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~ The Home Pub of the Famous Pink Drinks and Trotter's Ale

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Monthly Archives: December 2013

Shivers – It’s New Year’s Eve

31 Tuesday Dec 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 68 Comments

Tags

Warrigal Mirriyuula

Shivers

New Years Eve Playlist (and digital mischief) from Warrigal Mirriyuula

You’re sitting there happily listening to music, perhaps a favourite track or piece you like, and on cue you shiver, delightfully, or pensively, at that same spot in that same way.

What is that?

I don’t have a clue but the following article offered some insight.

www.cogsci.ucsd.edu/~creel/COGS160/…/GreweChillPhys07.pdf

The following tracks make me shiver all over the place. I wonder; do any of them affect you in the same way?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kutbRyAG0Lw

“Don’t Let The Sun Catch You Crying”, Jerry & The Pacemakers

or alternatively

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ozrf-dMdWdw

“Don’t Let The Sun Catch You Crying”, Gloria Estefan with a little help from Eric Satie

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGORPUzLxtU

“Midnight Cowboy, Main Theme”, John Barry

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTbX2LYZx2A

“Meeting Across The River”, Bruce Springsteen

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlRQjzltaMQ

“The Way It Is”, Bruce Hornsby and The Range

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDRbF80NKDU

“Rainy Night In Georgia”, Brook Benton

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_Lh4MFiw08

“Neither One of Us” Gladys Knight & The Pips

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZ6Tp-nna9I

“Walk Away” Matt Munro

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ew-5rO8b67I

“Tammy”, Debbie Reynolds

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDeTu6rpN-4

“Sierra” Boz Scaggs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWc5kD6Fa_c

“Everyone’s Gone To The Moon”, Jonathan King

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Odl3jCbVAic

“Ghost Writer” Garland Jeffries

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c7sXslD8lac

“I Can’t Find The Time” Hootie & The Blowfish

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q05wB6F1UMk

“Hasten Down The Wind” Warren Zevon

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HKLnmMacEB4

“The Game Of Love”, Michelle Branch and Carlos Santana

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwCWCJLm6M0

“Lucky Man”, Emerson Lake & Palmer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXoGlk4-T-o

“Lalena” Deep Purple

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWUJGPBmiLE

“Walk Away Renee” The Four Tops

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6HjCbKnzDzQ

“Tell It Like It Is”, Aaron Neville, Greg Allman and Bonnie Raitt

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4lb6fMVu6Q

“The World I Used To Know”, Glen Campbell

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIunm_XxH_I

“Goin’ Back”, Dusty Springfield

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5uxQElYu68

“Life In A Northern Town”, Dream Academy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIDLdgeP9Bw

“Tar and Cement” Verdelle Smith

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIdIqbv7SPo

“Ain’t No Sunshine”, Bill Withers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EvDxSW8mzvU

“Driving Home For Christmas” Chris Rea (Christmas having come and gone, this is simply my favourite Christmas song. I know its not much of a song really but there’s something about it that just gives me the shivers.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MfDmu5WB_0

“A Fool Such As I”, Raul Malo (Just this particular performance. I don’t know….?)

 

 

A House in Rio de Janeiro

31 Tuesday Dec 2013

Posted by gerard oosterman in Uncategorized

≈ 34 Comments

A house in Rio de Janeiro

194312-625842-1QVMHP2C91

In between getting older and being old, have I left living in Brazil a bit late? I have always felt that there must be places that offer more excitement than Australia. “Oh Gerard, have you not learnt enough yet. Excitement is what you make yourself?” This is what reasonable people have always told me. “You are out of your mind”, from the same reasonable people. Another favourite saying thrown as a morsel to keep me sated or even sedated. ” You will never find anything better than Australia”, “it is the best country.” Is this last bit an attempt to quell their own uncertainty?

Perhaps it is nothing more than my own wish to escape from getting old, pretending that moving about will stop ageing, I have a tendency to dream that a nirvana exists always somewhere else except at the present place. Another bout of useless dreaming of foreign countries. It could also be, that reasonable people are possessed with a lot of sangfroid but bereft of coping with anything much more exciting than a change of direction of stirring the tea and milk anti clockwise. Their major concession to adventure. I am surrounded by a sea of tea stirrers all in tandem. Round and round they stir.

I know, that Christmas always brings out in me a kind of melancholy. Contrary to what most people seem to want, my melancholy runs its course and doesn’t stop just because of a looming deadline. Perhaps unreal expectations are running rampant in others and I know and feel that too keenly. Does a certain date of 25th of December make necessary for a total mayhem of life? Is the 26th or 29th of Dec not very much like any other date? If the 25th is such a nice date, why is every day not like the 25th? Yes, I know it is Christmas and very special, but we still continue breathing, laughing, or not, like every other day. The sun comes up and goes down, just the same as any other day. It also often rains.

Today, it is still more than ten days till Christmas. Even so, in the shopping avenues there is a certain tension building up already. You can see an increase in tempo. Is time starting to run faster? Is the minute now getting shorter?

Brows are furrowed and people are nervously lugging huge trolleys laden with mountains of food. Today I saw a lady wearing a floral dress who would normally, (I assume somewhat brazenly) calmly go through the dairy division (small goods) of the super market to buy a small diet yoghurt. Today though, she threw all caution to the wind, loading 12 six packs of apricot smooth yoghurt with attached spoons in her groaning trolley.

Later on, while I was studying the different bags of garden potting mix outside, this same lady was ripping into one of the six packs apricot yoghurts with the spoon now unattached. After I bought and rolled my two bags of potting mix on my trolley to the footrest car and taking the trolley back, this same lady was on her third yoghurt. Is the Christmas spirit causing a hot fever resulting in an uncontrollable urge to slurp fruit laden yoghurt?

I remember last year finding a half eaten leg of ham in a bin just outside the Woolworth super market. It was in the full sun and would have gone off. In any case, flies were busy buzzing. It had teeth marks on it. Did some soul’s hunger get the better of him or her? Later on I speculated on who could possibly have partly eaten a leg of ham and then discard it in a bin. Did some people hold an impromptu ham eating party around the corner on the grass verge to celebrate the Christmas. Did they eat it late at night?

It is not unusual to see people buying food at the supermarket only to see them outside the door and start eating. They wrestle with the plastic wrapping. Their hands are shaking. This eating seems urgent and the need to satisfy hunger is immediate. Not a second to lose. One can assume that food had run out at home and that finally only hunger drove them to the shop…

194312-625844-1CMSL51G3T

It is therefore not surprising I started dreaming of how life would be in Brazil. An escape from the tedium. I can hardly believe that those sort of strange Woolworth eating cultural habits would exist there as well. I know that hunger thrives in Brazil. The slums of Rio have hordes of hungry kids going around for food. But they also laugh and play soccer. From my experience in Argentina, people do have different life habits. Hunger here seems lonely and suffered in isolation. In Brazil, I hope and speculate, hunger if it is still rampant there, is shared and communal. A shared hunger is preferred to an isolated one. Shared anything is better.

I found a house outside Rio de Janeiro with twenty five hectares and two waterfalls. Here it is.

http://www.viviun.com/AD-194312/

The Pig’s Arms Best of 2013 Volume 1

30 Monday Dec 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon

≈ 65 Comments

best of 2013 1Playlist by Algernon

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5T3FXFnoTzE

Don’t let me be misunderstood – Nina Simone

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dp4339EbVn8

Son of a Preacher Man – Dusty Springfield

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FchMuPQOBwA

Stevie Wonder – Happy Birthday

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbO2_077ixs

A Change Is Gonna Come – Sam Cooke

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRyDlVOE86U

Chain Gang – Sam Cooke

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCmUhYSr-e4

(Sitting on) The dock of the bay – Otis Redding

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-kA3UtBj4M

What’s going on – Marvin Gaye

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9BA6fFGMjI

Mercy Mercy Me – Marvin Gaye

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PpD8FpGpBjE

Move on Up – Curtis Mayfield

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZcA3kiaQb0

One less bell to answer – The Fifth Dimension

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RyAOltYk8Q

My dear heart – Shawn Robinson

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NO4WBkLV3qs

Drumbeat – Jim Ingram

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dm1opP8x3Qo

Last two dollars – Johnnie Taylor

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fg8TjPO3doY

Poon Tag Man – Shirley Brown

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IgZOYt5kH9Q

Shake Shake Shake – KC & the Sunshine Band

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8Tiz6INF7I

Hit the road Jack – Ray Charles

 

 

Bumper Christmas Edition 2013 – A Christmas Peace

26 Thursday Dec 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Uncategorized

≈ 18 Comments

work in progress photo

by LindyP

In the hustle and bustle of supermarket shoppers , shopping like there is no tomorrow , I grab my essentials and pass by blaring xmas carols, children being dragged to sit on the knee of the big red man, flashing lights and sparkling this and that, noisy colour assaulting my senses ,screaming at me .

I rush outside to see cars adorned with red and green tinsel, and escape to my car and back to my quiet place.

Thankfully I have peace in my home, with my cat who is getting on in years like me , and my art work which has finally come of age with me.

I am working on bits of old monoprints which are collaged together onto board which lies across a small chair in the only spare space I have -next to my front door , so whoever comes in is warned as they step inside. It is a work in progress.

Every morning I go to it and stand, and watch, and wait ,allowing thoughts to process, then reposition, rearrange bits here and there, like the making of a jig -saw. It’s a peaceful process and a great therapy for calming the monkey mind. I go back to it several times during the day to make decisions , then unmake them-nothing is stuck down-I’m enjoying the slow time it takes to do and undo , then walk away and come back with fresh eyes.

The prints themselves were done spontaneously 20 years ago with brown printmaking ink, lashings of linseed oil, old rags for texture, full of holes, and fabric that was very fragile. The massive roller was wheeled over the top and the results were always a pleasing surprise. Monoprinting is so instant and energetic and loose- I still remember the smells –

My prints were made with passion and were about my love for disappearing wildlife, as well as loss of habitat, decay, fragility of existence, and the passage of time.

I see all of this as much more relevant now than it was then and am enjoying the process all over again of creating or recreating something very significant to me.

But this time I do it with a calmer more thoughtful mind, enjoying the stillness and reflection of slow composition, far away from the xmas rush .

The frantic urgency of xmas shoppers will cease , the big red man will deliver his gifts down chimney tops , arguments with loved ones will be settled, and hopes and dreams will reappear next year.

lindyp

Bumper Christmas Edition 2013 – Life as a Dalek

26 Thursday Dec 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Astyages

≈ 25 Comments

Tags

Cake, Dalek, Doctor Who, El Dorado, Perth, Tardis, United States

English: 2008 Shoprider Rainrider all-weather ...English: 2008 Shoprider Rainrider all-weather mobility scooter (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Story by Astyages

With the most immediately important repairs to the city of ‘El Dorado’ completed I began to resent my inability to do much in the house or garden and being thus obliged by circumstances to hire others to do what once I could have happily done myself. But worse still was the inability to get ‘out and about’ due to the limits of my ability to walk and stand, which has made doing my shopping my one major fortnightly outing and one which usually leaves me stiff as a board with backache as well as extra-sore feet.

Then I had a revelation, as I opened the gates to ‘El Dorado’ to get my car in (no remote-control on these ancient iron gates…) when a passing dalek stopped and, instead of uttering the expected ‘EXTERMINATE!’ laughed to see me limping around opening gates to get the car in and said, “Ya orta get wunna theez mate!”

He was right, too! So I did.

In exchanging emails with my old mate, Phil Rebe in Perth, I decided that such a mobility scooter was going to be needed if I were to be able to negotiate the airport and wander around Perth much. I found daleks (as I prefer to call ‘em instead of ‘gophers’… I mean, who wants to be a ‘gopher’? BTDT! But a dalek, now that could be fun…) can be taken on trains and even buses… though I haven’t been quite adventurous enough to try the buses… yet.

I can’t describe how much more freedom this little scooter has given me; I now go out for a ‘walk’ (well… perambulation, I suppose would be more accurate!) almost every day and can get to Elizabeth and/or Munno Para shopping centers easily; the large bag on a rack behind the seat carries quite a lot of groceries.

But to really show how much my mobility scooter spells ‘freedom’ to me, I can say it got me to Perth and back in good order and charge to spare! (Of course, the trains and planes helped a lot, too!)

An Imperial Dalek flies up a flight of stairs ...An Imperial Dalek flies up a flight of stairs (from Remembrance of the Daleks) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I call them ‘Daleks’ because I can just imagine how the notorious Daleks evolved from ‘wheelies’ like us (as the air stewardesses like to call us…) out of an extremely useful, but also extremely vulnerable, form of transport: First the armored exterior and bumper is added; then the weapon for self-defense (initially, at least) and the sucker is a good way to scab free rides from passing cars…

The stewardess who was pushing me through the airport enjoyed my theory, anyway. “You sound like you have it all figured out…” Charming girl… And I must say a huge THANK YOU to VIRGIN AIRLINES and their staff for all the help and care they took with me and my dalek… which are allowed to ride for no extra charge as ‘checked baggage‘.

I’ll write more about the actual trip and all the fun I had in Perth in a day or two; maybe even submit it to the Pigs’ Arms Bumper Xmas Edition, as editor Mike has requested a contribution from yours truly. I’ll see what I can do Mike! :)

Anyway, that’s all for now… Much more later!

Bumper Christmas Edition 2013 – Santa Was a Farmer, Pig’s Bum

25 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Sandshoe

≈ 20 Comments

Reindeer 7

Reindeer 7

Story and Graphic by Sandshoe

I got a cup and saucer that sat in a tiny sled that could be stood on end to display the china and was tiny like the combo. Santa gave the ornamental toy to me at a Carols by Candlelight held on the town sports oval where football and vigaro was played and a corner doubled as a circus field when the circus was in town. My association of it with tethered elephants was already romantic when Santa arrived that starry night on the tray of a farm truck or a seat of a sled trailer hauled by a tractor used normally for sugar cane haulage not sure which now. I did somehow know then the event was a co-operative undertaking organised between Santa and the Council. Our people had been talking to Santa’s. That was the town where I was born and Santa eventually came I saw it with my own eyes.

So many years later sitting at a radio sales meeting and a seriously new  employee of Rural Press in a hinterland of this place of my nascent experience of Santa, I was digging it hearing Santa was going to arrive in a helicopter. I was hearting Santa-Air. Talk turned to a recent take-over  by allegedly “us” of the only other commercial radio station in the district and far-fetched claims accompanied by warrior-style victory breast thumping regarding what the purchase meant now “we owned” that previous competitor. Whoop! Whoop!

Talk was turning further as I sat thinking about selling hay and legume seed to old tobacco farmers and ride-on mowers to doubts held by my colleagues regarding who might be expected to fly with Santa. There might be some minor adjustments to calibrate. No one was to worry. Santa would be “theirs”.

So far in my life-long days I had not yet heard anything half as silly as that dialogue between intelligent practitioners of any arts or sciences dressed up as work.

Stop me later if you’ve heard me tell this story.

Anyway it was the Christmas staff party coming up. Yes, as I was advised, it was a long way and why would I drive that far. You know you can’t drink. I won’t. So sensible. Yes, I was driving.

Ahhh.

Over a long tinsel-bestrewn trestle table I was sat at in its middle directly opposite the manager, I unavoidably watched the same harshly tell his wife seated on his left, “Behave” at that moment the flush of the excesses of alcohol began to suffuse his primal excitability. I could have died and gone to heaven not.  The nice thing was my present from under the Christmas tree was a plus large pink plastic telephone wrapped in pretty pink tissue paper and tinsel.

You see it was the one intimation I ever received that the position I was employed to implement was genuinely answerable only to the Manager who would be my assistant to set up a so-exciting and new telephone sales project. The manager made something of a fond fuss before-hand of how he couldn’t wait for me to see what ‘they’ got me. A presentation speech on the subject how special I was gulled me further bathed in a spotlight. He consistently failed to turn up to discuss or assort the project with me where instead I soon only found myself sole charge of our satellite office on the coast while the jock I worked with in it took holidays. Meanwhile it dawned he thought he could assess but not only, teach me my job and sure enough as I guessed from assessment of the tracks of what was happening, chose the Christmas drinks at the pub after work to sidle up alongside to do that (“only thing about how you’re doing is I wouldn’t use the word solicit. It doesn’t sound nice other than that you’re doing just fine”).

Earlier that day, I had purposefully addressed a client in a voice to project between our walls and using the word o, so beautifully, to test the culture once and for all. The summer was cloying hot outside, visible through the glass walls of the enclosed palm-tree foyer.

Worst thing about that drive-to Xmas party was the room was shared with another table of party goers celebrating an occasion and the behaviour of the dishevelled at ours drowned out theirs.

Some other time we may examine the proposition that all salespersons are equal.

My favourite Santa Claus I have met so far was Raymond Briggs’ Father Christmas of Father Christmas Goes On Holiday. He was ‘stuck up there in the bloomin’ cold’. I feel stuck up here in rural Australia again with ghosts of Christmas pasts tugging at my jacket. My sister was real skinny and she is rushing into the kitchen in some kind of fit about 12 years old.

I, the youngest by seven years her junior and looking up at shapes and forms recall those dear people in bodies with far away concerned faces. Dad had a usually slightly sarcastic way of looking at you as if you were in on a big joke. He looked ordinary Honey was upset. She was sobbing. Her face streaked. The day was hot stands to reason and getting hotter the way you know once you don’t have it any more in changeable southern climates all those days were in the summer of North Queensland on the coast.

“He’s…” she sobbed and looked terrified, “not a he. He’s a she. We can’t eat him.”

The ensuing wail was now terrible. We rushed  outside (I simply chase the action without understanding). The shadows are falling under the mango tree onto plate-size patches of lawn grass in sunlight and scratched dirt. The turkey is clucking and gobbling, walking from one side of the cage he was especially contained in as we did not usually keep fowl. This bird allegedly masculine we were to fatten was a Christmas present  to our family from my mother’s cousin (I had not known why. I had never seen a turkey before).

My sister’s aversion to everything and everybody if the turkey was harmed, its least feather, seemed likely inconsolable. Battling with the confusion of conditions at knee and thigh level, in my sister’s case (true) close to shoulder level, I managed to work out using my agile wits the bird was laying an egg that was unexpected.

“Tell Dad, Mum” screeched my sister as if our father was approaching the cage with a knife in hand and a hangman’s noose, “how could anybody kill this now it is…”

She blubbered. The two mango trees were thriving then and dwarf everybody, the garage and house, the cage and the turkey, everything. Gobble gobble. Forth and back. Along one side of the property a dingley dell of two paw paw trees, a bush lemon tree and the spare wire of a literally one barbed-wire strand fence on a lean make another scrabble of shadows among weeds against stark sunlight revealing the spare allotment next door. Gobble gobble. Back and forth. My sister rushed off somewhere.

I truly don’t understand a lot of it. Who ate the turkey I don’t know. Our family didn’t.

Have a safe and Happy Yuletide, piglets and our readers. Thank you for keeping the pub ticking over tickety-boo, Merv, Janet, Granny, Foodge, the tenants like the indomitable Glenda at the Pigs’ Legs Waxing and Beauty Salon and its workers and wenches, Eddie O’Bad alongside whose patronage we seem wholesome, Father O’Way without whom we would be lost  plus the mob in the carpark who sneak in and out using the facilities when Merv is upstairs changing  the twins’ nappies for Janet, the Mondrian Bros. (Plumbers to the Pigs Arms), so many contributors and Emmjay who is our proprietor, Mike Jones.

Bumper Christmas Edition 2013 – The First Hung Over

25 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 29 Comments

Tags

cricket

Backyard cricket

Dad standing at back, front from left Have One On kneeling with one of the Vowels on his knee, Gerard Van Camper and Hung One On far right.

Story by Hung One On

Here’s a story. Some is true and some is pure bullshit, some artistic licence.  I’ll let you decide.

I was born in Tamworth, the country capital of NSW however as a young kid my parents moved down to Wollongong on the south coast or should I say more precisely, Austinmer, a northern beach suburb of Wollongong. Seven surfing spots within a 5 minute walk, how lucky was I.  For anyone that has travelled down the coast from Sydney to Wollongong we lived opposite the Headlands Hotel which strangely enough is on a headland.

We were considered strange as we were from the country, my dad was from overseas but worst of all we were Catholic, what ever that was.  Later in life I learned that Catholics have caused all of the world’s problems but as a kid I neither knew nor cared, as long as we could play cricket.

Strangely enough, in the small row of houses were we lived our neighbours to the north were the Bowlers, to the south were the Bettermen’s which we renamed the Batsmen so we called ourselves the All Rounders.  Sadly this is a true lie.

But hey, let me introduce you to my family. My Dad was called Dad, Dad One On which turned out to be very convenient.  My Mum was called Mum One On again which turned out to be very convenient.  My mum and dad had doctorates from the University of New England which is no where near England at all.  Mum majored in Crap whereas Dad majored in bullshit.  My big brother’s name was Have, Have One On and my big sister was called Urge, Urge One On, oh and lets not forget our blue heeler, Sandy, who never told me what his last name was but Mum said a priest had given her Sandy as a pup and his name was Sandy O’Way, so I guess mum named him after the priest.

Anyway we were considered strange as we were from the country, my dad was from overseas but worst of all we were Catholic.

Anyhoo, this was the mid 1960’s and I had had enough of my big brother giving me a hard time.  Throughout the entire year, through scrimping and scraping I had managed to save five bob, can you imagine that,  five whole bob, yes, gob smacking.  Anyway, a mate of mine called Gerard who came from Holland showed me a trick with tennis balls. Remember how they were always yellow, bounced to much and had the big circular line through them. “Pump the ball half full of water Hung” said Gerard “That way they skim along the ground” Gerard grinned. Gerard didn’t seem to mind that I was from the country, my dad was from overseas and I was a Catholic.

I think it mainly because Gerard was from another country, his dad was from overseas and he was a Catholic but I’m not really sure.

Gerard’s Mum and Dad had the best sausage in town. His mum would fry it and the smell was amazing. “Bedunk Mrs Van Camper” I would say, yum.  The adults washed it down with beer but we were too young to drink so we had soft drink.  Gerard had five brothers, Hank, Henk, Hink, Honk and Hunk. We all referred to them as the “Vowels” although I never knew why as their last name was Van Camper.  Mr Van Camper ran the local shop but it was tough going with all those mouths to feed until one day he got sick of being asked about holiday rents in Austinmer and opened up a business called Hank’s Camper Vans which was a play on his name.  He is now a millionaire.

So Gerard gave me the doctored ball, my precious, my time had come. Boxing Day 1966, Mum’s backyard, “Hey Have” I called rather exuberantly “I bet you five bob I can get you out under double figures”  I baited knowingly.  See my brother Have was a pugilist of the first degree. As when we moved to Austinmer, being strange as we were from the country, my dad was from overseas but worst of all we were Catholic, my big brother belted the crap out of the biggest villain in miles, suddenly he was a hero. “Listen, you little prick, I belt you for a hundred then I’ll belt the shit out of you”  replied Have, smirking to himself for the easiest five bob he would ever make.

Anyhoo, I put Sandy in as keeper  and Urge at mid on, mum’s flame tree as mid off.  The first few deliveries I let him tonk me around the place and while he wasn’t looking I threw the ball over the neighbours fence and replaced it with the doctored ball. I bowled the doctored ball and bowled him middle stump as it slid through along the ground.

Have started to come for me with a stump but Sandy realised what was happening and started to growl and bark at Have.  Sandy started to bite Have just as Mum appeared, “ What’s all this noise?” she shrieked “ Have, bugger off and leave Hung alone, who owns this five bob?”  Mum’s and questions hey.

Me and Sandy went down to the Halfway Shop with our winnings. I had a whole dollar. Can you imagine that, one whole dollar, ten shillings in the old. My newly found wealth was staggering, I was rich. Mrs Drew, who ran the Halfway Shop, was rapt when I told her the story, I had a pie and a can of soft drink and Sandy had some left over pork sausages that Mrs Drew got out of her fridge and I had 85 cents left over, 8 and a half shillings, can you imagine that. It doesn’t get any better that this.

Funny though, after that things changed.  My big brother started his apprenticeship at the steelworks as a fitter and turner. When I asked him what did a fitter and turner does, he replied “they fit and they turn”, wow, what a guy.  He never played cricket again, that was for little kids like me, he was a man now.

My sister Urge was very pretty and was a boy magnet however she went to uni and eventually married a rich bloke but she stopped playing cricket.  Cricket was a little kids game, not for a beautiful intelligent woman with her life ahead of her.

Sandy got killed by a truck and mum and dad were always too busy arguing about things like thermal currents in the upper atmosphere and their effect on climate so it boiled down to just me.

Luckily Gerard came around. “Hey Hung. Thirroul are looking for players. Wanna come? Train Tuesday and Thursday afternoon at Gibson Park.”  “Is the Pope a catholic?” I grinned, you know sometimes when things change it’s okay. Life just got a whole lot better.

Bumper Christmas Edition 2013 – VIVIENNE’s – photo story from home

25 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Vivienne

≈ 29 Comments

Tags

Vivienne

 

Photographs by Vivienne

Viv 1

Burning ‘orff’ commences (view from front of house)

Viv 2

Burning ‘orff’ in all its glory an hour later  (I zoomed in)

Viv RainbowA rainbow

Viv BirdiesArriving for breakfast

Viv Bread

Gluten-free bread – looks like a brick and just as heavy!

Viv YabbieA big yabbie – along with 7 others – became lunch.

Viv pork chopsRoast stuffed pork chops

Viv Preserved OlivesA reasonably good salad featuring my home grown preserved olives

Vi Home OfficeMy office at knock off time

Bumper Christmas Edition 2013 – The Real 12 Days of Christmas

25 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Neville Cole

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

12 Days of Christmas

12_days_of_christmas

Neville Cole

On the first day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:

a Partridge in a Pear Tree.

The cat ate the partridge and the pear tree lost all its leaves overnight.

On the second day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:

2 Turtle Doves

Both of which the cat is eyeing hungrily.

On the third day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:

3 French Hens

I think they are French. One is wearing a tiny beret.

On the fourth day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
4 Calling Birds

Enough with the birds! There’s bird shit, feathers and bits of wing all over the living room. The cat is so fat she can barely stand.

On the fifth day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
5 Golden Rings

I was excited until one of the “golden” rings turned my finger green.

On the sixth day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
6 Geese a Laying

Oh boy, my true love is really getting on my nerves now! Hello, I live in an apartment!

On the seventh day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
7 Swans a Swimming

There are currently seven swans a swimming in my bathtub and six geese a laying on my bed. Best Christmas ever!

On the eighth day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
8 Maids a Milking

Ok. I have to admit, after seven days of disappointment this seemed promising; but cows are even messier than geese and swans.

On the ninth day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
9 Ladies Dancing

There wasn’t room for the ladies to do much but gyrate in place but I was fine with that.

On the tenth day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
10 Lords a Leaping

The lords got drunk, trashed the place, ran off with the ladies and the maids and left me with the eight cows.

On the eleventh day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
11 Pipers Piping

This one just about did me in as I had hit the eggnog a little too hard the night before with a bunch of dancing lords.

On the twelfth day of Christmas
my true love sent to me:
12 Drummers Drumming

It took me twelve days to figure out my true love didn’t want to be my true love any more. She sure knows how to hurt a guy. I’ll never get the smell of bird shit and rancid milk out of my rug.

Merry Christmas, Everyone! I hope you got all you deserved for Christmas and more! I know I did.

 

 

 

 

Bumper Christmas Edition 2013 – A Christmas Most Brutal

25 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Uncategorized

≈ 9 Comments

scrooge

By Gregor Stronach

T’was the night before Christmas, and all through the house… not a creature was stirring, except for the sad, twisted and vile individual whose ramblings you are welcome to abandon right now, should your disposition, beliefs or inability to decide fact from fiction dictate that you take even the slightest notice of the self-indulgent, mindless pap that follows.

It was, indeed, the night before Christmas – and I, gentle reader, was having a prodigiously shitty time of things. You see, I was suffering through one of life’s most hideous paradoxes: A genuine and long held desire to die, coupled with a total inability to sleep – as if the universe or god or whoever the hell is in charge has figured out that the best way to torture a tortured man who seeks eternal slumber is to deny him any at all in this world… and so, presumably, in the next.

But this is clearly neither here nor there. Because it was Christmas. A celebration of the birth of an illegitimate child whose parents concocted a fabulous lie so strong that it convinced their families and holy men – and saved the young woman involved from being stoned to death for daring to ride her boyfriend in the manner she rode the donkey into Bethlehem.

As far as lies go, it was a ripper. And, as we all know, lies tend to take on a life of their own, once told. But little did Joseph and Mary know that the palpable untruth they dreamt up to cover the result of their carnal desires would blossom and grow into the heaving miasma of deceit and corruption that we now call ‘the church’.

But I digress.

It was indeed Christmas. And not the first I’ve spent alone, but it is the first I’ve spent without my legs, whose current whereabouts I am not sure of.

I’ve lost them, you see. Lost to the cold, hard steel wheels of the 9.24am express to Hornsby in an attempt to relieve the world of my presence, which has been as successful as my attempts this evening to sleep.

I misjudged the track upon which my neck was required to lie – and in typical Sydney Rail efficiency, that bastard of a train took my legs, and not my life.

Such is the way of the man who wishes ill upon himself. If I believed that there was a god, I’d pray he found my predicament amusing. Because it hurt like rape and I cursed all manner of poisonous invective upon myself… and upon those around me who applied tourniquets and opiates, while wondering aloud why someone might want to do this sort of thing… as if the answer wasn’t clear enough from the circumstances surrounding it.

If a man wishes he were dead, then he will do something about it. And if a man’s circumstances are such that there is no other reasonable explanation, then for the love of all that’s holy, take the hint and let him slide into the abyss of his own making.

But, again, I digress.

My long lost legs, on this most brutal and lonely of Christmas Eves, were – I believe – attempting to communicate with me via another of life’s most horrible quirks. By legs, I mean feet. And by quirk, I mean they were itching.

Of course, I do hope that you can see my predicament… I wanted to die, but could not sleep, because my feet were all itchy, and I had no idea where they were. Probably in a skip somewhere… moldering away, giving themselves over to the putrefaction that every abandoned, unloved body part most certainly endures.

What kind of a universe is this, the one that we inhabit? Where both entropy and atrophy team up to make chaos of the order we all, deep down, desire – and at the same time slowly rob of us of the strength and vitality we need in order to survive the maelstrom of disorganization that our minds and environments create.

I know that this is chaos, because I’ve sent it. Close at hand and even closer to nose – as I fell from my bed through the (somewhat remarkable) expedience of forgetting that I no longer owned a functional set of lower limbs.

I understand how implausible that might seem – but please, allow me to help you make sense of all of this. Imagine, if you will, the following scenario – to be explained through the medium of a ‘recap’, which will no doubt be preceded in the film adaption of my horrible life by the strumming of harps and the tired old trope of wavy lines and soft-focus dissolves.

The scenario is this: A man, who wishes to die, has lost his legs, and cannot sleep, because his feet itch, but are no longer attached to his body – and so, in a sleep deprived state, the unshakable laws of chaos dictate that something else entirely must go wrong.

And wrong, they went.

The human brain is remarkably elastic – far more so than the bones in my face… but I’m getting ahead of myself here.

Acutally, I’m not sure whether elasticity or plasticity (or, dare I say it, spasticity…) is the correct term for it – but here I sit with a bag of Watties fresh-frozen peas against my face and a pain in the anterior portion of my cranium that rivals the itch in my feet (which have fled!!!) in both intensity and its ability to annoy. And depress.

… An ellipsis to denote the passage of time. Let’s say it was about ten minutes. The time was spent pondering the correct descriptor for the fact that the wobbling bag of neurons we possess in our heads is both an incredible machine, and a gigantic liability.

Aha! I am about to digress – bear with me.

I don’t know the correct descriptor, but I’ve come to the conclusion that I simply don’t care… to be perfectly frank.

I knew a man named Frank who fancied himself to be perfect. We (and by “we” I mean me and some other minor characters in this tragedy that I have neither the time nor the inclination to introduce at present…) drank with Frank at the local public house from time to time.

Frank seemed nice enough, but had one annoying habit – and as I would loudly declare my opinion on something, punctuated with the words “To Be Perfectly Frank!”, the man in question would interject…

“If you want to be perfectly Frank,” he would say with a truly slimy grin, “You would have to be me…”

And he would then wink.

Frank did this three times within earshot of me. He barely survived the beating he received as a result. A man can make one mistake, and then repeat that mistake again – to set himself assured that the particular action that resulted in a poor outcome was, in fact, the cause – and not simply a correlation.

Make the mistake three times, and you’re clearly a fuckhead with a strong desire to be hit with a whisky bottle and have the shape of your noggin modified with the thick end of a pool cue.

“Not so perfect now, are ya Frank?” I shouted at him. It did no good. He was clearly unconscious at the time.

…and I am, I hope, done digressing.

Where was I?

That’s right – I was sitting upon the floor – the cold hard tiles of my kitchen gradually numbing my buttocks as I held my makeshift icepack against the shattered bones in my face.

(Shit – sorry – digression… That’s why the story of Frank occurs to me to tell you now – I imagine this is how he must have felt. Poor, dumb bastard that he was.)

ANYWAY!

The reason I was upon the floor tending to my painful injuries was because my brain’s elasticity was such that I had fallen for the oldest trick in the book – the kind of trick only a human brain could play.

I had wanted to die, but instead lost my legs, and couldn’t get to sleep, because my feet were itching to the point of unrelenting distraction. But my feet were long gone, and – so – impossible to scratch. I needed a drink – a strong drink to put me to sleep – and so I decided that the place I needed to be was at the liquor cabinet. The decision made, I leapt from my bed – and it is at this precise moment that my bastard of a brain played its trick.

The itch in my feet, combined with the deprivation of sleep, had relayed to my brain a simple fact that we all take for granted: that there are, indeed, actual physical feet at the end of my legs…

Have you ever gotten to the bottom of a short flight of steps – the kind you know well enough that you no longer need to check as you walk down them – and stepped out into the nothingness of having miscounted the stairs you were upon?

If so, then you will know the feeling I felt – and if not, then you’re as big a liar as I am.

But the feeling I felt was far beyond the slightly uncomfortable vertiginous sense of falling – abruptly halted by the jarring impact of your foot on the step that you forgot was beyond the one you were on.

No… there was no immediate jarring impact. I have no fucking feet!

I fell for what seemed like an eternity – and I know what an eternity feels like.

(It’s a digression, but it’s worth it…)

I know what eternity feels like because when I was a much younger man, I fell in love with a woman. She was everything my father had warned me about.

Our relationship was short-lived, and fiery. But even across the term of a few short months, I could feel her drifting away from me. But it was a Tuesday night – when she called me to join her in a dank, dingy pub in Glebe – that I both knew what eternity looked like, and I found our relationship had drawn to an end.

I found her in a small, upstairs room – surrounded by women of ill temperament and bad haircuts. Many wore what I would later find out are called dungarees. One of them was wearing a beret – ironically, it turned out, but still… there’s no excuse for that.

It turned out that the love of my life had another burning passion – the need to pen poems and share them in pubs. I had walked into her ‘strictly ladies only’ poetry night, where she and nine friends would gather and recite poems about dominant paradigms, the evils of The Penis and the wondrous silhouette of a supple female breast when viewed through the bottom of a whisky tumbler against the backdrop of the setting sun, as it sank into the ocean and turned the sky to the colour of a cut throat, which bleeds into the sea…

In the 20 minutes I was trapped there, I found out what eternity really was – as this bizarre blend of sophistry and sapphistry clubbed my masculinity into a diamond-like mote of despair and sent me – and my wholly-unwelcome testicles – fleeing for the front bar and a pint-glass of whisky.

Two thirds of the way through that pint, Perfect Frank lost the first part of his nickname at the hands of yours truly. In despair, I fled the scene, and walked the dark suburban streets attempting to divest myself of guilt through moderate exercise.

It didn’t work.

Appalled at my lack of judgment, it was then and there that I decided to end my life. And that, dear reader, is how I came to be sitting on the floor of my apartment on the night before Christmas – broken and bleeding, crazed and confused.

…and listening to the movement of individual peas as the heat of my pain and failure thaw them out, and relieve them of their ability to cling frantically to their rotund, green brethren. A slight crackle here – a gentle shift of weight there… and soon, they would all be apart. Alone.

Alone in the dark, trapped in a bag held by a madman whose legs had gone AWOL but were still able to keep him awake by itching furiously enough, causing sleep deprivation and short-term memory loss, resulting in a misjudged leap from the bed in which I could not find rest, causing a massive injury to my face.

… (this one means an hour. Please… keep up.)

There was, by now, a pale light creeping through the slash in the curtains, now. And I thought, through the haze of the pain, that I’d heard a slight noise in the living room. A whoosh – and the ever-so-gentle tinkle of cheap glass ornaments tapping gently together.

I set off across the floor of the kitchen, dragging myself like a man possessed to the living room – and miracle of miracles, a miracle had occurred.

A simple gift lay wrapped beneath the even simpler tinsel-clad tree. A card attached said “From Santa”.

I removed the paper with the unbridled joy of every five-year-old child with whom I would be sharing this morning. Beneath the paper, was a box.

In the box… a brand new pair of shoes.

(Merry Christmas everyone… Gregor).

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