You hear stories like that of Canadians trying to get in, but when you go back home, you don't expect that.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Well, I've just gotten accustomed to just being in Canada for five and a half months a year.
People ask 'How do you get so eh-ish?' I don't know if it's just because so much of my family still lives in Canada and I finished studies up there.
The Canadians kind of look out for each other a little bit.
After being in captivity for so long, I can't begin to describe how wonderful it feels to be home in Canada.
Canadians have this weird way about them where we really stick together.
A lot of funny stuff happens in Canada.
I look at Canada like a second home.
The question about my Canadianness comes up a lot, and I'm never quite sure what to say about it. I've carved a life out for myself in Oregon, and it feels like home, not because it's the States but because that's where my friends are and where my son is.
The typical journalist's typical lead for the typical Canadian story nowadays is along this line: that Canadians are hard at work trying to gain a reputation as a nation of rapid social change.
I traveled nonstop in 2009, so when my son popped out and my passport expired for a while, I felt more than happy just to be at home here in Canada.
No opposing quotes found.