logo
How daytime parties are fuelled by the wellness movement and a need for community

How daytime parties are fuelled by the wellness movement and a need for community

CBCa day ago
Social Sharing
Daytime parties are trending across Canada, with people trading alcohol and all-night clubbing for coffee and croissants.
One such party is Croissound in Montreal, which is rethinking nightlife culture by gathering local DJs at cafés. So far, it's presented four Canadian events this year, with thousands of attendees. Its most recent party was a free, ticketed event at a popular Montreal food court.
The Coffee Party, which calls itself "a global movement reimagining how people connect," has held several events in Toronto since late last year.
An increasing number of these sober daytime events seem to be popping up. There have been parties in Vancouver and Edmonton, and even in places like Kazakhstan and Singapore.
And in August during the National Bank Open tennis tournament, Sobeys Stadium in Toronto is playing host to a Coffee Party event with all-you-can-eat pastries and bottomless coffee for $25.
WATCH | Hitting the dance floor in the daylight:
Hit the club and be home by 9 p.m.
7 days ago
An outgrowth of the wellness movement
Daytime parties represent a shift in how wellness and community are being highlighted in a post-pandemic economy where real-life experiences are valued, experts say.
Salima Jadavji, a clinical social worker, psychotherapist and podcaster, said she sees this growing interest as an outgrowth of the wellness movement and as part of a desire for in-person social experiences that are curated.
"Sustainable self-care doesn't have to sound boring, it really is what brings you joy and what's good for you," she said.
"These gatherings also reflect a broader cultural shift in people prioritizing and attending to their mental well-being ... people are shifting away from escapism to intentionality."
WATCH | Montreal is waking up to daytime parties:
Coffee, croissants and good sound — daytime parties are popping up in Montreal
3 months ago
Croissound is a party from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. for all ages. Experts say this type of event without alcohol is part of a generational shift.
For some, that's a move away from an alcohol-fuelled nightlife to healthier, sober daytime gatherings.
"While those are the trends of what we're seeing, you can create it in any which way that you want for yourself," Jadavji said.
This is also something Emily Lyons has been observing.
Lyons, the founder and CEO of Femme Fatale Media, has been planning and hosting events since 2009. She started with local Toronto events but has since expanded across North America.
"When we started, it was all nightclubs, nightlife, galas, things like that in the evening," she said. "But over the years, there's been a massive shift, so that's only a very small fraction of what we do now."
Lyons said recent wellness trends and the move toward alcohol-free drinks have contributed to the rising popularity of daytime parties.
A generational shift
In a report released last October based on a 2023 survey, Statistics Canada noted that young people between the ages of 18 and 22 abstained from alcohol at a higher rate than those in older age groups, and a lower proportion of young people drank seven or more alcoholic drinks in the past week compared with older Canadians.
There's also greater public awareness of the link between alcohol use and health issues, including cancer.
Markus Giesler, a professor of marketing at York University's Schulich School of Business in Toronto, said younger generations seem to be less focused on alcohol consumption and more interested in gatherings that promote wellness and balance.
Giesler attributes this to a decline in real, organic social encounters during the COVID-19 pandemic and to a desire for entertainment that's affordable these days.
He said members of Gen Z — typically born between 1997 and 2012 — tend to spend their money on more meaningful social experiences. The rise of the gig economy means younger consumers have more flexibility with their scheduling — driving for Uber at night, for example, and using the day for social encounters, he said.
Giesler said he's found that evenings aren't as focused on communal gatherings as they were in the past. "Community is valued differently than it used to be," he said. "Sunlight is the new strobe light."
A shift for businesses, too
These lifestyle changes are also affecting businesses.
"These event spaces need to also think very differently about what parties are all about these days," Giesler said.
He said he finds that younger generations have become more mindful of others who want to limit their alcohol consumption.
"Different things matter now. Quality conversation is more important than the experience of clubbing," Giesler said.
"Understanding these changes in consumption is the key to the event spaces and organizers of these parties," he said. "They're being shaped by, and shape this trend, I would say."
Spaces for arts and crafts groups, board games and activities that bring people together are benefiting from this trend, Giesler said.
Lyons, of Femme Fatale Media, said she's also found that things have changed drastically for her business, and she's no longer spending as much time tearing down events in the middle of the night.
"For us in the event world, it's been a total reset," she said. "Somebody said recently that brands want to be associated with clarity, not chaos, and I loved that because I feel like the daytime events are just so much more aligned with how people actually want to live."
Lyons said she's seen a redesign of nightclubs into daytime venues. One example is the Toronto Event Centre — formerly Muzik nightclub — which now hosts everything from corporate events and weddings to product launches and cocktail receptions. Lyons, who's worked with the venue for more than 15 years, said it's adapted to changing times and also hosts wellness-focused daytime coffee events because the late-night scene wasn't drawing the same crowds as before.
One of her other companies, Lyons Elite, a matchmaking service, is also changing the way it operates to accommodate this shift.
"For years, we hosted singles events in the evenings — rooftop mixers, cocktail-style parties — but we started seeing a growing desire for connection without the hangover, so we began testing daytime formats: brunches, coffee meetups, more casual morning networking events," she said.
Lyons said she believes more businesses are going to be built around what she calls a new ecosystem.
"I just love that we're redefining what a party even means," she said. "It's deep conversations by 10 a.m., and I personally love it because it's so aligned with where I am now in my life and what I'm focused on."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Heat warning in effect in Hamilton, surrounding areas could feel like 39
Heat warning in effect in Hamilton, surrounding areas could feel like 39

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Heat warning in effect in Hamilton, surrounding areas could feel like 39

A heat warning has been issued for Hamilton, Niagara, Burlington and surrounding areas from Sunday until Tuesday, according to Environment Canada. Monday is set to be the hottest in Hamilton with a high of 31 C, but it may feel more like 39 with the humidity factored in. "There is some uncertainty in the duration of the heat event for some regions ... Over some areas the heat event could persist into Wednesday," the weather agency said in its heat warning. Tuesday is expected to see a high of 31 C and a low of 20 C. Environment Canada recommends people check on those who are vulnerable, stay hydrated and watch out for symptoms of heat exhaustion. "Signs may include headache, nausea, dizziness, thirst, dark urine and intense fatigue," said the weather agency. It also suggests people close their blinds and open windows if it feels cooler outside than inside. Using a fan or air conditioner, limiting direct exposure to the sun, and wearing lightweight, light-coloured clothing also advised. The medical officer of health for the City of Hamilton initiated a heat warning starting Sunday. The city and some community agencies will open cooling areas for people to go to during the heat and humidity.

My baby nearly didn't survive her birth. Her presence has made me a grateful mom
My baby nearly didn't survive her birth. Her presence has made me a grateful mom

CBC

time3 hours ago

  • CBC

My baby nearly didn't survive her birth. Her presence has made me a grateful mom

This First Person article is the experience of Lauren Helstrom, who lives in Saskatoon with her daughter Evee. For more information about CBC's First Person stories, please see the FAQ. Right from the moment of her delivery, my daughter's life hung by a thread. I'd gone into labour 17 weeks before my due date, and something in my bones screamed danger. After getting admitted at the hospital, I was rushed onto a stretcher and wheeled through double doors, past people too afraid to meet my gaze. It felt like the room itself was holding its breath. I was supposed to say goodbye. A labour and delivery nurse kneeled beside me, gripped my hand and whispered, "I'm not leaving you." I didn't know how badly I needed those words until they reached me. Motherhood didn't begin the way I dreamed. But strangers in masks and gowns gave me the chance to be the mother I dreamed I could be. My daughter, Evee, was born at 23 weeks and four days gestation, weighing 561 grams — just the size of a bag of candy. She emerged still wrapped in her amniotic sac — skin like wet rose petals, lungs too tiny to rise and fall. She was silent. No heartbeat. Not breathing. But the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) team was there and ready, not to mourn, but to fight. A resident stepped in to resuscitate her. I will never forget his face — the tears in his eyes as he fought for her life with both hands. They brought her back. They saved her. They saved us both. A ghost of a mother The NICU was like another planet. Foreign. Unforgiving. Sacred. I wasn't handed my baby. I wasn't even allowed to touch her. She lay inside a glass box, her chest flickering with effort, tangled in wires and tubes. Machines surrounded her — blinking, hissing, screaming a language I didn't understand. I sat at her bedside, afraid to breathe too loud and overwhelmed by alarms that wouldn't stop. They pierced my eardrums and stabbed my heart. The first time I sang You Are My Sunshine, I didn't make it past the line, "Please don't take my sunshine away." I wept into my hands. Was I a mother? I couldn't cradle my baby or feed her. I needed permission just to place my fingertip on her paper-thin skin. I felt like a ghost of a mother. Invisible. Useless. Failing. I was haunted by the feeling: "You're saying goodbye." Evee spent 130 days in the NICU. She battled retinopathy of prematurity, chronic lung disease, seizures, an open duct in her heart and the worst yet — a grade 4 brain bleed and hydrocephalus. Through it all, the NICU staff were the hands that held me when I collapsed. And yet, within that grief, there was devotion. If you're a parent - you'll remember what it was like to be in a hospital delivery room. That memory is still fresh for Lauren Helstrom, whose daughter was born 17 weeks prematurely and spent the first months of her life at the neonatal intensive care unit in Saskatoon. Lauren has written a First Person piece for CBC on that experience, and shares her insights with host Shauna Powers. I changed her micro-sized diapers with trembling hands. I started to feel like her mother not in dramatic moments, but in small sacred ones — when she grasped my finger, or when a nurse said, "She knows your voice." When another NICU parent passed me in the hallway and gave a nod like we shared something unspoken. We were part of a club no one wanted to join. Even after we came home, we faced a new chapter filled with medical complexity, with several continued check-ups that continue for Evee today. And the shadows continued to visit. Post-traumatic stress after the NICU is not rare. It is real. It is silent. And it can destroy you if you carry it alone. The wounds don't close just because you've been discharged. But slowly, we've emerged from that dark time in NICU. My daughter didn't walk or talk until after the age of two. But once she started — she ran, she talked, she laughed. Now, at age three, Evee is vibrant and full of life. She dances barefoot in the kitchen and sings with her whole chest. She calls me "Mommy" like it's the most natural word in the world. I became a mother in a room where I once felt I had to say goodbye. I became a mother beside ventilators, signing forms, praying silently. I became a mother when I learned to hold hope and fear in the same breath. I became a mother the moment I refused to stop asking for help. I became a mother when I stayed by her side while others left the room. I became a mother when I looked at her — impossibly small, impossibly alive — and whispered: "Stay with me, my girl." And she did.

What is swimmer's itch? And how can you treat it?
What is swimmer's itch? And how can you treat it?

CBC

time4 hours ago

  • CBC

What is swimmer's itch? And how can you treat it?

For many, it's not summer until you've taken a dip in one of B.C.'s glistening lakes, a welcome reprieve from those hot July days. But sometimes, you end up with something not so welcome: itchy red bumps on your skin. Some call it swimmer's itch, some call it duck itch, and for others, it's simply the itch. But what is it, exactly? University of Northern British Columbia zoologist Dezene Huber said that itch — whatever you call it — is caused by a parasitic flatworm. "It's really quite tiny," he told CBC's Daybreak North guest host Bill Fee. "You're not able to really see it very well with your naked eye." That worm begins as an egg in the water, Huber said, and when it hatches, the little larvae swim using little hairs on the sides of their bodies in search of a snail. Once they get into the snail, they reproduce asexually in "vast numbers." From there, the new larvae leave the snail, in search of something larger — any sort of water bird, but usually a duck, Huber said. Once they find a duck, they burrow into the bird's feet and get into its circulatory system en route to its gut. That's where they lay the eggs that are then returned to the water when the duck poops. You may notice humans aren't involved in that life cycle at all. But humans, like ducks, are warm in the water, so sometimes, those little parasites mistake people for ducks. "They're really well adapted to survive in a duck, but they're not well adapted to survive in a human, so as soon as they burrow into the skin of a human, they die just underneath the skin of the human and that causes an allergic reaction," Huber said. "It's basically parasites making mistakes in a fairly complex life cycle." Those itchy red bumps you get are an immune response as your body rejects a parasite trying to get inside you, Huber said. Treatment While these parasites aren't causing long-term harm to humans, that itch can be pretty uncomfortable. According to the province, scratching those bumps can lead to pain and even infection. Fort St. James, B.C., pharmacist Ankur Pipaliya said the best tip for avoiding the itch is to avoid swimming in areas known to be a problem for swimmer's itch.. But, if you do, he said, towel dry or shower immediately after you get out of the water. Showers should be with cold water, Pipaliya said. And then, he said, apply moisturizer. "Dry skin, it promotes that allergic reaction. So if your skin is moist, it kind of helps you from having any irritations." If it's too late and you've already got red, itchy bumps from swimming in the lake, Pipaliya said he usually suggests mild corticosteroid creams to reduce discomfort, along with cold showers and cold compresses on the bumps. He said Epsom salts and baking soda also help, as well as over-the-counter allergy medications like Benadryl. The province also suggests calamine lotion and colloidal oatmeal baths for relief from swimmer's itch. It said symptoms can develop within 12 hours after infection, and can last anywhere from two days to two weeks.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store