FDotM Interpretive Dance Bandicoot
15 Thursday Apr 2010
Posted in Politics in the Pig's Arms
15 Thursday Apr 2010
Posted in Politics in the Pig's Arms
12 Monday Apr 2010
Posted in Gregor Stronach
By Gregor Stronach
This page used to be blank. It’s not hard to believe – all pages are blank at some stage of their existence. Some pages are doomed to stay blank forever, but it’s not my place to judge them for their decisions. If they wish to remain blank, who am I to impose writing upon them?
But this page isn’t blank. Not anymore. This page is slowly being filled with words, like the ears of a lover are oft poured full of whispered niceties, insistent urgings and warm feelings… as the words appear, they are gifts, like the touch of a lover’s fingers on bare skin on a warm summers night, as a breeze flows through the open window and the room is filled with the scent of fresh limes and sound of soft murmurs… The communication of the writer and the page – two lovers, whispering in the dark.
The words, of course, are dowries, promises of commitment – replete with wrapping and bows, they remain. What’s said cannot be unsaid. What’s written must remain written. Not even god could come up with ‘ctrl-z’ – nor should a writer ever dream or dare to delete. The words should just come from whence they are bidden… flow from the mind to the fingers, to arrive and dress the page for polite company, resplendent in Sunday’s finest.
I’ll take a sip of my beer – the last of the fresh lime is gone, bobbing quietly within the bottle, as the dawn of summer’s insatiable heat arrives through my open windows. This page used to be blank, you know… but it’s becoming less and less so.
It’s a task, you see – a calling. A talent is a gift from the universe – it must be used. We should never become slaves to our abilities, but nor should we ever turn our backs upon them. Like drugs, danger and angry drunks, our ever-present aptitudes should be embraced and faced head on.
My task is simple. To change the world I live in, one word at a time. And that’s why this page used to blank, but now it’s not. I choose to write. I choose to place my hands upon the keyboard and massage my message upon the page, kneading phraseology and tempting my vocabulary – plumb it’s depths to see what fantastic creatures emerge from its inky depths.
The words should lilt – the prose become poetry, the pentameter spastic rather than iambic, but the message remains the same. Like an earnest stage actor in costume, the paper now wears the idea – grateful for the chance to be a part of the change that lies within the turbulent air. One word at a time… and the happiness of creation becomes infectious. Viral – each sentence a contagion of joy.
To create such works fills me with a tangible, visceral sense of excitement – a falling joy. Vertiginous, my mind full of the butterflies that normally reside in my stomach. To write without thinking – to walk a tightrope with no net. To put words upon the page.
These words are mine to share with you – and yours to share with me. This moment, you may not remember in two days, but I will. I’ve given you the best gift that I can. I’ve crafted something from nothing – the laws that govern our universe say that this is impossible, but I beg to differ.
Gaze upon an empty page. Compare its stark, universal whiteness. Run your fingers across its skin, and let your fingertips revel not in its emptiness, but its potential.
Go. Now. Find a page and make it yours. Write, scribble, draw, paint, fold – create. Share with me the pleasure I get from this simple exercise. And when you’re done, hold your creation in your hands, and imagine the people with whom you can share it. Imagine their joy at receiving your gift of creation. Envisage the smiles, the caresses, the kisses… and think to yourself…
This page used to be blank.
This piece was written in one sitting, stream of consciousness, with no editing, no deleting, no changing it at all. Whatever I typed stayed on the page, as is. It was first published at http://www.rumandmonkey.com/articles/304
12 Monday Apr 2010
Posted in Gerard Oosterman
A peculiar incident of Australian easy going culture that we experienced during those early years was when mother had to be hospitalised for a couple of weeks. She had those mysterious stays in hospitals occasionally. Perhaps it was woman trouble or varicose vein disturbances. I never really found out, but considering she only died a few years ago at the sound age of 94, I feel that her health overall was well taken care off.
During the first few months on own block with dwelling, we had knocked up some kind of chicken pen. John had gone to the City markets called Paddy Markets and came home with about six leghorns travelling by train. The chooks were carried in a hessian bag with their heads sticking out of holes specifically made for breathing purpose. The train was crowded and standing place only. John had no option but to stand in the area between carriages and hold onto a post with one hand and hold the bag of chooks above his head with the other. Fellow travellers were being entertained by being stared upon by the beady eyes of the somewhat nervous leghorns above them.
Now, during the hospital period we had some kind of domestic help from the government or perhaps the local church. She was in her late fifties and was one of those ‘old girls ‘that looked as if she would play bingo and frequent the ladies lounge at the local. She was bone idle but as kind as a raffle ticket. Her main job was to cook a meal for the evening when all kids and dad would be home. The routine was simple; lamb, spuds and boiled vegetables. Later on, we were told by neighbours, that during the day she would saunter up to the Revesby pub (with the round dome) and have ‘a couple’ before coming back and prepare the meal…
Her speciality however was the dessert. This dessert was a very sweet fruit mince type of cake, a bit like a Christmas type pudding but, and this is amazing, she had taken the rounded domed water dish from the chook pen to make the cake in. It must have had the perfect shape for the cake! Now, we knew what happened to the water dish. Each time the dish was returned to the chooks she would without as much as batting her eyelids take the dish back to make yet another cake. To make sure the chickens were not without water, she would put a normal saucepan in the pen. As it turned out, most of the young leghorns turned out to be roosters. No eggs. Was this another variant on the three legged creatures? Many times, when the kids came home from school, she would be found snoring away from an alcohol induced torpor.
09 Friday Apr 2010
Posted in Astyages
The Tale of the Happy Buddha:
By
Theseustoo
(This story was written in response to a post by ‘Silent’, a poster on the Unleashed website; Silent was hesitantly suggesting that some Buddhists can be atheists too. Here is my response; I do hope Buddhists will understand my humorous retelling of this story, and that they will not be offended by my little tale)
Silent, your position on Buddhism puts you in the more intellectual Buddhist category. Here’s a little story, and believe it or not it’s true (more or less!):
When Buddha, after many years of sitting and meditating under the Bodhi tree, finally achieved Supreme and Ultimate Enlightenment, his followers all kept pestering him, “Master, master, please, PLEASE tell us… Just exactly what IS this Supreme and Ultimate Enlightenment?” Buddha just laughed at their folly and their laziness, “Go and find out for yourselves!” he told them.
But his followers then thought their master didn’t love them any more and started to cry… Eventually, after much more persuasion and many, many more tears, Buddha felt compassion for them and finally he relented and said, “Okay, look, what I’ll do is this: We’ll form a church, the Sangha, we’ll call it; and in it I’ll give you all a whole lot of rituals and chants and prayers and meditations; all designed to eventually bring you all to Supreme and Ultimate Enlightenment… provided you do everything I say and don’t get any of it wrong!”
“Thank you Master! Oh! Thank you Master!” the followers all cried, and started to shower the Buddha with all kinds of gifts… Day after day they brought their master lots of delicious foods including all manner of cakes and lollies. Many of them even gave him money; even though they were all very, very poor… They were so happy now they had a church which gave them a path to Supreme and Ultimate Enlightenment!
But after a while, as a result of all that extra tucker, the Buddha found that whereas he’d always been a fairly lean sort of bloke, he’d grown remarkably fat as a result of all the extra food. So to get a bit of exercise, he walked off, laughing… all the way to the bank! Then he decided he needed a holiday, so he travelled to China, where the people admired this jolly fat man and his sense of humour so much that they called him the ‘Happy Buddha’.
08 Thursday Apr 2010
Posted in Gerard Oosterman
Finally, the ideas of returning to Australia had been bedded down in my mind but had to be put into action so we decided to contact Thomas Cook in Rome in order to book return tickets by boat. I think it was going to be the Flotta Lauro’s sister ship, the Roma. We wrote a few times, but true to Italian tradition at the time, our letters were not replied to or acknowledged. By that time summer had reached its peak and August had announced itself. The thunderstorms were increasing in intensity and at time there were electrical black-outs as well. In the meantime the news from Holland included that my ex chess-master uncle had died suddenly, and that my aunt was coming over to stay in our part of Italy together with a far away distant niece or cousin. They had managed to get accommodation in a large farm house or ‘gasthof’ within walking distance of our chalet.
It seems that for poor uncle, neither the chilli sambal nor the speculaas biscuit were of any help, death stalked him mercilessly, without anyone even having the generosity of giving a dying man a chess game win. I wondered if he kept blaming his ex-wife until the very end.
One afternoon, we decided to follow Frau Johnson’s advice and look for mushrooms. The mushroom season apparently had arrived and none too soon. The pancakes cooked on lard with the occasional diversion into boiled potatoes with some mince patties was getting to me. Bernard was somewhat indifferent towards mushrooms. I loved them, especially the kind that was growing wild in that part of the mountains. They were Funghi Canterelli; you know those mushrooms, they were yellow ochre coloured and had serrated edges with a rather tall and thin stem. With garlic and Italian tomatoes they would be perfect at any time.
We climbed up the mountain behind the chalet and soon found buckets of them growing like confetti underneath the umbrella of birch and pine trees. It was a hike up that was tiring and exhilarating at the same time. We came home just before another thunder storm. The flies were in frenzy, banging head long into the glass windows and spinning wildly on the floor in their suicidal death throes. The storm was the most spectacular I had ever experienced. Wild flashings of lightning below us but above the now obscured village with the mountains rumbling in support of nature’s whims. Next day we ate some of the mushrooms in a spicy soup and I decided to dry the rest on newspapers outside in the sun.
06 Tuesday Apr 2010
Posted in Emmjay
In response to the following quote, taken from Unleashed/the Drum:
realist :
04 Apr 2010 3:24:48pm
This is not a debate, this is two different side being totally unaccepting of the other, neither of which is willing or able to see the othersides view. With a debate you have rational thinking on both sides and one side tries to have the other accept their view. That will never happen here, what you have here is a bunch of biased people on either side unable to bend at all, basically yelling at each other.
A Theist
Well, it were them wot started it weren’t it? There I was, scratchin’ me arse and reachin’ fer me third tinnie of the mornin’ when all of a sudden there’s a knock at me bloody front door and wouldn’t you bloodly know it, it’s them bloody Jehovah’s Witlesses on the ear’ole again!
“Sure mate,” they sez, “jest believe wot we tells yer and give us ten percent of yer income an’ after ya die ya’ll go to Heaven and get all the goodies you missed out on in this world!”
“Well,” says I, “Listen mate, why not gimme Heaven on credit now, then I’ll be able to afford to give a ten percent which would be a dammsight bigger than the ten percent I can give you now…”
“Nope!” ‘e sez, “Dun’t work that way!”
“I’ll just bloody well bet it dun’t” sez I, and slammed the door on ’em!
😉
For some strange reason these words of wisdom from Mr Albert Theist were not accepted as worthy of being posted on one of the anti-atheist blogs over at Unleashed this weekend; a pity; I think he’s onto something! So, I’ve decided to post them here as another ‘blog that got away’!
05 Monday Apr 2010
Posted in Emmjay
The possibly missing fish problem grew slowly but inexorably in the old man’s mind. Each morning he surveyed the tank and conducted his icytheological inventory. Some months had passed and it was not unexpected that there might be the occasional casualty. How long are fish supposed to live ? Does it differ much amongst the species ? Is the span of a fish’s life more or less in a home aquarium than in open water ? Had the boy’s neglect thrown the schools into a downward spiral ?
He grew suspicious at first, but then certain by degrees that death by natural causes was sharing the tank with murder.
As the number of fish declined, the looks of apprehension on their fishy eyes grew palpable. The Angels looked implacable. Then, from careful observation of the diminutive Angel Fish, the old man thought he could see fear writ large even in her eyes.
The catfish were unperturbed and went about their gravelly perusals.
The old man noticed that the Gouramis – the next largest fish in this captives’ world – had started to command the better defensive positions in the Halong Bay style acrylic faux rock. What was this aqua-terror ?
In the morning, as the grey light of day spread itself over his preparations for another shift on Cannery Row, the old man went to feed the fish. The tank reminded him of Tombstone – where the streets are deserted because all the townsfolk know there is bloodshed afoot and they are staying out of sight indoors. The Angel Fish swam by, avoiding eye contact with the old man.
There was only ONE Angel Fish; the larger. The diminutive Angel Fish was nowhere to be seen.
The catfish went about their job of hoovering the bottom. They were saying nothing.
The old man began his forensic search for evidence – and there it was. Floating on its side, hidden amongst the plants, on the other side of the heater. The female Angel Fish; its eye grown cloudy.
The old man knew that was important to remove dead fish to stop disease spreading and fish have few qualms about eating each other alive, let alone dead. Dead is easier. Less chasing needed for a feed.
The old man stood in the kitchen and studied the dead Angel Fish in the palm of his hand. Was there a mark on its portside flank ? Was that the telltale mark of a fatal blow or just a mark ? The boy came into the kitchen and saw the old man ruefully staring at a handful of something. “Where are the Coco Pops ?” he asked, oblivious to the present carnage.
The old man slipped the dead Angel Fish into the kitchen tidy, closed the cupboard door and washed his hands in the sink. “Where would you expect to find them ?” he said. “In the laundry ?”
The old man began to feel a sadness he associated with the keeping of captive creatures and he grew tired of the ceaseless pressure to clean the tank, remove the chlorine from the fresh tap water first and then balance the pH and replace a good part of the water, week after week. It was a burdensome piece of chemistry and he was growing sick of making the effort for so little acknowledgement or interest from the boy.
The fish ate the plants. The old man preplaced them and sometimes bought plastic ones that offered some visual interest and protection for the dwindling numbers of small fish. By now the last of the Zebra Danios had disappeared. Not found floating under mysterious circumstances, just vanished. The Angel Fish maintained a stentorian aloofness. The catfish hoovered, avoiding making any comment.
Easter; the season had turned and the daylight saving ceased. There were only six fish left in the tank. After the death of an expensive (and apprehensive from the outset) Moonfish – purchased under coercion from the aquarium keeper and the old man’s First Mate, the old man decided that it was high noon for the Angel Fish.
In his boyhood, the old man had learnt that it was unkind to see any creature suffer and his fish keeping guide had said that the most efficient and “kindest” way to kill a fish was to drop it into a tin of boiling water. The boy was at his cousin’s house for the Easter break. Now was the time. The old man put a pot of water on the stove and lit the gas. He took out the small net and lifted the lid on the tank.
The doorbell rang. The old man placed the net on the top of the tank and paced down the hallway. There was an Indian girl wanting to discuss whether he might purchase a subscription to the Sydney Morning Herald. He had done so in the past, and his name was on their database, she said. It was a very good deal and in fact the old man thought about how inexpensive the offer was, but he still felt that the quality of the paper had fallen dramatically and that journalism had given way to trite opinion pieces from writers of doubtful knowledge and indeterminate ability.
The old man thanked the girl for her kind offer but declined, closing the door gently so as to not offend. He returned to the tank and picked up the net. The Angel Fish sailed off to the other end of the tank behind the Halong Bay replica rock. His patience wearing thin, the old man went into the laundry and took a plastic tub and brought it back to where the tank was placed on its stand in the family room. The old man removed the tank light and lid, took out the Halong Bay replica rock, removed all the plants and placed all these things into the plastic tub. He confronted the Angel Fish who, despite having no cover at all, was not giving up for anyone.
It was a lopsided contest. The fish struggled briefly and was poached quickly. The old man lifted the seat on the toilet in the laundry, deposited the dead Angel Fish and dispatched it into the South East Australian current, Nemo style.
The old man replaced the tank contents and the lid and light and contemplated the fates of the five surviving fish. He knew that the boy would not miss the Angel Fish.
The Bronze Catfish hoovered the bottom of the tank without looking up.
04 Sunday Apr 2010
Posted in Mark
Tags
So, here we are, out in deep space. We have left the Milky Way and are on our way to Andromeda, to a planet called Missen. Belinda and I spent last night in the Cruel Room getting acquainted with our destination. For those of you new to The Father O’Way Chronicles, the Cruel Room resides in the Manor. When you sit on the chairs the walls, floors and ceilings disappear and the computer simulates the surrounding space outside the ship so you feel as though you are sitting on the ships hull. At first it’s spooky but you get used to it and it becomes fun.
Our contacts on Missen are Hardy Cocksure and his long time girlfriend Pussy Couscous. Hardy and Pussy run a cricket competition on the island of Flong which is in the southern hemisphere of Missen. Rumour has it that the island is called Flong because it’s long and narrow and the first people to arrive, got off the boat and mumbled “This is a effing long island” hence Flong however another theory has been postulated that Flong is the sound of a partly decomposed bean hitting porcelain.
I call Neville, the navcom, to make sure he knows where he is going “Neville respond” I say authoritatively into the intercom. “Neville here Lord Climate” says Neville. “Neville, do you want a route?” I ask casually. “I beg your pardon” replies an indignant navcom, “Did you say a root?” “Yes Neville, a route” I reply in rather annoyed tone, feeling that this conversation is going nowhere. “Well Sandy, I mean, I hardly know you plus this man on man thing is not really for me”. Oh, for zark sake, has this navcom got the stupid gene or what? “No, not a root as in having sex with, a route as in, you know, directions?” I assert. “Sorry Sandy but I’m blushing at the moment and no I don’t want a ro.., er, directions” Gees, that’s all I need, a navcom that doesn’t have a body who blushes, space, never ceases to amaze.
It will take weeks to get to Missen so Belinda and I head off to the snowfield for a holiday. Jilligan picks us up from the river port in the S.S. Nimmow. GO, the artist droid, comes along as he wants to paint some pictures of the mountain range and Helvi, well, she’s our body guard. It’s a cold morning in the bio and mist is rising off the river as we head upstream. The river generates the electricity to run the ship so once it starts flowing the ship remains powered indefinitely.
After a scrumptious breakfast on the deck we head inside as we approach one of the tubes. After last time I don’t feel like being knocked unconscious. The tubes are made of a clear material and connect the bios together. The new Nimmow is bigger and more streamlined and seems more powerful. “This seems faster Jilligan, has it got a new motor?” I ask semi-interestedly. “Certainly has” says Jilligan “Come below and I’ll show it to you” Oh shit, why does everyone assume that just because you are a bloke that you will be interested in motors? “This is called the BEAN engine Sandy, beautiful hey?” Well no, only to the mentally challenged, which clearly Jilligan meets the essential criteria and another zarking acronym. Putting on my watching-paint-dry voice I ask the obvious “BEAN Jilligan, what’s that mean?” “Well Sandy” launches Jilligan, just like a little school kid that gets one to many Easter eggs “BEAN stands for Bean Emissions Accelerator Nexus. See you put a 420 can of Heinz Baked Beans in Tomato Sauce in here, then super bugs from the MBL break the beans down, the gas is then connected in a series to the turbine which then blows it out the back passage” grins Jilligan, sort of mocking but not quite. Hmmm, blowing gas out the back passage after digesting beans, somehow I know what the designer was thinking. “MBL, now hang on we are not letting baseball take over in this book old chum” I state “No Sandy, MBL stands for Mythical Biological Laboratory”. Complex fiction indeed.
04 Sunday Apr 2010
Posted in Gerard Oosterman
The case for more tax!
This latest from the ABC story and interview with Swan on the 22nd of Jan. 2010 http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2010/s2798566.htm
Quote; And rather than focusing on tax cuts, Mr Henry is warning that tax revenues will need to grow “strongly” if the Government is to cover the costs of Australia’s ageing population. Unquote.
Good on you Ken Henry. This has to be music to the ears of many of us who have been complaining about the state of our Health, Education, Public Transport and many other social infrastructures that through the years have become crippled by lack of money. There are finally some encouraging signs that will stop the rot in Governments on both sides forever seeking popularity in massaging and nourishing our deep seated hatred for paying tax by promising reduced taxation for the workers each time there are elections.
Of course we all know that we still are one the lowest taxpaying country of all the OECD, indeed Australian Government’s own study indicates our low tax regime and well worth a look at;
http://comparativetaxation.treasury.gov.au/content/report/html/02_Executive_Summary.asp
It is no wonder that we are struggling to keep up with the rest of the world and that rumblings of the dissatisfied are finally coming to be heard. We get what we pay for! It is so true and never before are we so poignantly reminded of our shortcomings than the arguments that have been raging here on the ‘Unleashed’ especially about our shortcoming in Education. There are now all sorts of conjuring tricks being implemented. At the last election,’ Computers for all students’ was shouted from rooftops all over the country. Boy oh boy, have seen acres of video footage of Rudd and Gillard smiling in front of those promised school computer roll-outs. We must have School ratings and Comparisons and publish the Data, shame the lot of them, and the latest from the bag of trickery; Schools to receive public disadvantage rating.
At no stage do we ever hear that good teachers need to have higher qualifications and therefore a considerable increase in wages. You can’t teach kids by a mixture of people that have only just scraped by themselves in education. That there are many good teachers is without question, but I bet you in those countries where education is better, teachers are also better qualified and better paid. In Finland, which continues to be on the top of the Education ladder, a minimum requirement is a Master’s degree.
All this cost money: and where is it coming from?
It is very much the same story with our hospitals, and again, the paddle pop stick taped together ad hoc financially starved system staggers on. People are dying from the lack of the simplest procedures. Waiting times in Casualty wards are staggering, people bleeding to death and stories aplenty of people turned away or shunted to other hospitals. They have become charnel houses and blame for this goes backwards and forwards between States and Federal Government as regularly as a dripping tap. The Government is threatening to take over the hospitals. This is just another voodoo exercise. It is the lack of money, stupid!
As with education, so it is with health. Those that can afford it go for a private option and make those that can’t, somehow feel they have failed. How an egalitarian society ever came to believe and develop a two tiered system in such basics as Health and Education is beyond my understanding, but that is how it is at present. It would have to add to a huge waste and duplication. Not surprising is that those that have succeeded in making the money for private health and education probably enjoyed some very handy tax breaks or even dodges, n’est ce pas?
So, where is the money coming from for first class, world beating health system?
We have done so well though. But, has this doing ‘well ‘been on the back of filling up Bulk Carriers with the scrapings of the top 50 metres or so of our country, especially in the North and West. This has been a nice little earner for Australia, all those minerals and all that red dirt. It’s been so easy too. Huge trucks and trains to ports and then shovel it all onto boats and then wait for the money to roll in. How lovely for the Government, what a win-win. Will this go on forever?
In any case, it has not provided us with best standard public Education, Health, Public transport and it never will. It just puts money into shareholders who in turn will go for the private goodies and live in big ugly houses.
As for pensioners, they will have to feast on that extra $30. – added onto their fortnightly pension. Many will just have to continue living just above the poverty line and make do with the no-frills toilet paper.
Good on ye, Ken Henry,
We need to pay far more tax.
04 Sunday Apr 2010
Posted in Emmjay
It was not a choice the old man wanted to make, but the child stayed at school and met his obligations to complete another deskbound year indoors. The old man knew that the aquarium had to be purchased and he and the young boy made the arduous trek to FiveDock and acquired through the exchange of money and knowing looks, one 75 litre tank, light, filter, heater, flat box stand, some water plants and two or three plastic bags of washed quartz gravel.
He loaded the burden in the back of his old Subaru cart and set off some five kilometres to his house on the road that bordered the golf course. The man was poor and could only afford to live on the side of the road that did not back onto the links.
He set the tank in the corner of the old man’s family room. It was filled with surprisingly alkaline tap water. The old man added water ager to remove the chlorine he knew would be toxic to the fish – peeling off their slime coats and allowing the dreaded fin rot to take hold. He added a few caps-full of cloudy liquid alleged by the aquarium keeper to contain the bacteria necessary to turn fish waste nitrites into plant food nitrates.
The old man balanced the pH, sat down heavily in his Jason Recliner, carefully unscrewed the top from a stubbie of Boag’s Light beer and surveyed his handiwork with some small amount of pride.
They would wait a week for the tank to settle down, the plants to adjust to their new environment and they would take the time to survey the catalogue of tropical fish exotica to satisfy the boy’s insatiable and transient thirst for the novel.
The old man had been here before in his own youth. He knew the mysteries of domestic recreational aquaculture and he felt in the pit of his stomach the anticipated dread of sharing his family room with the life and death struggle about to overtake their lives. The boy scanned the catalogue and selected his fish. The old man fingered where his beard had been and began to plan his escape.
The boy wanted more fish than could fit in the confines of 75 litres, less room for gravel, plants, the heater and a late purchase of a Halong Bay style polymer rock intended to offer sanctuary for the weaker fish who were about to dance the dance of the liquid jungle. Death in the afternoon.
The old man encouraged the boy to consider smaller fish with bright colours, to allow them to school in the confines of the tank. The boy insisted on variety of shape and form. Across the old man’s weather beaten face flickered a look of knowing apprehension.
They agreed that a couple of Bronze Catfish would provide the colony with a useful garbage collection service. The boy compromised on small schools of Neon Tetras and, Zebra Danios. The old man allowed a few Swords and a pair of Gouramis. The boy agreed to a few Mollies and Guppies.
The fish were introduced into the tank in the time-honoured way of floating the sealed plastic bags in the water to allow the temperatures to equilibrate and then the tank and bag waters were allowed to mix slowly so that the fish would not be shocked. The boy knew that the old man was wise in the ways of home aquaria since the days of his own youth.
For a moment the boy gazed as the fish began to explore the reaches of the tank, but soon he was distracted and turned his attention to the Nintendo game paying itself on the large screen LCD. That was his last engagement with the aquatic domain.
The old man grew weary of the boy’s indifference to the demands of maintaining the tank. The pH began to fall. There was the occasional dead fish to be scooped out. The algae began to cast its verdant hue over the Perspex. The old man grew restive with the boy’s indifference and confronted him one morning over a breakfast of cereal. The old man’s weather-beaten hand stirred and poked the Weetbix with low fat soy milk over sliced banana and one or two strawberries the old man had found in a plastic punnet in the fridge. He baited the boy by asking him whether he had totally lost interest in the living creatures in the family room.
“They’re fucking boring”, said the boy.”They’re all the same. Boring little fish. I want something bigger and more interesting”.
The old man was forced to admit to himself that the boy had a point. There was a sameness about the little fish that, in the absence of acute observation of the different species’ forms and behaviours, could lead the boy to that conclusion. They agreed to go back to the aquarium specialist and seek his advice.
The old man should have foreseen this as the thin edge of the wedge.
The old man acceded to the boy’s relentless demands and bought a pair of Angel Fish. Not an exact pair. The male was slightly bigger than the female.
The Angels were larger than all the other fish in the home aquarium. They had a stately bearing and hovered regally about the tank, navigating like submarine sailing boats. The old man thought they had settled into their new home well.
Some days later the old man wondered whether there were as many Neons as he had purchased. He was not sure. It was difficult to tell. They were hard to count. Was there nineteen or twenty ? Was it his imagination ?