Tuesday, November 19, 2013

An interesting day

I often search through folders on my computer and find interesting things that i had previously written. today is no exception to that.

I was lamenting that i hadn't written here in a while, i started writing and saved the file, a thing which is strongly recommend and lo and behold I found a folder of blog entries yet to be uploaded.

I have no idea of when i wrote the following. it was sometime this year, i can remembering it all happening. I remember going to those places, some of those place I no longer wish to go to, others I look forward to going to again.


Tonight's (from today's perspective, that nights) adventure consisted of...

1. Going into bunnings (AKA Ikea for lesbians) for a $1.87 hose clamp. leave with hose clamp, allen key set and screwdriver set.2. gathering rusted metal and chains from my late grandfathers shed in order to construct manacles (have to build my own as Bunnings no longer stocks them)3. having two people mention that they enjoy my Facebook status'. must work on a younger crowd.4. getting a text from dad stating that i left my cigars at home (thanks Karen Rowley)5. having communion at church and the only thing I could think about was the bottle of Cabernet Merlot i had in the car  as well as the crystal wine glasses i had at home. seriously church if you are going to call it 'wine' at least make it taste like wine and serve it in the appropriate glass. shot glasses are for tequila. 6. seeing a fridge on hard rubbish that is the exact same model as what i have at home. i did a u-turn and took the shelves, i then realised it was in front of a church. second thoughts. Meh they are obliged to forgive.7. getting a confused look from the MacDonald's register monkey because i used a free burger prize and continued to also order a large cheeseburger meal.8. arriving at Evans place with my bag of MacDonald's only to be accosted by a groaking cat. stupid communist cat chairman meow. I did give the cheeseburger away but not to the cat.9. having a gentleman's communion with said wine (served in appropriate sized glasses) and cigars.10. had an awesome massage using cheeseburger as bribe.11. drove home along Sydney road behind a slow moving police car. ambulance directly behind me.12. arrived home to find that there were no parking spots near my house. convenient timing for when i had to carry a piece of tram line into the house (see section 1). I double parked and offloaded the tram line, various metal pieces, fridge parts and tools.13. Installed hose clamp on pool in the darkness using new screwdriver set.14. insomnia.an all round interesting evening.

that was an easy entry.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Thumbs

I'm writing this on my phone because...mmm. I guess I have dexterous thumbs and I feel guilty about the half written entry that had been sitting on my computer for the past week. I figured that whilst waiting to start work I could write something as opposed to playing some addictive game on my phone or reading the song of ice and fire (that's game of thrones in novel form for those that prefer televisual storytelling.)

The great benefit I see of phone blogging is the same reason why SMS is becoming less beneficial.

Auto correct.

As you may have read in a previous post, I'm not the greatest touch typer, however I have quite nimble thumbs thanks to an early introduction to the sega master system and successive keypad less phones. I can type and it guess what I'm about to say, it's like a conversation with my mother though less infuriating.

I'm thumbing my way through this entry whilst not actually watching what I'm doing, hence why auto correct is advantageous. I can write big words such as advantageous and it does all the thinking for me. I could mash the keypad and it would present me with the correct word. 

I wonder if I gave 1000 iPhones to 1000 monkies if they could produce the works of Shakespeare as a coherent series of messages?

Most likely they would end up playing candy crash and beat my score.
I better end this entry and get playing, god forbid a monkey should beat me.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Looking for a costume?

For those looking for a costume, there is a massive costume sale happening in Northcote this weekend.


What: Massive costume sale including vintage: see the flyer for details. 
When: Saturday June 29th and Sunday 30th 10am to 4pm both days. 
Where: 1/177 Beavers Road, Northcote. Opposite CERES, on the other side of Merri Creek. 
More information - See more at: http://circavintageclothing.com.au/2013/06/04/massive-costume-sale-malcolms-ex-stock/#sthash.BEUslhEA.dpuf


Friday, April 5, 2013

Reverence




My phone rang, it was Mum. I always worried when Mum called, I always thought that she was calling in response to something terrible happening.The greatest fear being that Nana had died. 
“Surprised you answered” Mum started
“What do you want?” I asked, this being my standard response to family members.
“Nothing, just letting you know that we scattered her yesterday”
“I hope you showed due reverence”
“Yeah, we all threw a bit, Me, Your Father, your Aunty, your cousin and her kids”
“Where?” I asked.
My family were in Maldon for the weekend, My Mum’s cousin has a house there where we would often stay, its a little heritage listed miners cottage just outside of the town area. This was also the town where my Nana was born and we thought it fitting to leave some of her ashes there.
“We put her under a tree in the yard” she replied.
“You had better let me know which tree, I’d hate to go out at night for a pee and find I'm peeing on Nana.”
“I'll show you the place next time you are up, O and I saved you some ashes if you’d like to scatter some yourself”
“Thanks” I said in an uneasy manner, unsure of what the correct response should be.


My Mother was at times tactless and irreverent as well as a bit on the macabre side. 
She had an interest in family history and had spent considerable amounts of time researching the lives of long dead family members, she had found that the best sources of information came from their last resting place and had traipsed through most of the cemeteries throughout Victoria. A majority of her holidays were spent as such with most of her holiday snaps being cemeteries and headstones. I guess nana’s was another to add to the collection.
This trait of irreverence I had inherited from my mother, in fact it was a trait common among the descendants of my Grandmother, I really don't think we, as a family held anything sacred.

Gathering at my parents place after the funeral my siblings and cousins told the stories of our childhood, the five of us trod the well worn paths of the often told stories. We recounted the stories at family gatherings, Christmases mostly as that was where most of the stories were created. 
Other mourners were dragged into the telling of tales, one of us would start the story whilst others interjected with corrections, opposing views or just justifying their actions. 
We would lose ourselves to hysterics recounting our childhood stupidity, still bagging each other for the actions of decades past. 
In our loudness I got a sense from those outside of the family that we should behave in perhaps a more solemn manner as it was after all the day of our grandmothers funeral.





There was however enough solemnity in the funeral, it was a staid affair at an east suburban funeral home. It was the same place where Pa’s funeral was held two years earlier. Of places to have a funeral it seemed pleasant enough, the chapel was quaint yet tasteful, laid out to the standard chapel/church template. a rectangular open room with rows of  blue pews all facing one end with a path down the middle which lead to the front. the coffin was front and centre with a window behind that looked out onto a small walled garden. it wasn't a fancy garden, just a small fountain on a concrete pedestal of the type you would find on special at Bunnings. this was surround by various ferns and hanging plants.

To the right of the garden window was what I would consider a speaking platform. 
it resembled the kitchen bench of a bricklayer, having been made of the same bricks as the chapel walls with a laminex bench top which was hidden from general view by another row of bricks. from this point all of the oratory elements of the service were conducted with the exception of the introduction and comments from The Celebrant, she had everything prepared in a little folder and was thus quite mobile. she was a matronly woman who spoke in a warm tone somewhat resembling that of a tour guide leading primary school students though a historical monument.

in this voice she spoke of all of Nana’s achievements, of being a foundation member of various local community groups, the CWA, girl guides and the Local hospital ladies auxiliary as well as the many years she worked and volunteered for the red cross but despite all of her achievements the celebrant kept coming back to the dementia. she seemed to frame every sentence around it. she was 91 when she died, dementia only played a small part.

I could sense the tension in my row, from the look on my cousins face I could tell what she was thinking, probably something along the lines of, “Who is this Bitch to talk about Nana? She wasn't demented all her life.”
I agreed with her, I found that celebrant was far too reverential  for my liking, I guess it was up to me to add some irreverence. 

After my Mother had read a eulogy from the bricklayers kitchen, My cousin and i got up to read some poetry of the type that one often hears at the funerals. i like to called it the “dead but not dead” genre of poetry designed to make the mourners feel better about the passing of a loved one, it was like a multi stanza hallmark card. these were given to Lauren  and i from the celebrant via Mum and we had organized that she would go first as it was only fitting as she was a lady and I, being the gentleman that i am, went second, though we would both be standing in the bricklayer kitchen whilst each of us read. 

it was  my turn to read. i paused for a moment. the day before i had felt that a hallmark card poem wouldn't say anything of Nana as a person. i had things to say, actually i had some things that nana had once said to me that i thought worth sharing. the morning of the funeral i scribbled down some notes in my moleskine not sure of whether i should say more than the poem. meh, grieving grandson. I can say whatever i want. 

Before I read this poem, id like to share a few things that Nana once said to me at the gate between our houses. Every weekend it was afternoon tea up the back at 3pm, walking back home we’d stop at the gate, this is the place where nana would share her wisdom.
“Don't get old” she once said. I have no plans for that so I'll head that advice


“I've had a good life,” she said, “I married a good man, had two beautiful daughters and five good grandkids, if I died tomorrow I would die happy” 
The third piece of wisdom is (I directed this part to my siblings and cousins), “I love it when you visit but don’t feel like you have to visit. I don’t want to be one of those grandmas that you feel you have to visit, you have got your own life, I don't want to be a burden on it.
Now here is the poem that I am obliged to read.

I read the poem and apologized to Lauren for leaving her up there longer than expected, she shrugged it off and we both sat down. It felt weird afterwards getting compliments for speaking at a funeral, “She would have been so proud,” said a second cousin whose name escapes me. She would have, except if I dropped my H’s. She hated that.

Maggie from the old folks home, sidled up for a word, “I didn't realize She lead such an interesting life.” Maggie had only known Nana in her later demented state. They had met the day that my Pa died and nana needed somewhere to live. Maggie was a small older lady, somewhere around 60. the caring nurse type who you knew could turn evil at a moments notice. she kept popping into nana’s room as we sat there . Nana lay on her bed unconscious, moving closer to the final sleep. it was the second day by her bed. myself, Mum, My Aunty and cousin. I had asked my brother and sister if they wanted to come. they declined. I don't think they cared to see their skeletal nana slowly die. Understandably.

We sat there in silence. Waiting. 



“This is boring” I stated nonchalantly. The others nodded in agreement. 
“At least you are not at work” chimed in Mum
“True,” I said, “I’m trying to milk this for as many days off as I can get, I'm out of grandparents after her”
The conversation continued on about work and compassionate leave. My aunty had just started a new job at a supermarket and had training that week and was worried at the effect of missed training. Mum, who had worked for the same company, albeit at a different store, for almost ten years suggested that she in essence, get over it.
 The irreverent conversations continued all afternoon, all the while Nana just lay there.

The previous day I had been sitting a work. I was training an older lady in how to use her computer. Showing her how to organize the photos of her grandchildren. The phone rang. It had rang three times before. It was my brother. Nana was dying. 






Saturday, February 23, 2013

Blog anxiety


It has come to this. I lament the lack of blog entries. I have a plethora of ideas swirling around my head however my apparent apathy prevents me from writing.

I’m trying to work out why I don’t. I have a few theories and though I'm no psychologist, I am aware of my own anxieties.

There is one major anxiety...

I am not very good at typing. As a digital native, its something that I am quite ashamed of.
Computers were there from the moment of my birth although they weren't in my general vicinity, they did exist. Heck. If we are talking about typing, the QWERTY keyboard had been around since before my grandmother who I might add, could touch type perfectly on her old black Remington typewriter.

Whilst Nana, could type, read a document and hold a conversation at the same time, while writing this I’m staring at my fingers looking to where the keys are. The tendons in my fingers know quite well where they are. I just don't trust them.
My neck is slanted forward over the keyboard like a monk over a medieval manuscript, they main difference being that the monk knows what he is doing,I, on the other hand, do not.

The monk and well as my Nanna would never make a mistake whilst working away, in contrast is me where wrong, incorrect spelling and grammatical errors are punch into the keyboard then bing revealed as I look up by a dotted red line under the offending words.

These red lines fill me with dread. I should know how to type. The principal of my primary school taught a class in typing.
We were huddled in a classroom with little red keyboards, a tying in “the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.” I think he knew that one day typing would become important. So much that I got my typing license well before I got my pen license.

I guess I could write entries in pen and then transpose them into a typed form. I’m quite good at handwriting, I do prefer to handwrite letters and have spent an amount of money on fancy pens and paper. 
With pen and paper I can write as fast as my brain and I can see what I am writing as I write (apologies to the lefties out there)

There is still a problem. 

To get it from the paper to blog, I still need to type it.

I should probably find a way to deal with this, just suck it up and deal with it.

Yep, thats what I have to do. Damn.


Tuesday, November 27, 2012

That point

It has come to this, I have reached a new level of sadness or as some may refer to it as a new level of maturity. After many years of a particular method I have discovered a new way, a more efficient way to...
Wait for it.
...a more efficient way to fold socks.
I had always folded them one into the other by folding them in half however today I found via a YouTube tutorial video that if the socks are folded three ways that it makes for a more compact package making for a more organised sock drawer.

Yep I've reached that point which quite frankly I'm not too fussed about. It's about time I had more organised socks, maybe too early for that to e re most memorable part of my day. Tomorrow, I'm going to get out more.


Thursday, November 15, 2012

What happens when the star falls


Im washed up. I’m a has been. Ive had my moment in the sun and now the night has set in. When people speak of washed up reality stars, I felt the pain. I know what its like. I was that has been.

A poster in a break room told me that I would be a star. It said sign up, so I did. Then I was a supermarket shop assistant but if I signed up, I could be a supermarket shop assistant on TV and star in a Woolworth's commercial.

To be fair it wasn't that big of deal, I just sent in a photo and filled out a form then I was booked in to audition. I arrived at the audition late in the day, the audition directer had already seen his fair share of wanna be actors more so wannabe superstars for like the lure of reality television many saw this as their big break. He was tired and asked if I could come back the next day. I had to work, it was today or nothing.
I went into the room facing the camera, he sat me in front a proceeded to ask questions about my cooking habits, I responded honestly stating that since I still lived with my parents, I didn't cook much at all. I spun some story about stir fry and hammed it up a bit in front of the camera. It was easy to do as the camera an I are old friends, you don’t spend years working behind a camera without gaining some insight as to how to look into one.
The director was happy with the performance and hinted that I might just have the gig.
I left the audition feeling all giddy, I was going to be a star!

I got a letter with a date for a second audition, this time with the director of the commercial as well as the previous audition director. In a tiny studio in St Kilda I again sat in from of a camera however this time I had lines. I read something about Woolworth's having all of your christmas needs, Ham and Lobster. 
“That’s not kosher” I stated.
“are you Jewish?” the commercial director asked.
“No,” I replied, “I just have a big nose, curly hair and happen to be called Benjamin.”
Awkward racial humor but I got a laugh and a positive response to my “acting”, so much so that unofficially gave me a role in the ad.

I didn't think much of the ad until weeks later when the manager came up to me and said congratulations.
“why?” I asked
“you got the role in the ad” he stated casually
“shit!” I exclaimed and then promptly apologized for exclaiming.

I flew up to Brisbane for a weekend for the shooting of the ad, all expenses paid of course.
On the Sunday we drove out to the store in the middle of nowhere, we had to shoot in Queensland as its the only state that has stores closed on a Sunday.Amid the craziness of the film set, I did my line.
“and some tender Woolworth's select frozen peas and mashed potatoes”
Then I added my own ad-lib.
“Its too easy”
I got it it three shots. They then took my photo from many angles and that was it. I was done. For the rest of the day I just sat around and ate from the catering truck. 

The ad was forgotten for months until one day I got an invitation to a managers meeting and the launch of the new commercial campaign.
All the state managers and assistant managers were hustled into a large auditorium where the general manager spoke like a televangelist about how great Woolworth's was. Then they showed the ads.

All.

Except.

Mine.

The marketing manager rose to thank all the participants, she read out the names, calling us to stand as our names were. 
As my name was read, it a fit of indignation, I exclaimed, “you cut me!”
The room went silent, the marketing manager looked awkward and tried to carry on, I just stood there shrugging at her. She continued with her spiel.

After the event I caught up with some of my “co-stars”, we decided to consume as much as the free spread as we could a a form of subtle revenge.

I watched a bit of TV after that though I never did see the ad. Thus I was like the reality stars spoken of; promised fame and perhaps fortune but ultimately paid minimum wage and cut from the show. I had signed a contact stating that they could use my image to sell their product and like reality television the “performer” ultimately has no say in how they are portrayed. I was shown the way that the producers wanted not the way that I really am. In reality I hate frozen peas and would never endorse their consumption.