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Thursday, December 24, 2009


 

Christmas Eve

 

Our tree, 2009.

Allow me to wish you all a very Merry Christmas. It feels a bit like the holiday has crept up this year and is suddenly upon us. Being focused on work, with only a few strategic shopping trips for presents and with other positive things on our minds, the lead up found us preoccupied until finally we opened our presents tonight and are able to sit back and reflect on the holiday.

I know it's the usual topic at this time, but more than ever, "family" is on the top of our minds this year. We'll be visiting my parents this holiday season, which is something we weren't able to do last year. Also, we already looking forward to next year as our family will be enjoying an addition. Our first child is due this spring, so when we sit down to Christmas Dinner (on Boxing Day, actually) my wife will be eating turkey for two.

Food and family is also coming together with a nice treat that was dropped off by our cousins this morning -- sausages. However, they're not just any sausages. Our cousins inherited the recipe from my great grandfather and a butcher (in Milton, I believe) has made up a batch based on the three kinds that were once a mainstay with my paternal grandmother's parents when they ran a butcher shop in North York, back in the the Depression. They'd immigrated from Scotland in the early part of the last century and landed in Winnipeg. Not liking it there, my great grandmother had pushed to return to Scotland but a cousin of hers in Toronto suggested that they come there and give Canada a second chance. They did, and they liked it enough to stay and set up a butcher shop.

They ran it through the '20s and lasted through the Depression in the '30s, but then both passed away in the spring of 1940. My grandmother was recently married then, and took over the butcher shop. Her sister, who'd been born in Canada, also married within a month of their passing and moved to Brampton, which was a long way away in those days.

Our child's due date will therefore be almost exactly 70 years on and I think it's amazing that we can both look to the future and share in that connection with the past. No word yet on whether we are expecting a son or a daughter, but we'll be finding out by the time we both start back at work in the new year.

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posted by Ian at 10:45 PM - link ...

   


1 Comments

Anonymous Shelly said...

Awesome!!!!!!!!!

Congrats to you and Yeji! I sure hope she hasn't been cursed with awful morning sickness. Told ya you'd be a dad someday. :)

January 18, 2010 3:33 AM  

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2001 - 2004 +

2004 - 2005 +

2005 - 2008+

 

My first blog initially began as the Kyungnam Journal in April of 2001, six months after I first landed in South Korea to teach English. Upon moving to Seoul in January of 2002, it became the Kyungnam to Kyunggi Journal (K2K) and upon returning to Canada and the establishment of Latenight.ca, it's been archived here for posterity. 

I hope you enjoy the photos and anecdotes of my time working in hagwons as an EFL instructor in the South Korean cities of Changwon and Seoul.  I especially hope that prospective English teachers heading overseas can benefit from this journal.

A few updates may still materialize however, as Korea retains its connection to me through memory, habit and, now, matrimony.

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My first Latenight blog was begun in March of 2004, when I repatriated to my hometown of Miramichi, NB.

Some of the posts are a bit sparse of concrete personal information, compared to my other blogs.  At the time, I'd begun a small publishing company and most of my life was consumed by that, while the competitive nature of my business situation demanded I keep my work-related posts a bit vague.

Nonetheless, even after moving away (again), it is still my hometown and I hope to continue to contribute posts from time to time.  Miramichi is a town in transition and deserves a blog of its own, so while I am not presently residing in the city, perhaps I can still cast my gaze back home periodically.

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Halifax was my home for a time when I was a child.  It's the city of my alma mater, Dalhousie. It's also where I've spent the bulk of my working life in the publishing industry.

I returned to Halifax, the City of Trees, in September of 2005.  By then a seasoned blogger, I set up the Latenight Halifax section of this site then and retrofitted the other blogs to match.

This blog covers my life in Halifax through writeups and photos, and also the steps leading up to myr marriage in June of 2007. 

We eventually decided not to settle here though, despite the years I've enjoyed in Halifax, and as of June 2008, we followed the ol' Maritime tradition and left to hang our hats in Toronto.

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Design and original material Copyright Ian Ross, 2007-2008