  Before I even came out as a gay man to my parents, I had a strong back bone of support that not only came from my peers, but also from the most incredible set of educators that the Calgary Separate School system could have provided me.  Not once did any of them fear that they might have been overstepping their bounds by providing me with the independent adult thought that I so needed at the time.

We are all a part of a network of incredible connections.  We grumble when we are pushed harder than we would prefer.  More than once I’ve grumbled at a professor whose workload has prevented me from partying as hard as I would like, but I’ve always emerged at the end of the term with a greater understanding of the course material and the world around me.  If we allow our education system to be dictated completely by the diverse set of family values that permeate our lives, how are any of our educators ever going to feel free to take a risk, to push their students to question the world around them, or to cultivate the attitudes of acceptance that our world demands?

And perhaps this is why I find Bill 44 so insulting to Alberta and Canada as a whole.  To see a province of teachers once again be restricted in the ways in which they are allowed to operate, not only takes a blow to me personally because of my mother, but also because I pride myself on the free and progressive society that I continue to believe I reside in.

It’s easy to sit back and relax out here in B.C. and consider ourselves unscathed.  It’s easy to look to our eastern neighbors and scoff at the silly conservative structure that they continue to reinforce themselves within.  It’s easy to think that we have it better without their snow and their structure.  But are we really??  Are we really so immune from the attitudes that reside in the places outside of B.C.??

I guess I can only hope that we are.  And I guess that I can only hope that the youth of Alberta who are most in need of an open-mind and an open-ear find what they are looking for in places outside of the school system, because their teachers may no longer be able to provide for them what they need.

So to every educator who ever forced me to push my limits, to every educator who ever threatened to fail me, and to every educator who ever provided me with a fresh outlook on the world around me, this one is for you.

And to my mother…

The most hard-assed educator of all.

Monday, June 01st, 2009 | Author: Trevor Ellestad

I don’t assume my genius, or what of it has remained.  I rise to the top and I sink below.  My choices are dictated in the moment, and the regret that follows knows no limits to the moment that’s just passed it.

Sometimes talking just gets old, even though I often say too much.

But I am slowly but surely regaining my mind back from the brain that keeps on tick tick ticking away.