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RUSH, Jinny

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1929 – 2023.

Jinny passed away peacefully at Greenwoods Eldercare on Feb. 15, surrounded by love. She is survived by Bob, her husband for 67 years, daughters Susan (Miles) Stacey and Colleen McKee, four grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren. Predeceased by son Brian in 1974.

Jinny was born and raised in Galt (now Cambridge) Ontario. Trained and served as a Registered Nurse at Sick Children’s Hospital in Toronto. She also served as a Nursing Officer in the Royal Canadian Naval Reserve, HMCS York, Toronto. In Jan. 1952 she transferred to HMCS Naden, in Esquimalt, serving in the hospital there until transferring to HMCS Discovery in Vancouver in August. She attended UBC from 1952-1954, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in nursing.

She met Bob on a blind date set up by and with respective UBC nursing and engineering ex-classmates in April 1954. They became engaged three months later. From June 1954-July 1956 Jinny was employed as an instructor in the School of Nursing at the Vancouver General Hospital. She became a stay-at-home mother for the next 17 years as their three children grew up. Jinny was a volunteer counselor with Planned Parenthood in Vancouver, before the province legalized it. In 1973 she was invited to apply for a position with the B.C. Centre for Disease Control. From 1973 – 1992 she served as the senior public health nurse there. Her duties included travelling periodically to public health clinics throughout the province. Jinny and Bob came to their cabin on Salt Spring every year throughout for vacations and as many weekends as they could, retiring back full-time in 1992. Jinny served as a volunteer at one time with the Library, the Visitor’s Centre, and Meadowbrook, as well as belonging to various groups and organizations. She will be missed by all who knew her.

We are grateful to Dr. Reznick and the staff at Greenwoods for their care and attention. There will be no public celebration of life for Jinny. Rather, it will be a private get-together of immediate family members, including 1-month old great-granddaughter, named Ivy Jinny Stacey.

OLSEN, Gwen

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Nov 18, 1934 – Feb 8, 2023.

On Wednesday February 8, Gwen E. Olsen passed away peacefully at home. She was 88 years old. Born to Violet and Jessie Archer in New Westminster, BC. Gwen was a long time resident of Salt Spring Island where she helped renovate, build and redecorate multiple homes. She was the business owner of Heritage Boutique and along with husband Harland, Harlan’s Chocolate Treats. Later in life she moved to the Nanaimo area to be closer to her daughters.

Gwen enjoyed traveling, painting and her pets. She was able to travel the world and reconnect with family in England. She was an accomplished painter, once having a gallery showing of her work. She loved animals and had pets all her life.

She is pre-deceased by her brother Wilfred (2016), Sister Kathy (2016), Husbands Harland (2015) and Leo (2002). She is survived by her children, Cindy, Cory and Sherry; step-children Marlene and Elaine; grand children Kelly, Jessie, Richard and Jason.

There will be a celebration of life held on Sunday March 26, 2023, 1-3 pm at the Nanaimo Golf Club.

MACDOUGALL, Nancy Jane (nee Applegath)

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April 30, 1928 ~ February 12, 2023.

It is with deep sadness that the family of Nancy Jane MacDougall announces her peaceful passing on Sunday, February 12th, 2023, at Greenwoods Eldercare. Nancy lived a remarkable 94 years devoting her life as a wonderful wife and mother. Her family was her world.

Nancy was born April 30, 1928, in Toronto and moved to Vancouver at a young age. It was there at the age of 4 that she met the future love of her life, Donald MacDougall. Little did she know her brother Bill’s friend would re-enter her life many years later and develop into a love affair that spanned nearly 72 years of marriage. They married in Vancouver on September 8, 1951.

Nancy left her career at Aetna Life when her children, daughter Susan and son Neil, were born. The family moved to West Vancouver where Nancy loved being a home maker. The family also enjoyed annual fishing trips to their cabin at Timothy Lake in the Cariboo.

Later in 1985 as empty nesters, Don and Nancy relocated to Salt Spring Island where Nancy was an active member of St. Mark’s Anglican Altar Guild and enjoyed her time with a lady’s bridge and mahjong groups. She was a talented crafter creating many beautiful cross stitch and crewel pictures. She was also busy canning and preserving the many bounties of Don’s vegetable and fruit gardens. After downsizing from their home on North End they moved to Brinkworthy where they made many friends over 20 years.

Nancy is survived by her loving husband Don, her children Susan Alexander and Neil MacDougall. Her grandson Bruce (Katie) Alexander, and granddaughter Erin (Tavish) Annis. She also has five great grandchildren Avery and Josh Annis and James, Arianne and Jaylynne Alexander. Nancy is pre-deceased by her parents Thomas and Wannetta Applegath and brothers Bill and Alan.

The family would like to thank Greenwoods staff for their care and compassion. As to Nancy’s wishes there will be no funeral service. In lieu of flowers, Nancy would be honoured to have donations made to the Salt Spring SPCA in her name.

GANDERTON, James Jan

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1937-2023.
 
James (Jimmy or Jim), passed away peacefully January 28 at home on Salt Spring Island.
 
Our wonderful father was a proud, generous and loving man who blessed us all with his kindness and devotion to family. He is survived by his sister Lynne and brother Fred, daughters Joni Ganderton (Steven Friedman), Diana Waterson (Brent), and son Mark Ganderton (Boni).
 
Jim was a wonderful grandfather, father and husband to Florence (Flo deceased) and was retired in Salt Spring, British Columbia. 
 
James attended Royal Military College in Kingston, (Engineering) before serving as Flight Lieutenant in the RCAF and, later as a career Diplomat (Trade Commissioner for Canadian Federal Govt) stationed in Singapore, New Zealand and USA. 
 
He and Flo were enthusiastic boaters for many years and he served as commodore of the Salt Spring Sailing Club. 
 
Jim had a sharp wit, a cheeky spirit and sparkling personality. He was a true gentleman and had the biggest heart. He had endless time for family and life long friends and was happiest celebrating their lives. He had the deepest love for Flo (65 years married). 
 
Finally, our Father and Mother will walk hand-in-hand again. 
 
The family thanks Dr. Reznick and the wonderful staff at Heritage Place for their compassionate care. 
 
A private family service is planned. In lieu of flowers, the family would like to ask that a donation be made to the charity of your choice in his name.

LTC votes to support another year of SSIWPA at reduced funding level

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After a public consultation process and lively discussion among trustees, an alliance tasked with coordinating work between various entities responsible for fresh water on Salt Spring Island will likely retain its special tax requisition funding, for the moment, at least. 

The island’s local Trust committee (LTC) will request the Islands Trust Council once again include the tax requisition in its upcoming budget to fund the work of the Salt Spring Island Watershed Protection Alliance (SSIWPA), a decision made at the LTC’s Feb. 9 meeting. The dollar amount will be smaller this year — $43,500 instead of $75,500, thanks to a $32,000 surplus from the previous year’s requisition, according to trustee Laura Patrick — but trustees were divided on the continuing value of the program.

Since 2014, SSIWPA has enjoyed a delegated authority to provide a planning forum “for the sustainability and protection of freshwater resources on Salt Spring Island.” It required a single part-time contracted staff person and essentially a meetings and materials budget to coordinate outreach and communication between the various agencies with jurisdiction over the island’s fresh water, those that provide it, and community members interested in it. Patrick said most areas of the province have regional districts that have created drinking water and watershed protection services. 

“That’s what we see at the Cowichan Valley Regional District and the regional district in Nanaimo,” said Patrick. “That’s exactly what (SSIWPA) is doing, coordinating all these different entities and the work that needs to be done making some hard decisions. It needs to be either us or the CRD. One of us has to be taking the lead and coordinating this work, and it’s been the Islands Trust.” 

But trustee Jamie Harris felt any continued requisition for SSIWPA was a waste of taxpayer money on an issue that was “not as complex as what it’s being made out to be,” and suggested defunding it altogether. 

“I see it as an exercise in more regulation being brought down upon the community in the guise of this ‘complex’ water issue,” said Harris, “where we’re all going to die of thirst as we’re crawling our way through the desert with one drop of water left in the canteen or something.” 

Harris argued Salt Spring builders “already know” what parts of the island have water, and what parts don’t. 

“We have areas where we know there’s a shortage of water, and it has [still] been developed there,” said Harris. “And people made out just fine. They have water delivered, they know how to conserve water because they don’t have the groundwater in that area, and traditionally never have.” 

In the meantime, Harris said, funding a coordinator between freshwater providers wasn’t necessary. Patrick disagreed, and trustee Tim Peterson decided to err on the side of continued funding, despite an upbraiding from Harris after the Lasqueti Islander admitted gaps in his knowledge of Salt Spring’s eccentric water systems.  

“You just stated you’re not clear on what’s really going on with the water,” said Harris. “How can you possibly vote in favour of something you’re not clear on?” 

“I’m happy to see that trustee Patrick has found a way to reduce [the tax requisition] substantially,” said Peterson, who chairs Salt Spring’s LTC, “and just from a precautionary point of view, I’m inclined to support it.” 

Patrick pointed out the LTC’s recommendation was just that; the final decision would be made by the full Trust Council during the budget process at the March 7 to 9 meeting. The resolution passed 2-1, with Harris voting against.  

Vortex project meets Trust permit conditions

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A project at the site of the former Fulford Inn has met its conditions for development permit approval, according to local trustees, who unanimously passed a resolution instructing staff to issue that permit to the developer — even as some expressed dissatisfaction with the process.  

Trustees Jamie Harris, Laura Patrick and Tim Peterson voted to approve the resolution, with Peterson voting orally — not raising his hand, in what he called a symbolic gesture of his reluctance — during the local Trust committee (LTC) meeting Thursday, Feb. 9, after public comment and a wide-ranging discussion on how — and whether — the Islands Trust committee could meaningfully interact with First Nations in its role of guiding development. 

The development permit application for the Vortex, owned by Merchant House Capital, whose principal and founder David Fullbrook lives on Salt Spring, was conditionally approved through an LTC resolution passed at an Aug. 9, 2022 meeting; those conditions included submitting revised plans that reflected the relocated sewage disposal fields at the site, according to planner Anthony Fotino, and staff agreed to recommend approval. 

“My rationale for this recommendation is that the applicant has fulfilled the conditions of the resolution,” said Fotino, outlining the steps trustees had requested and how they had been completed by the developer. 

But the long-debated project, which intends to construct 17 commercial guest units, a restaurant and accessory facilities at the mouth of Fulford Harbour, has never failed to elicit community reaction at meetings — and there would be no exception at this one. During the public comment period preceding consideration of the Vortex proposal, resident Jean Wilkinson stood to read an email she said she received that morning from Lyackson First Nation consultations coordinator Karyn Scott, expressing opposition to the development specifically and the lack of “satisfactory engagement or meaningful consultation with the Islands Trust” in general. 

“We strongly recommend and request the LTC and Islands Trust commence meaningful discussions with our communities to understand the infringement the Vortex development poses to our Indigenous interests,” said the letter Wilkinson read. “We are saddened and disappointed that once again, Islands Trust and its LTCs are ignoring the voices of the Indigenous peoples who will bear the disproportionate impact of these harmful decisions.” 

Yet even as trustees agreed on the importance of engagement with First Nations, they were clearly conflicted. Later in the meeting, trustees would instruct staff to develop options for interim protocols for “meaningful and respectful” engagement between themselves and regional and local Indigenous organizations.

But for the moment, and until such protocols were in place, this project at least would move forward. Harris — who later helped craft the protocol request resolution, guiding it to include Salt Spring Island’s Indigenous groups specifically — felt Vortex offered an opportunity for Fulford, not a calamity. 

“I see in this report that a great deal of time and effort has been put into making sure that the creek is going to be protected from waste water,” said Harris. “I know there was a kind of hole put in the community’s heart when the Fulford Inn became no more; this could inject some vitality in the community.” 

Patrick was more circumspect. 

“We have [an] email of some concern that was raised today,” said Patrick. “I’d like to make sure we dot our i’s and cross our t’s; that we’ve done what we’re supposed to do. Is there urgency that this has to occur today?” 

An option was presented by staff to withhold approval and request more information. However, regional planning manager Chris Hutton said the August resolution of conditional approval was “unlike anything I’ve ever seen before,” and expressed there might be difficulty in justifying another deferral. 

“This resolution seems to say that the permit is approved, and then adds additional conditions after the fact,” said Hutton, again noting the submitted drawings meet the LTC’s guidelines. “I would suggest that if you’re not content with the drawing that has been submitted, or the applicant’s efforts to meet the guidelines, you can certainly provide us with a comment back on how they can be improved. But I would not suggest that it might be a good idea to contemplate further input on this, [given] that this resolution exists.”  

“I think if we request further information at this point it’s not setting up a good precedent,” said Harris. “All the concerns have been met, and they’re quite stringent. And let’s face it, this is private property. We don’t have the position of power to requisition private property back from folks and hand it over to First Nations.” 

Patrick noted the upcoming building permit process would necessitate permits through the provincial archaeological branch.  

“I would assume that First Nations have the opportunity to influence the province, which does have a requirement to consult with First Nations,” said Patrick. “We don’t have that law that the province does. I’m hoping that is the pathway [where] they can voice their opinions.” 

Patrick added it was frustrating, because while she felt the LTC was focused on trying to build better relations with First Nations, they were continually put in a position of “making it look like we are not trying to build relationships.” 

“I can agree with trustee Patrick,” said Tim Peterson. “There isn’t clear policy. We have a Trust Council declaration on First Nations reconciliation, but at the same time we’re put in a very difficult position, especially in this case, when there’s already been a ‘subject-to’ approval.” 

Harris said the LTC’s relationships with First Nations were important, but he was unconvinced that “bending at the last minute” would do anything to improve them. 

“And I’m concerned that some people are seeking out First Nations and feeding them information to try and curb development here,” said Harris, “when in fact this is a really positive thing for the community. If anything, this is going to improve that area, because as it sits now, it doesn’t look good.” 

Ultimately, the development permit was approved — as was a resolution requesting staff “explore options to enter into interim protocols for meaningful and respectful engagement between the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee and the WSÁNEC Leadership Council, the Cowichan Nation Alliance, and Salt Spring Island local Indigenous organizations.”

Hospital auxiliary volunteers thrilled with Thrift Shop reno

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After almost two years since taking over the former Driftwood office space, the Lady Minto Hospital Auxiliary Society (LMHAS) has completed renovations needed to expand both the Thrift Store’s retail space and its sorting and storage areas.

The shop reopened Jan. 10 after an extended Christmas break with more space to set out the goods for sale and for items to be accepted, sorted and stored.

Anyone who took donations to the shop in the past could see the cramped space the volunteers worked in as plastic bags filled with donations and discards were piled high around them. With a wall removed during renovations, that area now forms part of the more spacious retail store, including a larger section for books. There’s lots of room for shoppers between racks and shelving units, and many more goods and treasures for sale.

The expanded working areas mean islanders will see fewer “No Donations Today” signs when they bring their goods to the shop. Still, LMHAS president Judith Wardell suggests calling ahead at 250-537-0643 before coming in with donations to ensure they can be accepted at that time. If sorting volunteers are available, donations can be accepted during store hours of Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

While more space for storage and sorting had always been the main priority for LMHAS volunteers who run the thrift shop, explain Wardell and board member and publicist Ann Heeley-Ray, the original plan was to use some of the Driftwood space in a store expansion. However, after LMHAS took over the area in March of 2021, structural problems with the building forced a change of plans. Another more recent challenge arose from a flood caused by a leaking toilet.

But Wardell and Heeley-Ray said everyone was pleased about the new floor that resulted, with a Victoria-area contractor available to do the job quickly.

All proceeds from Thrift Shop sales benefit Gulf Islands public health facilities.

“The public knows us as the thrift store,” said Wardell. “But I think a lot of times they don’t understand that we buy things for Greenwoods and Braehaven and the hospital. [Those agencies] send us lists and say ‘We need this, this and this.’ And we pick out the things we feel they need the most.”

“That’s where we really need volunteers — in the hospital,” she added.

Auxiliary volunteers have traditionally provided afternoon tea to extended care unit residents, for example.

Heeley-Ray notes that the LMHAS also provides items for facilities on the other Gulf Islands and receives donations from those islands.

Visit lmhas.ca for more information about auxiliary activities, donations and how to help.

Tuition-free education would make health care careers more attractive

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By CONNIE GIBBS

Here is a statistic to make you think. The number of seniors in our province is expected to double in the next decade.

More seniors living longer will mean more ambulance calls, more hospitalizations, more operations, more long term and extended care facilities and more support needed for people to stay in their homes as they age and finally die.

We don’t have enough people working in health care now. And we will need many more health care workers in the immediate future. A stay in our treasured Lady Minto, or a visit to a patient there, reveals the truth. The dedicated, overworked staff are stretched by the current unsustainable burden of caregiving they carry. Here on Salt Spring, like everywhere else in Canada, we need more doctors, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, lab and imaging technicians, paramedics, health care aides, social workers, mental health and addictions specialists and maintenance staff. At the same time, health care workers are burning out, reducing their hours and dropping out as the burden becomes too great.

How can we make working in health care at ALL levels more attractive than it is now?

Putting Band-Aids on a wounded health care system won’t help. Health care itself needs major surgery, not Band-Aids. We need bold initiatives to recruit, reward and retain public health care workers, to make working in health care a much more attractive career choice than it is now.

As one step in that direction, I would like to see the financial barriers to health care education dismantled.

When I worked as a student financial aid advisor at the British Columbia Institute of Technology, I discovered that fully 50 per cent of the nursing students were already above the average student loan debt. Why were nursing students carrying so much educational debt before they’d even graduated? It takes four years to train a registered nurse. I found out prospective nursing students had already racked up student debt in post secondary education just to make themselves more competitive applicants to nursing programs with admission waitlists.

There is a provincial and federal student loan forgiveness program already in place that cancels student loans for graduates who serve five years in a public clinical workplace in an under-served community. You can find the list of approved under-served communities at studentaidbc.ca.

Salt Spring Island isn’t on that list. We should be. Isn’t it time to declare the whole province, indeed the whole country, as under-served and widely publicize the opportunity to graduate debt free from a health care program?

Besides expanding the loan forgiveness program, there is another opportunity to make health care careers more attractive. One of the entry level caregiving programs in health care is the health care assistant certificate program. Health care assistants work in hospitals, long term care facilities and private homes to help with the essential tasks of living, right up to providing end of life care. Camosun College offers this certificate program. The tuition is $3,000. What if tuition was waived completely for qualified applicants who complete the program and work in the field for two years? What if experienced employees could seamlessly progress to the next level, the licensed practical nurse diploma and beyond to the registered nurse degree with the incentive of tuition waivers for those willing to continue to upgrade their skills?

There are not enough health care assistants on Salt Spring to staff all the beds at Greenwoods despite dedicated efforts to recruit by the administration. There are not enough nurses at Lady Minto. There is not enough home support for people who want to stay at home and out of institutions.

We need to listen to our health care workers about what they need to care for elderly, sick, disabled patients. We need to support them so they can do their jobs without burning out.

Last fall, I had surgery at Victoria General Hospital. The operation was successful and I received excellent care from the nursing staff in the four-bed room I occupied. The nurses worked 12-hour shifts and I noticed at times, they stayed on duty past their long shift. The nurse on duty seemed to never stop moving while caring for us. I asked one nurse how she coped with the pace. She said sometimes she was so exhausted after her shift that she couldn’t even speak to her husband, who was a very understanding guy.

Late one night, a young nurse checked on me. She was a recent graduate from a local nursing program. I asked her if working on the ward was different from what she expected it would be as a student. She paused, then said that her training was based on a different nurse to patient ratio. She expected to be looking after four patients, but due to staff shortages, she was responsible for six. This young nurse was not complaining, only answering my question honestly.

The next morning, as I got ready to return to Salt Spring, I thought about that young nurse. I wondered if she would last in the hospital, and how long.

Connie Gibbs worked as a student financial aid advisor and community educator in the Lower Mainland before retiring. She has written about student finance for the Vancouver Sun, the Province, and the Globe and Mail. She is a new volunteer with the Salt Spring Hospice Society.

Submissions wanted for Art on the Hall mini murals

BY ELIZABETH NOLAN

For Salt Spring Arts

Artists living on the southern Gulf Islands have the opportunity to share their creative vision with thousands of viewers over the next year in a public-facing exhibition located right in the heart of Ganges.

Salt Spring Arts is inviting proposals for the 2023 Art on the Hall mini-murals project up until the end of this month. The murals are produced on 4X8-foot sheets of plywood and will be prominently displayed on Mahon Hall’s main exterior wall. Installation is timed to coincide with the annual Spring Art Show. The murals stay on exhibit throughout the summer and fall to greet visitors to the Artcraft show, plus anyone else passing through downtown Ganges.

Salt Spring artist Patrick McCallum, whose mural was selected for the 2022 Art on the Hall exhibit, observed successful applicants are awarded an honorarium and get to keep the piece after the exhibit season. On top of the incredibly valuable exposure, all of this makes it a terrific opportunity for emerging and established artists alike.

“You have 32 square feet, seen over 300 days by literally thousands of people, mounted eight feet up on the side of an iconic building in the heart of Ganges, and they pay you. What more do I need to say?” McCallum asked.

In his view, however, these significant perks are only part of the reward. Even just preparing a proposal can stretch the artist in positive ways, since many people are not used to working at such a large scale or with that type of viewing experience in mind.

“When you’re painting something that’s four by eight feet, you can’t just take your smaller painting and scale it bigger — it’s a completely different experience,” McCallum explained. “Your idea has to be strong, your concept has to be strong and it can’t be highly detailed because it’s hanging up in the air. If you’re not a muralist you’ll have to rethink your entire process, so as an artist it challenges you to be creative in so many ways.”

Past Art on the Hall participants have certainly been creative in their approach. Rosie Schinners, who primarily works in collage, successfully presented one of her vibrant designs on a weather-proofed plywood base for the 2021 project.

“It’s definitely a good experience if you’ve been thinking about exploring your work in a different way,” Schinners said, adding, “If you’re interested in murals, in general it’s a good bridge to get to that place. It’s not a full-sized mural so it’s more manageable.”

As someone who had recently moved to Salt Spring, having the mini mural helped introduce Schinners’ unique visual style to the local community and to the arts council itself. Salt Spring Arts went on to commission Schinners for a “portrait” of Mahon Hall.

“Having the exposure to the community right down in Ganges was definitely big,” Schinners said.

Artists who are thinking about submitting a mural proposal are invited to take the theme of the 2023 Spring Art Show as a jumping-off point. This year’s event is a border-crossing collaboration between Salt Spring Arts, the San Juan Islands Museum of Art and ArtSpring called Archipelago — Contemporary Art of the Salish Sea. McCallum, who is curating the show with Richard Steel, suggested thinking about the Salish Sea’s extended island arts community as a group of people who have sought a quiet haven to unlock their voice.

The deadline for proposal submission is Feb. 28. All of the details and the online form are here.

Irreverent dance show probes body image

BY KIRSTEN BOLTON

For ArtSpring

Billed as part stand-up comedy, part Greek tragedy, part performance art and part contemporary dance, Body Parts is a virtuoso solo performance by veteran artist Tara Cheyenne Friedenberg that hits the ArtSpring stage on Saturday, Feb. 25.

Being a one-woman show is always a high-stakes challenge for a performer to pull off gracefully. Unfortunately for Friedenberg, as she attempts to perform her act, she continues to find herself terribly side-tracked by her own body issues. She questions, makes excuses, vents and theatrically recalls all-too-real stories many women can relate to about their own bodies.

The experience results in what Vancouver’s Georgia Straight called “insanely funny and imaginatively genius.”

Underneath the biting comedy, however, is Friedenberg’s exploration of a heartbreaking personal landscape of body dysmorphia, disordered eating and self-loathing. In short, negotiating our very complicated relationships with body image.

“Body image, body positivity and intuitive eating are all concepts swimming around social media, the ‘wellness’ industry, and in our minds,” says Friedenberg. “But do we feel better about ourselves? Do we feel like we can talk about the shame we experience in or around our bodies?”

Body Parts joyfully dismantles the damage inflicted by this shame. Her concept is built on the need to share our experiences and reveal the absurdity of ideas such as idolizing a “dancer body,” pursuing the perfect “bikini body” and the pressure of “getting your body back” after giving birth to a baby. 

Serving as the production’s writer, choreographer and performer, this recognized dance-theatre force and alumni of SFU also has her creative hands in the set design and costumes. Friedenberg has been artistic director of what is now known as Tara Cheyenne Performance (TCP) since 2007, whose express purpose is to encourage and grow the work of underrepresented artists, spark community engagement and “make contemporary dance more accessible to the public through physical storytelling that blends comedy, movement and text.”

Combining personal pains with insightful social commentary, the show ultimately holds out hope of transformation. An irreverent, kinetic show to kickstart the important conversation about how we can begin to take the power back, enjoy the amazing things our bodies can do, and laugh through the tears together.

The performance, which begins at 7:30 p.m., will include a post-show talkback.

The community is also welcome to participate in a free “Rough Cut” session on Wednesday, Feb. 22 from noon to 1 p.m. to preview a portion of Friedenberg’s next work in progress, Pants, which has been developed in ArtSpring’s Creative Residency Program. In this work, Friedenberg explores her own relationship to gender and invites viewers to ask questions, share experiences and give feedback. The input is a valuable part of the process to artists.

Email tickets@artspring.ca or call the box office at 250-537-2102 to sign up.