in your place

23 09 2009

There are a lot of things ready to put you in your place in this world. Good job too. Everyone needs reminding, some more than others.

One of the most effective reminders of my place in the world is the ocean.

Tonga - Pic by N.Lewell-Hillary

Beautiful, nurturing and giving, it welcomes every morning. It offers to take you as you are and then deliver you reborn onto the wet sand.

Maroubra dawn - Pic by N. Lewell-Hillary

Always moving, always changing; the swell, the wind, the tides, the sand underneath. A constant state of flux and rhythm.

Occasionally whilst visiting you get to meet the locals. Fish dart underneath. A penguin pops up in the rip. A sea lion appears out of the fog. Dolphins show you how waves should be addressed. Even a passing humpback stops in the bay to remind you how small you really are.

Boomerang Beach - Pic by Leo Hillary

Often though, all it takes is the ocean itself. It doesn’t even have to be big. Attempting to dive below, swim within, or glide on top, you are just another collection of particles in the current.

Sometimes you are granted the illusion of control but even a little wave can put you exactly where it wants.

Such a human quest to find something bigger than themselves. We will look in the strangest of places before looking at the very thing we came from.





duty of care

15 09 2009

As Al Jourgensen’s 90’s Industrial heroes Ministry once implored, “Never trust a junkie’.

I can’t say that I ever gave too much consideration to this advice on account of a) it being quite obvious and b) never being in a position to need to.

On a recent illness induced trip to the emergency ward of St. Vincents at 1am on a Monday morning however, it was these words that kept coming to mind. Well, that and ‘duty of care’.

The ER really is no place to experience sober but how much easier would the lives of the people working there be if more people were?

It was a reasonably busy night and pretty long wait made even longer by one individual. He was on what must be a pretty regular attempted procurement stop, with his dilated pupils, swollen DVT leg, general incoherence and swearing. Every so often his partner would appear for moral support, mutual swearing, arguments, inappropriate touching, or to pop outside for another smoke.

As luck would have it they remained in (too) close proximity over the next 4 hours as we progressed through the waiting and treatment areas in a similar timeframe.

Now junkies aren’t subtle at the best of times and our unfortunate parallel lines ensured a full watching brief. Interestingly, given his difficulty in making sentences that made sense, his encyclopaedic knowledge of high impact hospital grade pharmaceuticals was thoroughly impressive.

When he wasn’t demonstrating this in various pleadings to nurses, doctors and any other person passing by in scrubs, it was all shifty eyes, looking for the opportunity to light-finger anything within reach.

Prior to an anonymous tip to the nursing staff the haul included a tourniquet, gloves and other generic sundries.

It could be that Ministry’s advice does constitute part of the ER educational syllabus though. The primary goal was never reached and he was dispatched swearing into the night with only DVT medicine and a reminder that the methadone clinic would be open in a few hours time.

This incursion over and the staff went back to their myriad other duties with the weary knowledge that the same act would play out again, if not the next night then the night after that. Repeat to fade.

Of course it was just another night in the ER: the tired staff; the overpowering stench of inebriation emanating from the pores and breath of battered faces; the police taking statements; the recriminations and accusations; the ambulance crews wheeling in the next case; the people on the front line.

All of humanity on display. The best and the worst.





ain’t no love in the heart of the city

10 09 2009

The yellow brick motorways all lead inwards, clogged with those who seek entry. Streaming in from all parts.

It draws them in however it can. By force, the promise, through lies. More bodies must equal a community. If not then the leftovers might sustain. The noise is interaction. The lighting is warmth. Someone will care.

Promises of a life laid out in front. Get the job, get a place, get some things, get a promotion, get more things, get another job, get a bigger place…

Get everything you ever wanted.

That’s the brochure. And this is the place to achieve it.

The system is all set up for you to buy in. Like a casino tempting with a glamorous route to riches, scented, climate controlled and with no clocks.

Everyone and everything is here. Join us.

And in they march, repeating the happy mantras drummed in from an early age and through every facet of society.

From a distance the shadows are hidden but the further in you get, the bigger they grow until they envelop all.

The grey sky above offers no respite, occasionally dispensing the city’s filth back downwards.

The nefarious heart draws on its subjects. Living through their energy. It is cold and soulless. Offering a morphine drip to keep them submissive. Stay in line.

The bars are only visible when you want to get out, the treadmill only apparent when you want to get off.

No one wants you to leave. The entity is only as strong as its constituents. The barricades surround.

The city screams, if you are leaving me you’re leaving the best. Can you settle for less?

If you can’t then don’t. And if you can?

There’s no place like it.





fight for your rights

9 09 2009

Now I was a perfect (teen)age for the late 80’s/early 90’s alternative rock scene, listening to Pixies, Nirvana, Jane’s Addiction and many others. Given this, it was obvious that I would have to express my individuality through the medium of ripped jeans, thrift shop jackets and having long hair.

The latter aspect of this unique sartorial splendour set me at odds with school regulations which stipulated that boys’ hair must be (from memory) ‘neat, tidy and off the collar at all times.’

Various ways and means were employed by myself and others to circumvent this particular diktat including a cornucopia of undercuts, back combing and Andy Garcia-esque applications of styling product. Most though ultimately settled upon ensuring a 1cm hair to collar gap all around.

Despite these sterling efforts there was no guarantee of safety from one particular textbook totalitarian Rod(zilla), the token teaching Rottweiler and upholder of the law. And whilst his old school values crusade was just another presumed example of his aggressive over-compensation for deeply repressed and traumatic conflicts of the past; my was he effective.

Observing that fighting on the front line was no way to win a war I went for hearts and minds. Surely a well presented, thoughtfully made argument and ensuing debate could open the doors of change.

And so it was to the school newspaper where I was a sort of part-time contributor (read ‘lazy and unreliable hack’). I subsequently crafted an impassioned but logical plea for review citing the inequality, sexism and inconsistency inherent in the current regulations. It escaped the worst of the editor’s review and even evaded the designated teaching staff censor to go to press.

Whilst the issue was trivial in the grander scheme of things, it was a direct challenge to the rules and the system and as it hit the campus, classroom and teachers’ lounge, it achieved the first aim of getting people talking.

Feedback was positive from the inmates and a strong number of the teaching staff commended it, even to the point agreeing with the central construct.

So this was it. Cross party consensus. Dialogue would ensue. The weight of opinion could break through. Decisions would be made and rules changed. Follicles would run free. A hair-band revolution!

Only nothing happened.

First it was silence from the ivory tower. Then it was quietly made clear that no discussion would ensue; rules were rules; keep onside or pay the price.

Rodzilla continued his holy war.

The following term I dyed mine red. After being told I would be suspended were it to stay red, I shaved it all off, bald. I was suspended.

I gained further punishment the term after that. Admittedly this time for applying a vomit finish to a teacher’s shoes after an ill-advised afternoon vodka run. But still…

The moral? Who knows? Pick one of these:

The house always wins? Don’t try if you can’t succeed? Being difficult can be fun? Middle-class teenage white boys have rubbish hair and should be stopped at all costs?

One of those should do it.

Now I was a perfect (teen)age for the late 80’s/early 90’s alternative rock scene, listening to Pixies, Nirvana, Jane’s Addiction and many others. Given this, it was obvious that I would have to express my individuality through the medium of ripped jeans, thrift shop jackets and having long hair.

 

The latter aspect of this unique sartorial splendour set me at odds with school regulations which stipulated that boys’ hair must be (from memory) ‘neat, tidy and off the collar at all times.’

Various ways and means were employed by myself and others to circumvent this particular diktat including a cornucopia of undercuts, back combing and Andy Garcia-esque applications of styling product. Most though ultimately settled upon ensuring a 1cm hair to collar gap all around.

Despite these sterling efforts there was no guarantee of safety from one particular textbook totalitarian Rod(zilla), the token teaching Rottweiler and upholder of the law. And whilst his old school values crusade was just another presumed example of his aggressive over-compensation for deeply repressed and traumatic conflicts of the past; my was he effective.

Seeing that fighting on the front line was no way to win a war I went for hearts and minds. Surely a well presented, thoughtfully made argument and ensuing debate could open the doors of change.

And so it was to the school newspaper where I was a sort of part-time contributor (read ‘lazy and unreliable hack’). I subsequently crafted an impassioned but logical plea for review citing the inequality, sexism and inconsistency inherent in the current regulations. It escaped the worst of the editor’s review and even the designated teaching staff censor to go to press.

Whilst the issue was trivial in the grander scheme of things, it was a direct challenge to the rules and the system and as it hit the campus, classroom and teachers’ lounge, it achieved the first aim of getting people talking.

Feedback was positive from the inmates and a strong number of the teaching staff commended it, even to the point agreeing with the central construct.

So this was it. Cross party consensus. Dialogue would ensue. The weight of opinion could break through. Decisions would be made and rules changed. Follicles would run free. A hair-band revolution!

Only nothing happened.

First it was silence from the ivory tower. Then it was quietly made clear that no discussion would ensue. Rules were rules. Keep onside or pay the price. Rodzilla continued his holy war.

The following term I dyed mine red. After being told I would be suspended were it to stay red, I shaved it all off, bald. I was suspended.

I gained further punishment the term after that. Admittedly this time for applying a vomit finish to a teacher’s shoes after an ill-advised afternoon vodka run. But still…

The moral? Who knows? Pick one of these:

The house always wins? Don’t try if you can’t succeed? Being difficult can be fun? Middle-class teenage white boys have rubbish hair and should be stopped at all costs?

One of those should do it.





the people in the garage

2 09 2009

Now there are many things I don’t understand. Rotund cyclists clad in lycra, religious doctrine, Russian and the appeal of the Black Eyed Peas among many.

Top of my list at present however is: why is there a couple living in their car in the garage next door?

Some background could be useful here. We live on the top floor of a duplex in Randwick, Sydney. Next-door is an identical duplex in reverse. The shared driveway between the properties leads to four garages. Next door is vacant.

It is owned by a very strange woman indeed. She lives somewhere in Double Bay and appears occasionally with her son (a special character he is too). They do odd jobs like maintaining the front garden and other similarly superficial things whilst completely ignoring the general state of disrepair of the place. It is the equivalent of giving the Queen a brazilian.

She appeared one day a few months back ostensibly showing a couple around. Sure enough a shiny silver Mercedes AWD started appearing regularly and we would often see the couple and exchange pleasantries by the garages.

So far so normal…

After a short time we noticed the new couple spending a disproportionate amount of time hanging around outside, or coming and going from the garage. Sometimes with a bucket. Suspicions aroused, a little bit of curtain twitching revealed the evening routine of making up a bed in the back of the Mercedes, putting up reflective metallic sheets around the windows as temporary insulation, the brushing of teeth and then bed time.

“Oh well, temporary situation I guess. Perhaps giving them somewhere to pitch up whilst they pass through town?” suggested Mrs H.

Four months later, they are still out there.

Initially the happy campers parked outside but as the weather got colder the car was pulled into the garage. Other developments have included the number plates being removed, the appearance of some boxes and the occasional use of bicycles.

But fundamental questions remain unanswered…

Why are they there?

Where do they go all day?

Why can’t they use one of the empty apartments?

What is in the bucket?

Investigations will continue…





hypocrisy is the greatest luxury

1 09 2009

I always promised I would never do this.

In an email to a friend early last year I said “I feel that anyone stupid enough to write a blog deserves those stupid enough to read them.”

It looks as though I am stupid enough to read them and now I guess I am stupid enough to write one.

Recently I have found myself enjoying some fine work by some fine people on a variety of subjects (links will appear to the right at some point). There is quality out there (if you can find it) and I don’t expect I’ll add to it.

So in summary I have changed my opinion on the subject to suit my needs as is my wont.

My parents always said I was a turncoat…








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