Nerida Bullock

Critically Curious Musings

Menu
  • Blog
  • Hello!
  • Scholarly Publications
Menu

Author: nerida

If you’re angry and you know it, stomp your feet!

Posted on January 16, 2022January 16, 2022 by nerida

Next time I am accused of being angry, I will savour the moment, for anger is an indicator of injustice— an internal barometer informing me that my personal ethics have been violated. Instead of fighting anger or denying it, I will relish in its glory exploring its bitter sweet taste in my mouth. I will Investigate where it resides within my body—do I feel it on my scalp? In my stomach? Does it make my fingers tingle? I will pay attention to how it affects my thinking, whether my mind sharpens or slows down. In the afterglow of anger do I sleep soundly, or am I disturbed by powerful dreams?

Read more

Frightfully Angry: Reflections on The Juggling Mother & “Coming Undone” in the Age of COVID

Posted on May 16, 2021May 16, 2021 by nerida

*** This piece was originally written for and published by SFU Public Square on March 17, 2021. Like most mothers, it’s difficult for me to solidly land on one emotion as I reflect upon the pandemic-induced blur of the last 12 months.   I feel tired. Content. Proud. Fucking angry. Grateful. Shame.  Most scholarly meanderings that I…

Read more

Le flâneur

Posted on November 15, 2020November 16, 2020 by nerida

To my Canadian eyes, watching a German man traverse the streets of Europe was like being granted admission to a magical performance. I saw the beauty in the way he belonged. I had never seen anything like it. I had never experienced anything like it. Those streets were literally built for HIM.

Read more

Happy Anniversary to Me!

Posted on August 31, 2020September 14, 2020 by nerida

This September, it has been 7 years since my marriage ended. If the 7-year-body-regeneration-theory holds any truth, the body that left my marriage exists no more. I am fresh and new.

I have caught you watching me.

Observing me.

Melding what you know of me with your consciousness and lived experience.

As Mary Oliver would say, what have I done with my one wild and precious life?

Read more

Can a public statement be more tone-“death”? Reflections on the statement issued by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

Posted on June 5, 2020September 14, 2020 by nerida

I find it tragic, offensive, ignorant, and quite frankly, fucking racist that the LDS Church makes no specific reference to the criminal murders of black folk at the hands of law enforcement, but specifically calls attention to looting and destruction of property. […] I call your bluff President Russell M. Nelson. In my sphere of influence, I challenge faithful Mormons, secular intellectuals, and those who read my blog just for shits and giggles to think long and hard about a supposed prophet moved by looting, but unmoved by structural racism that has marked black and brown bodies as disposable.

Read more

A Queer First Vision: Mormons celebrate a 200-year anniversary

Posted on April 4, 2020May 21, 2020 by nerida

Everywhere Smith went, trouble followed, and at the heart of these troubles, was his provocative challenge to the normative. Whether it be sexuality, commerce, politics – Smith’s ideas challenged the newly emergent republic of the United States. In fact, many historians have argued that it was his challenge to normativities that actually reinforced monogamy and capitalism as being quintessential to the American consciousness.

Read more

Send your roots deep into the earth

Posted on January 23, 2020April 21, 2020 by nerida

Life can difficult and stability is the panacea to all that can throw us off our game. To have people in our lives, be it family & friends, and/or spouses, who we can rely on when the shit-hits-the-fan is probably one of the greatest balms to disappointment, loss, shame, grief, physical impairment and frustration. Likewise, to have “our people” in times of joy, celebration, achievement and companionship is arguably freakin’ awesome.

Read more

Canada’s Not So Nice: What Sarah Carter teaches us about sexual control and Indigenous genocide

Posted on June 21, 2019January 25, 2021 by nerida

Land theft and Indigenous genocide created in perpetuity a legacy which I, as a descendent of white settlers, benefit from. The sentiment expressed by McConnell that I cannot be held liable for something from the past is alive and well in Canada. As our country grapples with questions of so-called reconciliation, I have observed the tendency of those who espouse the Canadian version of McConnell’s widely held sentiment to position racial injustice, particularly the violence directed at Indigenous women, firmly in the historic past.

Read more

Infidelity & Monogamy: You can’t have one without the other!

Posted on January 13, 2019January 13, 2019 by nerida

  “In every society, on every continent, and in every era, regardless of the penalties and the deterrents, men and women have slipped the confines of matrimony. Almost everywhere people marry, monogamy is the official norm and infidelity the clandestine one.”[1] Building upon her New York Times Bestseller, Mating in Captivity, renowned couples therapist, Esther…

Read more

Hey, that’s not fair! Government entitlements & the amorous couple.

Posted on November 4, 2018November 4, 2018 by nerida

  It was a beautiful November morning in Southern Alberta. The radiant blue sky flirted with the winter wheat, magically framing the splendor of the Rocky Mountains on the drive from Lethbridge to the Mormon Temple in Cardston. In a few short hours I would marry my best friend— committing myself to him not just…

Read more
  • 1
  • 2
  • Next

Search

Subscribe

Subscribe to my mailing list

Recent Posts

  • If you’re angry and you know it, stomp your feet!

    If you’re angry and you know it, stomp your feet!

    January 16, 2022
    Next time I am accused of being angry, I will …Read More »
  • Frightfully Angry: Reflections on The Juggling Mother & “Coming Undone” in the Age of COVID

    Frightfully Angry: Reflections on The Juggling Mother & “Coming Undone” in the Age of COVID

    May 16, 2021
    *** This piece was originally written for and published by …Read More »
  • Le flâneur

    Le flâneur

    November 15, 2020
    To my Canadian eyes, watching a German man traverse the …Read More »
  • Happy Anniversary to Me!

    Happy Anniversary to Me!

    August 31, 2020
    This September, it has been 7 years since my marriage …Read More »
  • Can a public statement be more tone-“death”? Reflections on the statement issued by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

    Can a public statement be more tone-“death”? Reflections on the statement issued by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

    June 5, 2020
    I find it tragic, offensive, ignorant, and quite frankly, fucking …Read More »
  • A Queer First Vision: Mormons celebrate a 200-year anniversary

    A Queer First Vision: Mormons celebrate a 200-year anniversary

    April 4, 2020
    Everywhere Smith went, trouble followed, and at the heart of …Read More »
  • Send your roots deep into the earth

    Send your roots deep into the earth

    January 23, 2020
    Life can difficult and stability is the panacea to all …Read More »
  • Canada’s Not So Nice: What Sarah Carter teaches us about sexual control and Indigenous genocide

    Canada’s Not So Nice: What Sarah Carter teaches us about sexual control and Indigenous genocide

    June 21, 2019
    Land theft and Indigenous genocide created in perpetuity a legacy …Read More »
  • Infidelity & Monogamy: You can’t have one without the other!

    Infidelity & Monogamy: You can’t have one without the other!

    January 13, 2019
      “In every society, on every continent, and in every …Read More »
  • Rebel Mormons & Sexual Nonconformity

    Rebel Mormons & Sexual Nonconformity

    October 6, 2018
      In testimony submitted to the BC Supreme Court in …Read More »
  • Born To Breed A Nation

    Born To Breed A Nation

    September 3, 2018
      I was born into the Mormon faith, and raised …Read More »
  • Intimate Violence and Normative Citizenship

    Intimate Violence and Normative Citizenship

    August 10, 2018
      On June 11, 2018 U.S. Attorney Jeff Sessions intervened …Read More »
  • Helen Fisher, I doth protest! Marriage as a Technology of Governance

    Helen Fisher, I doth protest! Marriage as a Technology of Governance

    August 5, 2018
    The drive from Vancouver to Whistler is always a thrill, …Read More »
  • My oh My! Things certainly have gotten complicated.

    My oh My! Things certainly have gotten complicated.

    June 1, 2018
      It was not unusual for my group of moms …Read More »
  • I’m Single, Not Sick!

    I’m Single, Not Sick!

    May 18, 2018
    It’s Sunday morning, and I am scrolling through my Flipchart …Read More »

Share on Social

©2025 Nerida Bullock