Monday, June 29, 2015

Americans are crazy!

Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell loses speech after aneurysm, David Crosby says

I read this headline on the ABC website and rolled my eyes.  Honestly, I thought, only the Americans would hold a speech and then, after a speaker suffers an aneurysm and becomes mute, go on to declare the other participant the winner.  Seriously, what is the problem with Americans?  They take things to the limits.  Surely, they should have called off the speech as soon as poor Joni Mitchell grabbed her head and screamed in pain.  But no, whatever was being debated was perceived to be so important that the speech needed to continue.  And such an occurrence would only happen in America. 
     And why, I continued to think in the nanosecond after I read the headline above, would an aged, legendary singer be participating in a speech?  Perhaps she was running for president (it's all on now) and this was a pre-polling debate such as the one Tony Abbott and Kevin Rudd in August, 2013 (the same thing must take place in America). 
     Sonny Bono was a singer-songwriter before he ran for government, Ronald Reagan was an actor before becoming US president and Sarah Palin was a beauty queen before becoming the governor of Alaska and then running for vice-president.  America is truly a fertile land of opportunities and Americans are crazy for calling a speech when a speaker has a near-death experience!  These thoughts ran through my mind before my eyes read the following: 
 
Folk legend Joni Mitchell has lost her ability to speak after suffering a brain aneurysm, fellow artist and former boyfriend David Crosby says.
     Then I realised I have been taking my role as a literacy teacher too seriously.  But I still think Americans are crazy.

Bad luck!


On wet winter days, it's bad luck when you're a chook who has been adopted by ducks!  Poor, devoted Billie circles her mother and aunty while they sleep in the rain.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Marital Status

As my 20th wedding anniversary approaches, 21 July, I’ve been reflecting on how much of my married life has been spent as a single person.  Many times I’ve filled out a form and come to the Marital Status section.  My pen has hovered over the Single box although I’ve always placed my tick in the little square next to Married.
     Tony and I made a deal as new parents that we’d always share work so one of us could remain at home with the children, a deal Tony admits he broke early on to establish the first Gadin Ninja grass cutting business.
     “I have to work,” he said.  “If you want to work, put the kids in childcare.”
     I understood Tony’s predicament.  He loves working.  I wanted him to be happy.  I had an education, an opportunity he didn’t have.  It was only fair I supported him.  I could return to work anytime.
     I stopped work, became a full-time mother to a baby and toddler and also the admin chick.  I began to paint to combat the frustration of parenting alone for Tony was cutting grass during the week and driving taxis for a mate on the weekends. 
     After two years, we worked out it was better to lease a taxi and buy a licence.  So, Tony became owner of Strait Taxis (Be strait there!) with a brand new Toyota Camry sedan he called Lady Cathrine.  Again, I did the admin.  Tony worked late and left early.  Often, too often, I went to bed alone and woke alone.  The only evidence of Tony slipping in and out of bed was his side of the bedding turned down.  On Sunday night, Tony regaled me with stories of going to parties or catching up with people between midnight and the home rush in the early hours of Saturday and Sunday mornings.  Many people were surprised when he mentioned he had a wife.
     “I didn’t know you were married,” he reckons they said.  I know because some of them told me when I eventually met them.
     I recall the only night we got a babysitter and I went to the Boat Club and met Tony on one of his taxi breaks.  One woman in the throng commented, “so you’re the imaginary wife.” 
     Tony had a dream to establish Torres Strait’s first Islander-owned fishing charter.  It was my job to support him achieve that dream.  We sold the first Gadin Ninja business three weeks before #3 was born to establish Tony’s Island Adventures.  The fishing charter wasn’t as lucrative as the grass cutting so I stopped painting and went back to work just after I learned I was pregnant with #4.  I had a skill and I needed to support my husband to enable him to continue working.
     When I was 35 weeks pregnant, working point eight, doing admin for the fishing charter and the taxi as Tony worked long hours,  I decided something had to give.
     When Tony returned for a meal break, I rushed down the stairs, holding my swollen belly to keep  balance.
     “I’ve had enough,” I said.  “It’s me or the Lady Cathrine.”
     He didn’t say anything for a few moments and I contemplated life as a single mother. 
     “Okay,” he said very quietly, the closest he’s ever been to tears.  “I’ll sell the Lady Cathrine.”
     I went back to work shortly after the birth and Tony looked after the children.  We engaged babysitters on the days Tony had fishing charters.  Within a year, Tony was frustrated and wanted to work longer hours.  I stopped work again.  When the young ones slept, I painted and wrote, worried that if I didn't do something mentally stimulating, I'd lose the ability to think and speak intelligibly. 
     The fishing charter income and my painting wasn’t enough to support a family so we started Gadin Ninja, mark 2.  This time Tony added tree lopping to the service and we built up a nice little operation.  Tony worked long hours on Gadin Ninja and Tony’s Island Adventures.  I managed the businesses and the kids and in spare time (mostly in the dead of night), I painted and wrote.       
     Fast forward to Atherton.  We established a grass cutting business, The Yard Ninja, but things are quiet, competition is tough and we are not bothering to promote it.  After months of job searching, Tony found work on a casual contract basis and is often ‘under-employed.’ Anyway, his contract ends on 30 June.  I have loved that he’s been playing more of a role of house husband as I work, but he’s found a new interest – prospecting.   
     He’s bought a metal detector, has done a few trips and is now obsessive.  Each night he pours over books about prospecting or he’s sitting at the computer, the screen glowing with the patchy green/grey terrain of Google Earth.  He’s wants to become a professional prospector.  He’ll deck out the Prado, hit the road and be gone for weeks, months at a time.
     I’ve been plagued by old fears; will I have to stop work to enable him to pursue his new interest?  Will I ever be able to spend time finishing that book?  Will we have to struggle financially again?  Will Tony ever want to work and support me and my dream to write?  Why can't we have stability in our lives for once?
     I’ve had it.  I wonder if it’s time to tick that box next to Single. 

Monday, June 22, 2015

Why I keep this blog

Lately I’ve begun to wonder why I keep a blog.   It started out as a record of life on a tiny island, Ilan Life, where I was a visitor, albeit a long-term one.  I had a foot in both camps, the Islander one and the European one, not belonging to either.  
     Life was more interesting in the Torres Strait and a hell of a lot more unpredictable, something I relished including the rabid dogs, politics and supermarket debacles.  Everyday occurrences were worthy of recording as anecdotes. And it was great writing practice.
     Life here has routine, something I am not comfortable with.  The kids do tennis on Monday and Thursday.  I work at school on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday.  Tony works on Monday and Tuesday.  The routine is hard to take. Even the checkouts in supermarkets have routinely correct prices!  I have both feet firmly in the white majority camp yet don't feel I fully belong.   Life here is normal.  It's reality.  It’s taking me a long time to adjust, so long I wonder if I ever will.
     Lately I’ve also thought about giving up writing.  I don’t have the time and when I steal a few moments that should be devoted to something like doing the 2011 Payroll Advice for the ATO (that I should be doing write now), I don’t write very well.
     But at the moment, the only writing I do is for the blog and somehow it keeps me sane, partially filling that biological urge to write.  
     Of course, the blog is a visual record of our lives.  Recently, Kibby wanted to find the blog post about camping on Goodes Island two years ago and bow hunting pigs.  Together we trawled through the archives of posts, checking out long-forgotten events that must have happened because I’d recorded them and there were photos as proof.  We laughed and laughed at some of the entries.
     I’d like to change the name of the blog to Big Ilan Life, but I don’t think I can. And I don't have the time to work out how to do it or set up a new blog.
     In the meantime, I’ll keep plugging away at Ilan Life trying to come to terms with life on the big island, reality, and keeping up writing practice for when I finally get to use it.  

The perpetual quest for the perfect job

Looking back over the not too distant past, it seemed I was on the perpetual quest for the perfect job.  I thought I had found it; a proof reader/editor position.  This job was perfect for me for I would be immersed in writing and the English language and I could work from home in my pyjamas. Actually Tony found the advertisement when I away from Cairns.  I told him I’d look at it when I got home.  
     He gave me the torn square of newsprint when I returned at midnight after nine hours of travelling by car, train then plane.  I was exhausted and quickly scanned the ad for the submission-of-applications date, 16th February.  If tonight was Sunday, 8th February, the 16th was Monday week.  
     This was perfect because I could work all week and not have to think about addressing the selection criteria until the weekend. 
     Saturday arrived and I noticed, in the clear light of a summer’s morning and after a full nine hours of sleep, the submission date was actually Friday, 16th February. Friday was in fact the 13th. I panicked.  Was it Friday, 13th or Monday, 16th?
     I’d missed the Black Friday deadline so went with the Monday. When my brother dropped in a few hours later I showed him the ad.
     Stephen knows about interviews and applications. I asked him whether it was Friday 13th or Monday 16th?’
     He laughed.  ‘Cathy, it’s a trick question.’  I was perplexed.  ‘The job is for a proof reader/editor and you’ve missed the contradiction.  But go for it anyway.’
     So on Monday I emailed my application and within an hour I received a call to attend an interview at 3 pm the next day.  I could barely hear the woman speaking because there was a fire drill and the siren was sounding.
     ‘What time?’ I yelled.  ‘Three?’
     ‘Yes.  Three o’clock.’
     ‘Please email a confirmation and address,’ I said over the din.  ‘I can’t hear properly.’
     When I checked my emails that night, sure enough there was a confirmation for an interview at 2 pm on Tuesday.  Naturally I assumed I had heard the time incorrectly.
     I was excited.  I wanted this job and I arrived for the interview 20 minutes early at 1.40 pm.
     I met the two directors, friendly women and we chatted about writing and the Torres Strait for a few minutes.  They led me to a conference room and I sat opposite them at a large, polished wooden table. Each woman held two sheets of paper unfamiliar to me.  Interview questions, I assumed.
     ‘So I bet it’s cooler on the Tablelands?’ said the dark haired one.
     I wondered if this was another trick question.  ‘Apparently it is a few degrees cooler up there.  Five or six.’  
     ‘Aren’t you from Millaa Millaa?’ said the blonde with tense brows.
     ‘No, Cairns. Smithfield, actually.’
     ‘Aren’t you Jennifer?’ said the brunette.  Her chin had dropped a little.
     ‘No, Catherine.’
     They both gasped to me then turned to each other and gasped again.  They stood and rushed from the room.  Muffled conversation wafted from the adjoining office then silence.
     They appeared at the door.
     ‘Let’s start again,’ said the brunette.
     ‘Hi, I’m Catherine.’  I stood and extended my hand.
     They sat down and I noticed they were each holding a copy of my resume.  They talked about their company, their vision, my role and responsibility.  They asked some questions and I asked some questions.  The brunette's words became rushed as she advised the hours and the rate of pay.  The blonde, running her words together, asked if I could start on Friday.
     ‘Well,’ I said, ‘I am working-‘ 
     ‘Monday?’ said the brunette.
     ‘Possibly, but-‘
     ‘We’lltalkaboutthatlater,’ said the blonde.
     ‘Doyouhaveanymorequestions?’ said the brunette.
     ‘Um.’
     ‘Okay,’ said the blonde as they both stood and thanked me for coming in.  
     The brunette gestured towards the door the blonde had opened.  At the door, the brunette began to steer me with one arm, the other raised and holding the sheets of my resume, as if she was shielding me from something unpleasant.  The blonde appeared to be a human shield from whatever I wasn’t supposed to see. 
     I was pushed through the reception area to the exit … but not before I saw a woman seated next to the magazine table with a folder on her lap.  This must have been Jennifer from Millaa Millaa, probably wondering why her 2pm interview was fifteen minutes late.
     I laughed quietly to myself on the way home thinking about the comedy of errors; the application date confusion, the altered interview time, the wrong resume, the wrong town, the wrong woman.  I had more than enough chaos from my family. I didn't need more in my working life.
     I waited the appropriate few hours and then sent a polite email asking for my application (for the perfect job, dammit!) to be withdrawn.
     I would re-embark on the perpetual quest for the perfect job.