Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Australia Day

 It seems to be a day of argument and protest. Not that I'm involved (till now). It was like any other day for me. I worked in the afternoon, picking a bit for customers coming tomorrow morning.

I really can't see the point in all the fuss. I'd just as soon can the thing, it seems like a big wank for politicians. By all means have awards for those deserving but that could be on any day of the year. So could ceremonies of citizenship. I don't see how there has to be a National holiday for this. The whole nationhood thing is overblown. Yes I'm Australian by birth. So what? I had no say in it? I'm in no way special or superior to an Indonesian, a New Zealander, a Canadian, or any other person from anywhere. None of us had any say in how and where or know why we're on the planet. We all have a mouth to feed and a pooper valve the other end.

I've been thinking about my values, as I mentioned in the previous post. They are simple. Besides all same old chestnuts like freedom of speech, honesty, justice, egalitarianism, all of which are arguable to a degree (sometimes maybe it's best not to tell the truth for example) I believe that Decency is my primary value. Decency to other human beings, to animals and all creatures, and the environment. Decency is something we can carry as individuals, and by communities and governments. The law and order and justice part is more a governance thing. And too often lacking.

So much for that. I have little control of anything in this world, and the little knowledge I have is given to me by sources I can't be sure are authentic or accurate. But I can be decent. 

In one month from today settlement occurs on our house purchase at McCracken. The others at the farm are not ready to sell so will continue while they can to live at Chamomile Farm. I meet with my accountant this week to learn the best way for me extricate from the business, of which I'm sole proprietor. Hopefully there's a way for Meredith to continue the business and maintenance in a limited way after I'm gone. Mother Elvie is not ready to move into a care facility, and until she is Meredith, husband Roger, and brother Jod stay at the farm as they are now. Between them they should have the resources to do so.

2021 is shaping as big year for sure. I rang a removalist today to start the ball rolling for arrangements for migration on a date yet to be set.   

Monday, January 18, 2021

Everything is XXXXXX

 I hinted in my last post that I have undergone some introspection recently as a result of our life changing decisions - selling our home of nearly forty years, buying a house in SA and our impending cessation of our employment and radical financial changes.


My week away with Ricky Ralph provoked discussion about our school days, old friends male and female, parents, siblings, politics, world affairs now and historically, technology, the environment, etc. Most of all we laughed a lot, like we always did.


Gord gave me a book for Xmas, "Everything is XXXXXX", subtitled "A Book about Hope", by Mark Manson. Provocative yes. It talks about emotions and values and behaviour and reactions of people, to what is happening to them and around them, largely in the context of our "thinking brain" and our "feeling brain" and how it all works. I'm not yet a third of the way into it but I'm sure it's an appropriate read for me at this pivotal time, where I cannot help but try to analyze why I am where I am, and think how I do. Not that I want to get too focused on it, I have too many practical things to deal with day to day and over the next two months that must take preference (The tussle between thinking brain and feeling brain is in full swing).


As the book says, I agree, we are all narcissistic to some degree, I'm no exception. We look at the world in terms of how it affects us. Last weekend I went back to Mt Waverley where I spent most of the first couple of decades of my life. My family left there almost 50 years ago. I drove past where our house was (it is no longer there, replaced by apartments). I drove past friends' houses, most of them are gone, my old primary school is still there, even a couple of the original buildings, but of course it looks very different with much less open space. The Sherwood oval where I spent countless hours kicking the footy as a boy is there unchanged except for the palm trees surrounding it being 50 years older. The kindergarten I attended is still there. The Valley Road Reserve survives, fortunately preserved and improved as the grassed areas are gone and replaced by native trees and scrub. It was wonderful and inspiring to see; "the bush" as we knew it, even better bush now 50 years on despite the development of sprawling city and freeways and traffic.


When I was about 15 years old I was out one Friday night with a couple of mates, Bill Edwards and Mick McCourt. Our dog Minnie, about 10 years old (we had a male dog when we were very young named Mickey- it died of distemper, called parvovirus now I think, and female Minnie was the replacement), a faithful dog who saw us grow from young children to adolescence, followed as usual. She ran onto Stephenson's Rd at the top of our street to check out a dog across the road and was hit by a car. She got up and ran back across the the road where I picked her up as she floundered. She went limp, dying in my arms. 


Tears came to me as I recalled this at that spot last weekend, more than fifty years after the event. With wonderful Minnie dead I was devastated. I howled my eyes out, and didn't know what to do. My mates were terrific in support at the time. I remember that. We decided to take Minnie to a vacant block near Mick's house and bury her with a pick and shovel borrowed from Mick's. I cried the whole time while we dug the grave. Tears well in me now while I write this. I had to go home and tell my family what had happened. Of course I blamed myself for letting it happen. To my relief my family did not blame me as I feared they would, despite their grief they were sympathetic that I had witnessed it and had the dreadful job of burying her. 


This self indulgent trip back to my past has keyed in with the book Gord gave me, and the changes in my life. I realize now how profoundly affected I was by Minnie's demise on my watch. I'm sure it was a contributing factor in my going off the rails in my teenage years. The book says a painful experience leaves you feeling like shit, and because of it you can think you deserve shit. I'm not looking for excuses for my failings; around the same time I took up smoking and binge drinking and lost interest in school and sport, I'm just thinking about my life and my values and how and why they change over time. I'm sure there were other factors, but 15 years old was bad timing to lose Minnie in that way. A kid growing up turns to the family dog when things go wrong, a trusted companion who gives love unconditionally. Suddenly she was gone and it was my fault.


I believe it's legal to briefly quote from the book if it is part of a critical article or review so-


"Psychologists don't know much for certain, but one thing they definitely do know is that childhood trauma fucks us up."


It says, "Our childhood experiences, both good and bad, have long lasting effects on our identities and generate the fundamental values that define much of our lives."

He says, "There are two ways to heal yourself - that is to replace the old faulty values with better healthier values. The first is to reexamine the experiences of your past and rewrite the narratives around them."


"The other way to change your values is to begin writing the narratives of your future self, to envision what life would be like if you had certain values or possessed a certain identity."


These quotations are grabs, minus his explanations, but I think they give a picture of his general thrust. I reckon the book is well worth a read. He combines philosophy with entertainment and humour.


In my case my values have changed radically over the last five decades. The nearly 70 yo old Carey thinks differently to the 20 yo Carey of 1972. The changes have come slowly after experience and observations. I think I have rewritten my past narratives and begun work on my future self. Hopefully my values will hold me in good stead.

What are my values? How have they changed? More thinking to do. Maybe next post.




Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Since Christmas

 17 days. Wow, talk about getting on with it. We've bought a house in McCracken S.Aus. Take possession 26 Feb conditional to termite report and Covid clause.

Left with Ricky Ralph 27 Dec 8pm. My customers were all taking a break; Ralphie was keen to do a trip away with his caravan and kindly suggested we could go to SA where I could look around for prospective future location and residence. Good fortune for me. Thanks to Ralphie, he was amazing to do what he did.

We got over the West Gate Bridge and somehow got off the Freeway to Geelong at the wrong exit. Probably lost half an hour or more driving around in the dark before we found the Ballarat freeway. Cold and rain. We camped at truck stop, one we couldn't find on the way back, we couldn't even recall which side of Ballarat it was.

As we approached Adelaide next afternoon my phone rang. It was Lib. She found a good house on the net at Encounter Bay and suggested we look at it, so with the help of Ralphie's GPS we were looking at mid afternoon. Loved it and the location. Later, after miraculously finding a vacant site at the Port Elliot caravan park, I checked out the photos of the house's interior and back garden. Loved it more. I rang the agent to find it had been put under contract 2 days before Xmas. Would have been too good to be true to find the right house and buy first up day one.

We got comfortable in the caravan park and for the next few days tripped around looking at areas and houses. Anything that looked promising was under offer already by the time I inquired. Houses selling quickly I was told, within a couple of days of advertising. Second last day Lib asked had we been to McCracken yet. No, going there tomorrow. We'd found a few to look at on the google and I mentioned one to Lib, she said she'd seen that too, and had told me about it pre Xmas. 

Why it hadn't already gone like the others by the time we looked at it I don't know. We liked the look of it and the location fronting on to the Hindmarsh River Reserve, so I rang the agent on the board out front, she said she'd be there 2pm. tomorrow, owners would go out, to show us through. I think it was day before New Years Eve. The house, 25 years old 1995 build, has been refurbished throughout and was neat and clean as a pin. I told agent I'd check with Lib and if I got thumbs up I'd ring her later to say we'd make an offer. Lib agreed. We went to the agent's office in Victor Harbor 9.30 am Saturday New Years Day, caravan on behind as we were leaving for home straight after, and I did the necessary paperwork.

Safe home Sunday 2 Jan well before lunch after spending the night in the parking area at the Cresswick Sports Reserve. 

Ralphie and I had spent a full week away together, talking, reminiscing over school days and the 56 years since we first met at Malvern Grammar. We spent much time together travelling in our youth and trips as young adults, but nothing prolonged for 40 years since we both were married a couple of months apart in 1981. It's impossible to do that without provoking a lot of thought, given that we have the benefit of experience and hopefully wisdom. Significant that neither of us smoke. Cigarettes and alcohol were always a big part of it when we were young. I don't drink now, and I think Ralphie had one can of beer one day because it was in his van fridge and he was thirsty.

More on thoughts next post, my mind has visited my childhood, my Mt Waverley days, and meandered through my entire life. Not surprising I suppose, given that I'm making a life changing move in the months to come. 

For now I close and repeat my gratitude to Ricky Ralph.

Should just add that the countryside looked fantastic all the way across Western Victoria and SA to Adelaide. Amazing what good rain does. I reckon it would have been just about a record harvest, mountains of wheat recently harvested at depots and sheds full of hay and huge stacks outside. A joy to see.