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... easing into semi-retirement, having lots of creative adventures and enjoying being a (relatively) new Granny.
Friday, 28 December 2012
Wednesday, 26 December 2012
28.2.12 part 2
Stream of consciousness – choose one
word and write about it for 5 minutes
SUN
I love a sunny day and
feel down on a dull day.
I love to be in the sun, to feel it beating down on my
face and on my head, but only for a short time.
I hate to feel too hot from
being in the sun for too long.
My eyes begin to want to close, my skin feels
tight and I want to retreat inside, away from the sun.
Perhaps I like sun when
I can see it rather than feel it.
I love the warmth of the sun after a long, cold
winter and the promise of summer to come.
Maybe the thinking about the sun is better
than actually experiencing it.
28.2.12
Stream of consciousness – choose one word and write about it for 5 minutes.
BUTTERFLY
Flutters in the sunlight,
brightly coloured. I have always loved butterflies. On my first visit to
Brisbane aged 19 I was entranced by the beautiful butterflies in every garden.
Their size and colours amazed me.
Years later we went to the Melbourne Zoo to
see the Chinese pandas but I most enjoyed the butterfly house. You could stand
still and have them land on your hands, face, eyelids – just magical. It’s
quite amazing to think that a beautiful butterfly comes from an unexceptional
caterpillar.
Ben had the book The Very
Hungry Caterpillar which I loved to read to him. And now he tells me
that he also loves butterflies.
I bought a copy of that book for Millie when
she was born and Amy tells me that she loves it because there is a little finger
puppet inside which she always wants to kiss. Maybe she’ll also love butterflies!
Thursday, 20 December 2012
Monday, 17 December 2012
Peripheral Vision
The lamp looms over the desk
While the wardrobe stands tall.
Hanging clothes beg to be put away
But books beg to be picked up and read.
Under the desk is a clutter of boxes
And the door handle clutches its bags.
Stacked books once tidy in the bookshelf
Offset by the clutter of photos near the window.
A photo glimpsed on the wall
Draws attention away from housework.
Friday, 14 December 2012
15.2.12
Write something using
these 12 words
find alert independent allover addictive Season unlock wrinkle district
current nauseated speaker
Spread them out – one per
paragraph would be a nice challenge!
*************************************************************************
Why did I suddenly find
myself nauseated as I was finishing
my lunch? It started as a cough which I sometimes get after eating fatty or
spicy food, but then I felt the bile rise up in my throat and I was afraid to
move in case I involuntarily vomited. The feeling was so alien to me: the
sickening feeling in the depths of my stomach, the watering in my mouth which I
have not felt for many years.
However, I remained still
for a minute or so and then the feeling passed. I sipped on my tea and made
myself think of something else and then I felt better. But I still think that
subconsciously I remained alert to
this feeling in case it returned.
Now I have begun my
writing exercise and my attention has moved on. I am anxious to unlock the secret of good writing and
hope that this discipline will help me to find
my way. For some time now I have felt that I have some talents in writing but I
know that I need to join a group where I can learn the skills I need. My basic
shyness holds me back from taking this step at the moment, as I do not want to
have to present my work in front of others for them to criticise (or praise!).
So for the moment I will
continue with my own independent
learning in an attempt to hone my skills. Perhaps I need to think more clearly
about why I want to write and what I want to write. Do I want to
write to be heard, to have my point of view presented and understood? Will I be
writing for myself, my children (and grandchildren) or for a larger audience?
I am keen to become more
disciplined in my writing, perhaps for it to become my “work” in retirement, so
that I can continue to enjoy some form of activity no matter what the season of the year. I still wonder
whether my writing exercises and regular discipline will enable me to unlock my inner voice which has been
kept inside for so many years. This activity could well become addictive for me and I will then have
plenty to do in my retirement.
One thing I know I need to
practice is that of dialogue and incorporating the words of a speaker into my work.
Granddad’s Photo
“Grandma,
Grandma”, called Millie from the study of my 2 bedroom retirement villa, “where
was this photo taken?”
My
10year old granddaughter came into the lounge room clutching a large colour
photograph of a farm scene, with two horses leaning against a fence, lightly
scattered snow along the top of the fence and heavier snow on the ground. In
the distance the flat scenery led back to a far off stand of gum trees. The sky
was gun metal grey and mottled clouds hid the sun.
The
other two grandchildren, 9 year old Sam and 8 ½ year old Pippa, clambered over
me on the soft, velvet covered couch to get closer to Millie and see the photo
she was holding above her head.
“Calm
down, calm down”, I said as the friendly jostling threatened to escalate into outright
warfare. “Give it to me so I can have a good look at it. Let me see… oh, I
remember now”, I mused.
“This
was taken on my parents’, your great-grandparents’, farm at Cooma, in about
1966, the year that we had snow right up to November.”
“Grandma,
Grandma, were they your horses? Did you ride them? What were their names?” demanded
Sam, the outdoor, animal loving boy.
“Well…,”I
said, “let’s all sit down together over here and I’ll tell you all about why
great Granddad took this photo and why I still have it 65 years later…
I can still
remember how cold it was that day, even though the weather was clearing and the
watery sun was trying to peek through the heavy clouds. It was the end of
another cold and miserable day in the middle of November. I remember that by
this time I was no longer excited by the sight of snow; when we first saw snow
five years before it was a novelty, but now we realised that it always snowed
in Cooma in winter. It was such a change from my early childhood years in sunny
north Queensland.
“But Grandma, why did you move away from the sun, if you hated the cold so much?” asked
the ever-inquisitive Pippa.
“Well
Pippa, “I said, “when we left the north I was only 10 years old, the same as
Millie is now, and we had no say in the move. Our Dad, your great-Granddad, had
been sick for some years and the heat made him worse, so the doctors said he
had to move to a cool climate. After looking for about 6 months he decided we
were moving to Cooma, so in 1961 we went to live there on the farm at the end
of the bitumen road, 15 km from town.”
Our house was
much smaller than the one we had in Queensland and I had to share a bedroom
with my sister which we both hated. Nothing about that house or the town or the
school was as good as Queensland. I remember feeling dreadfully homesick for
about the first year we lived there and I wished we could go back “home”.
There was only an
outside toilet, about 100 metres from the back door of the house, and that was
very hard, especially in the middle of July one year when we all had gastro.
We all had a giggle thinking of
how dreadful that must have been.
There was an old
wood stove which my Mum, your great-grandma, hated; it never heated up properly,
the kitchen was always full of smoke from the chimney and she had to get up at
5.30 every morning to light the fire so we could all have breakfast in time to
catch the school bus at 8 o’clock. So one of the first things we bought was an
electric stove and that was an incredible luxury for us all. No more chopping
wood for Dad, no more collecting kindling for us kids and no more ridiculously
early mornings for Mum.
Now it
was Millie’s turn to interrupt. “Grandma, what’s kindling? How do you collect
it? Is it like eggs or mushrooms?”
“No
Millie, kindling is just small sticks and bits of wood that you use to start a
fire. We would crumple some newspaper, then build a little tepee of small bits
of wood or kindling and light the paper. When the kindling was alight then you
could add some larger pieces of wood and build up the fire. Haven’t you ever
made a fire, any of you?”I asked.
Three
heads all shook in answer to my question. “I think our next holiday should be
in a retro farmhouse somewhere far from civilisation so we can all learn some
bush skills. Let’s suggest that to your parents when they come home from the
club.” Again three heads in unison, but this time nodding.
“Back
to the story Grandma,” said Sam.”Why did great-Granddad take this photo?
There’s not even a person in it, just the horses.”
“Well,
Sam, the reason there’s no one in the photo is because my Dad forgot to take a
photo until after the guests left.”
“Guests!
Who were they?” demanded Millie.
“Well,
there were a few people but one of them was Prince Charles”, I told them
smiling.
“Prince
Charles!!...of England?” shrieked Pippa and Millie in unison.
“Yes,
that’s right, HRH Prince Charles, the Prince of Wales. This is how it
happened….”
We had all been
excited at school for weeks because Prince Charles was going home to England
from his boarding school at Geelong, and he was scheduled to stop in Cooma on
his way to Canberra before flying to London. There was to be a civic luncheon,
the school choir was singing and best of all, we got the afternoon off school.
There had been
snow overnight, and you can see what’s left of it in the photo, but it cleared
by morning and we were able to catch the bus to school. Mum was helping with
the catering at the luncheon in town so she left home soon after us, but Dad
had to stay behind to hand feed the sheep and cattle; it had been a very dry
winter and there was little feed for them in the paddocks.
He had just gone
inside the house for a morning tea break when he saw a convoy of three black
cars driving slowly down our driveway. The middle car seemed to have a broken
windscreen and it was going very slowly.
“What
happened then? Did Prince Charles hop out of the car and say ‘g’day mate’?”
asked Sam with a grin.
“I
don’t know Sam, I wasn’t there, but I do know that the security guards
travelling with the Prince asked to use our telephone to phone Canberra and
have a replacement car sent for him. It was way too cold for anyone to drive
any distance in a car with a broken windscreen on a day like that.”
Eventually it was
decided that the civic reception in Cooma would have to be held up until
another car arrived. Dad didn’t know what he should do and he had his farm jobs
to do, so he offered them all a cup of tea and hoped they would let him get on
with his work. They all accepted a cup of tea and were happy to sit around in
our little kitchen to wait for the car to arrive. All of them that is, except
Prince Charles; he was very interested in the farm and wanted to go with Dad to
finish feeding the sheep. So Dad loaned him a pair of gumboots and they went
off in the truck with the security guard riding on the back, clinging on for
dear life as they rattled around the rough tracks of our farm. Dad said they
were out for about an hour and the Prince did his share of throwing hay bales
off the back of the truck but still managed to keep his suit trousers clean.
When they returned to the house for another cup of tea, there was a fourth
black car driving down the driveway towards the house. It turned out that the
Governor-General was staying on a property not far away and they had managed to
borrow his car for the trip to Canberra.
With a lot of
rushing around and much hand shaking, the Prince’s entourage settled themselves
into the three cars and drove away at a much faster speed than when they
arrived. It was only as they disappeared into the distance that Dad realised he
had forgotten to have a photo taken with the Prince. So he went into the house,
retrieved his faithful Ricoh slide camera and took the photo that you can see
here. It was the same place where the Prince had been, it’s just that he wasn’t
in the photo.
“………….
And that’s why your great-Granddad took this photo at this time. Luckily it was
a good photo so we had it blown up and framed as a memento of the day that
Prince Charles helped Dad with the hand feeding”, I said, as the children’s
parents arrived home from their dinner at the Surf Club.
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