Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon: A Plea

The darndest thing happened to me the other day.   

I was sitting on the train, minding my own business, when I was approached by Kevin Bacon, who said, “Hey Julie, why do you think it is no one wants to play my game anymore – Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon?”

Well, he really had me there, and I apologised to Kevin for not having an immediate response.

People, it’s this simple: the game will not work with any other name. It can’t be called Six Degrees of Lindsay Lohan, or Six Degrees of Dieter Brummer or anything else you might have in mind. It must be Kevin Bacon.

I think you’ll agree with me that we owe it to Kevin to keep this game alive. Kevin brought us such memorable films as The River Wild, Apollo 13, Footloose and The Air Up There. It is his illustrious career and prolific body of work that makes this game possible at all.

For those of you unfamiliar with the game, it is based upon the premise that everyone in the world can  be traced back to Kevin Bacon via six degrees of seperation. It’s most likely to work if you use celebrities though. So, you take a celebrity (Emma Bunton) and link her to Kevin Bacon.

Ok, Baby Spice with Meatloaf in Spiceworld, Meatloaf with Susan Sarandon in Rocky Horror Picture Show, Susan Sarandon with Natalie Portman in Anywhere But Here, Natalie Portman with Ewan McGregor in Star Wars Episode One, Ewan McGregor with Nicole Kidman in Moulin Rouge, Nicole Kidman with Meryl Streep in The Hours, Meryl Streep with Kevin Bacon in The River Wild.

Maybe that was seven degrees but I think you get the picture.

So folks, play, play, play!! Play like a five year old two minutes before bedtime! And hopefully if Kevin asks me this question again, I’ll have some better news for him.

Really, it’s the least we can do. AND it opens up your neural pathways – five years ago I could have smashed this in, like, three degrees.

Hmm, let’s see…..

Nope, can’t be done. Or can it?!

The challenge has been issued. May the true champion of Kevin Bacon win.

Julie

Falcor – Where Is He Now?

Over the years I’ve heard many, many people ask the following question:

Whatever happened to Falcor from The Neverending Story?

And really, this is a very good question. I mean, where can a Luckdragon go once he’s had his fifteen minutes of fame? They don’t exactly blend in. I’m sure he didn’t want to stick around in Fantasia, not with that drip Bastian accidentally killing Atreyu in Part 2 and pronouncing Fantasia to be empty.

Little twerp.

People clearly want answers, and, unexpectedly, I am in a position to provide them. You see, it just so happens that I am a close, personal friend of Falcor’s and can tell you the whole story.

Because Fantasia was becoming more and more prone to evil overlords wanting to destroy it and the Empress’ passivity helped to enable this, Falcor decided to emigrate to earth where, unfortunately, he had to shrink quite a bit in order to blend in with local culture. He still retains the main features of a Luckdragon however, as illustrated below.

I give you…..Falcor Now!!

Exhibit A

Exhibit B

So, after providing indisputable evidence, everybody can relax now. Falcor didn’t fade into complete obscurity. He is alive and well, living with me in Peachester, and goes by the alias of “Caffery.” He likes to do normal, everyday things such as have his bottom patted, hump his giant teddy and visit the hydro bath.
He’s not immune to the camera flash of lurking paparazzi either. I’ll leave you with the following  pictures to be featured in Who Weekly next week. Ciao!
Julie
Falcor and his new squeeze, Teddy,
step out to Starbucks.
No Way to Treat a Teddy – Falcor is
spotted in a compromising position.
Thanks to his fame, Falcor can enjoy regular
spa treatments at exclusive resorts.

“I just want to live my life!” – Falcor’s plea
to intrusive paparazzi.

Don’t have a cow- no, wait….

Ummmm…..Ilikerawcowsmilk.

Sorry. *subtly clears throat.*

I like raw cows’ milk.

Why? Because DAMN it tastes good! Who wants to drink that watered-down crappola from Woolworths?

But Julie, it hasn’t been treated with a billion and one unnecessary processes to squeeze every last drop of awesomeness from it – you might get a disease or some sort of unpleasant bacterial infection, I hear you say. Well, I appreciate your concern, but I guess that’s a risk I’m willing to take. Because that’s me. I’m a risk taker. I jog without wearing socks in my runners and occasionally leave the door slightly ajar when I go to the loo.

Risssssssssssks. Hiss it out and tell me you don’t feel bad ass.

Seriously – (although I was being…) Pauls and all the other Big Boy companies (it’s been so long I literally can’t remember their names) are holding their products hostage at one big, long, regrettable night out at the Milk Masquerade Ball, where no matter how crap your date is or how sick you get or how many times they play the Macarena or how many times a creep grabs your ass or how messy your makeup gets, you can never, never, never leave.

I understand the above paragraph doesn’t make much sense. I don’t care. It stays.

What supermarket supplied milk lacks (along with integrity) is the natural cream top which lasts for a third of the bottle and is basically like drinking pouring cream.

Milk should not taste watery. It should be thick, creamy and sweet. You should look forward to your daily glass of milk as a treat. Adding it to your hot beverage should be sweetness enough. Mixed with cocoa and boiled should send you to sleep where you sip.

I will no longer be supporting the enforced, ghastly, thin-lipped (you heard me) Milk Masquerade Ball. The tickets are too expensive and the guest list sucks.

My supplier of raw milk must remain nameless to ensure its continued *cough ILLEGAL* supply to its band of loyal followers. Yes, you heard my false cough – ILLEGAL. Guess that makes me an accessory to the crime now, don’t it? Testify. Apparently you’re not allowed to commercially sell unadulterated, awesome cow’s milk. It’s just too dangerous. BUT HERE KIDS, BUY A LITRE OF GUARANA AND SHARE IT WITH YOUR FRIENDS!!!

Thank goodness for food standards and safety regulations – where would we be without them?

Now I’m off to buy a No-Doze at my local corner store. Roll-up anyone? They go well with Coke – now THERE’s a drink of champions with absolutely no health risks whatsoever associated with it. That must be why it’s so popular – because it has the tick of approval from the government, and the population can enjoy a free-for-all with an easy conscience, knowing how vigilantly it is protected from dangerous consumables.

*Silence/crickets*

Ummm….yeah, I’m gonna go have a cup of hot cocoa now and then turn in for the evening….

*Silence/crickets*

Goodnight.

Uncool Runnings

I have never been a good runner.

This initially came to my attention when, at the age of five, I ran my first competitive race and came last. Sure, it was only a 20 meter race at my little Catholic primary school’s sports carnival, but it created an unease which has never quite left me.

You see, it was the first time I tried really, really hard at something and didn’t succeed.

You can’t bluff sports. There’s no room for sleight of hand or trick psychology or even to skilfully talk your way through. You either have the physical goods or you don’t.

I was shocked to come last, because, having two older brothers who had effectively hazed me into a state of rough-and-tumble boyhood with them, I assumed I would dominate in all things athletic. Wrong. The other misconception was that, as I was tall and thin, I must be fast and athletic. Unfortunately, this wasn’t true either. I was slow, weak, lacked stamina and was devoid of competitive genes. I grew to hate organised sport.

And so like watching a train crash in slow motion, any observer could see my athletic tragedies unfold pathetically throughout my primary and high school careers. At least my friends in high school were kind enough to find my weak attempts charming.

I will state for the record here: I came last in EVERY school race I ever ran in my life. Usually by a gap of at least ten meters. I was that person.

I enclose here a photo from my high school year book where I am attempting long jump at a sports carnival. I was in grade twelve. I tried really hard and really wanted to prove something. The faces of the girls behind me say it all (hi Spope!)

I thought it would look more like this:

 
You can imagine my absolute horror when, at age 19, as I decided to pledge myself to an Indian guru and immerse myself in a path of meditation, I discovered that his rules made it mandatory for his students to run for half an hour a day.
Well shit. Out of the frying pan and into the fire.

It was about that time that I took out a gym membership. This was serious. I really needed to get into shape and couldn’t fake athleticism, particularly around the robust, glowing, health-oozing people I meditated with. There was a compulsory 2 mile race every Saturday morning which I used to loath with a passion usually reserved for bad re-makes of Jane Austen classics. So I started training at home. By training, I mean a couple of times I managed to coerce my ill-equipped carcass a few hundred meters down the road. Then, gasping, I would usually seek support from a telephone pole, and try to appear as though I wasn’t an immediate candidate for cardiac arrest. It was usually around this time that a couple of dogs would race out of their yards and chase me the few hundred meters back home, where it was assumed by all that I had spent an entire day in the sun.
And of course, I came last in every Saturday morning 2 mile race I ever ran.

I decided however, that I wasn’t going to let it beat me. So I started training in earnest, building up until I could run continuously for at least half an hour every day. Sometimes it was a little more. I tried to include hills in these sessions, which I actually prefer to flat running, which is incredibly boring. I even ran at night after whatever job it was I was working, so I could fit in my daily running, and actually grew to enjoy it.

This is the part where everyone expects me to say that I became a running sensation and starting winning the races.

I didn’t, and I still basically came last in every race I competed in.

However, a turning point came when I questioned further about the purpose of our running on this path of meditation. Was it just for physical fitness?  What in the name of Sam Hill did it have to do with meditation or spirituality?
Because it is a metaphor for our inner running, I was told. When we are committed to something inwardly (be it a spiritual path, a job, a partner) we are everyday inwardly running towards a goal – to gain a higher position, to be a better partner or to feel our meditation more deeply.
When we are committed to this, we are keeping inwardly fit. We are sprinting towards something high and lofty and true. Our outer running is an expression of this. We train the body to be physically fit and healthy, but at the same time we are training our minds to be patient, goal-focused and strong. Run for half an hour a day, every day. Make time for it. Convince your mind it wants to. Do it, I dare you! It’s not as easy as it sounds.

The answer was not what I expected. Nonetheless, I understood it. I came to see running as another form of meditation, and just as effective in quieting the mind.

Therefore, when the word “marathon” was introduced, I was relatively ok with that.

I won’t go into all the gory details of what my first marathon involved. Actually, I will. Basically, it was a small, in-house affair of roughly six people who opted to run a 1.1 km circuit at the University of Queensland something like 38 times.  A marathon is a distance of 42 kilometres.

Now, anyone who knows me well knows that I don’t and can’t do things by halves. It must be all or nothing. Therefore, my plan to “maybe see if I can run 10ks” was doomed from the start. We’d planned the event as a night marathon so as to avoid the heat, and started at 10pm at UQ. We had an aid station set up at the beginning of the loop with water, electrolyte mixture, chocolate, jelly beans, fruit, salts, Gatorade and practically everything else you could possible need when running a marathon.

I wasn’t quite as prepared. I hadn’t trained and didn’t even have proper running shoes (I was wearing  Converse sneakers). Nevertheless, I was as so enchanted by the possibility of conquering my doubting mind and uncooperative body, I brazenly opted to run 10km, which I secretly always knew would turn into an entire marathon.

Did I mention I have an enormous stubborn streak?

Ok, this is the point where I’ll skip the gory, weeping, blistering, pain-demented, hate-filled, heaving, gasping, lactic-acid-soaked details, but the whole thing basically took me 10 hours. To put that in perspective, a tremendous athlete could do it in under two, and an average one in maybe four or five hours.

IT TOOK ME MORE THAN TEN HOURS.

But I refused to give up. A quarter of the way into it, my shocked legs seized up and refused to bend. At all. So I basically walked peg-legged the remainder of the, oh, thirty kilometres. Surrender was simply not an option. Needless to say, I continued to walk peg-legged for the remainder of the week, much to the delight of the smut-loving chef I worked with at the time.

So, it wasn’t pretty.  There was no adoring crowd waitng to greet my at the end, only looks of repulsion. It was possibly the longest recorded time ever for a marathon. But I completed it in accordance with another important stricture: Never, EVER give up.

It conquered a mental barrier. In years to come, I would repeat this venture on an annual and sometimes biannual basis, many times in New York where my teacher lived. I didn’t dazzle anyone on any occasion (except when I exposed my pale legs), but I never repeated my ten hour maiden attempt. The best I ever did was 6:25, and I was ecstatic about it. I came to regard doing a marathon as normal, and never once dreaded it or doubted my ability to do it. After all, I’d already proven I could. I would rock up untrained, with snow white legs, and start half-heartedly limbering up in front of hundreds of doubtful, athletic- looking competitors. Oh yeah, they were scared.

All up, I’ve bumbled my way through eight marathons and continue to run on a daily basis.

I’m still not good. I get so tuckered out after a couple of minutes and I’m still really, really slow. However, I find the best trick to running is to simply be present – not anticipate the road ahead, nor imagine how wrecked you’re going to feel  in a few minutes time, and definitely don’t compare your running ability to anyone else – you only insult them and psych yourself out.

I’ve had a year of little exercise after getting glandular fever, but I’m back in training and plan to run a particularly beautiful, hilly 10km stretch of road up at Maleny called “Bald Knob Road” within the next few months. I’d love to be able to run it without stopping.

I’ll let you know how I go 😉

One Year Later – A Tribute to My Nanna

A little over a year ago, a beloved member of our family cast aside her earthly garment and was initiated into the greatest mystery of all. In holding with the unerring tradition of death, we have not seen or spoken to her since. However, the dissolution of her spirit from our outer perceptions has not stopped her from entering into our hearts and minds to be with us on all occasions – those trivial, those important and those frankly where she has no business being at all.

Yes, Nan – your spirit is still very much alive in our hearts, and very often our actions too.

I was re-reading a piece of writing which I abridged and read at Nan’s eulogy on behalf of her grandchildren. The actual piece was written a year earlier again, after visiting Nan at her nursing home one evening and realising that she was gradually drifting away.

I would like to resurrect it and post it in this blog as a public tribute to the charismatic, nous-filled and well-loved woman that was my Nanna, and also known as Nan, Nanny, Nanna Mac, Mum or Old Girl depending on which family member you ask. And critics would do well to remember – you can’t fatten a thoroughbred.

Julie

The first time you were unable to speak to me was a day in 2009 towards the end of winter, but it felt like summer.

As I drove north to visit you after work, the evening air was unseasonably warm and still, and kookaburra’s laughter echoed across the sky long after the sun had set. For a beautiful hour, the sun had lit up the sky like fire in the west, behind the mountains; the first silver evening star hung low and bright, summer is in the air (the cicadas have woken up) and it is your time. It is you. You are more in this summer evening then you are lying alone in Anam Cara nursing home, still and weak on your deathbed.

 Do you remember all of the sunset walks we took at Bribie, down at the beach, first on the surf side and then on the calm side? They were great – at first we would walk, you and your grandkids, maybe play around a bit in the surf – someone would have brought a soccer ball – sometimes you would take us for a BBQ in the park, and watch as we played and made new friends. Then we would sit in the sand together, and watch the sky change from corn blue to burnt orange to hazy pink; then indigo blue and finally spangled ebony. We all listened to the breaking the waves, and their gentle lapping as they climbed the beach and tried to tag our feet. We listened to hundreds of birds screaming in the warm night air, and the irrepressible laughter of kookaburras nearly as raucous as our own, and just as quick to lapse into a peaceful, easy silence. What magic lay on that beach, in those dream time years, where a tiny black poodle name Boko once ran, and gave you such joy, and where our family had a special tree, our names carved in it forever before it washed away to sea. I always believed you understood the language of the sea: its mysteries, its poetry, the scents and memories from bygone eras which wafted from it. Or perhaps you simply learned to listen better than others.

 As we grew older, we watched the sun set from a different side of the island, from the Bribie passage, facing west, and watched it sink behind the crooked Glasshouse Mountains. Sometimes we would all ride bikes, but often we would walk down together from Doomben Drive and get an ice cream – Bubble-O Bills and Golden Gaytimes were our favourites, but you never could resist a Havahart. I couldn’t begin to count the number of ice creams I ate with you at Scoopy’s, overlooking the Bribie passage, where a million lorikeets were screeching as the sinking sun chased them home into the tall pine trees, and you sitting there like a little girl, your hands full of ice cream, chocolate all over you face and both of us giggling uncontrollably because we know it’s worth every second of it. We’ll laugh about times like these, you and I. About the time a giant dog chased us into the surf, and we had to wade home, and then you lost the house key in the sand. Or how the police always pulled you over for riding your shiny blue Melvyn Star without a helmet. “We’ve had some laughs,” you’d always say to me, “We’ve laughed a lot and cried a lot.”

 And we did. Nan, you were the only person I could ever properly cry with.

 I see you this evening – lying small and alone in your darkened room; the oxygen tank an unwelcome drone and the clinical scents of the nursing home your new fragrance, although never the right ones. Dressed in pink and white, you look as fresh and summery as I’ve always seen you – in fact, I’ve never known you to wear black. This is the first time you’re unable to talk to me, and even through I’m trying my hardest I cannot help but cry a little. You can’t talk, can barely open your eyes, but somehow you manage to say, “I can’t talk darling. Tell me the news.” And through tears I try to tell you what’s news, try to make relevant to you a world you’re not a part of any longer. After a few minutes I stop. You were holding my hand, squeezing it the whole time, and I marvel as always at the strength and warmth of your hands – my favourite hands in the whole world. Then you pull my hands towards you, press them to your mouth and croak, “I love you darling. I love you very much.” And I am sobbing uncontrollably, telling you I love you as well. And suddenly your eyes have opened, and you’re looking at me in surprise. “Don’t cry my darling. Smile, always smile.” I do my best to reassure you that I will, and that I do. Still though, I can’t stop the tears. “Don’t cry, my darling. Cry tears of joy,” you croak, kissing my hands once more and then pushing them away. “Goodbye. Oh, I love you. Goodbye.”

 And in five minutes the visit is over, and I am heartbroken, because it is the first time you haven’t been able to talk to me, make me laugh, discuss the sunset, or go over the good times we shared. Yet I can feel you all around me because summer has arrived, and it is your time. I can feel you in the joyful laughter of the kookaburras, in the scent of BBQ in the still night air, in the hope and possibility of the months to come. And even here in the parking lot of Anam Cara nursing home the warm, gentle breeze hasn’t changed a bit from the one that visited us so many years ago, one summer as we played in the sand, and you sat with your grandkids and watched the sun set on the surf side, saw the sky light up and change from blue to orange to pink to indigo, to star-spangled ebony. If you listen, you can hear our laughter on it, the promise of childhood dreams fulfilled the song of the ocean, of summer, of you. Recorded on it are a million laughs, a million tears and a million happy memories of you. It’s all you, and always will be to me. I only wish I could tell you all about it. I’ll continue to smile until that time.

A Case for Beauty Over Boredom

This is probably a really illogical post, but hear me out.

I have long had a problem with balancing out the beautiful parts life with the boring realities in a way that is socially acceptable.

For me, it is very difficult to see sense of the proverbial long-term slog whilst watching the plump and luscious fruits of spontaneity fall to the ground and rot for want of takers. I despise that convention cautions me against putting my hand up. It’s almost criminal, and sits very badly with my conscience. This leads me to my second point: I have no discipline, nor the inclination to cultivate it.

I skip work fearlessly to nap on a whim. When in the office, I’ll stare out the window for a full half hour listening to a beautiful piece of music on my I-pod regardless of my co-workers and responsibilities in general. University work takes second place to the charming stories of Woolf, Austen and Rowling. I will give my full attention to animals, regardless of social expectations that I also make polite conversation with their owners. My room is a realm of dreams and closely guarded treasures, and disgustingly messy. My car is a fellow adventurer and loyal friend, and an utter affront to the human eye. Sometimes I don’t make it to the ironing board and conduct my professional day in jeans. Happiness is high when work attendance is low.  A career is a choker around the neck of burgeoning creativity. In short, I’m largely guided by my own sweet will and hate “sucking up” life’s less palatable realities.

Part of it is because I’m part of gen Y, and I want everything now. This is a concept that my patient, hard-working baby-boomer parents struggle to grasp. But it’s the truth. Why shouldn’t I get what I want when I want it, within reason?

This attitude however isn’t entirely a case of greed or ignorance as to “the way things work.” Rather, I put it down to loving the beauty of life and its possibilities too much, and therefore struggling to embrace the duller, more necessary parts. I posit that a life full of perceived exquisitely beautiful experiences is destined to struggle with the counterbalancing “bread and butter” day-to-day happenings.  And that’s what I do. Feel the magic and then lament the reality. To take your understanding further into the realms of Julie Loka (my world), I draw on the following universal experience:

You have gone away on a holiday after months of tough slogging, only to come home feeling bitterer than when you set out. This is because you connected with something joyful and sublime and entirely non-boring on your holiday, and resent coming home to once again resume being easy lackey to “the man.” You then feel guilty that instead of radiating joy and vitality at having 2 weeks away, you’re experiencing horror and dread towards the 50 weeks you now have left at work. This leads you to stare vacantly at stationary items on your desk and wonder what your purpose in the organization, if not life in general, is, and why you can’t be more like Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy from Little Women.

This analogy can be expanded to include massively great life experiences vs. massively boring life experiences. It is this grey feeling neither of elation or gloom that really bugs me. For me though, this feeling is not characterised by disillusionment, but rather, the remembrance of a separate sensation so sweet and profoundly satisfying as to make apparent its absence in all other areas.

It then begs the question: what is this feeling, and why must it be restricted? Can is not be expounded, bled from its source so it may be viewed in its entirety and made to last longer?

Here I am, sitting at my desk in the office, bathed in computer glare and surrounded by desk dividers and staplers and folders, but elsewhere, my thoughts are soaring into the great unknown, and I do not know when they will take rest and nor do I want them to.

I do not mean to colour grey those circumstances in my life which, withstanding comparison, would be considered fortunate – education, a job, a home. I do not mean to appear so entirely self-absorbed and glass-half-empty that I do not see the forest but for the trees. Of course not. But if you were told you could never see the ocean again, would you not pine for it, glorify it even? If you have experienced beauty even for a fleeting moment, does it not make it harder to plug away at that job, save those funds, trod that well-worn path?

I should not do my life the injustice of continually measuring its tolerable sum against the few fleeting yet sublime encounters I have had with beauty. It is neither fair nor wise. But I cannot help it. Once a person has journeyed to a foreign country, their homeland never seems quite the same again, whether for better, worse or indifference.

I mentioned earlier that I feel the magic and lament the reality. Ok, I can see how lame that sounds. No one wants to be that gasping, starry-eyed person. So, to make the most of it I do what I can to change reality a little. I wear jeans to the office and play hooky so I can go nap or read; I luxuriate in the accumulating filth of dream-filled bed room, drive a crap car I adore and delight in the uncomplicated nature of animals versus their annoying owners. I swear no allegiance to my responsibilities, shirk convention where possible and wilfully view circumstances incorrectly. It’s resistance at its best and is ethically, socially and morally repugnant and boarders on being totally unacceptable.

And you know what? It works for me.

Sunday Musings

I live by the sea, in an affluent bay-side suburb called Manly. I do not own a house here; I rent with a friend. I’m that person who has no money yet somehow manages to get around in Louis Vuitton and Jimmy Choos (figuratively speaking). There is a great deal of luck involved. Or a misapplication of funds.
I like living in Manly for many reasons. To begin with, it is idyllic. There are wide streets lined by leafy trees and picturesque houses. You cannot go anywhere without seeing young families together; children play and ride bikes, and people exercise and walk their dogs along the esplanade.
I like it because it’s a place that has grown affluent organically, and the generations of families who call it home are by and large unpretentious and hard working.
I also like it because it is beautiful. It is a township of cafes and boat harbours and yacht clubs, and stunning views of Moreton Bay. You can smell sea air even when you cannot sight the ocean. You can ride your bike along the water front of an evening and be treated to views of tall white sails and islands buoyed in the deep turquoise.
But mainly, I like it because it is so close to the sea, and to me, the sea is all allure and unfathomable mystery. The sea is constant and unpredictable all at once, and speaks a language which both confuses and fascinates me.
How comforting is the utter timelessness of the sea! Knowing that from time immemorial it has looked the same, acted the same, smelt the same. How the sea itself must also keep to the beat of some other drum to maintain its own unbreakable rhythm. For all that it can be wild and terrifying, it is not exempt from the constant, rhythmic laws of nature. It will never do anything which it has never done before. I find this incredibly anchoring.
On weekends, and those weekdays when I am home early enough from work, I like riding my bike down to the water and finding some secluded nook from which to watch the sun set, or rather the effects thereof. The sun doesn’t actually set over the water, but the reflected colours are spectacular. If the moon is rising, it is magical.
It is usually during these times that I cannot help thinking existential thoughts (which I won’t bore you with) and ponder whether the presence of such beauty on earth is meant to remind us of something higher and forgotten. I guess I won’t know for sure in this life time.
It’s also at these times, alone and surrounded by the majesty of nature, that I think most about my family and friends, and wish to be closer and more connected to them,  as though in connecting to the purity of the sea and sky and grass, I must connect to other elements too. What are we humans if not elements of nature? It is so precious to be human and alive and capable of feeling love for each other.
I like that this is a pleasure in life that is free to all, as are the reflections that follow.
The backdrop of picturesque houses and yachts with white sails is pleasant, but for all that it is, it’s just an accompaniment. Like billions before me, my questions fly out to the sea and sky, the great beyond, and I will wait and listen for answers which, in a way, will still come from me.
After all, we are all made of the same stuff.

Book Review: The Highly Sensitive Person – How to Thrive When the World Overwhelms You

Chances are you know one. It’s even possible you’re one yourself.
In her new book The Highly Sensitive Person: How to Thrive When the World Overwhelms You, author Elaine N. Aron (Ph.D.) discusses what it means to be a Highly Sensitive Person (or HSP) in the 21st century, and offers scientific and physiological explanations as to why some people are born highly sensitive, and how the trait reveals itself.  
In a culture which values achievement and power, the so called “weak” or “shy” amongst us often lose out. Yet it is rarely understood what makes these people the way they are, nor the special talents they have at their disposal. Elaine Aron attempts to throw light on what causes an estimated 15-20 percent of our population to be classed as Highly Sensitive People.
 I have included an extract of the blurb:
·         Do you have a keen imagination and vivid dreams?
·         Is time alone each day as essential to you as food and water?
·         Are you ‘too shy’ or ‘too sensitive’ according to others?
·         Do you feel overwhelmed by bright lights and noise?
One in every five people is born with a heightened sensitivity; they are often gifted with great intelligence, intuition and imagination, but there are also drawbacks. Frequently they come across as aloof, shy or moody and suffer from low self-esteem because they find it hard to express themselves in a society dominated by excess and stress. The Highly Sensitive Person offers effective solutions to those feeling overwhelmed. With numerous case studies, exercises and advice, Elaine Aron focuses on the strengths of the trait, teaching HSPs that their sensitivity is not a flaw but an asset. This book  also offers great insight into raising a sensitive child.
The book is a must read for anyone who can personally identify with being a HSP, or knows someone who is. It aims to abolish many of the old ideas of people needing to “toughen up” or “being a whimp” and identifies the inherent intelligence and often intuitive qualities these people have.  The book is particularly useful as a tool for identifying highly sensitive children, and putting to rest your own demons of being an unacknowledged HSP, particularly in childhood and infancy. It acknowledges the challenges faced by HSPs in the modern world, and offers strategies to overcome them.
I didn’t always like the tone of the book, nor the amount of time the author spent dwelling on just how special these people are, but her theory and research into HSPs has an undeniably important place in the understanding of modern psychology  and, hopefully soon, the world at large. If you wish to broaden your understanding of some of your more sensitive bedfellows, I guarantee this will more than help you.
3/5

Waity Katie Gets Her Datey

It came as a shock to no one, yet the news sent media outlets (and supporters of the British monarchy) into a feeding frenzy.
The bait? The highly digestible news that Waity Katie has finally been given a wedding date – and a ring – by her long-time beau, Prince William.

Princess Diana’s engagement ring, no less.

I suppose this is a big deal, and an important moment in British history and all that. But honestly, I just can’t get up the energy to care.

Don’t get me wrong, I love the kids. I think they make a very aesthetically pleasing couple and would rather see their profiles on Commonwealth currency than, say, old Charles. And while we’re on that topic – I do hope they beat old Charlie to the crown, and have a blast ruling. Can’t you just picture the pair of them mixing it up in the throne room with Harry and Chelse? Hectic.

But it must be said – even in the early moments of the story breaking, it felt like old news. Let’s face it: the utter predictability and lack of scandal with which this couple have conducted their public life pointed to only one conclusion – eventual marriage. William himself was even quoted at one point saying he wouldn’t marry until he was at least 28. It’s no surprise that he’s popped the question to Kate in his 28th year.

The media has spent the past 8 years canvassing this story up to pussy’s bow and back. Now that the anticipated outcome has actually been reached, there’s really nothing new to talk about, except the usual discussion of wedding plans, costs and the dress make etc. Even the vague speculations on whether it’s appropriate for William to give Katie his mother’s ring (which is, of course, a ridiculous question) seem hackneyed and old hat.

In fact, it’s my belief that the only refreshing part of this fairytale is Katie herself. She presents as a poised, unselfconscious young woman from a working-class family with no pretensions to pomp and grandeur (except for marrying the heir to the British throne) and whose status as a commoner seems to be embraced by the public and royals alike.

If William, Harry and Denmark’s Fredrick are anything to go by, the new generation of princes like their princesses common and without pretension (clever boys!).

And now that Katie has ensnared a ring and date out of her prince, and the scent of scandal remains as elusive as the crown on Chuck’s head, a fresh topic must be introduced. My bet is that a new wave of Diana-esque nostalgia will ensue, with endless comparisons being made between the young pair and William’s parents.

Good luck to you, Katie and William. And while I don’t really give a fig about your wedding, I do hope you have what your predecessors never had – a long and happy marriage.

The Ramblings of Sicko

Well.
It’s been a long four weeks. That’s how long I’ve been sitting at home doing nothing, since my doctor diagnosed me with glandular fever and told me to take time off work.
There have been some minor glitches – you know, not having sick pay, having to move house, pay every conceivable bill within that four weeks without borrowing from my parents (I sold my liver instead). But it hasn’t been all bad. I’ve been installed on a black leather couch for the past two weeks, firmly ensconced in front of the TV and feeding myself up like a prized pig. No carbohydrates after 9pm? Please. That’s the ONLY time I eat my carbs, and let me tell you – I eat plenty of ‘em. Mmm, spaghetti, garlic bread and homemade chips in the dead of the night with a fresh coffee chaser. Bring it on.
My flatmate has also been away in Brazil for the last couple of weeks, so I truly am on my lonesome. Oh, but don’t worry. I have Facebook and a DVD player. I’ve also had a rocketing temperature, which has lead to some pretty wacky dreams, let me tell you. So you see boredom is not an issue either. Quite the opposite in fact. I think I’m having a little too much fun existing in this base, directionless state.
This has been a really great opportunity to reconnect with some of my –well – not real friends. I’m talking about the kids from High school Musical (I love the way they end up banding together no matter what!), the lovable Mighty Boosh lads, the f***ing annoying Walker Clan from Brothers and Sisters, a star-spangled British cast from The Forsythe Saga, Beatrix Kiddo from Kill Bill, Sheldon and his band of Geeks in Big Bang Theory, and the girl on every literature lover’s hit list – Bryony from Atonement. Ridiculous little brat. You didn’t atone for shit.
That’s not even half of it. I guess the point I’m trying to make is: when you’re sick, and have a great deal of time on your hands, the rules change and life is not viewed through its regular lens. For example, pressing tasks such as deferring your uni course, lodging Centrelink application forms and supplying paperwork for your doctor to fill out takes a back seat to blogging, napping, eating, cooking, and staring vacantly at the wall. My pair of eleven-year old board shorts recently sustained a series of tears on the seat, yet I continue to wear them daily, without concern that guests might drop by and register abhorrence at being exposed so unwittingly to my underwear.
 It’s almost as if, my some magical turn of osmosis, the world says it’s ok to let things slide, because you’re sick. You expect complete strangers to give you the same latitude you’d get from your mum. Your outlook becomes skewered and narrow, concerned only with events pertaining to your minute sphere of existence. I forgot I owned a car. And you start to look forward to small, simple things. To demonstrate: my week is based around watching the Brittney episode of Glee at my best friends on Wednesday night, and supplying some “B” food. It’s actually going to be more of a party. THRILL! The dozens of small, urgent, day-to-day tasks I am required to complete to perpetuate my legal existence continue to take a back seat.
Today has been a good day so far. I got up at 7am, ate two freddos, watched Karl and Lisa for half an hour, then went back to sleep. I rose again at 1pm, ate two freddos, watched High school Musical 2, made coffee and ate mixed berry yoghurt. Ascertained my passport number from my mother, so the day is in the early stages of productivity. It’s just grown dark at 2:30pm and started to rain. Excellent, good DVD weather (LOL!). The only thing I’m lacking is a cat, which would be heavenly to cuddle up to at this point.
The conclusion of this post? There is none. I’m low on coffee and wanna watch some Mighty Boosh. Sequential plots and conclusive summaries are overrated.
Check ya later!