nova scotia

...now browsing by tag

 
 

“Happy now?”: An honest and magnificent new essay about depression by Anna Quon

Thursday, November 26th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown ReportBooks & Book Reviews

Anna_Quon_Happy_now_title_graphic

.

This year I fulfilled a lifelong dream of becoming a published novelist. The whole process of getting my book “Migration Songs” ready for print was a daunting one. My jewel of an editor saw me through the ups and downs, delivering endless pep talks to get me over the hurdles of insecurity. One minute I’d be fine, the next, sunk, but she always knew how to keep me moving from sunk to relieved. I felt like I never depended so much on another person for my mental health.

The novel is published and selling well. After a long lean stretch, I am bringing in some money from a project or two that I’ve been waiting on. And I have the support of my family and friends. But somehow I seem to be struggling with feelings of emptiness and futility.

On the surface, I have nothing to be depressed about. But does depression have to be “about” something?

We have been taught that the propensity for depression can be partly genetic and partly attributable to early life experiences, and it is well-recognized that the condition is not always situation-based. But for a long time I have believed that if I were able to change my thinking, I would be able to avoid depression.

I have consciously attempted to exchange negative thoughts for positive ones, successfully navigating a trip to Russia in 2006 on the basis of encouraging self-talk. It also helped that I was taking my medication as prescribed, as I continue to do today. But the feelings of spiritual loss have not abated.

I know I have been stressed-out lately, from dealing with certain people in my life, and because of money woes. I have also been feeling lost because of not having a clear work schedule. I shouldn’t be surprised… these are familiar feelings, and familiar scenarios. But I suppose I thought publishing my novel might just create a new kind of happiness that would not easily disperse.

Just as depression is not necessarily situation-based, neither is happiness. There may be nothing in the world that can make me happy, and only one person in the world who can—myself. And maybe, there will be times when even I, however much I work on thinking positively, may not be able to pull myself up out of the muck.

I once thought gratitude was the answer, and that if I could be grateful for what I have, the good things in my life, that I would magically be happier. It’s possible that I have forgotten to act on that lesson. But it’s also possible that there is no magic bullet, that there will be times when we just can’t seem to turn our dark moods around.

I’m going to keep trying the things that have worked in the past to increase my happiness, and the things that seem promising. But now that I am older, I am also prepared to live with a certain amount of darkness and pain.

The quest for happiness seemed like a worthwhile one, when I was young. It still seems reasonable to hope for happiness, but perhaps it is not so reasonable to expect feelings of happiness to be the inevitable and lasting conclusion of getting something “right” (whether it be thinking or attitude or being good or living a certain way).

Happiness may well be the by-product of seeing beauty in the world and other people. It may be something which must pass, the way anger and sadness do. It may be that some people have a natural talent for happiness, while others have to work at it. And it may be that our memories of happiness can feed our souls with as much light as actual moments of happiness do.

Migration_Songs_book_cover_Click_here_to_support_Anna_Quon_and_Irked_SIMULTANEOUSLY

I have been happy, and have no doubt that I will be again. I also know that the times in between will not kill me, and perhaps most importantly, that they are not a punishment for having done something wrong. I am open to the idea that I can change something in order to be happier but I will refuse to assign blame to myself if I don’t achieve the kind of happiness we all hope for. Happiness, after all, is not a test, but a state of being that I believe we are all born to recognize, enjoy and long for.

My editor probably doesn’t realize she was also a kind of happiness coach for me while I was revising my novel. I got by on her kind and enthusiastic words until the next wave of despair hit. Maybe I can learn to be my own shrink and cheerleader, or maybe I can simply take what comes and deal with it then.

I’ve never liked unhappiness, but maybe I can learn to endure it a little, while waiting for the next batch of happiness to wash up.

Like shells on the beach of my life.

Anna Quon is a Nova Scotia-based writer, and a much-cherished ongoing contributor to Irked Magazine. To purchase her critically-acclaimed debut novel click here.

.

Read Irked posts tagged “Anna Quon”
Read Irked posts tagged “depression”

.

Permalink / Comments

One In Five…

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown Report, Campaign Watch

A very important message from Anna Quon—critically-acclaimed debut novelist:

“Hi people,

One in five people will experience a mental illness every year. Yes, that’s roughly 200,000 Nova Scotians! The system to help these people and their loved ones is not working. And currently our government has no strategy to improve things.

Take a moment. Visit www.oneinfive.ca to join the growing number of Nova Scotians calling for a better mental health care system in Nova Scotia.

For those of you out of province, I still recommend you check out the site—it’s very cool, and the 1 in 5 stat applies across the country and the world.

Anna”

.

Watch a powerful video from NovaScotia1in5’s YouTube channel >>

Then…

Read Irked posts tagged “mental illness”

Read Irked posts tagged “Anna Quon”

.

Permalink / Comments

Sue Carter Flinn on Anna Quon’s debut novel: “Migration Songs flies high. Quon has already mastered the power of restraint. A strong debut from a new hopeful voice.”

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
Filed under: Books & Book Reviews

Quoting Sue Carter Flinn, reviewing Anna Quon’s new book “Migration Songs” for The Coast:

Migration_Songs_book_cover_Click_here_to_support_Anna_Quon_and_Irked_SIMULTANEOUSLY

Anna Quon’s debut novel Migration Songs is a hopeful sign for Atlantic Canadian literature moving beyond the traditional rural stories and recognizing that we don’t all share the same history. Though Quon’s Halifax is a blur—this is really a story about the interior life and struggles of Joan, a jobless 30-year-old loner, who feels out of place in this world: “Inside I am dark and shady, like a copper beech, rattling its leaves in the breeze.” Joan’s fragility is protected by matronly Hungarian neighbour Edna, Joan’s British father, David, a staunch Mao supporter, and her mother Gillian, a Chinese-Canadian immigrant. Quon has already mastered the power of restraint, shrinking her character down in size, quietly living in the shadow of her parents and their stories. A strong debut from a new hopeful voice.

.

Read more of Sue Carter Flinn’s great articles

And please…

Buy Anna’s awesome book

Then…

Read all Irked posts tagged “Anna Quon”

.

Permalink / Comments

FIRST LOOK: Read an excerpt from Anna Quon’s new book!

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009
Filed under: Books & Book Reviews

To read a truly beautiful excerpt from Migration Songs, a new novel by Anna Quon, click here (PDF).

.

According to Anna’s official website:

It’s well and truly September and the world is starting to show its straggly side, as though it’s been turned inside out. Lots of goldenrod, cicadas and leaves falling. The world is going beautifully bald. I’m getting ready for my poetry workshops for women with disabilities, for the book tour, and trying to start another novel… which is about like I imagine breastfeeding to be…at times lovely, at others painful, unending and occassionally mind numbing. Let me know if there is another, better way…

.

And according to her official Twitter account…

Anna_Quon_Twittergrab

.

Purchase Migration Songs here and here!

Click here to read Anna’s awesome Irked essays!

.

Permalink / Comments

Nova Scotia: The 7th province to adopt “apology legislation”

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009
Filed under: Uncategorized

KanyeWest_TaylorSwift_Halifax_TownClock_title_graphic

In Nova Scotia…

You can now say sorry without accepting liability!

(Coming Oct 1st)

.

Permalink / Comments

Helen & Opal get more good press for Halifax!

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBlind Visionaries

Guide_dog_title_graphic

Quoting The Chronicle-Herald:

When Helen McFadyen got her first Seeing Eye dog a few years ago, she realized quickly there was a need in Halifax for places to exercise the animals. Her five-year-old black Lab, Opal, is extremely well trained and disciplined, but like other dogs she needs a chance to run free, play and sniff around a bit. ”That’s a huge thing, that part of a dog’s life,” Ms. McFadyen, 53, said Monday. “They need the downtime because working dogs, especially guide dogs, have a pretty stressful job. ”They have to do stuff that’s opposed to their natural instinct.” So as the chairwoman of Halifax’s advisory committee for people with disabilities, she started to push three years ago for an enclosed place where people could take their working dogs without worrying about them running away or getting into trouble. ”I thought, wouldn’t it be great if there was a place where I could go and my guide dog could run freely,” she said. Now there is . . . Ms. McFadyen, a divinity student at the Atlantic School of Theology, lives in residence. ”If I were to let Opal off leash, she’d probably decide she wants to go swimming in the Northwest Arm,” she said. “And I don’t think I want her smelling like that.” She said the park cost about $25,000 to build and caused some envy among other dog owners in the city who have been lobbying for off-leash areas. She said she has no problem sharing the space with non-working dogs, as long as they’re behaving. ”There are people who have really wacko dogs out there,” she said. “My dog’s been attacked. We’ve been jumped on by pet dogs.”

.

Read the rest of Jeffrey Simpson’s great article

Then…

Read all about Canada’s first Service Dogpark

Read all about Opal-the-dog

.

Permalink / Comments

Opal works like a dog; now she can play like one

Monday, September 7th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBlind Visionaries, Campaign Watch

The Globe and Mail:

Opal is trained to work with the unflappable calm you expect from a Seeing Eye dog. Conditioned to ignore distractions, the black lab is usually the epitome of propriety as she guides Helen McFadyen around Halifax.

Helen_and_Opal_crossing_street_photo_by_Cyndi_Burns

But while extensive training has taught Opal to suppress her instincts, she still has all the energy of a five-year-old dog and Ms. McFadyen says she’ll run “like a freight train” when given the chance.

“There’s the assumption that these dogs are regimented little machines,” Ms. McFadyen said. “But they’re still dogs. They need downtime. They need play.”

Until this summer, though, when Halifax opened what is believed to be the country’s first dog run specifically designed for service animals, letting Opal play the way she wanted was too big a risk for Ms. McFadyen. She worried about letting her trusted companion out of reach, and the only way to allow Opal to get real exercise, she said, was to stand in an open space with a long leash and let the dog do laps around her.

“She would run in circles,” Ms. McFadyen said. “It gives an opportunity to run very hard but not what you’d call free running.”

Now, thanks to her lobbying efforts, the dog can run free. The downtown spot set aside for service animals is not big, and it is bounded by several major roads. But it is fenced and double-gated, secure enough that Ms. McFadyen is comfortable letting Opal off leash to work out her excess energy.

Ms. McFadyen, a master of divinity student at the Atlantic School of Theology in Halifax, is chair of the municipal government’s advisory committee on persons with disabilities, which comprises councillors and members of the public.

Blair Blakeney, capital projects parks co-ordinator for the Halifax Regional Municipality, said the city already owned the land when the request came in from the advisory committee, making it a relatively easy idea to pursue.

“This is not a dog park; it’s an area we set aside especially for people with service dogs,” he said. “They deserve something unique.”

Pullout_Quote-Interest_has_been_piqued_far_beyond_the_cityThe idea is unique not only in the region but apparently in the country as well.

John Rafferty, CEO of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, said that he is not aware of a similar project elsewhere in Canada.

“I think it’s a great step,” he said. “It’s certainly a fantastic commitment by the city of Halifax.”

.

Read the rest of Oliver Moore’s great article >>

then…

Read all about Canada’s first Service Dogpark

Read all about Opal-the-dog

.

Permalink / Comments

Anna Quon Book News (and bonus concert footage!)

Monday, August 31st, 2009
Filed under: Books & Book Reviews

Migration_Songs_by_Anna_Quon_book_cover_and_synopsis - SYNOPSIS: “Joan is on the brink. Cough drop addict, school bus driver, mixed race daughter of a Maoist English father and Chinese-Canadian mother, Joan struggles for meaning after a friend’s death reveals a secret life. Migration Songs is a lyrical journey in search of identity and belonging, and a witness to the power of kindness.”

Details about Anna’s book tour…after the jump!

Click to continue »

If you and your dirty car are in Halifax today…

Saturday, August 29th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBum DealCampaign Watch

Charity_car_wash_title_graphic

Quoting the Friday, August 28th edition of The Chronicle-Herald:

The Saint Mary’s Huskies football team is hosting a car wash Saturday in Halifax to raise funds for Hope Cottage. The team, along with the Halifax RCMP, Halifax Regional Police and Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency Service, will wash cars, with all proceeds going to the non-profit agency, which provides hot meals to the needy. Some other Saint Mary’s athletes will help out, as will players from the Halifax Rainmen basketball team. The car wash will run from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at O’Regan’s Chevrolet Cadillac on Robie Street.

.

Quoting halifaxnewsnet.ca:

Hope Cottage [2435 Brunswick Street; (902) 429-7968] is a charitable organization whose mission is to provide meals to those who cannot afford to obtain these meals themselves. Since its inception Hope Cottage has grown into a Halifax institution feeding more than 200 meals a day, Monday to Friday. Each day a brunch of soup and sandwich is served from 10:00 to 11:00 and a hot prepared meal from 5:00 to 6:00. Hope Cottage was originally financed by the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. For the past 15 years or so Hope Cottage has been self sufficient, with all revenues coming from unsolicited donations from individuals and corporations. The annual operating budget for the cottage is approximately $165,000.00. Hope Cottage relies heavily on volunteers. There are three volunteers for each meal, for a total of 30 people working two to three hours a week. Volunteers will work the same meal every week. These people serve meals, serve coffee, wash dishes etc.

.

Visit Hope Cottage’s website

Read more about Hope Cottage on Irked

.

Permalink / Comments

FOLLOW UP: Canada’s First Service Dogpark continues to make headlines…and so does Halifaxgate!

Friday, August 21st, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBlind Visionaries, Campaign WatchIrked Videos

Halifaxgate_Servicepark_title_graphic

Interesting developments (and a bonus comic)…after the jump!

Click to continue »