high school graduation and SHIFT

26 02 2009

Growing up for some of us is like driving an automatic:  we shifted gears almost without thinking.  And for others of us growing up has been like learning to drive a standard:  we shift, jolt, restart, look for the sweet spot, and try again;  every transition requires us to think, stop try.  Nothing feels automatic.  

 High school graduation is a major marker in the journey of growing up.  Today I was privileged to be a part of graduation interviews at Tupper High School.  I’m so impressed with the students I met and deeply appreciative of the variety of strengths they have landed on and are seeking to develop in the next years.  Some of them are shifting well almost on automatic, and others are in the midst of learning to shift.

I have been thinking during the day about the kinds of shifts that are needed and one hopes are well on the way by graduation.  Here’s a short list of shifts that I believe high school graduation signals are in order.  What do you think, are these expectations realistic?

1.  From dependence to independence to interdependence.

2.  From working on my weaknesses to living in my strengths.

3.  From trusting that others will solve problems for me to seeking solutions with others.

4.  From simply absorbing the values of others in order to please them to sorting out what really matters to me.

5.  From living for myself as an end to living for something greater than me.

6.  From fear of challenges to facing challenges.

7.  From the inertia of the familiar to the exhilaration of learning something new.  And from depending on others to do this for me to taking the initiative to sharpen my growing edges.

8.  From intoxication with power to the just application of power.

9.  From having others pay the bills to paying the bills myself.

10.  ……….hey what shift do you believe high school graduation signals?





the drift, 2009

24 02 2009

Attention local artists and friends of art:  The Drift Society has announced the next dates for the 2009 Arts on Main St. adventure!  Saturday October 3 and Sunday October 4.  Discover more details and how to be involved in the latest newsletter.  Last year I really enjoyed the venues and the art on Main St.  We turned it into a family outing and had a wonderful time.





grounds for violence–welcome to the wild wild west

18 02 2009

Yesterday violence erupted again in my neighbourhood and someone lay dead on the ground for the second time in as many weeks.  For the most part I live my life from the space in between Main and Fraser in Vancouver.  I enjoy these two streets and the different stories they are telling about the City.  However my heart broke yesterday in hearing the account my neighbour told of taking children home and having to walk past the body of a young man absorbed in the darkness of lawlessness.  

This morning I sat a few blocks from the corner where he died and reflected on what grounds for violence he and others in his realm have.  The Lower Mainland is seemingly awash with those who would turn this western edge of the continent into their own wild playground.  What has consumed their conscience and heart?  Why have they abandoned the delight of life?  Have they been deceived by the attraction of power?  What vision of strength have they enshrined?  What honour has been constructed that must be preserved?  Do they truly want a life built on the survival of the strongest?  What lies has the Evil One weaved into the fabric of their hearts?

 Law is the tutor that highlights reality for the deadened conscience to recognize that something is wrong.  But what’s next? Changed hearts and restored relationships are possible from a Christian worldview through the grace of God in Christ Jesus His Son.  Into the grounds of violence God has planted a cross and empty tomb; He is shouting “you matter to me.”

This morning I prayed for our City in the tradition of Jesus a prayer that seeks to take back the ground and the lives of those sullied and sickened by violence, apathy, greed, denial, revenge, selfishness, bravado, and pain.  Perhaps you will join me in voicing again the prayer of all Jesus’ disciples:

Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come,
your will be done
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliever us from the evil one.
Matthew 6:9-13





love main street

17 02 2009

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Hey thanks to all of you who helped us “Love Main Street” on Sunday after the service at Cityview.  About 25 of us went out for an hour and did a clean sweep of gargabe on about 3 blocks, passed about 400 Camino fair trade chocolates to the Main Street shoppers, and about 30 tins of goodies for the merchants.  You all were awesome.  Thanks.  And Thanks to Sarah as well for creating the card for us.




Options housing strategy good for Vancouver?

17 02 2009

I really enjoyed an article in the Tyee series A Home for All, on affordable housing.  Toronto developer, Michael Labbe, declares

“Housing is the one area of social need that creates wealth,” he explained. “All the housing solutions we have created to date have tended to bury that wealth. This system makes that wealth available to many, because every purchaser helps expand a permanent solution to housing,” he said.

“I’m absolutely convinced that, either quickly or slowly, we are going to eliminate housing as a problem in Canada.”

I believe the Tyee article, Homes that Cost Less than Rental is a great contribution to the conversation on the home ownership in Vancouver.  What do you think about this concept?





trying to buy a house in Vancouver?

29 01 2009

In case you were still wondering why you are struggling to purchase a house in Vancouver…or if you were wondering why your rent is so high…The Vancouver Sun alerts us that we are one of the five least affordable cities in the world.  Recent conversations with people in the Cityview community have expressed hope that the downward trend in housing prices would prove helpful for them.  However, our friends on fixed incomes and below the poverty line are experiencing more challenges in finding places to live as rents move into the $1500 range for a two-bedroom.  I am currently concerned for some who are looking for new places because of redevelopment plans and in particular for one family that has gotten behind on rent because of less employment in the construction domain.





creating an environment where dyslexics THRIVE

9 01 2009

Jennifer Steffenhagen has an informative article on the THRIVE program in ONE Vancouver public school.  THRIVE, under the leadership of teacher, Tyson Schoeber, seeks to create a learning environment helpful to those children with a languaged based learning difficulty.  

Steffenhagen’s follow-up post in the Vancouver Sun is full of comments calling on the VSB and other school boards in BC to take an aggresive stance on the implementation of the Orten-Gillingham learning system.





the christmas crowd

14 12 2008

Douglas Todd explores the genuine spiritual longing of the Christmas crowd.





a vancouver housing tragedy

16 10 2008

The Tyee has a story by Sean Condon on the life and death of Paul “Duncan” Giesbrecht.  His body was recovered in Stanley Park, September 15, one week from his move-in date for housing.  His story illustrates the need for a multi-layered strategy in Vancouver to building community and care with our neighbours who are most vulnerable to distress and death.

There is still time to register for the Church & Affordable Housing Conference.

The Church & Affordable Housing Conference 2008
starts this Friday evening at 7:30 PM. Doors open at 6:30.
Online registration closes Thursday at 4 PM.
Registration is available at the door, but lunch on Saturday is not guaranteed.

Venue: Broadway Church, 2700 E Broadway (at Slocan) in Vancouver, 2 blocks north and 2 blocks west of Renfrew Skytrain Station.

There is also a Free Public Keynote Address 
Saturday, 7:30 PM, Oct 18th from Michael Brown.  I have pasted the information Jonathen Bryd regarding the free lecture below.

The Faith-based Roots of the Community Land Trust Movement

Michael Brown, Burlington Associates

Community land trusts seek to balance the legitimate property rights of individuals with those of the broader community. The dual view of land found in the Judeo-Christian tradition informed both the origin of the community land trust model and the evolution of the community land trust movement over time. We’ll spend some time considering what a community land trust (CLT) is and how it operates and why CLTs are becoming a preferred approach to community development and affordable housing in many of our communities. We’ll also examine the faith-based roots of the community land trust movement and reflect on how individuals and congregations of faith can most effectively be involved in supporting this dynamic and successful approach to permanently affordable housing and sustainable communities.

Michael Brown helped found one of the first community land trusts (CLTs) in the United States in eastern Tennessee in the early 1980’s and has been involved with CLTs ever since. In the past ten years, Michael’s primary clients have included some four dozen community land trusts, as well as municipalities, county governments state agencies, land developers, state wide housing intermediaries and community-based interfaith organizations.

Burlington Associates in Community Development , LLC is the premier provider of technical assistance to community land trusts In the United States. Several partners have been involved with the CLT Movement since the early 1980s. They have helped with the start-up of over 80 CLTs, while assisting many others with organizational development and long-term planning for the stewardship of their portfolios and the sustainability of their operations. The “CLT Resource Center” which Burlington Associates added to its website in 2005 has become the first place to which many practitioners turn when seeking training guides, legal documents, program evaluations, policy research, and other technical information about CLTs. Most of these materials can be downloaded free of charge.

Burlington Associates has worked in a diverse array of inner-city neighborhoods, suburban towns, and rural communities, assisting non-profit developers of affordable housing, municipal governments, state agencies, and community development financial institutions in 39 different states.





4th annual Drift: Art on Main

3 10 2008

This weekend is the 4th Annual occurrence of The Drift. 

“The Drift is an annual weekend local arts & culture festival taking place along Vancouver’s trendy Main Street in artists’ open studios and participating local shops, cafes and restaurants.

Drift along Main Street and see an eclectic variety of fine art and original handcrafts from established and emerging local artists including ceramics, painting, sculpture, photography, woodcarvings, collage, mixed media, glass works, jewelry, film, clothing design, textiles & multi-media compositions.”

I hope you will make time to come out and enjoy our awesome street, the artists and their work, and the merchants who are hosting them.  This is one of the events that reflects much of what makes Main St. a rich and interesting place.

For more on the studio’s and merchants displaying work check out the new website The Drift.








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