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Archive for August, 2008

From CNN:

‘Can’t we be friends?’ Mending a broken heart

By Michel Vincent Miller

(OPRAH.com) — A young man I know, still in love with his girlfriend, tried to go along with her plea to remain friends after she told him that she wanted the freedom to see other men.

A couple of months later, she invited him to her birthday party. In the course of the evening, while searching for a bathroom, he saw her through an open bedroom door passionately kissing another man. Feeling deeply hurt and angry, he later confronted her, whereupon she retorted, “But we said we’d be friends.”

The girlfriend’s response seems lacking in empathy and concern — traits we usually associate with friendship — but one wonders whether the young man wasn’t setting himself up for a fall in the first place.

“Can’t we be friends?” It’s an old refrain, ready-made for the one who wants out of a relationship to deliver to the one who doesn’t. Frank Sinatra gave it a permanent place in popular culture with the song “Can’t We Be Friends?” (“This is how the story ends / She’s gonna turn me down and say / Can’t we be just friends?”) Sinatra, who never backed away from melancholy (at least in his music), understood a thing or two about mourning. Oprah:com: Stuck in the past? How to move on

And mourning is the theme that matters here. Trying to be friends immediately following a breakup tends to prevent the rejected partner (and maybe both partners) from mourning the death of romantic love — from accepting its finality by suffering it all the way through.

As painful as this can be, it ultimately performs an essential function. Behind the tears, mourning has silent work to do: It binds up the torn places where love was and gives them a chance to heal.

This is crucial because falling in love carries us beyond our customary limits of self-expression into territory that puts our sense of self at risk. Two people in love place much of themselves in each other’s hands for safekeeping; that kind of interdependence is why the loss of an intimate partner entails the depressing experience of being left behind with a diminished sense of your own existence.

Grieving the end of a relationship is a gradual process of extracting the “I” from a vanishing “we.” It provides a way — the only way — to retrieve what you invested in a lover or spouse who has departed. Mourning is like casting a line into dark waters and trying to reel in those parts of yourself that you surrendered to the relationship before they, too, disappear.

Although friendship just after the split may offer temporary relief, it blocks the slow but necessary passage from loss to restoration of independence. Oprah:com: Meet women who started over and found their true calling

A number of years ago, I saw a patient who felt that her sex life was essentially over because she had suddenly been left by the man with whom she had experienced her first grand erotic passion. She did everything she could to win him back — calling, sending gifts, even promising to change anything about herself that wasn’t satisfying to him — all to no avail.

It took extensive work (and many tears) before she was able to see that the unparalleled sexiness she attributed to him was in fact the power of her own sexual desire. At this point, his image began to lose its magnetism for her.

What her experience suggests is that if you give in to mourning, unsettling though it may be, it will eventually finish its work. Only then do you again become free to fully inhabit your present life and turn from a sorrowing fixation on the past to the exciting unknown of the future.

All human development entails suffering losses that need to be grieved. At every stage of life, we are propelled beyond familiarity and security into a new situation: A baby’s first steps mean that she will soon leave behind the comforting security of being carried. A young adult going off to college feels the thrill of freedom but has to contend with homesickness. For all the important gains, there are also losses that bring up anxiety and sadness. Grief might be thought of as the growing pain of human development.

A child’s love is really no different from dependence, and that equation haunts us to some degree all our lives. The residues of early dependence in all our intimacies play a large part in making the loss of love so hard to bear. Yet we all go through such loss, leaving behind a trail of casualties — outdated selves, broken promises, lovers we realize we chose for the wrong reasons. Mourning these helps change what can seem like failures into wisdom.

In learning how to grieve our losses, it doesn’t help that American culture, with its emphasis on romantic love and happy endings, isn’t very hospitable to mourning. But when we enter into the deeper and more difficult stretches of loving, Hollywood can’t shield us from the truth: All love stories come to an end, even those that last a lifetime. When loss hits us hard, it can be difficult to know what to do with it or even how to bear it. Many people in grief turn to antidepressants, which may reduce the pain but don’t necessarily provide much by way of self-discovery.

Mourning teaches us how to accept the end of love and helps us start the process of feeling whole again. True, the self you get back is never quite the same as the self you relinquished to your relationship; although wounds can heal, they leave scar tissue. But there’s more to gain than just surviving the breakup; there’s also the possibility of becoming more than you were, more able to undertake the experience of love in its moments of sadness as well as joy. As with any art or skill, the only way grieving can be learned is through practice — whether we like it or not.

By Michel Vincent Miller, Ph.D, from “O, The Oprah Magazine,” July 2008

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Yesterday I was driving down Yonge st on the long stretch between the lights of York Mills toward Lawrence. I saw a flash of LED’s in my rear view mirror and noticed an angry set of lights staring back at me. I saw the multiple-chevron shape an unmistakeable saab in between the lights but something was very different about that Saab. It was aggressively styled, with angled lights highlighted by a strip of LED’s, wide open intakes below the front beltline, and chrome accents in all the right places. I actually slowed down to let him pass me to see what kind of Saab it was. It said “9-3″ on the left rear flanks.

What happened to Saab? The Saab I know produces homely hatchbacks with weird styling and equally weird interior ergonomics. After a talk with my friend, I discovered that this car is the “Turbo X”, a high end version of their 9-3 sedan (and available as a wagon). Someone must’ve kidnapped their design team and fed them coke and raw meat, and I’m not talking about cola.

It features a new modern all-wheel drive system that transfers torque left-to-right on the rear axle as well as the normal front-to-back. Audi better listen up. As usual, there is an ENORMOUS price gap between the US Turbo-X ($42,510) and the Canadian Turbo-X ($54,999*). Even with our dollars latest retreat, the 7% currency gap cannot explain a 30% pricing gap by GM on the Saab.

PS: This car should only be purchased in Black.

*Canadian price is from the National Post.Saab Canada has decided not to update their website with the latest Saab model.

PPS: I can’t believe I like a Saab (That’s for you, K)

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Driver’s Republic is a new site on the scene. They have some great editorial content and fantastic visuals from their staff. Their latest article and video compares four amazing cars of 2008:

The new 4.7L Aston Martin V8 Vantage which features a new engine and more power.

The new 3.8L Porsche Carerra S which adds Direct Fuel Injection and Dual Clutch Gearbox

The venerable Audi R8, probably the first car to seriously content with the 911′s unique price/performance/usability offering.

The awe-inspiring Nissan GTR, a car that, at half the price, easily performs with the group if not exceeds.

The full article comparision is here and the video follows.

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My friend and I were walking down Yonge St. when I noticed a patio running the length of the new AMC building. It’s about four floors up and looks fantastic. There’s a big Milestone‘s sign beside it so it must be the new location for them.

There’s a few pics on Spotlight Toronto.

Photo from Spotlight Toronto

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The Pinny Cohen blog has a nice article about new car sales and why they’re dropping. It’s quite insightful and I agree with most of it.

In particular, the point about lots of leasing and leased cars entering the used car market is making many people buy used instead of new. This is one of the reasons I’ve always bought used cars – they’re priced right and many of them are not used that much at all. My 350z was two years old and only had 13,000km on it.

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I was at the local Indigo when I saw these two magazine covers. I thought it was odd that two magazines used a white porsche and a red chaser car (Car: Aston V8 Vantage, Automobile: Chevy Camero). Upon closer inspection, it looks like these two cover photos used the same Porsche Press photo of the new 911 and photoshopped the chaser car behind it. The white porsche is in the same position, the reflections on the window are exactly the same, even the trees in the background are the same!

There’s some lazy photographers at these magazine offices.

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Over the past few months I’ve been receiving these yellow cards in my mail requesting to “CALL TODAY” to update my information in some kind of Queen’s directory. Naturally suspicious, I ignored the notices until something caught my eye: a little copyright saying (c) Harris Connect, Inc. on the side of the note.

This led me to believe that Queen’s has sold my contact info to a third party company, and the information is now being used not by the university, but by a private company for commercial purposes. When I called the number (1-888-869-0786) I found out the truth.

The company has already received basic contact info from the university (name/address/phone/grad year was confirmed on the phone) and also probably the profile that I’ve filled out on the alumni website which includes my company and occupation. Moreover, that information is going to be cross-referenced with “public sources” of information to be produced for a alumni directory that is available in hardcover for $90 or by CD-ROM.

While they assured me that the information is only sold to alumni and the alumni association, I’m suspicious of my personal information leaving the university, published to external media, and available to such a large group of people in an uncontrolled manner. Moreover, Harris Connect is an American company – should the information leave Canada we would have very legal rights to it’s control.

My old friends from Queen’s are on email, Facebook, etc. I don’t think any of my friends are going to pay $90 for a directory just to find me. Moreover I do not wish to be spammed by some “enterprising” alumni that has use for this information that is conveniently available in CD-ROM form. I called them and requested that my information not be published in this publication – I think you should too.

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The Toronto Star has created a google-based map of large propane facilities and marked a 1.6km area around them. Check to see if you live near one. Luckily, it looks like within the 427/401/DVP/Gardiner area there are none.

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Brassaii is a nice restaurant tucked away in the courtyard on King Street, just west of Spadina. It’s the courtyard that the Crush Wine Bar overlooks. We had a party there but it was with a set menu which is based on items from the normal menu.

As it seems like what I do with new places, I had the steak. Ordered rare, it also came that way, which is great. I tend not to see it overdone much anymore in any downtown restaurants. It was a simple dish, which was just the steak, served sliced and frites. Our appetizer was an antipasto platter which was very very nice. It was better than a similar dish at Crush Wine Bar mainly because of a better selection of cheese and a bit more variety which included marinaated vegetables.

Brassaaii is a nice restaurant and I recommend it for large groups because they have a pretty easy time setting it up in their large space. They also have a great patio for drinks and dinner, although it’s probably better setup for drinks with a large bar and seclusion because of it’s distance from the street.

Brassaii
461 King St. W.
Toronto, Ontario
416-598-4730

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I noticed this name while preparing the Aug 16 Wine Release:

MEGALOMANIAC SONOFABITCH PINOT NOIR 2006
VQA Niagara Peninsula
(John Howard Cellars of Distinction)

Pinot Noir is often referred to as the ‘heartbreak grape’, a nickname that romantically alludes to the delicate and difficult nature of growing this tricky variety. John Howard cuts to the chase with the cheekily (and perhaps more accurately) named Sonofabitch Pinot Noir. This SOB features lifted aromas of cherry, woodspice and vanilla. It’s dry, medium-bodied with a supple texture and a good balance of cherry, raspberry and cranberry flavours as well as cedar and spice notes.
085134 (D) 750 mL $24.95

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