I wear a poppy - not because I agree everything Canada has done or continues to do. I share some of the same sentiment as Darko but not to the same degree (though I am older and the family experiences are quite different). My family was personally effected on both sides during Canadian war times and I have complex, mixed feelings about my Canadian identity. When my mother was 7, she, her family, and other Japanese Canadians were rounded up, stripped of property and rights, held at Hastings Park, and then taken to the prison camps in the BC Interior. The rest is part of our country's history. However, Canada being young and a relatively wealthy country held opportunity for families to rebuild and in one generation the wealth of the land allowed my family (on both sides - for my Scottish side, it was mining in eastern Canada and on my Japanese side - it was from sockeye from the Skeena and Fraser Rivers) to eventually aquire a comfortable and safe living to raise the next generations. For that I am grateful and fortunate. I am also mindful that these opportunities (while coupled with hard work work) came from resource extraction from the traditional territories of Indigenous people- for which I am thankful. Do I feel fortunate to be a Canadian at this time and place in history- yes! I am certainly grateful to those who fought and sacrificed for the country I live in with relative peace and comfort. I would also imagine for a lot of us being Canadian is a complex thing with a lot of layers and contradictions. Behind the visual symbol of wearing a poppy or not wearing one - there is lived experience and a family history that is hard to judge from the outside. That said, my family wears a poppy to honour and show respect.