Tags
Helvi Oosterman
Moving from a big place to a smaller home is not easy. You are attached to your life-long collection of things; to your furniture’, books, paintings, to your “sendogu”, Japanese for beautiful but not necessary objects. We were given only five weeks to decide what to keep and what not. We came to the clever idea of renting something two weeks earlier than we had to, and decided to pack in a hurry and unpack slowly. This way we were giving away things at both ends; tipping and burning on the farm, and taking to charity shops discarded items from the new place.
The most delightful loss of all was the shedding of three kilos of my weight, through stress and hard physical work. The second best was ‘accidently’ misplacing hubby’s humble underwear collection into the new recycling bin. May I explain here that I gave up buying his underwear years ago. This was my way of keeping abreast with any possible extra marital happenings; you know what they say about men suddenly shopping for Calvin Kleins…
Being busy and too tired to cook we got into a habit of grabbing some take away food; Mc Donald’s, Korean noodles, Italian style fettuccine (is there any other kind), soggy fish and chips, and more horrors. Opening the white box of noodles made me puke, and even Milo refused to touch my hamburger left-over’s. The tasteless pasta was swimming in tomato sauce, Italian Style is not the expression to use here. I always thought that take-out makes you fat, the reverse was happening with me. Better lose the urge to shop for convenience food, rather than lose the will to live.
I also gained useful skills these last few weeks. For example how to get in and out Kennard’s rental truck; you put your left foot on some pedestal and swing the right one inside the cabin whilst hanging onto some kind of railing inside. The nice manager, Richard, had cleaned the truck just for me. All very nice but the seat was so slippery I was afraid of sliding out. Some fat lady has sat there before and the seat kind of sloped towards the door …As husband was struggling with the multitude of gears and other truck paraphernalia, I kept quiet and gained some of my usual calmness by Buddhist meditations. All the Christian prayers ,learnt at Sunday school, came in handy when the driver accidently reversed instead of going forward at a busy intersection…
Now to the gains: no more muck for lunch, but quick shop for sourdough bread and some nice cheese, and after unpacking the car, the trailer or the truck, it was to our newly found real pub and fantastic twelve dollar steak for dinner. The usual Shiraz was not quite right here, so a big schooner of beer it was. We haven’t been to a pub for years, nor have drunk beer anywhere. Steak and beer was a good combo and we have now become regulars at the Bowral Royal. The nice barman, Hugh comes to chat to us and we even have our pub-loyalty-cards.
Among the plusses is the safely moved Persian Delight; Milo did not crush it at the back of the car. My Kalanchoe was not so lucky.

The books are stacked in the garage in their milk crates; I left some out even there wasn’t much time for reading. I had saved all John Updike’s books when packing. I’m now so pleased to re-read his wonderful early memoir ‘Self-Consciousness’, and I love it.
This is what Guardian says about it on the back page: ‘If he (Updike) has an unmelting splinter of ice at the heart, that is our good fortune. Who wants words as good as these with water?’

Helvi,
Pop shows are shows for those that like loud music blaring out.
Movies are now more baout popcorn than films, I heard.
It is the most profitable item of going to the movies.
Huge buckets are taken in. An evil rotten egg smell permeates the foyer. We were watching ‘ The girl with the Dragon Tattoo’, when my feet seemed to move on their own accord, almost as if on roller bearings. Turned out that the amount of popcorn on the floor acted like a kind of roller blade. Luckily, the film was a good one, and my rolling and uncontrollable feet were a minor detraction
LikeLike
You’re Moving Out Today (Carole Bayer Sager/Bette Midler/Bruce Roberts)
I stayed out late one night and you moved in
I didn’t mind ’cause of the state you were in
May I remind you that it’s been a year since then
Today the landlady, she said to me (what did she say?)
You’re looney friend just made a pass at me (slap him in the face)
Perhaps you might enjoy a cottage by the sea
So pack your toys away
Your pretty boys away
Your 45s away
Your alibis away
Your Spanish flies away
Your one-more-tries away
Your old tie-dyes away
You’re moving out today
Your nasty habits ain’t confined to bed (Ha Ha Ha Ha)
The grocer told me what you do with bread (what do you do?)
Why don’t you take up with the baker’s wife instead of me, fool!
Pack up your rubber duck
I’d like to wish you luck
Your funny cigarettes
Your sixty-one cassettes
Pack all your clothes away
Your rubber hose away
Your old-day-glos away
You’re moving out today
Pack up your dirty looks
Your songs that have no hooks
Your stacks of Modern Screen
Your portrait of the Queen
Your mangy cat away
Your Babyphat away
You’re headed that-a-way
You’re moving out today
Pack up your fork and spoon
Please leave my Lorna Doone
Your map of Mozambique
Your water bed that leaks
etc etc. (Istill love some of the old MOR stuff.)
LikeLike
More like “just been hit by a truck stuff”
LikeLike
Warrigal, have you got a song for every occasion in life; what is your song for weddings?
LikeLike
‘Please Release Me, Let Me Go.’
LikeLike
That was your retrospective song for the first wedding…?
I chose Leonard Cohen’s ‘Dance me to the End of Love’; even big men had tears in their eyes 🙂
LikeLike
We had ‘Both sides Now’, played on the organ, in the Catholic Church in Winchester.
It wasn’t for any deep feeling for the sentiment, but really more for the melody. Although Joni Mitchells’ lyrics were special. We particularly liked Judy Collins’ version.
“Bows and flows of angel hair and ice cream castles in the air
And feather canyons everywhere,”…Wonderful stuff.
That was August 15th 1970…….We were young!
LikeLike
Jules, we got married in a register office in my little uni town, not much singing and dancing for us that day. I’d like to say there’s been plenty ever since, but I don’t like to tell lies 🙂
LikeLike
Oops, that L Cohen song was for my Daughter’s wedding, it looks like i’m talking about my own…better stop now.
LikeLike
What year ?
LikeLike
You missed the significance of MY date, Helvi.
LikeLike
Now Jules ,let me try. You married 1970, and you say that you were young. Let’s say twenty? In other words you are saying that you are sixty 2010. Are you celebrating a signifigant birthday this year … 🙂
You don’t have to tell me if I’m right or wrong.
LikeLike
It’s not about my age. Try again.
LikeLike
Oh Hadron, I’ll have to say like my grandson: I give up, this is too hard for me…
Do you miss your little grandson, didn’t his parents move to England?
Please tell me the signifigance of that date.
LikeLike
A clue: ruby.
LikeLike
Seeing you don’t have a granddaughter called Ruby, it must be your fortieth anniversary coming on the 15th of August. Right? I had to google that bit about anniversaries…
Gez’ birthday is on the 7th of August , so I’ll make a note to remember your happy day a week later.
Thanks for the tip.
LikeLike
Yes, it’s sort of crept up. OMG.
We Skype with grandson now. We didn’t need it before, even though we have other family and friends abroad.
But it really is fun. And of course with a little manipulation I can see around their lounge and out of the window into the garden.
They are renting a 4 bedroom Victorian house a few minutes walk to a train station. My son has to drive between the university campuses–and he enjoys that–it sort of breaks up the day.
His biggest complaint is that now he has moved up a notch, he has to spend a lot of the day in meetings and it’s hard to find time to implement the systems that he wants. They have got behind and a lot of work was waiting for someone like him to come in and sort out.
Life never seems easy. They have a mortgage to pay for a house in the South of England, a mortgage to pay here (we have just found tenants after 7 weeks), and rent for a house near his work. Daughter-in-law is taking a part time job.
Oh well it’s just a bloody scramble these days.
LikeLike
We are now an hour closer to Sydney, so we find it easier if Daughter needs us as babysitters…
Seven weeks to find tenants ! As our new place was let we wanted to rent something in Bowral, every place had at least twenty people wanting to do the same.
We gave up and found a nice place in the next little township.
So in October we’ll be moving HOME, it will be easier as we now have some time to sort out and cull our posessions.
LikeLike
Jules,
The agony of seeing the kids having to make their own lives can be harrowing. We went through all that but are now taking time to take our own lives more serious. Things have changed so much.
We used to support our parents when they were getting old but this seems to have changed with many adult kids still depending on ageing parents for support.
A friend of ours regularly flies to Brisbane to babysit her grandchildren so that the parents can whoop it up, go to parties, pop shows…
LikeLike
Gez, what on earth are pop shows? Are they shows for pops like you. Do you just pop in shortly, or you take some popcorn with you?
LikeLike
Seven weeks to find a tenant is becoming normal on the Gold Coast now. There is no work. The construction industry is non-existent, except for five projects, and there are doubts as to whether buyer, who contracted 2 years ago, will settle. The sub-contractors have pulled up stumps and fled to wherever they can get work.
So there is only the tourist industry now. Ands of course that has been affected by the high dollar and lack of funds to spend by holiday makers.
It’s a bit like Spain. There construction boom was fuelled by the European holiday makers in the 60s 70s 80s. Now everyone holidays in The Adriatic Baltic Coast. It’s cheaper.
Coupled with Spain becoming more expensive, as the use The Euro and prices in the cities have reached a parity with London and French cities.
Anyway I am digressing now…
……………………………………………..
Yes, missing grandson and of course his parents have to work to support everything. Skype is great.
How about a Pigs’ Skype. Baggely still wants to check out Vanya’s broach!!
LikeLike
Who’s Vanya, Jules?
LikeLike
Your memory is fading Helvi. Baggely is in my story about the dance comp.
Vanya………Ensconced at the bar, with an officer’s ration of Jamaica’s finest, Baggely lent back, to survey the scene. Seemingly oblivious to Vanya from Salem, the Swedish dermal therapist- despite her brazen attempt to distract him from his mental limbering up- by thrusting her modified, traditional, bodice into his view. Her grandmother’s old pewter broach, barely up to its allotted task.
…………………….
I can’t remember why I put Salem in, but the pewter broach was going to be awarded to Maybelline (Madeleine)..It’s a Swedish thing…She spent time there..and had a lover, remember?…–and then I thought of V’s apocryphal boobs.
I don’t suppose that you got the Brabantia thing then?? Dutch connection for Gerarrd. The one with the guttural lingo.
Never mind.
LikeLike
Jules, I liked your story the first time and even more the second. Of course I got the Brabantia reference, which implicates me as Mrs B. I just wasn’t sure about Vanya…
Maybe I’m concentraning too much on Svetlana, the other woman..
Like the other piglets , I’d like to see more stories by you here…
LikeLike
Big M,
Ah, the fondue set. This, and Carole King singing ‘tapestry’.
LikeLike
Gotta be in my top five all time greatest albums. Fabulous songwriting, sympathetic production, wonderful playing. Particularly the song “Tapestry”
Gonna listen to it right now!
LikeLike
Jools Holland had her on his show recently. Still got a great voice, a twinkle in her eye, and plenty of time for the other musos on the show.
LikeLike
We are about to join the ‘movers’, as we’ve just bought a new house.
Last time I helped a mate move, we piled a whole lot of absolute rubbish, including fondue set from nineteen eighty something, into a big box, ready for the tip. His missus happened past, and said.” Thanks for saving all my good stuff. ” Then carried it back into the house!
LikeLike
Yes the fondue set, pieces of meat boiled in oil, worse than the Korean noodles…
LikeLike
The fondue set was a wedding gift, from her first marriage.
LikeLike
Cheese fondue, yum, can’t eat bread now so won’t be having one again.
LikeLike
Helvi, many thanks for your inspirational story.
My last two moves were, as I’m sure you recall, me getting chucked out of the family home and then having to empty Mom’s place when she had to go into residential care. Neither of these events were very nourishing, however a new life with the First Mate certainly has its compensations.
FM is a huge accumulator of stuff. I am not. Well, books, maybe, and some of my Dad’s toolamker’s things, and a couple of motorcycles, and now a pedestal desk and an Aeron chair, and a lovely old bow-fronted chest of drawers for my collection of new Calvin Kleins :-).
But at the same time I am decluttering. FM is merciless in her attacks on my old wardrobe – the contents, not the furniture, and appearing to be different is a reminder to BE different.
And I have some great friends at the Pig’s Arms. That’s one of the most interesting moves of all.
LikeLike
I can’t believe I wrote “neither of these events were”. Sorry. “Neither of these events was”.
LikeLike
…and are we piglets going to move as well. I believe Hung is looking at some pubs in Young. Maybe he ought to look at some nice ones in Balmain 🙂
LikeLike
It would be nice to Hung back into NSW!
I can empathise with Emmjay. Got chucked out of the family home, and ended up in a 2.5 by 3 meter room in the nurses home. Of course I had some clothes and a classical guitar!
LikeLike
…get Hung back!
Errr.
LikeLike
Back to Wollongong, er, um, its changed, anyway eye two poor, just a lowly paid nurse
LikeLike
It’s all f#$%ing changed, Hung, it’s all changed.
LikeLike
I beg to disagree Emm.
http://languagetips.wordpress.com/category/neither-singular-or-plural/
A site to roll about in when the pedanting mood overtakes you. Oh, and note the aside about ending a sentence in a preposition. Go on. You can do it!
LikeLike
That was interesting Voice.
I am too set in my ways to learn how to phrase correctly now, but an appreciative of my early schooling, say 12-16, and the pedantic English ‘old school’ methods…..Apart from my commas…that is!
However Voice, if you decide to give ‘lessons’, I will attend and sit at the front.
LikeLike
Moving is always a wrench, but is also a cocktail of exhilaration, disappointment, expectation and sadness.
A nice cup of orange-pekoe solves most angst.
LikeLike
You are so right, Jules. Moving is all those things and more. You are putting it very poetically,methinks.
LikeLike
Helvi, so when you tag they turn to links
LikeLike
Hung,
Thanks for sorting the tags,I was hoping you’ll do it. Gez now knows how to add them.
LikeLike
Hung,
If the tags are useful in promoting our Pigs Arms, why have we not used them in our stories before. I have often looked at other wordpress blogs and when I saw all those tags and wondered why we did not have any.
LikeLike
I don’t think any of us knew how to use them. I have gone back and tagged about 30 posts and will add tags to any from now on.
LikeLike
Bless you, Hungy. I’m still as rough as a ribbed condom as far as tags go….
LikeLike
I hate ribbed condoms with tags.
LikeLike
Will do some retrospective tagging whenever i think of it, and will remind the boss to do the same…
LikeLike
Thanks for sharing that with us, Big M !
LikeLike