Thursday, August 27, 2009

Finally Sephora

Recently and finally, the beauty giant Sephora has opened its doors in the Western-most Canada.


After years of hunting down Sephora stores while traveling or endlessly waiting for online orders to arrive (Sephora can take as long as three weeks), I have the option of simply walking in and choosing from a number of cult favourites and otherwise hard to come by products. Hooray!! Two stores have opened in Lower Mainland, one in Coquitlam Centre and one in Pacific Centre on July 10th. Metrotown will be opening one in the fall. All who know me also know of my addiction to the store.


They would be surprised that I was not standing in the line up downtown Vancouver at 9 am, July 10th; you know the one that snaked out of the mall's doors and around the corner of the building. The one, beautiful Vancouverites--girls and boys alike-- braved for two hours just to get into Sephora's door. I waited until the next day, Saturday, so that I may experience this historic moment with my best friend. Fully worth it, we were third in line, half an hour before the store opened. Three hours later, spent and happily carrying bags full of new goodies, we exited the store.

Sephora offers plethora of brands such as Ole Henriksen, Ojon, Fresh, my personal favourite Korres, and many others. The beauty experts, fully trained, are waiting to help you choose the right product or offer a makeover. Many of the brands they carry were previously available to us only online. Keep in mind that the stores still only carry a small percentage of what is available through their website www.sephora.com . Sephora' conveniently located stores now offer me quick access to my favourite things, without the travel or wait. Have you checked it out yet?

As local beauty junkies fully know, Sephora is not the first beauty shop in Vancouver to carry some these lines. Beauty Mark in Yaletown has been operating for years and is still worth the gander. Aside from carrying almost the full line of Ole Henriksen, John Masters and Stila--which has recently been pulled from the Holt Renfrew shelves-- among others, they offer an array of funky jewellery, under things, bags, etc. Another store, Beauty Bar, similarly operates in Kits on West 4th. Both of these have been my haunts for the unusual and the effective for many years. But I live outside of Vancouver and so in order to shop there I had to travel of over an hour each way. With two and a half kids, a husband and school work, some days that was an impossible task.

With Coquitlam Sephora, new age has dawned.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Old Vancouver

I love history. Herzog exhibition at the Art Gallery downtown Vancouvers couple of years ago was amazing. I dragged my children to see it. As a matter of fact we have been to about every museum and heritage site in Lower Mainland. When we go on holidays, our initiary includes ruin and museum visits. To my husband's dismay. Discussing an upcoming trip with my eldest and our possible visit to the B.C museum, he mentioned and old Vancouver footage from the 1920' he watched in school. The eternal geek that I am, logically I deduced I might find it on You Tube. And I did. Very interesting snipet of a life long gone:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JpPhg9AG_H4
Just finished the third semester of the two year (five semester) program. Yeah! Somewhat bittersweet, as the class said goodbye in the usual manner, with a pub night. All misty eyed we hugged with assurances that we will see each other very soon. No doubt, because five weeks goes by really fast and before we know it, we'll be squirming under the preasure of of full-time, full work-load fall semester. But that is what makes this so interesting. As this is more or less my first college experience, having been to busy wasting my youth, the bonding in times of misery that happens between classmates is an unforgetable experience. That is not to say that we, or some of us, at times do not retard to bad behaviours, worthy of high schoolers. But I miss them already, my smart, creative classmates who teach me so much. Have a great August! Here we come Diana!

Thursday, June 4, 2009

One Way

The teacher walked down the hall with small furtive steps. His worn jeans slid down slightly, barely held up by a belt on his thin body. His chequered shirt worn and faded hung on his rounded shoulders and tucked into his jeans low below his slight paunch. He sported a full beard which got messy when he ate and forced his habit of sporadically running his fingers through it in search of lost bits of food. His hair was thinning on top and curled a bit too long at his collar. His nose was large and puffy like that of heavy drinkers, but lacked some of the purple tinge. As he turned into his classroom, the deep-in-thought look in his eye quickly changed to one of engagement. Some of the students chattered, paying no attention to his entrance, while others anxiously watched his every move. His eyes scanned their faces and he brought their attention to himself. There was a new student in his class. Her agitated eyes fluttered over the classroom. He always felt sorry for the fresh ones, so lost, expectant and awkward. Like him, in some way. He moved slightly towards her and introduced her to the class, which like one whole organism turned to look at her. She blushed as the corners of her mouth twitched with a nervous smile and she kept her eyes on the teacher as if he was her life line.
“How much English can you speak?” the teacher asked his new student.
In a panic the student looked back at a classmate, the one from the same country as her, seeking help.
“Book, boy” she replied apologetically, her fingers making the symbol for little.
The teacher continued to question her, as he did with all the new ones, regardless of their ability to understand. That was his method, talk to them, get their brains working, press them to learn and figure it out. He was good at teaching ESL and felt at home with these kids who did not fit in well, at least not yet, whose friend he always became, who needed him to help them with their first tentative steps in their adoptive country.
He was driving in his beat up Honda , approaching the always-jammed bridge, to his home in West Vancouver. Making his way out of the West End his thoughts were on his daughter. She was coming this weekend. He would need to pick her up from her mother’s across town. Seeing his ex-wife was something he always dreaded, for more often than not, bitter words would be exchanged. His daughter looked like her mother, with jet black hair, pale skin and amazing green eyes, but had his disposition. Easily hurt and sensitive, she was often quiet and withdrawn. He worried about her, not wanting her to go down his path. That reminded him, tonight was the meeting and he had to go.
Once over the bridge, he did not stop at Caper’s as he would when he was expecting company for dinner, usually one of his students when they were lonely and in need of social interaction. With no one to cook for but himself it did not seem worth the trouble. He would just make a sandwich or grab something on his way to the hall. At home the teacher was greeted by his family, the two large black cats and his loving black retriever. All three had long hair running wild like his and owned names, which resonated with his past, like Tequila and Bo’ jangles. He fixed them their dinner and went out to the garden, his pride and joy, to check on the fall harvest. His garden was lush and in full September splendour. It was what he loved and requested all his students to love it too. He was really a lucky man when he thought about it, standing there in his garden awash in the late autumn sun. The teacher had lived here for a long time. His landlord who lived next door, out of loyalty or sympathy he did not know which, never raised his rent. He paid the same sum as he did 20 years ago, and so he lavished in one of Vancouver’s most exclusive neighbourhoods on a teacher’s salary.
Sure a lucky man, to be alive, to be breathing. But every day was a fight.
The teacher entered the ramshackle building, walked through the musty, dimly lit hall and turned through the double doors into the old auditorium. Up front, people were getting ready, putting the head table on the stage and hanging the last of the banners up. The podium stood to the side, lonely and expecting.
A year ago his doctor had told him to quit or he would be dead inside of 6 months. After losing everything, including his family, this grain of truth struck home, and he quit. Now his little frame ascended the two steps leading up to the podium and took his place at it. To the right of him, his cake sat on a table decorated with a congratulatory phrase and purple icing flowers. A one year candle crowned the lettering. The teacher adjusted the microphone and looked out into the sea of faces, men and women looking up at him, all like him in one way.
“Hi, my name is Robbie and I am an alcoholic...”