Reader mail day – alternate career paths

Last week, I turned the keyboard over to you guys and asked for some help in dreaming up content. I told you to go ahead and ask me any question, or give me a topic, and I’d blog about it in an upcoming post.

Ahem. Not too many of you took up the challenge (looks pointedly around) BUT the clever blogger from whom I stole the idea in the first place came through for me. Suzanne of Mimilou asked: “In a comment on my blog, you mentioned having a crush on editing as a profession. Other than what you are doing now, what kind of career could you see yourself pursuing?”

Well, the ‘kept woman’ career path never panned out like I had hoped, but in general I’d be happy doing just about anything with words.

In a ‘money-is-no-object’ fantasy world, I’d love to be a freelance writer and researcher. (Quelle surprise.) I’d love to have a little home office all to myself and a steady stream of small jobs on a huge range of topics. I don’t think I have the stamina (read: attention span) to be a book writer, and I’m not sure I’d be creative enough to write fiction. But just to write pieces that I could choose, enough to keep me busy about five hours a day… yep, that would be sweet.

In the real world, there’s a part of me that thinks I would have made a really good teacher, espeically to primary school kids. I would have loved to do that, and tossed around the idea of going to teacher’s college after I finished my degree in 1998. The main reason I didn’t, in fact, is that I had gone to school part time while working full time, and you can’t go to teacher’s college on that schedule. That, and I just wasn’t brave enough to give up my income entirely for a couple of years and start over after being in the paid workforce for eight years. Money talks, ya know?

I’m too comfortable in my government job to think about big changes any more. And I do love what I’m doing, albeit some days more in theory than in practice. I’ve worked pretty hard to get where I am, and I’m content now that I’m here. I’ve started to look at other opportunities within the realm of government communications, but I don’t think I’ll ever move outside that scope. Next month will be my 16 year anniversary with the government, and in addition to my handsome remuneration and benefit package, my annual vacation will be bumped up by two days to 22 days in total.

The other nice thing about my government job is that I’ll be able to retire with a full pension on my 55th birthday. That will leave me with a lot of free time to set up that nice little writers’ garret in the one of the spare rooms, as the boys will have just gone off to college. (Yes, I’m 36 years old and have my eye on my retirement. That’s not sad, is it?)

When I go back and read all that, it sounds a little bit like I’ve sold out and am just trudging toward my retirement. I don’t really feel that way – I’ve just always found that a job is something you do during the day that enables you to do the rest of the stuff you love in your ‘real’ life. I guess I’m a little underambitious; I can pay the bills and support my family, but what I’m really passionate about happens after 4 pm. Remind me not to give any future employers a link to my blog, willya?

So what about you guys? What’s your alternate-universe dream job? And, ahem, I’m still taking questions and ideas for future posts… throw a dog a bone, whydontcha?

Pardon my French

Nothing to blog about today. The last and next few hours have been wasted invested in cramming for my French exam Tuesday at 8:15. Souhaitez-me bonne chance!

I’m right on the brink of achieving the levels I need, so depending on the amount of sleep I get Monday night and the relative positions of Venus and Jupiter, it could go either way.

For civil servants in Canada, if your position is deemed bilingual, you have to be retested every five years, unless you get the golden ‘exempt’ score. Kind of like the golden ticket in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. I myself aspire to a much more lowly intermediate score, or B level. As of today, my job doesn’t hinge on being able to achieve my levels, but I’m in a pool of qualified candidates for a promotion and I can’t lock it in until I confirm my language levels. This is kind of a practice run, but if I succeed I can sock away my results for another five years.

After many years of on-and-off language training, and investing three to four hours a week of in-class training for the past year, I think my proficiency in French is as good as it’s ever been. I can follow a conversation with relative ease, and even contribute well enough to be understood, if not in a grammatically gorgeous kind of way. I’m actually quite pleased with my progress in general, but in preparing for the exam I’ve taken a series of practice tests – and scored lower on each successive test.

So think a kind thought for me tomorrow as I try to conjugate the subjunctive and identify my si clauses and distinguish between direct and indirect objects… and still have enough brain cells left over to tie my shoes.

And speaking of mediated childhoods…

… I just saw this incredible news over at Half Changed World. Starting tomorrow, you can pre-order on Amazon.com one of my all-time fave childhood television shows: The Electric Company!! I used to watch this every. single. day. when I was a kid, and I’ve often wondered what became of it. It was like Sesame Street, which I also loved, but with an edge.

This is something we simply *must* acquire, and it will be a nice addition to our Schoolhouse Rocks collection on VHS. Now I just need to get some of the old Sid and Marty Krofft episodes (Land of the Lost was my favourite, but I liked HR Pufnstuf too), and pick up some of the original Muppet Show series, and my kids will never have to watch commercial TV again!

(Is it me, or is it suddenly 1976 in here?)

Movie weekend

Suzanne at Mimilou had a good post the other day about media-savvy parenting. In my comments to her, I admitted to a certain (albeit questionable) smugness in that although my kids watch way more TV that the ‘experts’ would recommend, at least they don’t watch (whispers) commercial TV.

I thought of this on the weekend, as Tristan and Beloved happened to turn off the Theodore Tugboat video they were watching to catch the end of the animated movie “The Secret of Nihm” on cable. Whatever scene was on must have been fairly engrossing, because as I listened from the kitchen, they watched in silence for a few minutes. I couldn’t help but laugh when Tristan’s suddenly querulous voice asked, “Hey, put it back! Why did you change it?” It took Beloved a few beats to realize that a commercial had come on, and Tristan had no grasp of the concept.

Okay, so maybe they worship at the altar of the electric nipple, but he’s almost four years old and he doesn’t know what a commercial is – I can’t be doing that bad of a job. (She said, justifying and rationalizing as fast as her conscience would permit.)

The next day, Beloved and Tristan were watching that animated Garfield movie while I tried to read the latest John Lescroart novel and ignore them. I couldn’t help but be distracted in listening to Tristan watching the movie, though. I wasn’t sure he’d sit through an entire movie, but he followed the plot and laughed at all the silliest humour, so he was getting it. But my heart nearly broke at one point when his little voice intruded into the depths of my reading trance and he said, “Mommy, Odie is lost,” with all the empathy his little heart could feel. I quickly reassured him that Odie would soon be found and all would be right with dogs and cats the world over, but I couldn’t get back into my book. I had to watch the rest of the movie with them, partly because I wanted to really get an idea of what he was taking in, but largely because the idea of spending a blustery Sunday afternoon lying on the couch watching a movie was something I gave up about the time the kids started noticing the glowing box in the corner – and I was happy to have it back again.

Curious George comes out in theatres some time in the next couple of weeks, and I think that will be his first cinematic experience. I can hardly wait! Popcorn, giant screens, chest-thumping speakers – I love the movies!

And finally, speaking of movies, have you seen The 40 Year Old Virgin? We finally rented that this past weekend, and it’s easily one of the funniest movies of the year. If you haven’t seen it, don’t miss it!

Great mysteries of my life

Here’s a question that’s been bugging me ever since I’ve been buying kids’ clothes:

Why does WalMart put multi-packs of kids’ socks into resealable bags? Am I missing something? Is everyone else keeping their kids’ socks in baggies, rather than the more pedestrian underwear drawer where my kids’ socks live?

(Tangential question: should I be reading something into the fact that my kids’ caregivers chose a bag of socks to give to Simon for his birthday? Albeit, admittedly, in addition to a really cool playdoh train set. Or, as Simon calls it, “play-day-doh” – rhymes with potato. I’m just wondering.)

One of those days

So far today, my darling first-born son has:

– refused to eat the lunch his uncle cooked while we visited his cousin for a playdate;

– wiggled, wriggled and tipped over backwards in his chair at the same lunch, breaking the chair in the process;

– said he thought I should go away;

– refused to eat the dinner I cooked, or even try a single bite;

– said he didn’t like his little brother; and,

– made such a general pest of himself that I am now hiding in the computer rather than deal with it.

It’s just a phase, right? RIGHT?!

Sigh…

But PS – I had a blast at the party yesterday!! Thanks to all who played along!

Birthday week continues

It seems the theme on blog this week is birthdays. First Simon’s birth story, then a recap of his party, and now today, (**blows kazoo**) it’s blog’s first birthday!

It’s been an amazing year for blog, and for me. When I started writing, I had no idea where it would lead, but I never dreamed it would be as much fun as this. I had hoped to reach an audience of 10 or 20 people a day, and instead I’m reaching between 150 and 200. How cool is that? Just yesterday, we tripped over 30,000 hits on Sitemeter. Wow!

I was going to make a list of all the incredible people I’ve had the pleasure of meeting (and “meeting”) over the past year, but the list is just too long. And I can count more than a dozen “in real life” friends who have started their own blogs since then, including one entire extended family. I’m not taking any credit for that, but it just goes to show you how quickly and thoroughly the virus that is blogging has innundated one little corner of the universe.

In honour of blog’s birthday, I think I’ll host a comment tea party tomorrow. When Nancy held one a couple of weeks ago, it was a blast, and either she tagged me or I tagged myself to host the next one. I’ll open the doors around 8 am, and you can wander by and say hello any old time. I think I’ll limit mine to 12 hours, so make sure you come by before we call in the wrecking crew at 8 pm to clean the place up. I’ve vaguely heard that there are rules to this sort of thing, but I’m trying my best to ignore them. I’ll provide the snacks and the firefighter strippers (in all three genders, bien sûr), you bring whatever else you might want. Think we can clear 120 comments in 12 hours?

And finally, in the theme of comment whoring, here’s an idea that I’m blatantly ripping off from Suzanne. It’s “customize your blog experience” day! After a year of yammering, I’m starting to run out of ideas. So help me along – ask me a question. Anything you’re dying to know about parenting two preschool boys? Want a debrief on living in a constitutional monarchy? Itching to see a list of my favourite Timmy’s doughnut flavours? Go ahead, ask me a question or propose a topic, and I’ll write a post about it in upcoming days – or, depending on volume and laziness quotients, weeks.

Celebrating Simon’s birthday

Although today is Simon’s birthday (and thank you for all the birthday wishes!), we celebrated it with the family last Saturday. And since Simon’s story yesterday was perhaps one of my wordiest stories ever, I’ll let the pictures do most of the talking for this one.

In the morning, we went for a walk to Hog’s Back Falls. It was the perfect day for a winter walk – clear and mild and still. This is my favourite time of year to visit Hog’s Back, because the snow is white and clean but the spring melt is beginning and you can hear the water rushing nearby.

First, I took a turn pulling Simon in the sled…

…and then Tristan took a turn.

Then Simon realized he could get into a lot more trouble under his own power. Here he is walking with Beloved.

We brought some bird seed and peanuts, but to our great disappointment, we discovered that chipmunks are hibernating creatures. Or, at least we didn’t see any. But there were chickadees and nuthatches who were quite willing to sit on our fingers and have a snack.

(See, Andrea? Emma and Tristan would at least have this in common!)

All that walking made for a great afternoon nap for Simon, but alas, not for mummy. While Beloved and Tristan went off to the library, I decorated the kitchen and living room. The balloons and streamers were intentionally put up high and out of reach, but the box of Wiggles cards (Valentine’s Day cards, in fact, but don’t tell Simon) got taped up at toddler eye-level throughout the main floor.

Granny and Papa Lou came over for dinner, and we made sure to have Simon’s favourite food, which you really should hear him pronounce because it’s so damn adorable: gu-a-co-MOOOOOO-leeee. (Other special birthday guests could not make it, sadly, because their beautiful baby girl developed croup that day, which Simon has somehow managed to catch via my phone conversation with her mother. Go figure. “What did you get for your birthday, Simon?” “Croup.”)

And of course, what birthday would be complete without prezzies? Tristan was very helpful in extricating the presents from their packages with Simon.

For years, I have contemplated getting a cash register toy for the boys – since Tristan’s 2nd birthday, I think. Beloved has always seen it as a bit of a lame gift. I perservered (yes, I’m laying it on thick, hoping Beloved is reading today) and was – can you believe it? – right! They loved it!

And a special bravo and thank you to our bloggy friends who suggested an AquaDoodle as a great gift for a two-year-old. (Nancy, you get props for being the first to suggest it – I remember when you first got one for the Troops and how much they liked it.) Granny read all your suggestions, and in the end chose the fancy Thomas the Tank Engine AquaDoodle. Even mummy and daddy get a kick out of playing with this one, and watching the Thomas train follow the tracks we’ve drawn. The boys like it so much, they even (gasp!) SHARE it!!

And of course, no Wiggles birthday would be complete without a Wiggles cake…

… and a birthday boy to enjoy it.

Happy Birthday, Simon! You are more wonderful (two-derful?) with every passing day. I love you!

Simon’s story

In honour of what I was doing exactly two years ago today (all. day. long), and because you responded so favourably to our infertility and IVF stories, and because it’s my blog and I’ve decided to yammer and really there’s not point in resisting, you might as well sit back, grab a coffee and let me tell you the excruciatingly long story of how Simon Francis came reluctantly into this world. (And yes, I promise that all the sentences won’t run on quite so long as this one.)

While Simon may have favoured surprise in making his presence known to us, he was obstinately opposed to the idea of actually coming out and meeting us. After a pleasantly uneventful pregnancy, marred only by six months of low-level nausea and one unfortunate barfing-at-the-bus stop incident, I was more than ready to divest myself of what was becoming an alarmingly large baby.

After previously birthing a nine-pound baby, and hearing throughout my pregnancy about this one’s “healthy” size, I was getting a little skittish on the idea that I might be gestating an elephant calf. As my due date came and went, I was referred to the high-risk obstetrical unit for monitoring, and after each ultrasound, would ask the technician for her estimate on the baby’s size. Each time, she would hedge and tell me that they could only guess within a pound or two either way, but eventually she took pity on me and said that her estimate was for nine or ten pounds.

This caused me considerable distress. Ten pounds plus two pounds of leeway was (takes off socks and shoes to count) potentially TWELVE POUNDS of baby. I began to rethink my vehement opposition to induction and ‘convenience’ c-sections and in fact pleaded with the obstetrician to induce me. And each time I was patted gently on the head and told that the earliest they would intervene was 10 days post-term, as long as the baby was otherwise healthy.

And he was. And so we waited. And waited. And waited.

On the eighth day post term, I realized mid-morning that I couldn’t remember the last time I had felt the baby move. He was so large and so tightly packed into my womb that I’m sure I could have felt him so much as blinking his eyelashes, so when neither drinking orange juice nor squishing him with my entire body weight (both tactics I used shamelessly to motivate him into movement throughout my pregnancy) elicited a response, we checked with the nurses and they advised me to come into the labour and delivery ward for monitoring. After several hours of angsting, an hour of frenzied preparation, and 20 minutes of driving, we were about a half a kilometre from the hospital when the baby commenced a series of lazy rolls. Closer to the hospital than home, and hoping they would take pity on me, we went in anyway, and were sent home within the hour. “Be patient,” they told us. You know me pretty well by now. You think I was good with the concept of “be patient”?

The next evening, the L&D administrator called me and told me that barring a baby rush in the next 24 hours, I could come in the next morning at 8 am to begin the induction. I was sure that Simon would take this as his cue, and that in overhearing this phone conversation he would finally take some initiative to make his own way into the world.

I was wrong. When we showed up on the fourth floor of the Civic hospital campus the next morning for an outpatient induction, I hadn’t had a single contraction, not a single twinge. When the resident obstetrician checked my cervix and found it “unfavourble”, I felt a little bit like I did when I failed my first drivers’ test. No dilation, no effacement. The baby was at ‘minus three’ station – in other words, somewhere up near my solar plexus. She gave me a dose of cervidal (I’ll save you the visual of how she dosed me) and within minutes I was having mild but detectable and regular contractions.

The nurse told us we had an hour to wait before the next exam, so we went for breakfast in the hospital cafeteria. (We hadn’t formally been admitted into the hospital yet, and wouldn’t be until labour was measurably and officially in progress.) After a few serious contractions, I felt like a bowling ball had dropped into my pelvis, and I was having trouble not walking in the bowlegged manner of a career cowboy. Either the baby had dropped, or he had become so large he had begun producing his own gravitational force. Flush with the excitement of actual contractions, I was crushed to find out on my next exam that my cervix was still closed. Closed! Not even dilated one centimetre.

The contractions, mild but frequent, continued every two minutes or so throughout the morning and into the early afternoon, when the resident announced that I was “fingertip” dilated – but nothing more. Entirely sick of walking the hospital corridors, we decided to take our show on the road. What with it being the last day of January, we were loath to walk around and enjoy the minus 15-before-windchill out-of-doors, so Beloved and I trundled ourselves to the nearest mall to kill some time. Because if you’ve gotta kill some time while you’re in labour, the mall is better than the hospital pharmacy for both selection and ambiance.

I don’t really remember too much of that part of the afternoon, to tell you the truth. I remember it was crowded because they were having a sidewalk sale, and I felt bad coming to a sudden stop in front of people as each contraction came on. I remember thoroughly enjoying a coconut pineapple Orange Julius. And I remember calling Nancy, who was faithfully keeping the rest of my friends informed of our progress, and leaving a message with her very patient husband, telling him I was in “induction hell”. I didn’t buy anything, or even do any serious browsing, because it just didn’t seem right to be using the fitting rooms while waiting for my water to break.

When we returned to the hospital around 4 pm, the staff took pity on us despite (or rather, because of) the rather uninspiring results of six hours of useless contractions, we were finally admitted to the L&D ward. By that time, my contractions had once again become irregular and barely uncomfortable, and I was getting annoyed with both my lazy baby and my enabling plumbing. If you don’t just squeeze him out of there, I told my uterus, he’s going to stay there forever. He’ll be twenty and taking his high-school equivalency exam via correspondence course in there, if you don’t step up now and kick him out while you have the chance. My uterus, drunk on cervidal and having been stretched to its limits – theoretically and literally, was not listening.

Dinnertime found me in the Jacuzzi tub, eating a ham sandwich and orange Jell-o, with barely noticable contractions. Nice life if you can get it. I’d’ve been perfectly content, if it weren’t for the 300-pound baby I couldn’t wait to pass.

The nurse assigned to us was a treasure. Her name was Jamie and I liked her instantly. She neither patronized me nor let me get away with anything, and I felt like we were attacking the problem of my stubborn baby like a business case that could be managed. We decided to let my body try its own thing for a while longer before starting a pitocin drip, and everyone was convinced that once things started to move, they would really move. It was just getting the process kick-started that was the problem. The baby was so high up in my cervix that we couldn’t even rupture my membranes, due to the risk of the cord prolapsing.

Beloved and I walked endless loops of the fourth floor, and even ventured down to the main floor of the hospital for a change of scenery. We walked so much that eventually Beloved asked, in a very tentative voice, if we might rest in the room for a while because between the mall walking and the hospital pacing, his feet were starting to hurt. So I sat in the room and bounced on a medicine ball for a while.

If you ever think you’re having a bad day, just thank whatever deity you worship that you are not a nine-months-plus-10-days pregnant woman trying to force a baby the size of a Toyota out against his will by spending an hour bouncing on a medicine ball after 12 hours of unsuccessful induction intervention.

The worst part was hearing the successful labours of other women on the ward. Because if labour is ever going to end, it first needs to start. I never thought I’d lay my head down and cry for jealousy of women screaming in agony. “Why can’t I have contractions like that?” I wept in the general direction of poor Beloved.

To my utter dismay, after 12 hours of regular albeit easy contractions and 4 cm of dilation, the contractions petered out to nothing early in the evening. We gave up on my body’s own plans for the evening, and called for the pitocin drip. Jamie ordered an epidural at the same time, still convinced that things would happen quickly. I was less optimistic.

The pitocin drip has a scale that starts at eight and moves up in increments of two to a maximum of 20 units. They started me at the minimum, and my mild contractions resumed.

Finally, shortly before 11 pm the anaesthesiologist arrives to begin the epidural. He is young and goodlooking, and I trust him because of this and because his name is Ben. After administering the epidural, he and Jamie leave me to stew in my own hormones yet again.

Every 20 minutes or so, Jamie boosts up the level of pitocin, and although contractions are steady, they are not painful and certainly do not have the anticipated effect of popping the baby out like a cork. Baby is still minus 3 station, and the epidural is very patchy, seeming to take only on my lower legs. Unless I find a way to deliver the baby from my ankles, I might be in trouble. Finally, Dr Ben the anaesthesiologist is called again, and he begins to mix special “cocktails” to properly anaesthetize me. He pokes me with a toothpick several times, and tells me I have a remarkably high tolerance for pain. I tell him not that high and ask him to keep working on his cocktails!

Dr Ben, my new best friend, comes and goes through the course of the night, completely perplexed as to why his cocktails are not working. We finally seem to hit on the right combination, and although I don’t seem to be completely frozen, I can feel the pressure of the regular contractions without feeling the pain from them. Dr Ben tells me that in the 400 to 500 epidurals he has done, mine is by far the most challenging. I am oddly pleased to at least be excelling at something this long night.

Finally, some time in the early hours before dawn, and more than 20 sleepless hours after the induction began, I feel a noticable change in the intensity of the contractions. Just as I am reporting this to Jamie, there is a gush of nether fluid. She tests it, but the traitorous strip tells her it is not amniotic fluid. A few moments later, there is a thud inside my uterus so sudden and so sharp that I jump and gasp in surprise and ask Jamie what has happened. She checks me, but I am still only 5 cm dilated, and she steps out to take a coffee break. Within minutes, my contractions ratchet up and my water breaks in earnest.

The contractions come on so suddenly that I am taken completely off guard and am unprepared to deal with them; all the breathing techniques and diversionary tactics I have learned go out the window in my sheer panic and I realize just how inadequate the epidural is. I beg for Jamie, my human security blanket, and Dr Ben.

Jaimie returns and cups my face in her hands, forcing me to look at her and get at least somewhat of a grip on my composure.

Jamie checks the monitors and tells Beloved to press the call button. My heart nearly stops at the tone in her voice when she calls for assistance; the baby’s heart has decelerated significantly, down from 140s to low 60s, Beloved later tells me. The room is suddenly full of people, including Dr Ben and the OB on call, handful of extra nurses, plus the resident who had been following me since I showed up for induction oh so many years hours ago. Still lying on my side and still feeling the totality of every contraction, which now seems like just one big, never-ending contraction, I thrust my right arm in the air at the pinnacle of each contraction. I have no idea why, but the gesture is mildly comforting. She checks me yet again, and finds I have dilated the last 5 cm in less than 20 minutes, and gives me permission to start pushing.

Fact of the matter is, her ‘permission’ is a little anticlimactic, because the Toyota-sized baby is now in charge and on his way out whether it’s convenient for us or not. After nine-months-plus-10-days of waiting and almost 24 hours of medical intervention, he is finally enticed out of the womb. It takes two pushes to get myself focused, and with three more pushes Simon barrels out, his arm raised over his head in much the same way I held my own arm up at the peak of every contraction.

He is born at 5:59 am on February 1, 2004. He weighs an even 10 lbs, and is portly and lovely and starving from his first breath. Two years later, he is perpetually portly and lovely and hungry.

(Hey, if you thought the retelling was long, be thankful you didn’t have to endure it in real time!)

Rough weekend for Canadian culture

It was a bad weekend for icons of Canadian culture.

First, on Friday it was announced that the Hudson’s Bay Company is being sold to an American businessman. The history of Canada and the Hudson’s Bay Company are irrevocably intertwined, and the idea of this titan of Canadian culture and history being owned by American interests is deeply disturbing (with apologies to my dear American friends.)

So why does it matter that HBC has fallen to foreign ownership? First, because one of the first things I remember learning about in elementary school was the role of HBC in the formation of Canada – the fur trade, Rupert’s Lands, coureurs du bois, Native people, British and French power struggles and remote northern outposts. It all became more tangible and comprehensible when I could tie it somehow to the big Bay department store downtown, back in the 1970s when department stores and downtown were both places of significance.

And more importantly, because given the choice between The Bay or Sears, or between WalMart and the HBC-owned Zellers, I always tried to support the Canadian company. If HBC ownership falls to American interests, there isn’t a Canadian equivalent left to choose.

Second, there were rumblings in the media this weekend about the possibility that Tim Hortons would be setting up its most distantly remote franchise ever – in Kandahar, Afghanistan. There are more than 2,000 Canadian peacekeeping troops stationed there, and while American soldiers can have their Pizza Hut, Burger King or Subway fix, Canada’s most popular coffee shop is reluctant to make the same move.

Timmy’s head office says that while it would be logistically feasible to set up a coffee and doughnut vending trailer on the base, they are reluctant to do so, citing concerns about quality control. While Timmy’s has a reputation for being generous to our overseas troops, ensuring each deployed soldier gets a gift package at Christmas, this seems like a great way for the company to show their support of the peacekeepers.

I don’t know how I’d get through a morning in my quiet little world with out a Timmy’s coffee (extra large, three milks) to start my day. For those who risk their lives in the name of a more peaceful world, a double-double and a chocolate dip doesn’t seem like too much to ask.