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Category Archives: TTC

Unanswered Questions

Posted on May 10, 2010 Posted in 2010, Cascade 220, iPhone photos, Toronto, TTC .

Your ChildrenAs the graffiti asks: Do you know where your children are?

I saw this earlier today after popping into Romni Wools for a skein of pink Cascade 220. While waiting for a streetcar, this sight caught my attention and drummed up some questions.

Who wrote this?
Why did they write that question when the rest of the graffiti on the wall is pretty random?

When was this written? Was it last week, or a few months ago? I’ll confess I don’t know the lifespan for graffiti on an old building in downtown Toronto. Does it handle weather well? Do most buildings get this stuff removed if it’s worth their time?

So many questions left unanswered. But I’ll still keep asking and will probably come up with a few more questions.

So tell me… do you know where you’re children are?

Update May 12: My dad being a smart ass (and I’m a lot like him when it comes to my sense of humour) had this comment when I posted a link to this post on my Facebook: “The answer: maybe writing graffiti or may be taking pictures of graffiti and the other one is in Boston. LOL” Nice one Dad! ;)

Big City vs. Small Town

Posted on November 4, 2009 Posted in St. John's, Toronto, TTC .

So tell me – do you live in the big city?

And where exactly is this city of big stature?

Who decides the criteria for a big city vs. a small town?

As someone who is not native to my current big city, I find many people classify my birth  place a small town.

Defining a “City”
According to Wikipedia a city is considered: “A city is a relatively large and permanent settlement, particularly a large urban settlement. Although there are no agreed on technical definitions distinguishing a city from a town meanings, many cities have a particular administrative, legal, or historical status based on local law…”.

Side Story – Mount Pearl the “City”
This next part will be lost on most of you, but the community next to St. John’s, NL known as Mount Pearl was officially recognized by the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador as a “city” many years ago. If you look at the geography of Mount Pearl, it’s somewhat like Japan only instead of being surrounded by water, it’s surrounded by the City of St. John’s and the town of Paradise. A lot of people in St. John’s turn their nose up at Mount Pearl’s city status. In my own family it’s even been joked, “to be a city you need to have a clearly defined downtown area and at least ONE elevator!” So even in our small towns we’re arguing over who’s really a city and who’s just trying too hard.

It’s all relative really when you think of “going to the city” or “getting out of this small place and moving on up to a bigger place!”

Experience Can Influence Perspective
I attended Occupational Health and Safety training in July and our instructor (who was very entertaining and managed to make a rather technical topic fun) joked that what we consider traffic and rush hour in Toronto and the surrounding areas is nothing to stress about. Now while he currently lives in the Brampton area (and has no intention of moving closer to Toronto), but as he put it, as already “done his time” in the big city by living in New York for several years. At one point he worked in the heart of the city  near the Empire State Building. It was normally for him to stand on a sidewalk and watch hundreds (thousand probably?) of people move in waves, shoulder-to-shoulder. No, he doesn’t worry about traffice in Toronto. Instead of suffering three hours in bumper to bumper gridlock, he’ll invite a friend out for dinner or a drink and wait until 6:30 p.m. or so and drive home without any problems.

His take on the whole big city perspective left me thinking. If you ask any of my friends from back home (Newfoundland & Labrador), they would say I live in a big city. But I also have friends who are from small outport communities in my home province and they would consider moving to St. John’s as a move to “the big city”.

Heck, I remember visiting my in-laws , who live about an hour outside of Tononto and while waiting for a Greyhound at the “lovely” bus terminal, I approached a local teen and had the following discussion:

Me: Hi. Do you know if the next bus going to Toronto is already here?
Teen: No it’s not here yet, but it’ll be pulling in over there. *points over to the #5 spot*
Me: Oh ok. Thanks!
Teen: *sulks a little* You’re luckly you’re going to Toronto.
Me: *currently homesick for Newfoundland* Thanks, but I don’t feel overly luckly.
Teen: Yeah, well it’s better than being stuck HERE!

It didn’t take a rocket surgeon to tell she wasn’t overly proud or loving her current community. And she’s probably just a normal teen who can’t wait to get out and move into the big city.

Toronto the Big City
Some of my friends who aren’t in Toronto find it amazing that I don’t mind living here and that I don’t find it overwhelming. I think their amazement is more a transference on how they wouldn’t want to be in my shoes. And I’ll be honest – I know a lot of people who would do very well in a larger population, but there are a lot who would go insane and be lost to all of society.

I don’t mean to sound harsh, but not everyone is cut out for certain conditions. Example: riding the subway in rush hour. Besides the clastriphobic tendencies a lot of us get when gammed into a tin can subway car like a sardine, you suddenly become up close and personal with dozens of people. I’ll admit, I suppress a lot of rage sometimes when riding public transit.
Compare that to an average day in St. John’s where I’d likely commute in my own car (possibly alone), and I’d really only experience the closest thing to population overcrowding by going into a supermarket on a Government cheque day or the liquor store the day before a civic holiday.

But is somewhere like Toronto really all that big city?

According to Worldatlas.com’s city population lists, Toronto isnt the first city on the list… in fact we don’t even make the top 10.

Toronto is actually number 50 on the list!!

There are more people accounted for in Tokyo than all of Canada.

So I ask again – do YOU live in a big city?

The better way?

Posted on September 22, 2007 Posted in Toronto, TTC .

I just wanted to pass on this experience…

While exiting St. Clair subway station on the north side yesterday at around 8:00 p.m., I was greeted by this image. Perhaps such a sight would have gone unnoticed most days, but images and news of the TTC have littered my brain lately. From the upcoming fair hike, recent subway delays during peak morning rush hour, to the decrease of pleasant street car drivers – I can only swallow so much. What boggles me is that this wasn’t the only set of garbage bins in the area, but it was by far the worst of the lot.

The TTC touts that it’s “the better way” for commuters to travel within the City. Yet like many commuters, I am more and more frustrated by a service I cannot improve. Sure, I can call and make complaints, but many unpleasant experiences happen while I’m en route to work or even just traveling from point one place to another. By the time I reach my destination, I’m often too busy to give a complaint, or I’m feeling too jaded and cynical to believe someone will hear my voice.

In a past ad campaign, the TTC urged riders to clean up after themselves on the subway (showing images of a man looking like a pig after leaving a mess)… yet can the TTC not clean up after its own mess? Surely they can find “a better way” to address this problem.

I want to read about…

Been there, done that

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