Tuesday 28 June 2022

Reflections of a JSRDF Board Member 2017-2022

 



It's been two weeks since my time as a board member for the Joubert Syndrome Foundation came to an end, stepping down after a four-year term (plus an extra pandemic-necessitated "victory lap" year), and I'm feeling reflective. 

My first experience with the JSRDF's Board of Directors was at the Chicago conference in 2015. A couple people casually said I should join, but I wasn't ready for it. When I was formally asked two years later, I accepted. Though I was excited by the opportunity, I spent the majority of my first year feeling out of place.

You had about a dozen people, all with kids and some kind of work experience. Meanwhile, here I was, unemployed (work wouldn't happen for another year) and living with my parents. Of course everyone was great at involving me in things, but I still felt like one big fish out of water.

It wasn't until the following Spring that I started to feel like I was finding my place. The Board's Communications committee began sharing blog posts and articles I'd written and I was able to represent the Board and Foundation at a couple of events, like a Canadian Organization for Rare Disorders (CORD) conference being held in Ottawa. 

My first year with the Board ended with my first ever business trip, a retreat in Dallas, Texas where I was invited to sit on the Family Support committee as a means for the Foundation to better represent and include adults with Joubert syndrome, something I did almost immediately with one or two ideas. 

After this, there was the conference in Baltimore, where I got to show off a little, a retreat in Chicago, where I thoroughly enjoyed an amazing piece of deep-dish meatlovers pizza and, more seriously, proposed my own project of collecting profiles of adults with JS, frequently-asked questions, or whole stories in some cases, submitted in each person's own words. Here at home, I represented the Board, the Foundation, Joubert syndrome as a whole, and even myself at a genomics event held in Canada's Parliament. And literally one short week before the pandemic hit Ottawa, I was able to squeeze in another CORD conference.

And that brings us to COVID-time. 

The past two-and-a-half years have been tough, not going to lie, with pandemic-related restrictions preventing travel and face-to-face interaction, and COVID-fatigue making participation seem like a chore at times. But it hasn't been all bad.  The adult profiles were uploaded and posted last year, and I was interviewed about life with Joubert syndrome and being a board member by Healthing.ca, an online health and wellness magazine.

Despite March 2020 'til present, sitting on the Board of Directors and being able to represent the JSRDF has been fun, educational, and an all-around great experience. Big, big thank-you's to my fellow Board members and best of luck to the next crew!

Cheers!






Tuesday 14 June 2022

I'm Off!

 

If only that colouring was real.

Work's done, packing's done, countdown's done! 

Just taking the briefest of moments to do up this post and relax before heading out later this afternoon.

Incredibly excited, but still hoping for a smooth and complication-free flight.

Cheers!

Monday 13 June 2022

Sunday 12 June 2022

Day 2

 

Parasaurolophus

Day 2 and everything's almost ready to be packed.

Cheers!


Saturday 11 June 2022

Day 3

 

Mammoth

Day 3.

A nice walk to enjoy the warm weather, run some errands, and grab some Subway. Last major outing (and bit of junk food) before departure on Tuesday.

Cheers!

 

Friday 10 June 2022

Day 4

 

Entelodont

Day 4. Also, dino-pig! 

Packing begins and a teeny bit anxious about that four-hour flight. That'll pass though.

Cheers!

Thursday 9 June 2022

Day 5

 

Ankylosaurus

Day 5 and starting to make a list of what to pack.

Cheers!

Wednesday 8 June 2022

Day 6

 



Day 6 of the Countdown to Drumheller.

I just learnt that the Tyrannosaurus skeleton used for the main building in Jurassic Park, that gets crushed by a flung velociraptor at the movie's end, is "Huxley" from The Royal Tyrrell Museum's Dinosaur Gallery, and was discovered in Alberta. Can't wait to see it!!

Cheers!

Tuesday 7 June 2022

Out and About

 


The last few weeks have been surprisingly busy, active, and eventful. Some things I even did maskless!

Two weeks ago was my 37th birthday, and I actually got to go out and do things. A relief after two previous lockdown birthdays! First was a birthday burger and Tijuana street fries at Bite Burger, then out to see Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness the next day. 

Last Friday was pretty well non-stop, with an Orthopedics appointment in the morning (all good, with a referral to try and get a pair of shoes like I got last year), a quick trip to work in the afternoon to get an access card updated, and an evening at Ottawa's Ribfest for dinner (jam-packed and a little bit crazy!) and an iced chai latte for the drive home.

And finally, today I went back to pick up my card for work, and went up to my former office, first time since March 2020, to see if there was anything I could bring home. I walked in and it was like one of those documentaries where a disaster had pretty much frozen some place in time! Photos of a team-building exercise from well-over two years ago (which showed clearly how much weight I've lost since then) adorned the department's bulletin board, a 2020 calendar was tacked over my desk, and a two-year-old box of green tea was the lone occupant of one of my desk drawers. Very weird experience. Then Harvey's for a sit-down lunch.

I might try and get out for some comics this weekend, but otherwise I'm "people and placed"-out until I fly out West next week.

Cheers!


One Week Until Drumheller

 

Triceratops


You know what's a better topic than housing?

Dinosaurs!

Exactly one week until Drumheller, and the countdown is intensifying with the first of seven positively prehistoric posts with some favourite, and often Canadian, creatures.

Cheers!


Monday 6 June 2022

I Shouldn't Have to Do This

 


I've got housing on my mind again. 

It's been five years since I seriously looked into it, and about three since I had my one and, so far, only viewing of an accessible/subsidized apartment through the Ottawa Housing Registry.

The province of Ontario recently had an election, and I was in the middle of drafting a housing-related email to one of my area's candidates when our current Member of Provincial Parliament, who I unsuccessfully reached out to years earlier, was reelected. Instead, I'm in the process of finishing the email to send to one of our city council members. 

I know there's a housing crisis that's affecting everyone, and I'm aware that this email won't magically get me a place to live, or more money to think I can look, but it will get my story told.

But, I can't help thinking that I shouldn't have to do this.

I shouldn't have to be below the poverty level. I shouldn't have to have been on a list for accessible housing for well over a decade now. And I shouldn't have to keep contacting policy makers in hopes that someone just might be willing and able to do something for me (and others)!

Stating the obvious, but it's worth venting about.

Cheers.