donating

a cut-a-thon is a lot less violent than it sounds

when you move to a city, and you are used to being surrounded by friends constantly, there is seriously only 1 way to make new ones. say yes. say yes to things that put you outside of your comfort zone. anything. it's a little like the movie 'yes man', minus a lot of the hysterical antics (plus more embarrassment).
so, when the aveda institute of vancouver called out for volunteers to act as witnesses for their leg of the 24 hour cut-a-thon, i said yes. i didn't really know what i was getting into - only that i would spend 8 hours at the salon, and would be the world record witness for their guinness world record book attempt.
i have to say, it was one of my favourite vancouver experiences so far. i arrived to the smiles of excited stylists, who had just walked 6km to symbolize the walk that a girl in east Africa must complete in order to attain clean water. they were all energized and ready to go.
a few of the lovely ladies on the vancouver institute team, working to spread the word outside the salon

i was promptly whisked off into the chair of julie - a new stylist who works in the salon of the aveda institute - who massaged me, washed my hair, and styled me and my recent haircut (that i had yet to figure out how to style myself). (hey everyone. get an appt with her. she's fantastic and wonderful, and so sweet). i then spent the day watching as the students, teachers, stylists, and every other person working at the institute, spent their time with each person in their chair.... with all funds from cuts that day being donated to watercan
essentially, it was all part of a global 24-hour cut-a-thon that aveda international was coordinating. beginning in asia, aveda salons across the globe were coordinating in 8 hour shifts, to raise the most money from haircuts and styles, in a 24 hour period - ever. they had been working tirelessly throughout the month of april to raise money from various events, and this day was the culmination of not only the vancouver institutes hard work, but also of a strong bond across the globe from the various salons...
me having my hair delicately handled by julie (top left) - among the other clients that day (from aveda institute vancouver's instagram)

it was an awesome day. so much money was raised. so many people had smiles on their faces all day. i was offered so much hospitality and spoiled rotten by all the lovely people who i met that day - leah who arranged the whole thing, julie who took care of me right away, kirk, who was insistent on ensuring i was comfortable and happy all day, and Shallynn who sat with me and chatted, and gave me a wonderful gift.  it was clear from all the lovely LOVELY people at the aveda institute of vancouver that they were simply passionate about what they were all contributing to that day.
i have to say - from my experiences within corporate culture, i had become jaded... i had lost the faith in a corporations passion for believing in something other than profit. spending the day with the folks at the vancouver institute was so inspiring... and a reminder that corporations are not only capable of keeping their eyes on a goal other than profit, but can be motivated, energetic, and humble about it.
thanks for having me aveda institute of vancouver - i will see you again very soon!

to book a service with the vancouver institute in vancouver, check out their website here. you can also keep up withtheir happenings from their facebook page here, or their twitter account here. also, this is isn't a sponsored post - just love these folks!

my weekend in summary (is going on hiatus)

hey friends.
i hate to be the one to say it, but i've been distant.
there's been lots going on, as i adjust into new life, and seek out the best of the best in jobs, apartments, and hiking trails.
and, though perhaps slightly selfish, i am going to take a break from 'weekend in summary' for a little while.
NOT LONG. not to worry. just a little break until i'm back into a routine. 
to distract you from this, here's a video that i find particularly endearing.... 
Lena Dunham for Rachel Antonoff / Best Friends Fall 2013

i'll also share that today i'm pretty excited to be working with Aveda Institute Vancouver to be part of the AVEDA Global Cut-a-thon today. 100% of the proceeds of services today will benefit WaterCan. if you're in the area, come get a haircut! i'll share some stories, and some photos tomorrow. 
happy monday - this week is allllll yours....

on knitted hats and lofty goals

when i set a goal for myself, i set it in the way i was taught in my masters degree: make it measurable, attainable, and most seriously - make it realistic. that's why when i set goals, they sound a little bit like, 'make sure you do your dishes tonight... or by thursday at the LATEST'.... or 'make sure you still have a $20 bill in your wallet by tomorrow'. i'm very serious about these goals, but rarely do i reach them.
enter robyn, who takes goals very seriously. none of this 'just make sure you eat for the next 3 days' goal setting... she created a list of goals, that she wanted to complete before she turned 40 - and, set out to make 10,000 hats for 10,000 people. she started small - with 100 hats in 2009. now, it's 300 hats in 2013. she's sending hats all over the place, just to complete her measurable goal. one she is determined to complete. and man - she's going to kick it into the ground.
the connection that i have with robyn? i'm a giant online click'a'holic... i start in one place online, and next thing you know, i'm halfway across the internet, on a person's page who i used to go to highschool with. people often interrupt my 'i found this thing online' stories with, 'wait.... HOW did you find that??'
so. here's what happened: i was reading sydney's blog, and in catching up, saw her post on her connection with robyn, from she makes hats. i then spent the next hour reading robyn's blog - her goals, her posts on her designs, and what the project meant to her.
you can imagine my surprise when i received an email from robyn, asking if she could send me a hat. me. a hat. i could not hit reply fast enough. handmade hats are my 'swoonworthy' thing. knitting is something i've never been able to fully master, and my jaw drops at the things people can do with needles and yarn.
so, yes. i said yes so quickly, my internet connection could not keep up.
and a little while later, i received my hat. it is warm, and a colour that goes with everything, but is way less boring than my typical grey. it's slouchy, and perfect. and - as you can see from photos - since i am from canada, i can never ever ever own too many hats. since i lost my last knit hat about a year ago (and have been unable to find one that has come even CLOSE to replacing it), i've been without. it would be far too small of a thing to say that this hat serves as a good replacement for that hat - this one would beat that one in a 100m race.  
i know. i know. just a hat. get over it. 
i won't. i won't get over it. while we're all reading blogs, listening to songza, drinking green tea, and trying to get our acts together, robyn has been whipping out hats for babies in maternity wards, hats for active-duty naval sailors, and hats for people like me (who, relatively, have no good place in her repertoire of hat making). 
robyn is part of an organization called nebraska hats for hope. she knits hats to include in bags that are put together in backpacks with food and other warm things, for children from the local elementary school - a large portion of whom receive some form of public assistance (in the manner of free lunches, and so on). so now, instead of store bought hats, robyn has set out to ensure all those deserving kidlets receive hand knit hats. and here's the key component: we can be involved. if you would like to send robyn hats, to be included in this amazing and inspiring initiative, please send them to: 
Nebraska Hats for Hope Initiative
PO Box 6093
Omaha, NE 68106
i just started knitting again. it's taken me a month to make a headband. but this year, my (realistic) challenge will be to send robyn at least 3 hats. please join me. 
and totally off topic, for those of you who were wondering, the following is the reason i will never ever be a fashion blogger. as soon as there is a camera in front of my face, it inexplicable contorts in ways that i can't control, and leaves me with hundreds of photos that look like this:
i'll leave it at that.

oh! i should also add, that robyn has included instructions on how to knit this hat, on her website. it's based on this hat, but she has altered it... so you can see her changes for the final product here. for those of you WAY more talented with needles than i, check it out! we can match! she also wrote a sweet blog entry about the hat, the process, and what number my hat is (#310) in her grand goal.... check it out here!

you can follow robyn's adventure on twitter, instagram, pinterest (because who doesn't love a good perusal of pinterst?), her website, and even buy some of these hats on her etsy shop.

consuming social justice

when should our human duty to one another begin to put us - as well-off human beings - out? maybe it's the way I learned to do justice, but to me, it's not helping someone, unless you are making a sacrifice. This sacrifice - however - should not be making a purchase.
Food for thought
Paul Theroux writes a good piece on charity, throwing away money, in "the rock star's burden" - I like the way Roldo Bartimole puts it: "The problem with charities such as United Way isn't that they don't do any good. They do. Wealth interests use the concept of charity to avoid government action, especially if it is based on progressive taxation. They would then pay the largest share of the burden. They hate government. It's a deep ideological, class hatred. That is why they would even like to get rid of Social Security. Corporate, foundation and charity leaders know this but do not want the public to understand. Charity - despite all the headlines of great gifts by wealthy individuals -- shifts the burden to ordinary individuals, just as increasingly regressive taxation does"
▪ and finally - my favourite - everyone reminding us to "think pink". I am a suporter of all things to encourage the aggressive study of breast cancer… however…. "When peach went pink, an activist movement became a consumerist movement. Yet, as noted by Barbara Brenner, executive director of BCA (Breast Cancer Action), "If shopping for pink ribbon products was truly the path to a cure, we’d have solved the breast cancer problem by now." Yeah, and if SHOPPING was a CURE for anything, we would have also saved the environment, the economy, and eradicated poverty!"
yes. I'm sarcastic. however - let's look at working in a tangible, non-consumerist, and non convenient way, to work for those who accompany our day to day life on this planet. Let's actually consume less, work harder, and talk less about how good we feel.
the critic in me finds ways to be jealous of everyone. my newest green bug is for "style rookie". she has taken to selling her clothes in an auction style, for charity. giving up clothes she does not wear anymore, selling them on a blog that is linked to her blog she currently writes in (almost) daily, and donating the money to charity. nontheless - she has an eye for fashion, a MASSIVE following, and a killer writing style. I'm dwarved by her. clearly critique can only take me so far.

I'm not that mean… I'll leave with something I do love and respect. These photos.

Originally posted on hello bum's photostream. Beauty.