I never did like playing follow the leader...

Ever woken up in the morning and wondered what if? What if I took a risk and tried to do something I've always thought about but never had the balls to do? Quit my job? Jump out of the rat race? Get inspired? Finish writing a book that's been trapped in my head for years? Well I just did. As in taken the first step that is. This blog is a bit of a chronicling of the process of getting this book out of me and all the little things and experiences that inspire me along the way.

Friday, 23 December 2011

countryness is next to goodliness

a few pics taken out and about in country land.. came across this abandoned shack/house/homeless hovel and took a few pics. It was completely overgrown with vegetation in the middle of nowhere..

isolation at its best..


playing with movement..


interesting grafitti..



roughing it...

an interestingly named spot on sunshine coast..

Wednesday, 21 December 2011

A waitress's guide to surviving Christmas..


I can’t honestly remember the last time I waitressed during the festive season. I was in Uni and it was a bit of a blur. So working the tables and customers in the lead up to Christmas has been a bit of an eye opener. In fact, it can sometimes drive you downright crazy. So I’ve put together some tips for those who want to survive it with your sanity intact.
1)      Don’t resist it – embrace it. Yes the silly festive earrings, tinsel and funny Christmas hair clips look dorky in public but everyone else at the restaurant is wearing it and if you don’t you do so at your own peril. You face daily repeated questions of ‘How come you aren’t in the festive spirit? Don’t you like Christmas? And the dreaded – ‘Smile, its Christmas’ comment. Wear the red and green it will make it all better.

2)      If you think Christmas brings out the best in everyone you are wrong. I’m no humbug, I love Christmas and being with family. But let’s face it, most families have a freak flag and the only thing worse than waving this flag at home, is waving it in public in front of a waitress who is trying to do her job. So don’t be fooled, people will be on their worst, most impatient, impossible behaviour. They will complain about meals which two weeks ago they loved and they certainly won’t feel the need to give you a tip, unless it’s that you should perhaps consider weightwatchers when you can’t fit behind their chair. I do not kid. It’s the second time I’ve heard that very phrase this week.

3)     Don’t get into the habit of wishing everyone a Merry Christmas. It will become soul destroying. Especially if you say it to the freak flag families who think it’s fine to let their 8 month old play on the restaurant floor and pull poo from its nappy and wipe it on the tablecloths. Reserve the phrase for only when you mean it.

4)      Getting drunk at Christmas time is fun. Except when you are the one who has to take a drunken someone’s order. They order things they don’t mean to, which lead to epic faulty tower type situations in where I run in and out of the kitchen fleeing swearing chefs and customers who are on their third bottle of wine. Or a real highlight is finding the surprise that many patrons leave in the bathroom by way of a parting gift for all the wine they’ve consumed. Very festive I’m sure you’ll agree.

5)      Old people aren’t fun at Christmas. I hope this doesn’t sound ageist but it’s true. Many start to realise that their time is running out, they feel vulnerable, abandoned and lonely, their illness is catching up with them, their sons/daughters or grandchildren don’t do enough for them and they are angry at the world in general. So they either decide to tell you their woeful life story complete with box of tissues and puppy eyes, vent their frustrations at the waitress serving them their meal or they get drunk. Most opt for the drunk option. This lot also tend to have a penchant for bottom patting and pinching  every time you walk their way.  Contrary to what they might think this is by no means the highlight to my day. All seniors who try this on get my tested and tried phrase ‘Watch out, I bite.”

6)      The only highlight is perhaps the staff or colleagues you endure this raft of unfriendliness with. The laughing at the Camilla Parker Bowles look –a-likes, the giggling at the man with spinach in his teeth that keeps winking at you and the slices of fruit cake from the lovely old dear who brings festive goodies for her favourite waitresses makes it bearable.

7)      And of course there are the good customers, the ones who apologise for being late, for bringing five extra people to their 10 people booking or for the mess they’ve made of their meal and floor and the drunkenness of one of their party.

 
8)      And of course, the reason its ok, is because despite all the downsides, I share more laughter then frowns throughout the day. And at the end, I get to go home and raise my own freak flag and forget about the day. No stress. No responsibility except the blind happiness in that  tomorrow really is another day, that and new year’s is only a few weeks away..

Xx
J

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

good scary vs bad scary..

It’s odd the way one week or even one day can change everything. Just a week ago I was happy with my little 15 year old ‘fanny’ the ford festiva. She worked, yes she was bit rough around the edges and had a slight doggy scent from multiple trips to the beach with sir paddy but it suited me fine.
But insert a mechanic, his so called psychic predictions and a potential future invoice following a routine service and poof, everything changed.
Facing a $2,000 bill for bits and pieces to make her roadworthy again I was faced with a dilemma. When she actually became un-roadworthy is unclear although many friends will claim she’s been that way for a while.  
My options were  either a) suck it up, trade in fanny and erase my debt free existence by getting a used car loan b) pay the invoice and cross my fingers she didn’t start falling apart in dribs and drabs as the mechanic foresaw in his oil change c) sell her and just borrow mum’s car.
Let’s face it option c) wasn’t really an option. I need my independence so I bit the bullet and went for the car loan so I could get a reliable car so that my main worries would be what to wear on weekends away to Brisbane rather than on the rocking, bucking or knocking of my car or the chance of a tyre blow out en route.
But within two days, the search for a second hand, newishy car somehow took a turn blindly down new car boulevard and I found myself with keys in hand for a car with a genuine new car smell, not one with those fake perfume tree ones.
This well and truly threw me into the good scary vs bad scary territory. Everyone knows this space. The scary zone that forces you to make big changes and take a leap or at the very least a little step of faith.
We’ve all been there. Where something is just out of reach and you can take a leap and do it, or turn down a familiar path and shy away from the challenge. It’s scary, but not in a serial killer type of way and when you finally take that leap, nothing feels better than landing on the other side.
It’s in these choices you find out what you are really made of. Like when one morning you wake up next to a partner of many years and decide being ok, is not enough, you want to be happy every day, or when you’ve taken one too many demeaning insults from a boss or colleague or have been putting off the next adventure because it falls too much into unknown territory. That’s when it’s time for a taste of the good scary.
As I questioned how I even got into spot in the first place it made me think of the last year in general. And while it’s definitely had its low and high points, I’m proud to declare that it seems to have been a year of good scary.
-Moving from London back to Aus after three years away which didn’t include a single visit home – check
- Choosing a job with a new start up business over an established corporation and another business – definitely check on the good scary
- Choosing to flat share with a range of odd, manic depressive, anally retentive and at times psychotic flatmates – a mixture of good and bad scary
- Deciding to chuck it all in for a move to the country – check
- Above all else moving in with the parentals after seven years of freedom – check – and this had the potential to be bad scary, however has turned out to be a good scary in many ways
So with the end of 2011 now in sight, I can look back on the year as one that took a bit of courage, a bit of blind faith with eyes screwed tightly shut and also quite a few deep breaths.
I can’t tell anyone how much I’ve pondered over and over the number of paths I could have, should have and might have taken this year but I’ve decided to put all those ifs and buts in a box and post it to the north pole where it can stay in a deep freeze.
Right now all that matters is I’m where I am and where I’m going. The most I know at this point is my mode of transport is a spiffy white new car with the number plate – SAE.
An acronym for ‘Seek and endure’… perhaps?
Til next time
X
J


Thursday, 1 December 2011

Pick a line, any line

I’m one of those people who loves classic, memorable lines. Some people collect them from films, songs or movies. For me, there’s only really ever been one medium. The printed word.

So I suppose to stands to reason that as I tap away writing this tortuous book that is taking so much of my energy, time and focus that I keep coming back to the lines and books that have stayed with me well after the last page is read.

I love those lines when first read that have the ability to illicit a laugh, provoke thought or simply make you sigh. I know its ambitious to hope that maybe one day my book will be home to one or two or perhaps a couple of these lines. The type that make a person put down the book and just be still. For a moment or two to absorb what they just read.

It’s not just the classics that are home to these lines, but new modern favourites as well. So with these in mind I’ve decided to include below some of my all-time favourite lines from books which have changed  or shaped my perspective, made me cry, made me laugh and ones I have simply just enjoyed.

This is just a sample of some of the top ones. Many more out there and feel free to share any you have

X
J


“The first thing you should know is that I’m a whore. I don’t mean that in a glib way. I’m not using the word as an analogy for working from a desk or toiling away in new media. Many of my friends will tell you how temping for a year or ending up in sales is equivalent to prostitution. It’s not. I know this because I’ve been a temp and I’ve fucked for money and they are in no way similar. Not even the same planet. Different solar systems all together.” – Belle de Jour

It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife. - Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice (1813)
“If all else perished, and he remained, I should still continue to be; and if all else remained, and he were annihilated, the universe would turn to a mighty stranger: I should not seem a part of it."
- Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights, Ch. 9

“Sometimes we love with nothing more than hope. Sometimes we cry with everything except tears. In the end that's all there is: love and its duty, sorrow and its truth. In the end that's all we have - to hold on tight until the dawn” -
Gregory David Roberts, Shantaram

“It took me a long time and most of the world to learn what I know about love and fate and the choices we make, but the heart of it came to be in an instant, while I was chained to a wall and being tortured.” - Gregory David Roberts, Shantaram

“I have hated the words and I have loved them, and I hope I have made them right”. –
Markus Zusak, The Book Thief

“The African girl they locked up in the immigration detention center, poor child, she never really escaped.” – Chris Cleave, The Other Hand

“But better to be hurt by the truth than comforted with a lie”. – Khaled Hosseini, The Kite Runner

“Like a compass needle that points north, a man's accusing finger always finds a woman. Always.” - Khaled Hosseini, A Thousand Splendid Suns

“Of all the hardships a person had to face, none was more punishing than the simple act of waiting.”  - Khaled Hosseini, A Thousand Splendid Suns

“Love is like breathing, you take it in and let it out.” ― Wally Lamb, She's Come Undone

“I think... the secret is to just settle for the shape of your life takes...Instead of you know, always waiting and wishing for what might make you happy.” ― Wally Lamb, She's Come Undone

But what are our stories if not the mirrors we hold up to our fears?” ― Wally Lamb, I Know This Much Is True

“I didn't know that it was right to love her. I just loved her.” – Nicholas Evans, The Horse Whisperer
“Everything I know and I am and I have seen felt done past present past now then before now seen felt done hurt felt focus into a something beyond words and it speaks now and it says.
Stay.
Fight.
Live.
Take it.”
James Frey, A Million Little Pieces

“Be content with what you have and take joy in the way things are. When you realize you have all you need, the World belongs to you.”
James Frey, A Million Little Pieces

“Sometimes skulls are thick. Sometimes hearts are vacant. Sometimes words don't work. ”
James Frey, A Million Little Pieces

“You could have not me the offer of you hand in any possible way that would have tempted me to accept it; I had not known you a month before I felt that you were the last man in the world whom I could ever be prevailed on to marry.” – Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

“Life isn't about what happens to you, it's about how you handle what happens.” - Nicholas Evans, 'The Smoke Jumper'

“Fate is like a strange, unpopular restaurant, filled with odd waiters who bring you things you never asked for and don't always like.” - Lemony Snicket

“Life is pain. Anybody that says different is selling something.” -Fezzik's mother, The Princess Bride

“Not all who wander are lost.” - J.R.R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring

“All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others.” - Animal Farm, George Orwell

“I've dreamt in my life dreams that have stayed with me ever after, and changed my ideas they've gone through and through me, like wine through water, and altered the colour of my mind.” – Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights

“Always throw spilled salt over your left shoulder. Keep rosemary by your garden gate. Add pepper to your mashed potatoes. Plant roses and lavender, for luck. Fall in love whenever you can.” - Alice Hoffman, Practical Magic

Tuesday, 29 November 2011

Smile everyone is watching


There has never been so many opportunities for people my age to study, follow their dreams and basically do what they want. So I’m sure I’m not the only person who freaked out when they saw the recent Australian study about how happiness starts to decrease once you turn 25. Eeeek! I’m 28, so that’s three years of declining happiness which has already slipped by.

After listening to the recent Triple J Hack program on the same study, it’s clear that I’m not the only one who has had a so called ‘quarter life crisis.’ I do feel a bit guilty about it sometimes, there are people in third world countries living below the poverty line, struggling for food, education and  battling for basic survival and here I am contemplating my navel and what I ‘really’ want from my life.

It seems a very middle class or bourgeoisie syndrome, what do you do when you have too many options at your feet? You go into a tailspin of ‘what ifs’ and maybes and coulda, shoulda, wouldas. We really should know better, but we don’t. While people in these poverty stricken countries face daily issues, their levels of happiness are far greater than ours.

Just a month ago I was in a great job at a great business with brilliant prospects, excellent salary which I’d studied and worked seven years to get to and was living in a top floor flat just 5 mins from centre of the city.  Logically I had it all.

But I threw it away and moved three hours away to ‘reassess’ my life and find out what I really wanted to do. No job, no flat, no responsibility.

And now I couldn’t be happier. Sometimes I do have to pinch myself and question my sanity, how can I be happier in a little town like Gympie working in an unskilled job for half the salary?

It defies logic but it’s true and for the first time in my life, while my income isn’t on the increase, my happiness definitely is.

A case in point is I had been trying to lose weight for months (actually years) to no end despite endless activities (netball, PT, rockclimbing and salsa).  Now with just dog walking, swimming and the occasional run the weight is now falling off me, one month in and I’m nearly 4kg lighter both physically and mentally.

And suddenly doors that I wouldn’t have dreamed opening are now looking appealing, I’m taking a peak and finding I could go down any number of paths and what’s best, is I could travel a couple at the same time. The phrase anything is possible has never felt more true and valid for me right now.

So when I heard about this study and the decline in happiness it made me think about everything I’d done. I’m not a psychologist, scientist or expert by any stretch of the imagination, but I think the biggest problem facing many people in the 25-30 year old category is limitations.

The minute we sign up for something such as a career or study path, we put pressure on ourselves to do everything in this field. We bolt, lock and shut doors because they don’t fall into the box or path we envision for ourselves. Before long, we don’t have much left in the box that we actually enjoy. It’s all been done before and suddenly we want something new and don’t know where to start.

I have always been afraid of change. It sounds bizarre considering the amount of change I’ve had in my life over the last ten years, but it used to paralyse me. It’s easy to let this fear take control, after all what is familiar and safe is reassuring. While it can get boring, it is better than the unknown. Not knowing what is around the corner or what the next day will bring was enough to have me reaching for latest best-selling corporate book on how to be the nice girl who wins the corner office, rather than teaching myself how to paint, making time to write or considering a new career path.

Now I’ve made the leap, the prospect of change has galvanised me and I’m now trying out and doing all the things I enjoy but never gave myself the time to fully appreciate. I find myself contemplating a variety of paths that complement my writing which I never would have dreamed of before. Investment specialists would call it diversification, nanna would call it not putting all your eggs in one basket, I simply call it my new way of life.

X
J

Monday, 28 November 2011

too slow to keep worms in a tin...

So it’s been a month since I moved out here and you’d think I would be used to the country way of life, sayings and phrases tossed between locals but I’ve been a bit of a fish out of water.
I’ve been a bit slack on blogs, but thought I’d share just as couple of the gems that have been thrown my way or said in my earshot that gave me a giggle and certainly raised a few eyebrows…

  • -          May your chooks turn into emus and kick your dunny down
  • -          Too slow to keep worms in a tin
  • -          He could talk under wet cement with a mouthful of marbles
  • -          He had a head on him like a sucked mango
  • -          I'm not pissing in your pocket mate ( telling it straight)
  • -          Busier than a one armed Sydney cab driver with the crabs
  • -          Give birth to a politician ( as in go take a shit)
  • -          Seen better legs on a table
  • -          Pass the dead horse (tomato sauce)
  • -          Shit stinks, eggs don't bounce and you can't buy generals in a general store (apparently short for ‘what do you know?’)
  • -          Dry as a bulls bum going up a hill backwards ( dry mouth)
  • -          Don't come the raw prawn with me mate (pull the other one)
  • -          I'd better ask me cheese'n'kisses first ( ask the missus)
  • -          He's got a Ned Kelly on 'im (belly)
  • -          Give us a Mick Jagger (a beer)
  • -          I'm on the wallaby track ( looking for work)
  • -          Wanna go halves in a rape charge (what do you think of that girl?)

And many of the locals have started passing on some of their local folklore as I doll out the cappuccinos. Not sure how accurate some of these are but gave me a giggle all the same:
  • Never wear green to a wedding – it’s unlucky apparently
  • Heat a lemon before you squeeze it
  • When swallows fly low rain is on the way
  • Cows lay down when it’s going to rain
  •  If it rains before seven, it will be fine by 11
  •  The louder the frog, the more the rain
-          When you tread on nine daisies at once, spring has come
It’s safe to say I still have a lot to learn when it comes to getting down with the local lingo but it’s certainly giving me a few laughs along the way

Til next time

X
J