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Student Life

Learning to live and cope with loss

Losing a parent can make us mature faster, like our favourite disney characters

Disney characters rarely have mothers and they’re forced to grow up much faster without them. I lost my mother when I was 13 and now I feel 10 years older than I should be.

Fiona Maynard at a young age, with her mother. Photo courtesy of Fiona Maynard.

Like most kids, I grew up watching all of the magical Disney movies like  The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Cinderella, and Bambi. I never realized the trend when I was younger, but the absence of mother figures in these children’s movies jumps out at me now. Why would Walt Disney, the admired innovator of children’s films, create such tragedies and refrain from adding such important roles in the lives of his main characters?

In a revealing interview with Glamour in 2014, long-time Disney producer Don Hahn explained Disney’s reasoning behind his need to eliminate or exclude mothers altogether. Hahn said “it’s much quicker to have characters grow up when you bump off their parents,” which is the more obvious justification for a movie that’s usually 90 minutes long. However he goes on to recall how Walt Disney tragically lost his mother. At 28-years-old, Disney bought a home for his mother and the furnace in the house leaked which ended up causing her death at the age of 70. “He never would talk about it,” Hahn said in the interview. Although Disney felt personally responsible for his mother’s death, he kept his head held high and continued producing movies, touching hearts, and making history.

I sympathize with Disney. When something devastating happens to you, you have two choices: pick yourself up, dust yourself off and continue with life the same way you would have before, or fall into an endless downward spiral towards darkness and let your heartbreak get the best of you. Sometimes people aren’t strong enough to pick themselves back up, but luckily something in me was.

My mother Kerri had breast cancer for about three months. I firmly believed she would conquer it because it was her second battle with the same cancer. But one day my mom and her boyfriend Carl picked me up from school. I hopped into the backseat of the car and started ranting about pointless things that happened during my day. I noticed the snug Harley Davidson bandana on my mom’s head, an accessory I still have, when she turned around and said “I shaved my head” with a comforting smile on her face. At that moment, the cancer became real.

Over time, cancer sucked the life out of my mother’s body but her smile never left her face.

If there’s one thing that I’ve inherited from my mom it’s her optimism and fierce determination to succeed. People who know my story always look at me with such disbelief at how I’ve managed to steer myself in the right direction while staying so positive over the years.

Times were tough. After my mom died, I immediately took on her role and cared for my sister Lily and my brother Tristan, who at the time were one and two years old. It was like a Cinderella story. I was left with two new siblings and I was living with my stepfather, who I had trouble getting along with.

Computer time and MSN messaging with my friends turned into long nights preparing baths, changing diapers and reading Dr. Seuss’ One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish. I wouldn’t change it for the world but I grew up too fast.

While my stepfather worked the night shift at FedEx, I was alone with my thoughts and became accustomed to my new life as, well, a teenage parent. I didn’t have time for a social life—I was just constantly busy and overwhelmed with the endless grind. I slipped on my mother’s shoes and just started running.

Nothing makes you feel more like your parent than when you realize you’re doing exactly what they used to do. Tristan was one year older than Lily, and during his terrible twos, he took advantage of his power and made her cry a lot. One night I couldn’t handle the tormenting so I grabbed him by the arm and started yelling at him to stop. He raised his hands up towards his ears and my heart dropped. It brought me back to the same scene 10 years prior, when I covered my ears because my mom’s yelling was too loud to handle. In an instant I went from being totally frustrated and fed up to chillingly nostalgic.

It’s moments like this that made me more in-tune with how I should carry myself in the world. I learned by failing and from those around me.

Graphi by Florence Yee.

When Bambi’s mother is suddenly shot by a hunter, Bambi doesn’t realize it and he continues running into the woods until he turns around and realizes he’s on his own. He meets new friends who guide him and teach him valuable life lessons. That was me—a lost soul looking for guidance from everyone around me.

I was lucky that I had close friends and a drive to keep moving. Like Walt Disney, I stuck my nose back into whatever I was doing before the heartbreak and in my case it was books. I spent the next four years of high school studying tirelessly, then I went to college and now I’m in university. The dedication I put into school was initially a distraction from my pain, but as I kept pursuing it, I encountered challenges that kept me on my toes and made me a stronger person.

Throughout the years, I have been relentless in the pursuit of a greater existence because I have always feared that the most tragic point in my life would consume me.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned from Disney and the tendency to eliminate mother roles from his movies, it’s that losing someone can cause a pain so excruciating and unexplainable that the only remedy is to avoid the subject altogether. The most important thing to remember though is to keep moving forward. Even if you don’t know where you’re going, you’ll find yourself along the way.

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Student Life

It’s a new year, are you hoping for a new you?

A New Year’s resolution may not set you up for disappointment after all

It’s 2016. Social media pages are flooded with motivational quotes on starting fresh and abandoning the last 12 months. “Out with the old and in with the new,” they say, and with that comes New Year’s resolutions.

Making a goal on New Year’s is a good way to kick start a change. Photo by Andrej Ivanov.

So what is it about the new year that makes people want to change? According to Minda Miloff, a Montreal-based professional work and life coach, a new year is symbolic of a fresh start. Miloff said that people who make New Year’s resolutions are those that have recognized certain aspects of their lives they want to change, and they have built some sort of momentum and thoughts around how they can make these changes. The new year is simply an arbitrary date where they can finally take action and start reaching their goals.

Miloff said she helps people improve their quality of life by making goals and addressing obstacles that hold people back. She said a New Year’s resolution can be an effective method for people who need to kick start a certain change, but the key to following through with one’s goals lies in the process of recommitting to them every day.

There are a few things a person needs to do when goal-setting and Miloff suggests thinking about your values. “Values drive action. For every priority you have, ask yourself: ‘What can I do today to support that priority?’” Miloff said goal-setting won’t always be easy the first time around because “people set up challenging goals and then they have a difficult time because they don’t have a strategy on how to do them. You need to remember what it is that you want to do better today.”

Photo by Andrej Ivanov.

One of the reasons people give up on their New Year’s resolution is because their goal is too big and isn’t specific, measurable, timely or attainable, according to Miloff. Giving up on something can make a person lose faith and confidence because they won’t get results overnight. Miloff suggests then to “start with smaller hopes and aspirations and then build on your successes. Starting off slow builds success, success builds confidence and confidence will drive you to set more goals.”

Anyone who sets any kind of goal is bound to risk falling off the wagon. Miloff stresses that people are going to have setbacks in anything they do in life.

“We all have bad days or weeks, unforeseen situations arise and good routines fall apart. You lose steam, you get discouraged and you just get back up the next day,” Miloff said. It’s important to remember why you are setting goals in the first place and to remember to recommit to those goals every day, she said.

Keep thinking about what it is you’re doing each day that’s bringing you closer to your end goal. “Keep trying,” said Miloff. “If things don’t work out as well as you’d hoped, you just need to keep trying.”

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Music

Beyoncé: from the ‘90s to now

The superstar is credited with supporting feminism in her long-established career

For those who have followed Beyoncé’s career from early stardom to becoming the world-renowned superstar we all know her as today, there’s no denying her music has evolved over time.

Photo from Flickr.

She started off as the lead singer in the R&B group called Destiny’s Child which, according to Billboard, ended up being one of the best-selling girl groups of all time with recognized singles such as “Survivor” and “Bootylicious.” These tracks both have messages that shouldn’t be missed.

“Survivor” instills a sense of self-worth by defending independence and being confident in one’s achievements. Beyoncé was inspired to write “Bootylicious” based on nasty comments from the media criticizing her physique. The song praised women with curvy bodies and emphasized that all women are beautiful.

The singer/songwriter and actress then branched off to start her tremendously successful solo career. Beyoncé has always written songs about love, monogamous relationships and women’s empowerment through different lenses as each album was produced.

Beyoncé met her husband Jay-Z in 1999, and they started dating when she was 19 years old. The couple collaborated on many songs, the first of which was “Crazy in Love.” This song introduced “Bey-Z” as the ultimate rap/R&B distinguished duo. Their song “Déja Vu” openly demonstrated their chemistry and head over heels love for one another with lyrics like “Baby seems like everywhere I go I see you, from your eyes, your smile, it’s like I breathe you.” Their fearless and vulnerable lyrics inspire people to live by their own rules, follow their creative intuitions, and not let anyone’s opinion affect the final outcome of a project.

Jay-Z’s single, “On the Run,” featuring Beyoncé, put their relationship into perspective for the public, with lyrics reflecting “an innocent love un-misunderstood.” There is no doubt that Jay-Z is an enormous influence when it comes to Beyoncé’s music, however, she plays a huge part in his musical career as well. When their daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, was born, (before the Beyoncé album was released) Jay-Z vowed never to use the word “bitch” in his songs again. This was also due to the image Beyoncé painted herself as: an equal rights activist who believes that “men and women balance each other out, and we have to get to a point where we are comfortable with appreciating each other,” as mentioned in her 11-minute video, Yours and Mine, which was released in Dec. 2014 without forewarning.

Beyoncé’s work has gone from a safe mainstream pop and R&B style to a darker more risqué tone. Her latest album, Beyoncé, which had absolutely no advertising or warning that an album was in production, was dropped onto the world, leaving people in awe while her greatest masterpiece yet was revealed. On this exclusive visual album, including videos for every song, her track “Drunk in Love” gave her fans an intimate look into the star studded relationship.

The song also caused a lot of controversy for Beyoncé who is an advocate for women’s rights. Many critics analyzed the lyrics and deciphered several theories as to what the couple meant when writing this song. One of the lyrics has Jay-Z rapping “Now eat the cake, Anna Mae, I said eat the cake Anna Mae.” The lyric is criticized for being a reference to a scene from the Tina Turner biopic, What’s Love Got to Do With It, in which Tina’s (born as Anna Mae) abusive husband becomes physical to get her to eat cake. The lyrics came off as distasteful and offensive, however, the term “eat the cake” is also a common term in rap, and is used as sexual slang.

Beyoncé’s 2014 MTV Video Music Awards performance brought the F-word to the masses. The end of her performance consisted of projecting the word “Feminist” on a giant screen while she stood in front and embraced the message.

In her video, Yours and Mine, Beyoncé explained how she feels about the word: “I’ve always considered myself a feminist, although I was always afraid of that word because people put so much on it… I consider myself a humanist,” she said.

Beyoncé’s main goal is to leave a mark on the world through creative expression, and in the video, Yours and Mine, she explains that “the love that [she has] for music, for [her] husband, for [her] child, is something that will last far beyond [her] life.”

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Music

Recording your music 101

Home recordings can be tricky, so here are tips to help with sound quality

There are many reasons people still consider recording music at professional studios; the quality of sound is impeccable, the tracks and beats are prepared in advance and depending on where you go, expert feedback is normally provided. These benefits are compelling sure, but everything comes with a price. So if you’re looking to spend a minimum of $60 an hour for these perks then read no further! For those interested in saving a couple of bucks and channeling those creative skills, you’ve come to the right place.

It’s all about the home studio these days and one of the tricky parts about creating one is knowing what to avoid and what to use to your advantage. Ideally, setting an ambience is prime in deriving the appropriate background noise and overall atmosphere. Recording in a room with furniture, a bed, blankets and stuff in general will help absorb that echoing sound that cheapens the final track. Many microphones are sensitive to humidity, dust, or smoke, so avoid these elements as best you can to ensure the diaphragm stays clean. When placing the mic, it should be level to your mouth and always make sure to stand up when singing; your breaths are deeper and you have more control of your voice.

When it comes to recording instruments, if you own a keyboard, guitar or any type of instrument you can physically play, I suggest that you record yourself playing into your mic and upload the sound the same way you would the voice. Virtual instruments are a pain to use on a computer with keyboard and mouse. Also, avoid acoustic drums if you’re not properly equipped for recording them; the sound won’t be as clean as electric drums.

 Ideal equipment will include a microphone, headphones, cables to connect your instruments (if electronic), a computer and a decent recording software. A worthy microphone can be purchased at any local music shop, or electronic store for a minimum of $100. Carbon and dynamic microphones are ideal if you’re on a tight budget, but if you’re looking to really invest, I suggest using ribbon or condenser type microphones because of their sensitivity and ability to pick-up higher frequency sounds. If this is too pricy, your old “Rock band” or “Sing It” mic will do just fine. Headphones are a must when recording, and I would recommend semi open headphones because they offer a perfect balance between sound isolation and sound quality.

 Not all recording programs are user-friendly or easy to understand, but the following list includes free software compatible with both mac and PC: Ableton Live, Audacity, Presonus Studio One Free, Cockus REAPER and Zynewave Podium Free. I haven’t had a chance to test each program, but I can vouch for Ableton Live and Audacity; they get the job done.

 A few tips to getting it right: the microphone can hear you, so don’t be afraid to add yourself singing back-up vocals. For the perfectionists out there: fresh is best. Record it once and believe in yourself (but if it sounds awful, one more take won’t hurt anybody).

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