Showing posts with label New South Wales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New South Wales. Show all posts

Anorexia, Quotas, Fears, and Gundagai

1. Felt guilty when I saw that one of my iGoogle headlines, from the ABC, was about the rise of childhood Anorexia.   

I went to read the article.  They said the Westmead Children's Hospital in NSW told them that admissions for childhood anorexia has tripled in the last decade.  

That's very sad.

Mia Freedman, a body image specialist, talks about how parents are so stressed about the two monsters looming on the opposite sides of the fence.   On one side you have the terrifying obesity monster.  On the other side, you have the crazed self-starvation monster.

How do we protect children from both obesity and anorexia?   

One thing Mia Freedman says is we should be good role-models.  We shouldn't complain about being fat in front of our children.  This is probably especially true if we're not fat.

Last night I complained about being fat to Tim, in front of Jack.

I was feeling awful about myself.  I needed reassurance. So I partook in the awfully pathetic activity of fishing for a compliment.

I said to Tim.  I'm not as fat as I look.  

I wanted to hear What? You don't look fat.  And you're not fat.

What I got was, You're right.  You're not that fat.

I fished for a compliment and got a boot...that kicked me in the gut.

We fought about it.  I became even more whiny and pathetic.

Tim claimed he meant that we all HAVE fat. We're all fat.

I think there's a big difference between having fat and BEING fat.

Is it even medically possible to have 0% body fat?  I doubt it.

Anyway,

I guess my thing is, medically speaking I'm not fat.  My BMI is in the normal range.  Every so often, it creeps up into the overweight range, but never more than a few pounds.

But with today's standard of beauty, I'm a fatty.  I look at myself in the mirror and in pictures and don't see what equals beauty in our society,

A part of me wonders, even if I'm a good woman and keep my negativity to myself, will it matter to the children in my life?  Can it counteract all the messages of skinny=beautiful that they receive?

I tried to fight against it.  I have failed. Can I expect them to fare better?  

Well, I'll try my best to have a better attitude—at least when talking out loud.

2. Finished reading Dragon Man.  Finally.   

It took a long time because I alternated my reading time between that and a zombie novel.  

3. Started reading Mac Slater Hunts The Cool by Tristan Bancks.  It's a kids book.

I wonder if Jack would like it.  

4. Had a movie playing in the motel room.  It's with Hugh Jackman, and has vampires and werewolves.  Maybe it's Van Helsing?  

We don't have the internet here, so I can't look it up.

I think maybe David Wenham is in the movie as well. 

5. Watched credits of movie.

David Wenham IS one of the stars. Richard Roxburgh is in it too.  

6. Had a lucid dream in which I'm searching for Julian McMahon.  I used to have these dreams a lot.  Now I have them every so often.

In last night's dream: I'm in a new location, not one I usually go to in my lucid dreams.  It has a big sports arena.  I go up to people and ask if they've seen Julian McMahon.   A few say yes, and say he's here.  I feel hopeful that this time I might actually find him.  

At one point I tell people I'm a stalker, but they don't need to worry because I'm not dangerous.  I only do the stalking thing in my dreams, not in real life.

Later I go near the sports arena.  I find this blond guy with an accent.  He seems to be German, maybe?   I ask him if he's seen Julian McMahon.   He says he IS Julian McMahon. But his name is spelled a bit differently.  I get the idea that this is the Julian McMahon everyone has been talking about when I asked.  

7. Wondered what my dream self plans to do when I find Julian McMahon.  

Maybe I'll try to sell him Girl Scout Cookies?

8. Looked at my Statcounter.  Several Americans  have come to my blog using keywords along the lines of Qantas and Jews.

What's the deal with that?

9. Counted the Americans.  There were seven of them. The first came at 9:25 pm and the last came at 12:01 am.

Maybe there was something on the news about Jews and Qantas.

Maybe some comedian made a joke?

10. Saw another topic bringing Americans to my blog today—Thelma Keane.  I've had nine people visiting via keywords related to the Keane family.

What's up with that?

11. Googled and found out that Bill Keane died today.

Jack and I are both fans of his work.  I loved The Family Circus when I was a child; then a few year ago, Jack got really into it.

Well, I'm hoping Keane's reunited with his wife...out there...somewhere.

12. Went to bed, had a long sleep, and lots of dreams.  Some of them were related to Australia or Australians.

In one, I seem to be part of a new family or group of friends.  I feel loved and accepted by them.   At one point, I think of telling one of them that when I die I'd like to be buried with an Australian flag.   In my mind I'm picturing an Australian flag towel.  Then I decide not to say that, because it sounds melodramatic.   

In another dream, we're living in Chattanooga Tennessee in some kind of temporary situation.  A bunch of other people are part of this temporary situation, including some Australians. And one of the Australians is my friend Gina.

It's not like we're on holiday.  We're living regular lives. Gina has a job working at a shop nearby.

I think about how I love living here, and I begin to wish it wasn't temporary.

That dream ended for awhile.  But then it came back....sort of.

Tim has cooked this elaborate dinner for my family. It includes some fabulous desserts.   I start to think there's way too much food for us.  I decide it would be better if we had more people to eat with us.  I think about Gina who works nearby.   I consider inviting her over for dinner.  It would be very last minute because we're eating in 20-30 minutes.  But I figure there might be a chance she's available.

I consider asking my family first, and then decide there's no need.   They won't mind.

But then I start to question that.  Maybe there's enough food in my eyes, but my family might see things differently.  

13. Angered by what I read on this editorial by Nick O'Byrne.  Apparently a group called Commercial Radio Australia wants to put an end to the rule that says radio stations have to dedicate a portion of their playing time to local artists.

According to O'Byrne, contemporary commercial radio stations in Australia must use 6.25% of their playing time for Aussie music.  I think that's not enough Australian music.   Some people from the radio stations think 6.25% is way too much.  They don't want to torture their poor listeners with songs by Missy Higgins, Cold Chisel, Nick Cave, Angus and Julia Stone, Hilltop Hoods, Sarah Blasko, Jessica Mauboy, etc.

I don't know.  It's just a horrible thing for these radio stations to say. What they're saying is that Australian music isn't good enough.

That's ridiculous. The problem with Australian music is that it's ignored.

I think it's sad enough that it's ignored here in America.   There are so many fantastic Australian songs, and I'm sad that so few Americans have heard of many of them.

But for musicians to be rejected by their own local music stations?

It's crazy.

Personally, if I was in Australia, I'd protest this attitude by never listening to commercial radio stations.  I'd stick to the ones willing to play a LOT of Australian music.   

14. Went to the website of Commercial Radio Australia. I'm wondering if I can get some insight into the issue.

15. Found page about supporting Australian artists. They say they have quotas to fill, but the page itself doesn't express complaint about these quotas.

I'm wondering if it's a faction within Commercial Radio Australia that wants an end to the quotas, rather than the organization as a whole.

16. Found an article about the radio issue.  

Commercial Radio Australia's complaint is that they have to follow the quotas while internet music stations do not.

So is their complaint that people are listening to the internet more than regular radio?

I don't know statistics; but I know that I rarely listen to the regular radio anymore.

Then again, I don't really listen to internet radio either.  I listen to iTunes or videos on YouTube.

I think it's fair for Commercial Radio Australia to want the rules to apply to internet radio as well.   But I don't think they should be fighting against the quota.

They should be eager and proud to play Australian music.

17. Reread some of O'Byrne's editorial.

I misread the statistics a little bit.

Australian radio stations are actually required to dedicate 25% of their playing time to Aussie music.   That's fair.  It's better than only 6.25%.

The 6.25% refers to NEW Aussie music.   New Australian artists are getting only 6.25% of radio-playing time.  It's going to be hard to boost their careers at that level.  How are they going to compete with other artists who are getting much more playtime?

18. Went to Tallygarunga.

Today I'm going to be reading a story thread called Fear, Itself.

I wonder if I'll feel totally lost while reading it.

Did a lot happen while I was away?

19. Saw that the story involves Jack Dalton and Reade Ainsworth.

It takes place in the dueling classroom in the Eureka Underground Hallway.  

20.  Confused.

The story is supposed to take place on November 11.

Yet the first two posts were posted on October 14.   I've never seen Tally writers go so far in the future.

I'm wondering if originally the story was supposed to take place in October, and then maybe they changed it?   

21. Started reading.

The story takes place after the Quidditch field incident.  That's when Reade fought back and hurt Jackson.  Now Jackson is seeking revenge by meeting up with Reade after their potions class.

22. Felt sad for Reade. He's going through all that crap with Arti being in the hospital. Then he has to deal with Jackson as well.

One thing I've learned, in the past few years, is that some people don't hold back their meanness when you're having a hard time in life.

People will kick you when you're up, and they'll also happily kick you when you're down.

That's not to say that people should hold back all complaints and be sweeter than Stevia when we're having a bad day, week, month, or year.  But they could try to have a LITTLE extra compassion.

Couldn't Jackson wait until Arti was out of the hospital, and then attack Reade?

Well, no because he's a bully.  And bullies tend to lack compassion and empathy.

23. Confused by the story again.

But now I've figured it out.

There were these people talking to Jackson while he had Reade paralyzed with some spell. I couldn't figure out what was going on.

It turns out Jackson his having some type of hallucination-type thing.  He's seeing/hearing his parents.  They're there to criticize him.

That's the thing about parental criticism.   It sticks around even when your parents are far away.  

24. Found out that Jackson isn't having mental-type hallucinations.  He's encountered a Boggart.   In the Harry Potter universe, these are spirits that take on the form of our biggest fears. The way to fight them is to imagine the fear in a silly way.

Jackson imagines his parents roller skating in spandex.

25. Learned that Jackson himself brought the Boggart into school.  He planned to use it against Reade.  He's still planning to do that, but he himself got a little taste of the nastiness.  

26. Got an explanation for the weird timing of the post.

In small print Jackson's role-player says OOC: Due to my unexpected hiatus, the date of the scene in this thread has been moved forward to present time.

That makes sense.  And I think it was a wise choice.

27. Hoped nothing bad happened to cause the unexpected hiatus.  Jackson's role-player is very nice.

That's not to say I'd be okay with a bad thing happening to a not-so-nice role-player.  

Maybe something great happened to cause the hiatus.  That would be fun.

28. Touched by Reade's ability to have empathy for Jackson.

His post says, From what they were saying Reade started to realise that they were Jackson's parents and that they were very disappointed in their son. Despite the current situation, being body-bound and scared he was about to get beaten up, Reade's heart went out to the other boy. He couldn't imagine what it would be like if his own parents spoke to him like that.

Reade does have very nice parents.  He's lucky. But he could still find excuses to be miserable and cruel.

And there are probably lots of kids who have disapproving parents.  Not all of them turn out to be bullies.

29. Left with a bit of a cliffhanger.  Reade is about to face his biggest fear. He doesn't know what that is, and I don't either.

I guess we'll find out soon.

30. Thought of my two biggest fears.   I've faced both of them in nightmares and bad dreams.   I survived.   As long as it's not real, it's not too bad.  Since the scary things don't happen in lucid dreams, I don't know they're fake.  I think it's real.  But then I wake up and I feel relieved.

31. Saw that my Australian of the year is Caroline Lillian Archer.   

She was a telephonist.

I'm not sure what that means.

Maybe it's an operator?

Archer also worked with causes involving Aboriginal rights.

32. Saw that Archer was born on February 22 in 1922.   That's a lot of 22.   In numerology, 22 is a master number.

Oh...and February is the 2nd month of the year.

Archer had a lot of 2's in her birthday.  It would be 2/22/22.

33. Learned that Archer was born in an Aboriginal Reserve in Cherbourg, Queensland.  Her father was white, and her mother was Aboriginal.

Back when Archer was born, Queensland had a policy of segregating the Aboriginal people from the other people. So that's why she was living on a reserve.

Archer had a rough childhood.  She didn't get enough to eat.  This caused ill health and a permanent limp.

34. Learned that when Archer was fourteen, she went to work for some white people—the Kay family.  It seems they were fairly decent. They paid Archer a white person's wages and they also gave her career encouragement.

Encouragement is a really nice thing. I think it gives us strength, and that strength makes it more likely we'll succeed.  But if we do end up failing, it hurts less when we know people have been genuinely behind us.

35. Continued to read about Archer.  The Australian Dictionary of Biography says she gained switchboard skills.  I'm guessing that refers to being a telephone operator.

Archer was able to obtain full citizen's rights.  This was not something that came automatically to Aboriginal people. But Archer was able to obtain it by meeting some standards.

36. Learned that Archer was involved with an organization called OPAL (One People of Australia League).  The purpose of the organization was to bring Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people together.

37. Found information on the National Museum of Australia's website about One People of Australia League.  

It was a pro-assimilation organization.

I'm guessing that means they wanted Aboriginal people to act more white.

It fits in with what the Australian Dictionary of Australia says about Caroline Archer.

They say.....she was consciously 'middle of the road' in her views; she had little regard for radical solutions to racial issues and referred to herself as an 'Australian first and then an Aborigine.  

38. Thought about the way people define themselves.  In some ways, it can make us feel more secure.  It helps give us an identity.  But then I also think it can put up a wall between us and others.

If I define myself by my gender, then I put up a wall against men.

If I define myself by my nationality, I put up a wall against people that are not American.

If I define myself by my spiritual beliefs, I put up a wall against those who believe differently.

If I define myself by my ethnicity, I put up a wall against those who aren't from the same ethnic group.

39. Decided I'll just define myself as being weird.

I guess I'll have a wall up against those who aren't weird—those who are boring, blah, and don't show ability to think for themselves.

40. Decided most people though are at least a LITTLE weird.

41. Wondered if maybe all people are weird. It's probably just that some folks try harder to hide it.  

42. Liked that non-human animals can also fit into the weird catagory.

Both my cats are very weird.

All my childhood dogs were weird.  

43. Wished I could divide the world into nice and mean people. It would make life a lot more easier for me.

I'm so confused right now about things.

Right now I have a wall up against pretty much everyone.  Or at least I try to keep it up.   At weak moments I let it come down.  Then I usually regret it afterwards.

I feel this collective anger towards almost everyone. The exception is Jack.

Then someone will say or do something sweet.  It will usually give me tears, and then I'll feel guilty for sticking them in the same category of all those who are annoying me right now.  What makes things worse is I'll then start thinking of other nice things they've said and done in the past.  I'll feel awful for forgetting those things.

But then just as I'm starting to think, maybe I DO have people I can stick in the can-be-counted-on category, I remember times that they weren't nice to me.

44. Figured the best way to be able to love people is have extremely low expectations of them.

But then when I do that....

Well, I feel like a total snob.

In most of my relationships, I let the other person do most of the talking.   They talk about their lives—their achievements, problems, and news.   Some of them read my blog and so it evens out somewhat.  I may not give a lot on a one-to-one basis, but they get some stuff by coming here.  

Other people don't read my blog and it's usually a one way street. They open up to me, and I try hard to stay as closed as possible to them.

It makes me feel strong in the same way I felt strong when having an eating disorder.  It's that feeling we get watching other people eat huge sundaes while we have the self-discipline to sit there eating a raw apple.  

There's a sense of superiority.

But there's also a huge sense of loneliness and deprivation.

Sometimes we might give in and eat the big sundae.  It feels so good.  It tastes so good. There's a sense of relief...of belonging.   There's that question.  Can I leave this deprivation behind?   Can I allow myself to be like everyone else?   At the same time, though, there's worry and guilt.  There's a feeling of weakness and failure.

Then later the good feelings go away. We're left with a stomach ache and higher numbers on the bathroom scale.

Note: I'm just being symbolic here.  These days I'm usually perfectly happy to eat a sundae.  We shared three at Disney World.    

45. Thought about my talking-anorexia.  I'm borrowing that phrase from John Marsden's novel I Have So Much To Tell You.  Although her cause was much more severe.  She literally stopped speaking.

I still speak.  I haven't become mute, or anything.

Anyway, it all started in February 2008 and I've had the problems off and on since then.

It started with something so stupid.  If I told a therapist, they'd probably have to leave the room in order to not start laughing at me.

So...here's the story.

I was having MAJOR marriage problems.   I had been feeling the problems for many years, and kept them secret.  Then, finally, I started opening up to people.   Some tried to be supportive, but I could tell they thought I was a cold-hearted bitch who should just shut up and be happy.

In February.....

We had recently been in Australia, and I was very depressed about coming back to America.

My sister was leaving in a few weeks to go to Australia.  I was extremely jealous of her.

For Valentines' Day, Tim took some of our Australia trip photos and turned them into a poster.  I was supposed to love it.   Instead I hated it and felt so angry.    I didn't see it as Tim giving me an Australia-related gift.  I saw it as him showing off his photography and making it look like he was the most romantic husband on the planet.    I knew my family would see it and think, how lucky you are to have Tim.  Why can't you appreciate him? He gives such thoughtful gifts!

But I saw the gift as being thoughtful only on the surface.  The main reason for this, were the pictures Tim chose for the poster.  For example, there were ones from Luna Park, and I didn't like Luna Park.   Jack got hurt there and the clown was creepy to me.  It was one of the few things about Australia that I didn't like.  I felt if Tim really knew me and loved me, he would have known that and kept off the pictures of Luna Park.

I also thought he should have included some of the pictures that I had taken—displayed some of my photography.   It kind of symbolized the way I often felt in the relationship.  I have often felt Tim LOVES to do things for me. But I often feel he doesn't love and appreciate what I do for him, or what I do in general.  

It all sounds very silly. I know.  

And....

Yeah. I'm very picky when it comes to gifts.  But you have to understand that my mind was already very troubled at the time.  My heart was blackened.  At other times, I'd likely appreciate the gift and shrug my shoulders at the choice of photos.  

The other thing was that I had recently opened up to one of my sister's about my marriage problems.  She wasn't very empathetic.  Then a few days later, she called (or emailed) Tim behind my back to get help on something.  She made plans with Tim to come over so she could get help from him. I do believe that in-laws can have friendships regardless of the relationship status of the spouses.   But for her to do that so soon after I had talked about my marriage problems?  It was a slap in the face.

 Something snapped in me and I spent the next few months not opening up to anyone. I built up a huge wall.  Not many people noticed. Or at least they showed no evidence of caring. Some people seemed to love this side of me. They loved that they could talk and talk while I'd just listen.   I wouldn't bore them with the details of my own life.

In late Spring, I got over it and slowly started opening up to people.  Some of the results of this were positive.  Some of them were very negative.

Relapses started to occur when I realized more often the results were negative than positive.

Having this blog has helped probably in some ways.  It's the one person who will sit there and listen to me.   It's not really a person, though.  It's an internet program, but it's made up of people listening.   Maybe.

Sometimes I think people skip over all this personal stuff.

Actually, I often think that.

Or I figure they roll their eyes at me.

I'm rarely able to imagine people reading and feeling sympathetic.

I think they're bored.  I think they're saying, Just shut up and get back to the Australia stuff. 

46. Thought about something someone has said to me recently—about no longer caring what people think of them.  I wish I could get to that point.  And maybe I AM getting there.

I started to think, I'm going to lose readers if I keep blabbing on and on about all this. Then I thought, I don't really care at this point.

I'm sick of doing things to please other people.

I'm sick of worrying that I'm going to alienate people.

I'm sick of forcing myself to make jokes so I don't sound absolutely miserable. And no I'm not absolutely miserable all the time.  Most of the time I'm happy.  Despite my angst, I had a GREAT time at Disney World.   We all did.  But there have been moments in the past few weeks where I've felt awful.  And I'm sick of feeling I have to lighten the mood (during these moments) so I don't scare people away.

I guess maybe now I WANT people to go away—at least the ones that make me feel I have to be happy, funny, and self-sacrificing all the time.  

47. Figured I'll have a ton of regret if I don't delete this stuff from my blog.

But I think I'll have even more regret if I DO delete it.

Oh well......

48. Decided to get back to the Australia stuff.

Right now I'm not feeling a lot of the Australia love.

I think it's because I'm wrapped up in my own problems.

And then there's that uncertainty of whether we're going to Australia or not.   That complicates things.   I look at names of places and think, We're going to go there!  No wait we're not going to go there.  Or maybe we are going to go there.  Are we going to go there? Maybe we're going to go there.  Then again....maybe we're not going to go there.  

Seriously.  I'm a mess.

I should just love Australia—every little bit, and not worry if I'm going to see it in person or not.   If I give love to only the places we plan to visit,  I'll probably be sick of them by the time we get there.

49. Thought about another one of my psychological issues. I've felt stupid, ashamed, and annoying by keep changing our we're-going-to-Australia news.  Why?!

How is it going to hurt or bother anyone by us going to Australia or not going to Australia?   I know there are a few people who will be happy to see us, but they won't be destroyed if we don't come to visit.  And even if they're sweet enough to be disappointed, I don't think they'll blame us for having to change our plans.

Most people understand financial restraints, health restraints, etc.  

At least I hope so.

50. Looked at the Australia Monopoly Board.

Today my space is Sydney Station.

What is Sydney Station?

I don't remember a Sydney Station.

I remember a Central Station.  Is that what they're referring to?  Or is there an actual Sydney Station?

51. Found out from Lord Wiki that the board is referring to Central Station.

Thank you, Lord Wiki.   Now I feel a little less dumb.

52. Learned that the main station in Sydney used to be called Sydney Station.  

Lord Wiki is talking about it's history.  I'm a bit confused. But there's some station that was built over a former cemetery.  They had to move the graves.  Hopefully, they moved the bodies and not just the headstones, like the realtor company did in Poltergeist.  

53. Did some more reading.  The station built on the old grave site was Redfern Station.

If I'm understanding things right, this was the main station prior to Central Station being the main station.

54. Learned that part of Central Station has been transformed into a hostel. The rooms look like old train carriages.

Didn't I read about that recently?

55. Looked at a website about the Railway Square Hostel. 

I don't think I've been to the site before, but the idea sounds so familiar to me.   Maybe I read about it somewhere else?  

56. Read reviews about the hostel.  Apparently the rooms are right near the platforms of the working trains.  You can hear the people waiting for the trains.  

57. Found a new Flickr account to stalk.

I didn't find it in my usual way.

I found it because I looked on Flickr for photos of the Railway Square Hostel.

I found some photos on an account called Fredweng. The account belongs to a guy named Ling Chih Weng.

I looked at his sets.  There's a bunch of Australian ones.   I thought, this might be a fun account to stalk.

I'm excited.

But I'm probably going to wait until tomorrow to start my stalking.  

58. Thought about my issues again.

Sometimes I'll feel guilty for holding things back from people.   I get the delusion that people want me to open up and talk more.  I'll decide to say something. I expect that they'll be excited and eager to hear from me—that they'll listen extra carefully to make sure I'll keep on talking.

Usually, they end up looking really bored. They interrupt. They seem eager to get the conversation back towards themselves.

This happened with a friend.  I had gone back to a stage of holding back from her.  I let her do all the talking.   She went on and on about happenings in her life.  I dutifully listened.  Then I had a moment of weakness and said something about my own life.  No, actually it wasn't even about my life directly.  I shared a fact about boomerangs.

She gave me this look.

I don't know how to interpret it really.  I mean MAYBE she was interested and just didn't know how to show it.  Maybe I misread her facial expression.  But to me she looked annoyed that I dared to bring up something that wasn't about her life.  

59. Wanted to clarify that I didn't randomly bring up boomerangs.  Then my friend's look would have been along the lines of, Oh, that's so random.  Why is she bringing that up now?  

No.   We were in the swimming pool.  And there was a Nerf boomerang.   I told her that not all boomerangs come back to you.  The ones for hunting aren't supposed to do that.   I wanted her to say Oh cool.  Really.  I never knew that.    It would be a bit less fun if she already knew that.  But then she could have said,  Oh yeah.  I heard that before!   Instead she gave this kind of uh huh response.  Or maybe she said nothing.  It was either nothing or close to nothing.

60. Thought about how my eating disorder and talking issues are very similar.  In both, I have delusions that people will want me to get well.   I imagine they want me to talk more, eat a healthy balanced diet, and have a positive body image.

But in the end....in most cases, it's bullshit.

Most people want me to be quiet and they want me to be skinny.

61. Decided "most" is probably too strong a word.

Maybe instead I'll say "too many"

Or I can just say there's enough people with that attitude to make me feel a bit sad.   

62. Decided to take a Funtrivia quiz about Gundagai. 

I'll probably get most of it wrong.

I can't even remember what state Gundagai is in.  I want to say New South Wales. But it could be Queensland or South Australia.

63. Got the first question wrong and learned the name Gundagai is derived from the Aboriginal phrase gundabandoo-bingee.

64. Wished I knew the lyrics of one of the Gundagai songs.  That would probably help me answer the questions.

65. Got the second question wrong and learned the Aboriginal group originally in the Gundagai area are known as Wiradjuri.  They sound familiar to me.

The quiz answer mentions New South Wales.  So maybe I got at least that bit right about Gundagai. 

66. Consulted Lord Wiki about the Wiradjuri people.  He says they're from the central part of New South Wales.

Mum Shirl was one of them.

67. Got the third question right and the fourth question wrong.   Now I know that there was a bad flood in Gundagai in June 1852.

The quiz answer says the town was moved because of the flood.

It was another one of those moved towns—like that one in the Snowy Mountains.  I forgot the name.

I'll read about the moving of Gundagai after I finish the quiz. If I look now, I'm afraid I'll end up accidentally cheating on the quiz.

68. Got questions five, six, and seven right—mostly from guessing.

I got the eighth one wrong thinking, of course, Jack O'Hagan didn't write a song called "When a Boy From Alabama Meets a Girl From Gundagai".

It turns out he did write a song with that name.

69.  Finished the quiz.   I got a 6/10 which is the average score.   It's not too bad for a tough quiz.

I'm not that proud of myself, though.   Most of my correct answers were a matter of good luck.

I did well on guessing today.

70.  Consulted Lord Wiki about Gundagai.  The original town in it's original location was founded in 1838.

In 1852, the flood killed 78-89 out of the 250 inhabitants. Then the town was moved.

71. Tried to remember the name of the town in The Snowy Mountains that was moved.

I know it starts with an A.

I'll look on Google Maps. If I see it, I'll know it.

72.  Found the town on Google Maps.

The name is Adaminaby.  

On the map, you can see the old and new location of the town.  The old one seems to be in the middle of a lake....and it is.   A few years ago, during the drought, some of the town started to resurface.  

73. Wanted to remind people that Tim eventually ended up giving me a fantastic Australia-related gift.   He struggled and succeeded in getting me access to watching Offspring

I really loved that gift.   It was thoughtful, enjoyable, and I was very impressed with what he went through to get me the gift.  

I like when people do things for me.  But what I love is when people show they KNOW me.   I like when people show that they've been listening and paying attention.  I liked that Tim knew how much I wanted to watch Offspring.

74. Wanted to add a piece of information about my dream last night. I meant to talk about it earlier; but I forgot.

There was another dream that might have been connected to the one in which I'm part of a new family.  I had a new man in my life (which might explain the new family).  He was a sports player of some type.  He had a problem with his liver and he wore a retainer.

I don't know.

I think it's kind of funny that I dreamed I was dating a sports guy.  Then the night before, I had a lucid dream involving a sports arena.

Maybe something is telling me I should get more into sports.

75. Decided I'll just ignore that message.

I can't imagine getting into sports.

76. Remembered Gina works in the sports field.   And I also dreamed about her.

Wow.

This is all getting a bit eerie.

Kosciuszko, Moreton Bay, Bernard Fanning, and An Irish Mystery

1. Had deja vu when I saw this article.  

A doctor from Egypt, working in Western Australia, has been denied permanent residency because his daughter is disabled. She has cerebral palsy, and the government thinks she'll be a burden to the health system.

A few years ago the same thing happened with a doctor who's child had Down Syndrome.

I think they eventually let the family stay, but it was a battle.

I would have hoped their battle would have prevented other people from having to endure the same battle.

2. Learned from my Australia travel guide book that Mount Kosciuszko was named after a Polish freedom fighter.

I didn't know that.

Lord Wiki says the name of the mountain was originally Mount Kosciusko.  Then in 1997 they changed the spelling of the name to better match its namesake.

The guy who named the mountain was Pawel Edmund Stzelecki.  He was a Polish explorer who climbed the mountain and named it.

3. Consulted Lord Wiki about Tadeusz Kosciuszko.

He wasn't just a Polish freedom fighter.  He was an American freedom fighter.

He fought on the side of the colonies during the American Revolutionary war.  Then he became an American citizen.

4. Learned from Lord Wiki that Kosciuszko eventually left the United States. He left with Thomas Jefferson as the executor of his American estate.  He requested that his money be given to a fund that would free African slaves and help them become educated and independent.

Unfortunately, that went wrong.  People did wrong. And none of the money went where it should have gone.

5. Felt a little emotional when I saw from Lord Wiki that there are many places around the world named after Kosciuszko.  

There's a Kosciusko, Texas.  It's near San Antonia.  I think it's a pretty small town. I have to zoom in a lot on Google Maps before I can see it.  

Lord Wiki says America also has a few statues of Kosciuszko.  There's one in Washington D.C

6. Saw that the Australian dollar has gone up even more. It's now equal to 1.03 American dollars.

I have to go back to my old post to see what it was last time. I think it was 1.01 or 1.02.

7. Saw that the last time I looked at the currency thing was Sunday. And the Australian dollar was worth 1.02 American dollars.

It's comparison to the British pound has stayed relatively the same.  It's still worth about .65 pounds.

It's worth 6.81 Swedish Kronor.  Last time I checked it was 6.78.  It's gone up a bit there.

The Australian dollar has also gone up in yen.  The last time I checked it was worth 78.12 yen.   Now it's worth 79.1 yen.

8. Went to Tallygarunga.

Today I'm going to read a story thread called Or Perhaps You'd Rather Be Nude.

It takes place in a wizarding robe store in Oliphant Lane, Melbourne's wizarding village.

The two characters in the story are Eudoxia Karras and a new guy named Henry Hunter.

Henry is a professor of practical magic...probably at the university, but I'm not sure yet.

9. Started reading the story.

It's the evening of Sunday, October 16.

It looks like Henry Hunter has recently moved to Victoria.  In his previous hometown, the robe shop folks knew him very well. He could just walk into the store and they would have clothes ready for him.  They knew his size and what he liked. Now Henry is wondering how long it will be before he has that type of relationship with the shop in Oliphant Lane.

Eudoxia is also in the shop.  She's looking for robes for her brother. He has a thing about starting fires, so she's thinking of getting him a fireproof robe.  

That might be wise.

10. Saw Eudoxia and Henry exchanging some small talk in the shop. It started with a question about the weather.

11. Learned that Henry is from England, and he's teaching at the university.

12. Started to read the biography of Henry Hunter.  

His face claim is Gordon Ramsey—the cooking guy.   From what I know of that man, I don't like him.   But then I really don't know much, so I suppose I'm being a bit prejudice.

13. Watched a video of Gordon Ramsey getting angry.



There's a lot of videos on YouTube with him getting angry.

He has quite a reputation.

And maybe there's more to him than that. Maybe he has anger issues, but is really nice when he's not angry. Maybe he gives a lot of money to charity.

I'm trying to think positively here....

14. Learned from Lord Wiki, that Ramsay would lie to vegetarians and feed them soup with chicken stock.

Yeah.  I'm not finding much to love about this guy.  

15. Started to read about Henry Hunter.

He's 42.  He was born in London. His Patronus is a hedgehog.

16. Learned that Henry Hunter is not like his face claim.  He's friendly and has a good sense of humor.  He likes games and jokes.

17. Thought of the dad in Gremlins when I read these lines. 

The man is perpetually tinkering with one thing or another irrespective of the time of day or the season (or what company may or may not be over at the time), and he has invented just as many useless things as he has destroyed.

18. Learned that Henry is a bit sexist....or maybe a lot sexist.

He doesn't think women are suited for proper charm work.

19. Saw that Henry does have something in common with Ramsay.  He has a hot temper. However he doesn't hold grudges.

I wonder if Ramsay holds grudges.  

20. Started to read about Henry Hunter's history.

His father is a wizard, and his mother is a Muggle.

The two met at a benefit event for Muggles. The wizarding Hunter family cared about Muggle-welfare and involved themselves in those types of charities.

21. Learned that at Hogwarts, Henry was sorted into the Ravenclaw house.

22. Learned that Henry lost his Ministry job in the UK because he started a lab fire.

He escaped to Australia feeling they were a backwater continent, and therefore probably wouldn't have heard of his reputation yet.

23. Amused by this bit about Henry.

Easily tricked or distracted out of a temper (or assignment... or anything) with questions about things that interest him.

That's kind of cute.

Henry Hunter is described as being a mad scientist.  Besides the Gremlins dad, it also reminds me of the Back to the Future guy.   

Henry is creative, but dangerous.

It sounds like he's a bit like Eudoxia's brother.  I wonder if she'll come to realize that.  

24. Read something in Summerland that reminded me of Sarah's fight with the bullies, in the Tallygarunga story I read yesterday.  

The narrator of Summerland says,

If a woman has obvious flaws, a man can, mentally, take out his anger upon them.  He can silently curse her breasts slopping across her like a pair of jowls, her rippled cellulite, her thick waist, her lank hair.  And then his recovery starts: he scolds himself for his unfair wrath.  

I think that's fascinating, and I feel there may be some truth to it.

Our anger at people can make us think really nasty things—superficial things, bigoted things, unfair things.  I know I've done this at times.

If we're relatively decent, we feel guilty about these things.  Then maybe some of the anger and disgust we direct at the other person is redirected towards ourselves.  This might somewhat calm our anger towards the other person.  

The key word, though, in Summerland is silent.  When Sarah insulted the bully for his weight, she was far from silent.  Because of this, I'm tempted to believe she sees no fault in her way of thinking, and no guilt for her words.

I could give her  the benefit of the doubt if something slipped out once.  Sometimes our secret shameful thoughts are blurted out in a moment of negative passion. But if they're said repeatedly, I would think there's no shame.

25. Saw that my Australian of the day is George Appel.

He was born in Germany in 1823.

When Appel was fifteen, he went to London and started working in a bank.

In his late twenties, Appel decided to seek gold in Australia.

He arrived in Melbourne and then headed off to Bendigo. He didn't have much luck there.

He moved on to the Moreton Bay area, which is a little bit north of Brisbane.

He took part in the German community and was a founding member of the first Lutheran church of South Brisbane.

If I'm reading this right, Hamburg Germany appointed Appel to be a sort of consul to Brisbane. I guess he was kind of a liaison between Germany and Queensland. 

26. Went to Silkw0rm1982's YouTube channel.  

Here's his cover of Crowded House's "Fall At Your Feet".



I think he has a nice voice.

27. Listened to Silkw0rm1982's cover of Bernard Fanning's "Wash Me Clean".



It's quite lovely.

I'm not sure I've ever heard the original.

28. Started looking at John Lampard's Flickr set of a garden in Mt Eliza Victoria.

29. Saw that Mt Eliza is a tiny bit south of Frankston.

One of my favorite Australians lives in Frankston.

30.  Liked the trees in this picture

31. Looked at the Australian Monopoly board

The next space for me is Wickham Terrace.  Lord Wiki has nothing to say about it.  But I'm assuming since it's part of the red property group, it's in Brisbane.

I'm not saying the color red symbolizes Brisbane. But the other two red properties were in Brisbane, so I'm assuming that's the case for Wickham Terrace.

32. Found Wickham Terrace on Google Maps.  It's near Brisbane Private Hospital

33. Saw on Google Maps, that there's a Wickham Park.

34. Learned that the name Wickham comes from a guy named John Clements Wickham.

He was a captain on the HMS Beagle.  This is the ship that was made famous by Charles Darwin's adventures.

He later became a police chief of the Moreton Bay area. 

This is the second time I've run into Moreton Bay today.

I'm having Moreton Bay synchronocity.  

35. Saw that there's one of those non-sleepover hotels on Wickham Terrace.

It's called The Mill Hotel

I'm looking at their menu right now.

They don't have a vegetarian option on their kid's menu.  I don't like that.  There's not many vegetarian options on the menu...period.

That doesn't necessarily mean there's no food for vegetarians.   They might be willing to make something vegetarian or put together a side plate of vegetables.

I've been to some places in which every dish has meat, and if you ask for something without meat, they look at you like you've lost your mind.    Actually....I've been to only one place like that recently— a Vietnamese restaurant in Fort Worth.  Most places these days are vegetarian friendly. The thing is, it's not just vegetarians who want to order meatless dishes.   Before I was vegetarian, I often wanted meatless meals.

36. Wondered. If I expect meat restaurants to serve vegetarian food, should I then expect vegetarian restaurants to serve a few meat dishes?

I decided my answer is....

No.

There's a difference.

Meat eaters usually still eat vegetables, grains, and other stuff.  Unless they're on some kind of extreme protein-only diet, they should be able to find a vegetarian dish they can eat.

I do think the best restaurants are those that serve meat from ethical sources, and then also have a lot of vegetarian and vegan options.  Elevation Burger is like that.  The dead cows they use in their burgers are grass fed, organic, and free range....all that fun stuff.   Then they also have a vegetarian burger AND a vegan burger.  Oh, and what I love is they have a burger called Half The Guilt Burger.  You get one beef patty and one vegetarian patty.

37. Looked at my Australian travel guide.  I read about an explorer exploring a place.

Guess what place it was....

Moreton Bay!

That bay is haunting me today.

I'm going to be honest here.

The Australian travel guide is my designated bathroom book.   I like to read when I'm on the toilet.  I don't often mention that, because it seems to be such a guy thing.   But...well....there you go.

Maybe most women do it too.  Maybe I'm not alone.   It's just I more often hear men admitting to it.

Anyway, so I went to pee and ran into Moreton Bay again.

38. Consulted Lord Wiki about Moreton Bay.

Lord Wiki says it's the only place in Australia where the dugong gather in herds.  I guess it's their hang out place.

39. Learned the Aboriginal name for Moreton Bay is Quandamooka.

40. Learned that Moreton Bay is named after a Scottish astronomer named James Douglas. He was the Earl of Morton.

The change from Morton to Moreton was due to a spelling mistake.  Oops. 

James Douglas was the 14th Earl of Morton.  Now Scotland is on their 21st Earl of Morton. This guy's name is John Douglas.

I'm guessing all the Earls of Morton are related.

Why do they use the name Morton?

Why not say they're the Earl of Douglas?

41. Learned that Captain James Cook only passed by the bay, and that's when he named it.   That was in 1770.

Twenty-nine years later, in 1799 Matthew Flinders was the first to go IN the bay.

Twenty-five years after that, a guy named John Oxley brought in the first settlement.

It's amazing to me that so much time passes between these events.   My brain knows that.   But a part of me imagines it all happening at once.  Well, I don't picture it happening simultaneously.  I imagine it happening within a few months or years.  Sometimes, though, it's decades.  

So in the 1820's, there were convicts and soldiers in the area.

In the 1840's, ships with immigrants started to arrive.

41. Saw that one of the immigrant ships has the same name as a Tallygarunga wizard. Artemesia.  

Artemisia was the first ship to bring immigrants into Moreton Bay.  She arrived in December 1848.  

42. Learned from Lord Wiki that the relationship between the Quandamooka people and the Europeans was not a sweet one.   The white people showed a lack of respect for Aboriginal marriage rules and they desecrated sacred sites.  The other problem is the white people took over the land and there were not enough places for the Aboriginal people to hunt and father food. They started going after the stock animals, which I think is fair and understandable. 

The cattle grazers didn't think so. They thought this gave them valid reason to massacre the Quandamooka people.

43. Learned that, in March 2009, there was an oil spill in Moreton Bay. It was an environmental disaster.

That's bad, but the badness doesn't end there.   

In the 2011 Queensland flood, contaminated water got into the area.  Fishing folks were told not to catch anything.  The water was investigated, and the investigators learned there was sewage, pesticides, and metal in the water.  

44. Learned that there are 360 islands in Moreton Bay.

One of the islands is Bribie Island. I think I've heard of that.

Peel Island was used as a leper colony from 1907-1959.

45. Learned from Lord Wiki that there's a song called "Moreton Bay".

Now that he's said that, I'm thinking I've heard it before.  

46. Watched video with Moreton Bay song and scenes from the Ned Kelly movie. 



It's a pretty song.

Lord Wiki says it's about convicts being treated with brutality by a guy named Patrick Logan.

Logan was in command of the penal colony there from 1827-1830.

The convicts thought he was hateful, but some people see him as the father of Queensland.

It's interesting how there can be so many varying views about a person.

47. Learned Bernard Fanning is the one singing "Moreton Bay" in the video above.

It reminds me of this song that played at the end of this TV movie about Protestant and Catholic Irish children.  I forgot the name of the movie.  There was a program in America where they'd take in two kids—one from each side of the conflict.   It was a peace initiative.  

I like stuff like that...things that promote peace.  

48. Struggled to find the name of the movie.  This is frustrating.  It's so rare that I can't find the answers with googling.

I DID find that the program is called The Irish Children's Fund.  

You'd think knowing that would help me find the movie, but I'm still not having luck.

Anyway, it was a good song...in the movie.   I used to love it. They played it during a tearjerker moment.

I'm guessing it's a style of music.  Irish folk music, perhaps?

Lord Wiki says "Moreton Bay" is an Australian folk song, which makes sense since it is about Australia.  I'd also say it was Irish, though, since the creator of the song was an Irish convict.

49. Listened to John Denver sing "Moreton Bay" on Spotify. I downloaded Spotify months ago, but didn't have a need to use it until today.

I tried to find Denver's performance on YouTube so I could embed it, but no such luck......

50. Listened to Barry Crocker sing "Moreton Bay".

I'm falling in love with this song.

I can totally imagine it making me cry if I heard it in a movie.  

51. Remembered the name of the TV movie!

I'm so happy.

It's called Children in the Crossfire.  

I found it by looking at the RareTvMovie YouTube channel.   They have a huge collection of American TV movies.  I actually didn't see that movie.  I saw a movie called Cross of Fire.  But that triggered my memory of the other movie's name.  

I think if I kept digging on this channel, I'd find Children in the Crossfire as well.   They seem to have everything.  

52. Searched through the channel.  It seems they DON'T have Children in the Crossfire. Oh well.   I'm still grateful to them for helping my memory out.  

Now that I've found what I was looking for, I have to admit I kind of enjoyed the challenge of searching.

53. Thought I wouldn't be able to find the song in the movie, but I did!

I thought the song was played only in the end, but it's also played in the beginning....at least a little bit of it.

Google Video has it.  

54. Found the name of the song!

It's called "The Town I Loved So Well" and it's by the Dubliners.  

I think these are the lyrics that are played at the end of the movie.

But when I returned how my eyes have burned
To see how a town could be brought to it's knees
By the armored cars and the bombed-out bars
And the gas that hangs on to every breeze.
Now the army's installed by that old gasyard wall
And the damned barbed wire gets higher and higher
With their tanks and their guns, oh my god what have they done
To the town I loved so well.


Now the music's gone but they carry on
For their spirit's been bruised never broken
They will not forget but their hearts are set
On tomorrow and peace once again.
For what's done is done and what's won is won
And what's lost is lost and gone forever
I can only pray for a bright brand-new day
In the town I loved so well.

Here's a video of the song.

Yara-ma-yha-who, Birketts, Christmas, and John Lampard

1. Started reading a new book. It's called The Sweet Terrible Glorious Year I Truly Completely Lost It.  It's written by Lisa Shanahan.

I've read only the first page, so I can't tell if it's good or not. 

2. Saw the Jirrahlinga Koala and Wildlife Sanctuary in my Victoria guidebook.

I googled to see if they were still in business.  They are. But sadly they had a horrible fire. 

Six of their koalas died.

3. Read an article about the fire. It's not known how it happened. 

It's really sad.

4. Considered Anglesea for the coastal place we'll visit in Victoria.

It's on the Great Ocean Road which is nice.  It's a bit too far from the Twelve Apostles.  But now I'm asking myself, do I really need to see it?   I've seen it a thousand times in photos.  Is it important to see it in person; or will I be just as happy seeing other cliff walk scenes?

5. Liked that the Port Campbell Holiday Park has free wireless internet in their cabins. That's great.   It's too bad Disney World can't say the same. 

We do get free internet because we're in the Disney Vacation Club.  It's one of the perks.  But it's not wireless. You have to use a cable connection; so only one of us can go on the internet at a time. It's pretty ridiculous. You'd think a company like Disney would be more high tech.  

6. Thought Summer's Rest Units Port Campbell sounded nice. And I like the prices. But the name? It reminds me of a funeral home.  

7. Read about Anglesea and Airey's Inlet on this Victoria website.

It sounds really nice.  

8. Consulted Lord Wiki about The Great Ocean Road.

He says it's not just the Twelve Apostles that's in Port Campbell National Park.  The London Arch and the Grotto are there as well. I think I've seen those in photos. I probably WOULD like to see them in real life.

Maybe we'll go to Port Campbell after all.  

9. Played around with Victoria on Google Maps.

I'm very excited about our plans.

We're actually not going very far, which is good. I prefer short car rides.

We have two days with three hours drives.  Then the other days are all around an hour or so.

10. Realized I will probably have to change all our plans, because I think something's going on the weekend we planned to go.  On one of the holiday park sites, it showed that weekend as being high season.  That was for 2011, but it was around the weekend we were going. I had a feeling the high season would be repeated in 2012, but I was hoping I was wrong.

Now I'm looking at another holiday park and they're already sold out for that weekend.

11. Saw that there's a Port Fairy Folk Festival that weekend.

The sad thing is I already knew that.  I already went through all this. I changed my all our plans.  Then I forgot about it and changed the plans back.

I'm so lost sometimes.

12. Fixed the calendar. All is well, except now we have three days of three hour driving.

But that's not a huge deal.

13. Went to Tallygarunga.

Today I'm reading another classroom story.

It's Advanced Broom Flying

The professor of that class is the one James Young is crushing on—Sergei Zhalobov Bogaevsky.

14. Started to read.

It's the afternoon of Wednesday October 12.

Sergei is sweating. He's from Russia, and is not used to Australia's heat.

Oh!   He has a relationship with James now. It's gone beyond that nervous phone call.

It says here,  He was comfortable (apart from the heat) and feeling much better than he had been for a long time. Most of that was James. Even though Sergei was still anxious about their relationship, he couldn't deny the Australian man made him happy.

I'm so happy for them.

I love good news...even when it's fictional.

15. Decided for brevity's sake, when talking about Lisa Shanahan's book, I will refer to it by it's Australian title, My Big Birkett.  

Anyway, I'm now on chapter seven of My Big Birkett. The book's okay, but it reminds me of the fiction I wrote when I was about thirteen or fourteen.  It's very over the top.

Then again, some of the Dursley stuff in Harry Potter is over the top.

I guess it's just exaggerated characterizations.  There's a lot of prejudice, uptight, and controlling men out there, but I don't think they're often as obvious as Vernon Dursley.

Most characters in the real world are more subtle.

16. Saw that my Australian of the day is John Henry Antill.

I see no indication that he's related to the Antill I wrote about yesterday.  But I peaked ahead. The Antill I'm writing about tomorrow is the grandson of yesterday's Antill.

17. Saw that John Henry Antill was born in Sydney in 1904.

18. Learned that Antill's thing was music.

He became an apprentice in the railroad industry.

While he was doing that, he wrote operas in his spare time.

That's very cool.

His father had reservations about music as a career.  That's why Antill had pursued the railway thing.  But then he decided to be brave and go for the music thing.

That's even more cool.

What is it about parents not wanting their children to pursue their artistic dreams?

I think I'd be more understanding towards parents who didn't like the arts.  They don't like reading.   They don't watch television. They don't go to art museums.  They don't listen to music much. It makes sense that they'd have no respect for that career choice.

But what about the parents who love all that?   Why would they believe in other artists, but not their own child?   I guess they could feel their child is not talented enough.  That would be one reason, I suppose.  But if they can see talent in their child, why not encourage them?   Yes, it's a risk.  But if they're unwilling to watch their child take the risk, they shouldn't be enjoying the artistry of other talented people who have taken that risk.

It's like people who support the war in theory.  But they then declare they'd never allow their own offspring to fight.  I've actually encountered this before.

19. Learned that Antill ended up going to music school. He attended the New South Wales State Conservatorium of Music which Lord Wiki says is now called the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. It's located near the Royal Botanical Gardens.

We've probably walked past it.

20. Saw Lord Wiki's pictures of the building. It reminds me of the building I saw when I was depressed and walking through The Royal Botanical Gardens.  Maybe it's sort of in the gardens? Or maybe I kind of walked out of the gardens?

Or maybe there's another building that looks like that.

It kind of looks like a castle.

21. Learned that Antill worked for the ABC for awhile.

At one point he was the conductor for the Wireless Chorus. I'm guessing from the name that it was a chorus heard on the radio.

22. Found a picture on Flickr of the Wireless Chorus.

It's from October 1939, and if I'm understanding the Australian Dictionary of Australia right, Antill stopped being the conductor in July 1939.  So he's probably not in the photo.

23. Learned that Antill is best known for his ballet about Aboriginal people— Corroboree

Here's some music from that.



It kind of reminds me of the music John Williams would do for a scary scene—like Jaws type stuff. 

24. Looked at the route from Melbourne to Halls Gap.  There're a lot of places we can stop.

It's only a three hour drive.

But we'll probably want to eat, and we'll have to pee.

We can stop at Bacchus Marsh, Ballarat, Beaufort, Ballan, Ararat, or maybe somewhere else.

25. Looked at places to stop between Halls Gap and Port Campbell.

There's Lake Bolac.

I consulted Lord Wiki about that place.  He says they had a tornado in 2006. There was about 2 million dollars worth of damage.

26. Saw that we can also stop at Terang and/or Mortlake.

I'm not sure if there's much there.

Hopefully we can at least find a toilet and a small lunch.

27. Found the website of the Terang Court Cafe.

It looks pretty nice.

Maybe we'll eat there.

28. Saw that Lake Bolac doesn't seem to have much in terms of places to stop.

All I can find so far is one hotel.

29. Found a website about Lake Bolac.  They mention only one hotel too.  It seems to be the only place to eat in town.

 30. Talked to Tim about vampires, and how blood-sucking creatures are seen in so many different culture's mythologies.

I knew there's an Aboriginal-blood drinker, but I forgot the name.

I found out from this article that the Aboriginal vampire is Yara-ma-yha-who.  

Lord wiki says the Yara-ma-yha-who doesn't have fangs.  In fact, he doesn't even have teeth.   He has suckers on his hands and feet.  He uses this to extract blood from the victim. When the victim is weak enough, the Yara-ma-yha-swallows him. Then he takes a nap, and when he wakes up he regurgitates the person.

The person survives. That's good. But they're a bit shorter than before, and their skin is more red.

31. Found more information on this website.  

They say the Yara-ma-yha-who doesn't let the person go willingly.  The person has to sneak away.   If he's caught, the Yara-ma-yha repeats the process.  He swallows him again and regurgitates him again.  The victim becomes even smaller and redder. If the process is repeated enough times, the victim becomes a Yara-ma-yha-who.

It's very interesting to me that so many cultures share this idea of contagious blood-sucking behaviors.

32. Found website with pictures of the Yara-ma-yha-who.  It has artwork done by various people.

This one is pretty creepy. 

This one is adorable.   It looks like a Muppet. 

I like this guy. He's cute too.  

The person who makes the website says he doesn't consider the Yara-ma-yha-who a vampire.  He says:

The Yara-ma-yha-who may share the diet and transformative powers of many "vampiric"
monsters, but has never been described as a form of the living dead, and it feels a little cheap to
label every mythical bloodsucker a "vampire." The sucker-fingered pygmy isn't even explicitly
supernatural, but viewed more as a very weird, very special beast of the forest.

Is it cheap?


I don't really think so.

I think the main attribute of vampires is the blood-drinking, not the living dead part.

The Yara-ma-yha-who isn't a vampire in the traditional sense. But I think he's a good illustration of the fact that blood-drinking monsters play a part in many mythologies across the globe.   

33.Watched video about Yara-ma-yha-who.  It's part of a vampire documentary.




34. Watched a short animated film about the Yara-ma-yha-who.  Someone made it for their school project.



35. Went back to Half Price Books.  It used to be my favorite store in Fort Worth. Now it's Jack's favorite...or one of his favorites.  Last time we were there he discovered they have video games.

I warned him that there probably wouldn't be much new stuff, because we were just there a few days ago.  I didn't even know if I wanted to go with them. I figured they wouldn't have any new Australian stuff.

But they did! 

I got a fantastic 1983 Australia coffee book called Treasures of Australia. It was only 5 dollars.

36. Saw the book on eBay for $35, so I think I got quite a bargain.  

When we were there I saw that Eastern European books come right before Australia books.   Last time, we were there, I remembered seeing a Bulgarian travel guide, and thought maybe it had been out of place.  I thought it was a weird coincidence because I dreamed about Bulgaria and Australia.

But it turns out the book was in it's rightful place.

Although, MAYBE my dream was predicting we'd go to the bookstore and see that the Australian books would be near the Eastern European books.

What else....

Half Price books has old National Geographics.   I saw, from the spine of one issue, that they had an article about traveling through the outback on camel. I found the article and saw it was written by Robyn Davidson.   I didn't buy the magazine.   National Geographic often bores me, and I figure.... I already read her book.  

37. Liked these lines from My Big Birkett.

Mum was clearly not a true birkett chucker.

A true birkett chucker never thinks twice about whether their birkett is justified or not.  They don't worry about whether their behavior is appalling or uncalled for because their too busy focusing on the behavior of the people they think provoked them in the first place.

A birkett is an emotional fit. The person becomes extremely intense, and they also become irrational. It's not an Australian term.  It's a private joke kind of thing between the family members in the novel.

Anyway....


Jack once said something very profound. I wrote a blog post about it for our unschooling blog.  

He said something along the lines of, When you're in a fight, you always think you're right. But later as you review the fight, you might feel guilty.

I think that's so true.


I've had birketts in my life.  I've seen other people have them.

I don't think we ever realize we're in the wrong....at the time.  If we did, we wouldn't be having the fit in the first place.  Sometimes I have this little voice saying.   Stop.  Stop.  You're being completely foolish.   Shut up!  It would be nice if I listened to that voice, but I think I usually ignore it. I think in some ways, that little voice makes me MORE angry.  I think I end up arguing with myself....trying to justify my reaction. I push myself to be more angry at the other people, so my reaction can feel valid.  

38. Felt grateful that I don't have birketts that often these days.

I think I used to have a lot of them.

Well...I think now I more often internalize my anger.

Or I write about it.

Lately when someone does something to offend me, I write it down in my private journal.  I think this helps because it prevents me from causing a scene.  But at the same time, I'm not allowing it to just fester.

Writing's good therapy.

39. Went to Mattybee73's YouTube Channel

He has videos of his father (Wayne) singing. That's really sweet. 

Here's Wayne singing a song he wrote called "Christmas Time Down Under". 





I love the picture at 1:56.   That's too cute.

40. Started to watch "Christmas Time Down Under" sung by a very young Olivia Newton John.   I looked for it because I thought I remembered a song with a similar title's to Wayne's.  I thought maybe it was the same song, and he was joking (or lying) about writing it.

But no.  It's a different song.



41. Found another "Christmas Down Under" song!



How many are out there?

42.  Read the introduction to my new Australia book.  I wasn't sure if I wanted to actually read the book; or just look at the photos.

I think I'm going to try to read it...but slowly.  Maybe I'll read a little each day.

The writing's nice. I wasn't bored by the introduction.

43. Went to my next Flickr stalking target.  The account belongs to a guy named John Lampard.   He's from Sydney, and he's a content producer.

I don't know what that is.

44. Went to John Lampard's blog

He writes about a variety of things.

His latest post is a review of a new movie called The Cup.   It's about the Melbourne Cup. John gives it 3 stars.  

45. Liked what Lampard wrote about in this post.  He talks about a study which indicated people who like sweet foods tend to be agreeable and pleasant.

I love sweets.

I'm probably not that agreeable and pleasant though.

I think have a good heart, but sometimes I can be a bit bitchy.

Maybe the bitchiness is about me also liking spicy foods.

46. Went to read more about the studies via John Lampard's link.  

It's interesting, but I don't know how much merit they have.

In one of the studies, people rated themselves on how nice they are. Then those people ended up liking sweet foods.

Could it be though that these people weren't nicer. Maybe it's just that they SEE themselves as being nicer. 

I definitely think there's some merit to self-evaluations, but they do have to be taken with a grain of salt.

47. Looked at another one of John Lampard's movie reviews.   It's for an Australian movie starring William Dafoe.  It's called The Hunter, and it's about the search for the thylacine in Tasmania.  Some people think those animals are extinct, and others think there are some still out there.

Lampard has a link to the trailer.  I'm going to watch it.

Well...no actually he has a link to the movie on IMDb.  

Here's the trailer.



It looks pretty good.

48. Thought of three fairly recent Aussie movies about animals that starred American actors.

A) Rogue

B) Red Dog

C) The Hunter.

I wonder if there are any more.

49. Decided I should probably start stalking John Lampard's Flickr account.

I'm going to start with his Taste of Sydney 2010 set. 

Oh!  You know what. I totally forgot.  We went to the Taste of Sydney 2009!   It was in Hyde Park, and we had a great time with our friends there.

Here's a post about it if anyone's interested.  

50. Started reading the post so I can get all nostalgic.

What's weird is this is the post where I see the building that might have been the music school.

I'm not sure if I actually mentioned it in the post.   I'll see.....

51. Saw that I didn't mention it.   I said, I walked through the Royal Botanical Gardens. I had left early and could take my time. There was hardly anyone else there. Oh! It was so peaceful. At one point, I sat alone among rose bushes and read my book.

I think the gardens were near the castle building.

I might be wrong, though. 

52. Went back to looking at John Lampard's photos. 

I like the colors in this photo.  

53. Decided I will have to go off my no-egg diet to try this type of macaroon.   I've had the Passover type many times, but I don't think I've had this time.

I've cheated on my egg thing a few times lately.

But for the most part, I've done pretty okay.  On most days, I refrain from contributing to chicken abuse.

Have I mentioned I made cake with diet soda?   It turned out really good. You just take a cake box mix and instead of using oil and eggs, you pour in a can of soda.

I remember my friend saying though that Australians don't use mixes as much as Americans.   I'm not sure if that applies to cakes?

Tim is REALLY into cooking and does a lot of things by scratch.  He makes his own bread.  He makes his own cookies. He makes his own pizza crust.   But when it comes to cake, he usually uses a mix.

54. Felt hungry when I saw this Paella.   It's not vegetarian,  but I'm just imagining it that way.   

Tim made paella once. It turned out pretty good.

55.  Finished looking at those photos.   I enjoyed the set.   I look forward to seeing more tomorrow.  

56. Looked at the Australian Monopoly board. 

My street for today is North Terrace in Adelaide. 

Lord Wiki says the street has a ton of important buildings.

These include the Adelaide Convention Centre, the railway station I talked about yesterday, the Adelaide Casino, both an old and new Parliament House, Government House, South Australian Museum, University of Adelaide, Adelaide Botanical Gardens, etc.

It seems like the whole city is on one street.

57. Found North Terrace on Google Maps.  

The road starts at a park called Kingston Gardens.  Then it goes on to the east.

I think it ends around the Botanical Gardens, but I'm not positive. I'm having trouble understanding the map. 

58. Saw that there's accommodations on North Terrace called La Loft Apartments.  If you go to the website, a woman starts talking to you.  

59. Saw that the prices at La Loft Apartments are very reasonable.   If you stay for 7 mights, a one bedroom apartment is $120 a night.   I think that's really good.  

60. Saw that there's a place on North Terrace called Chris Jarmer@air.   It's a restaurant and bar.  They also have cooking seminars and catering. 

61. Went to the website of The Cavern.   It's another restaurant on North Terrace.  

It has live music.  

They have a Motown-themed Christmas show on December 16 and 17th.  

The 17th show is already sold out.

On December 3, they're going to have a Christmas celebration with a London theme.   

I think I might like that. 

62. Looked at The Cavern's page about having a gig at the restaurant.  

They allow bands to play there for free.  The catch is the group has plan a program with at least two other bands in the lineup.  They say the reason for this is that it shows the musicians are good at networking and working with others. 

That makes sense.

They say people from outside the state can set up a program; but at least two bands in the show must be local.   How local?  Do they need to be from Adelaide, or can they be from somewhere else in South Australia?

Another rule is that the music groups must have a website, MySpace, or Facebook listing.

I don't know the reasoning behind that, but I like it.

I tend to ignore businesses and other entities that don't have a presence on the web. Part of it might be prejudice towards those who aren't technically inclined.   It's not just about lacking knowledge.   But I picture them being the type who clings stubbornly to the good old days. I picture them being the type that's grouchy about the internet.  

I shouldn't talk, though.  I still avoid the whole texting thing.

The other thing is I don't like talking on the phone.  If a business doesn't have a website, if I want more information I have to call them.   I don't want to do that. 

It's so easy to have a website these days. And if you have internet access it's free.  You can set something up on Blogger.

I'm sure there's other free sites as well. 

63. Annoyed with myself.   I'm going on a small diet and bought protein bars.  Today I noticed they have eggs!!!   I forgot to check.

I'm going to go ahead and eat them, but I'll make sure not to buy them again.

Sorry, chickens.  

Mental Illness, Wrists, Andrews, and Victor Zammit

1. Dreamed about Alex, one of our favorite Australian friends.

I make him a plate of ribs.  I guess I'm serving him? Then I forget I'm a vegetarian and I take a bite out of his food.  I remember, as I'm chewing; and feel regretful.  The ribs taste great, though.  

The funny thing is I felt embarrassed about betraying my vegetarianism, but I didn't seem to be embarrassed about eating off of Alex's plate.

2. Dreamed about my blog.  I think it was inspired by The Hunger Games.  We're reading that now.

I have people working for me, like publicists. They're excited about these three things regarding my blog.  (Maybe something like my blog being mentioned in  three other places).  I personally don't think it's as big a deal as they do. The publicists have this idea that we should hold a baby over a balcony.  I think it's a horrible idea. 

One of my fears is a child being held over a high place.   I have these nightmare daydreams where someone we know grabs Jack and holds him over a balcony, or something like that.  They do it as a  scary joke type thing.

I think it has actually happened, but I can't remember the exact details.  I think I've blocked it out of my mind, or I've distorted it.  It was in Australia, at the Sydney Harbour.  Our friend picked Jack up.   I remember that.   I remember telling him not to do it.   I remember him arguing that he would never drop him, blah, blah, blah.  It was kind of like where the blame is passed to you. It's hard to explain.  But there's that idea of, what?  You don't trust me?  You don't think I'm strong enough?  Why would you think I'd ever drop him?

I don't know if he actually held him over the railing or if he simply came close to the railing (because maybe I stopped him before he went further)   I'm guessing it's the latter.  I think if he actually did it, I would have freaked out more.

I had vague memories of it; didn't really think of it often.  Then I overheard Jack recently talking to other kids; and he told them that, when he was in Australia, our friend held him over a balcony. He wasn't telling it like a horror story—more like a this-was-so-funny story.

3. Bewildered over Amanda's post about a safari park in Denmark.  You know those places where you drive through and see animals?  Well, this one has a tiger in it!  I've never heard of anything like that.  I've been to safari parks; but the ones I've been to have relatively safe animals like giraffes and buffalo. If they have things like lions, they're in cages. They can't approach your car.

I think it would be a little bit cool to have a tiger approach your car.  But I think I'd also be a bit terrified.  That's one of my recurring dreams. I'm out somewhere and there're lions and/or tigers roaming about freely.  I'm scared, but no one else seems to mind.

4. Looked at the safety page of the animal park in Denmark. They seem to be pretty strict about the tiger area.  You have to stay in your car. I guess they trust that the tigers can't attack people when they're in their vehicle.

I was going to say, well, what if people are crazy and get out of their car?  But then I guess you could say the same about people at regular zoos.  Crazy people can jump into some of the animal cages.

5. Learned a little bit about Amanda. She's one of those blogs I added to my follow list, but then never read. I do that a lot.

Then the tiger thing caught my attention.

Anyway, this page gives her story.  She's a Perth girl who loves to travel. She's visited 40 countries, and she's lived in Germany, Japan, and Slovakia.  That's awesome. I'm trying not to be too envious.

The title of Amanda's blog is Not a Ballerina: A Travel Blogger's Life.  She has a cute explanation of why her blog is named that.

6. Saw another article about the threat to Julia Gillard's leadership.  Gillard is saying she won't go without a fight.   She thinks she's the best person for the job. Does she really?  And is she? Or is she just wanting to avoid the shame of losing?

The article quotes her as saying,  I'm not going anywhere. I'm doing this job because I am the best person to do it.   That seems a little arrogant to me. Is she trying to say that no one in the Labor Party is as competent as her?

7. Read article about a small freshwater crocodile being found in a Darwin pool.  The lifeguard thought it was a joke at first, but then realized there really was a crocodile.  He scooped it up with a leaf net thing.

The article says the crocodile was 40 centimeters, which is about 15 inches.  That's pretty small.  But then the article has a picture of a crocodile at a pool. It looks much bigger.

It's confusing.

8. Read article about patients dying in Victorian mental hospitals.  The article says that thirty-six people died unexpected, unnatural, or violent deaths between 2008-2010.  That's pretty scary.

The article says 975 mentally ill patients have died since 2006-2010. But not all of them were under the direct care of a mental health facility at the time of death.

Psychiatry can save some, but it can't save them all.

It's interesting.  I remember reading anti-Scientology stuff.  There were patients who turned to Scientology faith-healing and failed to get psychiatric help. They died.  So anti-Scientologists present that as evidence that the religion/cult is horrible.

I don't think it's fair, because psychiatry is not a perfect system. It has many flaws. It can't fix everything. And from this article, I'm getting the idea it can actually KILL someone.

I was going to say it's not fair that Scientology is villainized and psychiatry is not.   But that's not really true.  Psychiatry is seen in a bad light by...Scientologists, and others (like me).

I guess it's fair.

9. Consulted Lord Wiki about Scientology deaths in Australia.

One was a woman named Linda Waliki. The hospital prescribed her anti-psychiatric drugs. Her parents didn't give them to her because they were Scientologists and against psychiatric drugs.   Instead they gave her vitamins.

Then Linda started acting worse. Her parents backed down from their Scientology beliefs and gave her the drugs.  Three weeks later she killed her dad and sister.  Dr Rosanna Capolingua, the President of the Australian Medical Association said, if Linda had had access to appropriate medical treatment it could have changed the course of her life.

The key word there is COULD.   It could have changed her life. Or it could have made things worse.  If she had kept on with the vitamins, maybe that would have changed her life for the better.

Who knows.

Maybe there was nothing in the world that could have helped Linda. Maybe she was a lost cause.

The article about Victorians dying in mental health facilities tells of a guy named Mr. Travaglini.    He died in 2008 at Easternhealth Upton House, a psychiatric hospital.  His death was caused by anti-psychotic drugs.  According to witnesses (staff and patients), the day/night he died, he begged them not to give him more drugs.   That's really sad.

So if we can say, if it wasn't for Scientology, Linda's dad and sister would still be alive; we should also be able to say if it wasn't for psychiatry, Mr. Travaglini would still be alive.

Yet I'm sure Scientology has worked for some; and I'm sure psychiatry has worked for some.   Different paths work for different people.  Sometimes people go down the path that is wrong for them. Sometimes the result of that is very tragic. 

For some schizophrenic people, vitamins are the answer.  For other people the answer is psychiatric medicine.

10. Read about the other Scientology incident in Australia. A man named Frank Vitcovik went on a killing spree. He killed eight people plus himself.  Some of the blame went to Scientology because he took a Scientology personality test.  The person who administered the test failed to suggest that Frank seek psychiatric help and instead encouraged him to take a Scientology course.

But what if Frank DID go to get psychiatric help. Would that guarantee he'd recover and live a decent life?  Would that have saved the lives of the eight other people?  Maybe, but not necessarily.

As the news article said, 975 Victorian mental patients died between 2006-2010.

Psychiatry isn't a guaranteed solution.

11. Went to Tallygarunga.  Today I'm going to read the continuation of Oh!  It's You.  This is the story with Eudoxia Karras getting a visit from an old friend.  That girl is full of reunions lately.   Okay. Well, maybe there's been just two. But still.....

12. Forgot where I left off in the story thread.

It might be post #29.

I'll start there and see.

Eudoxia was apparently holding Thomas' wrist for someone reason.  Thomas moved a bit so they'd be holding hands. Eudoxia dropped his hand, and Thomas felt rejected.

I'm having trouble finding the part where Eudoxia initially holds his wrist.  Why does she hold his wrist in the first place?   I'm reading through posts, and so far I can't find the answers. I'll keep looking.  I must have missed something.

13. Read more closely.

If I'm understanding things correctly, Thomas shoplifted. They're at a shopping center.  Thomas went to an electronic store and slipped a phone into his pocket.  Then Eudoxia put her hand in his pocket and pulled it out.

14. Found the wrist part. Finally. Sometimes I worry about my reading skills.

It says,  It was fairly busy and she did her best to weave through the crowd taking loose hold of Thomas’ wrist something she hadn’t done since childhood, dragging him to look at whatever she had wanted him to see.

I guess wrist-holding is seen as less intimate and romantic as hand-holding.

15. Finished reading what's in the story thread.  It's a love triangle, basically.  Thomas has feelings for Eudoxia.  Eudoxia has feelings for Jason.  Thomas wants a relationship with Eudoxia, but she seems to see him as a player. He wants to let her know he's done with that game. Eudoxia misinterprets things and guesses that Thomas has settled down with someone.

16. Wondered if Eudoxia is failing to get a clue.   Thomas did try to hold her hand.  Or maybe that's just the way he is—flirty.   Maybe she expects that behavior from him, and doesn't take it as a sign that he has feelings for her.

Or maybe she does understand he's pursuing her, but she's denying it because she wants Jason.

17. Saw that my Australian of the day is Henry Martyn Andrews.   He's the first of eleven Andrews covered by the Australian Dictionary of Biography.  

18. Saw that Henry Martyn Andrews was born in England in 1845. I wonder if Andrews is a British surname. I would guess it was; or I'd guess it was German.   Maybe Swedish or Swiss?

19. Consulted Lord Wiki about the name Andrews. He says it is British. The highest frequency of the name, in the UK, is in Dorset.

Let's see.....

Henry was born in Shropshire. Is that near Dorset?

Nope.

I just checked Google Maps.   Dorset is in the south and Shropshire is up north.

Lord Wiki says the name is more popular in the south of England than north. But of course that doesn't mean it's not in the north...and all over the world.  

20. Started to read about Henry Anderson. He was a headmaster and professor.

When he was a child he was inspired by factory engines.  He wanted to be an engineer.  Did he end up being an engineer professor?   Or was it one of those many childhood dreams that get lost and forgotten?

When Henry was eight, his family moved to Melbourne.

Several years later he started studying at the University of Melbourne. The guy seemed to like learning. He studied math, physics, chemistry, zoology, and physics.

He gave up engineering when he realized his prospects of employment were low.  In those days the career favored people with apprenticeship training rather than university training.

It seems that's totally changed these days. Now there's such an obsession with getting a university degree.

Personally I think an apprenticeship is better.

Then again, a university degree in engineering would probably work as long as there's hands on experience.  I'm guessing there is in most cases. I would just hope that if someone didn't get a degree, and instead learned with hands on training, they'd still be able to find a job.

I think the world would be better off if we paid less attention to degrees from fancy universities; and paid more attention to the actual skills someone possesses. The skills could come from a degree.  They could come from a training program. They could come from watching one's parent or neighbor.  They could come from self-training via books, videos, etc. There're so many ways to learn.

21. Learned that Andrews became a professor of civil engineering. It wasn't a very popular class, though.  He had only one student.

Henry seemed to have more success at  Wesley College in Melbourne. There he taught science and math classes.

In his early 20's, Andrews went back to England and did more studying at Cambridge. A few years later he returned to Wesley College. Two years after that, the Headmaster retired and Henry took the big job.

22. Learned that Henry wasn't very popular as a headmaster. People seemed to prefer the previous guy.

23. Learned that Henry died young. He was only 43. Bad health plagued him throughout life and then put him in the early grave.

24. Started to look at another Peter Lindenburg Flickr set.  This one is called Animals of the East Coast of Australia.

Here's a very cool butterfly photo.  

25. Loved this owl photo.  It makes me think of Harry Potter, and other stuff like that.

It's a Powerful Owl.

I mean that's the name. It might not actually have magical powers.

Lord Wiki says they're from the east—Queensland to South Australia.

26. Loved this Kookaburra photo.

27. Impressed with this photo of a Purple Swamphen.  

28. Consulted Lord Wiki about the Purple Swamphen.  He says there are different types.  The one in Australia has the scientific name Porphyrio porphyrio. It's found mostly in New Zealand, but is also in Australia and other nearby places.

29. Thought this Brown Thornbill was very cute. 

Peter has so many cute animal photos. I think they could provide great inspiration for people who make cartoons and/or write children's books.

This guy would make a great character.

I wonder who could do his voice.

30. Thought that this Eastern Water Dragon would be a good character too.  

31.Thought this Crested Pigeon had a unique appearance. 

32. Guessed that this Noisy Miner bird had recently been rejected. He has that look about him. 

Then this guy is saying, Hang on there, kiddo. It gets better.

33. Started looking at Peter's Birds Around Deniliquin set.

Where is Deniliquin?

34. Found Deniliquin on Google Maps.  It's in western New South Wales, about three hours west of Wagga Wagga.  

I don't think I've ever heard of it. Because of that, I sort of guessed it would be one of those small, quiet, rarely heard of towns.  But it's not.   Lord Wiki has a lot to say about it; and there's a population of about 7000. It's not that tiny.

35. Learned one of the main industries in Deniliquin is wool.

Rice is big too.

36. Looked up Phillip Maher.  Peter mentions him in his photo set.  I'm guessing this is the right guy.  He lives in Deniliquin, and does birding stuff.  Here's the home page of his site.   

Phillip has various tour options available. He has ones already planned that people can sign up for.  Then he also offers private tours.

I see he just started a tour today.  It's of the Strzelecki Track in the outback. That goes until September 22.

37. Consulted Lord Wiki about the Strzelecki Track.  He says it's in South Australia; and it's an unsealed road.

38. Downloaded the PDF booking form on Maher's website. I like it because it asks for food allergies; and it also asks for foods you intensely dislike.  I like that they're sensitive to that.

Although what if he's really not a birding expert; and he's really a torturer? He could want to know your most hated food so he could torture you with it.   

Yeah, because the PDF form also asks, What are you most afraid of?  And they ask, how much does it bother you when people scrape their fingernails across a chalkboard?  

That's some SCARY stuff.

Then there's that bit that says, Please do not inform family and friends that you'll be on this tour.   Wouldn't it be better to surprise them after the fact?  You can impress them all with your pictures. If you tell them before you leave on the tour, it will ruin the surprise.

39. Started to look at Peter's photos.

This Red-Rumped Parrot looks very amused.  But here he didn't get the joke.  He looks confused. 

Now he's trying to share the joke with some friends.  I have a feeling he totally messed it up.  

40. Thought this little guy was very cute.   

41. Thought more about the over-the-railing story. I don't think it actually happened. Jack is easily frightened.  I think if someone actually held him over a railing, he would have totally freaked out.   I'm guessing our friend was planning to do it, but I stopped him before he could.  Maybe.

42. Thought about memories and how we forget things.  That gave me the urge to read about reincarnation.  I googled reincarnation and Australia.   I found this post from a spiritual blog.    It talks about a woman in Sydney who had past-life regression therapy. She remembered a life in Somerset England from 1765-1982.   If it's a true story, it's quite compelling.   She knew all this stuff that she couldn't have known by natural means. I'd like to think it's proof of reincarnation.  It might be.  My other theory though would be that she's simply psychic.  She went to the place and was able to "read" it.

No...now that I think of it; that wouldn't make sense.  From what I read here, she didn't know all this stuff until she had the hypnosis. If it was just a psychic thing, why would she know so much about this one specific place?  She should be able to know about a variety of places.

43. Went to the website of Victor Zammit.  He's the one who wrote the book where the blogger heard the Sydney-Somerset reincarnation story.  

Victor says he's a lawyer from Sydney.

See...I get skeptical when it comes to supernatural stuff.    I believe in all these things, but I also have a lot of doubt.   When I looked at Amanda's blog, I didn't doubt her story.  I didn't say/think, she's a woman who SAYS she's done a lot of traveling.    I take her at her word.   I give her the benefit of the doubt and assume she's honest.  But if someone has supernatural type claims, I want to know their credentials. I question whether they're telling the truth or not.  

44. Wanted to believe in Victor Zammit's impressive law credentials.  He says he worked for the High Court of Australia.

But I'm skeptical for now.  My bullshit antennas are up mainly for the fact that, so far, when I google I get Victor's own site, or other supernatural sites.  

I tried Lord Wiki. Lord Wiki doesn't like Victor.  He says that Victor is Another shameless self-promoter trying to misuse (him) for free publicity. 


45. Went to the High Court of Australia website.   I thought Victor was a liar because I didn't see him on their list of justices.  But then I thought, maybe I'm looking at the wrong thing. These are justices.  That would be different than a solicitor.   Right?

46. Decided to try and find information about a case Victor says he worked on. It was called R v Borg.

When I google that, I find a law case in Canada, some tennis stuff, and Victor's own site. At least that's what's on page 1 of Google.  

47. Used Google News archives to try to find an article about R v Borg. Victor says it was published in the Sydney Morning Herald.

I don't see any article.

I'm not finding anything that compels me to believe that Victor is telling the truth about who he is.

I'm not saying he's lying.  He could be completely honest.  But I would feel more trustful if I had something to back him up.

I'll keep looking.....

48.  Hoped no one took me serious about #38.

49. Became even more skeptical.

Victor talks about a so-called famous bank robbery case.   He says, It was one of the most sensational and most controversial cases ever in Australia where Dragosevich, the bank robber, was shot dead by the police. 

Okay, so this case is controversial and sensational. Shouldn't it be easy to find via Google then?

I googled, and guess what I get?  Victor's websites.

Victor says stuff about articles being published in the news. It's like he's saying, You have to believe me.   I was in the newspaper!  And maybe he was. Maybe Google just hasn't archived it.  But it's a bit suspicious. And if he really understands that people like me are going to be skeptical, why doesn't he simply scan the article and put it on his website? 

50. Used Google News archive to try to find a November 12, 1978 article about Dragosevich.   Why?  Victor claims the article is out there.

Google doesn't seem to have it.

Why should I believe Victor?

He makes me very suspicious.

51. Tried to find another article that Victor references in his biography.  It's supposed to be from December 22, 1980; and it's supposed to be about him leading a protest near the United Consulate.    He says he was protesting about the Ayatollah Khomeini hostage thing.

52. Did not find the article.

Three times I've come up empty.  For a man who claims to be such a prominent lawyer, it's weird that I can't find anything about him in the news archives.

53. Searched Google News archive from 1970-1981 (the time period Victor says he was doing his law stuff).   I can't find anything on him. I can't imagine a lawyer would not have himself quoted at least once in a news article.

54. Tired of searching for Victor Zammit. I wish I could have found something.

55. Found blog entry about Victor Zammit. It's written by a guy who reminds me somewhat of myself.  He believes, or is open to believe. But he's not going to believe without question.    

Michael Prescott says, Zammit seems to feel that either you're with him totally, or you're against him totally. Since I raised questions about the precautions against fraud taken in Sydney, he has decided that I'm a "skeptic."

Still Michael defends Zammit to a point.  He says,  Victor Zammit's a good guy, and his heart is in the right place. I agree with him on many (probably most) issues regarding the paranormal and the afterlife. In this case, I think his ego is wounded and he's lashing out. It will pass. 

I think it's very generous of Michael to say that.  

56. Wondered what's the truth here.

A) Is Victor exactly what he says he is—a lawyer who now is a promoter of the afterlife. And maybe the internet doesn't have as much information as I imagined? 

B) Victor has genuine evidence of the afterlife. He felt no one would believe him, so he invented the lawyer credentials.

C) Victor is lying about almost everything.

I want to believe it's A, but I fear its somewhere between B and C.  

57. Wondered if I would have been less skeptical about Victor if he didn't proclaim every five minutes that he's a lawyer. What if he just had a website about the supernatural? I wouldn't have believed anything without question or lingering doubt; but I think MAYBE I would have been less skeptical.

How would people have felt about my blog if proclaimed in every blog title that I'm a lawyer, doctor, or something like that?  

58. Figured I'd probably be most trusting of Victor if I was able to find information on him outside of spiritual and skeptic websites. I would have felt much better if I could find the articles he mentioned, or at least find this so-called bank-robbery case.

I don't like this about myself, but I do find myself less skeptical with people who have professional and conventional credentials....if I feel they're not inventing those credentials.   

I'd be trusting, but somewhat less trusting if he was just another person with a blog sharing his experiences and believes. There's a lot out there. I trust some people more than others. If certain people say,  I've seen a ghost, I at least believe they THINK they saw a ghost. I trust certain people enough on the internet to believe they're not making stuff up.   

I hope that when people read my blog, they believe my little weird stories. They're all true, but I can't say whether or not they're supernatural or just wild coincidences. I understand, though, that people have the right not to believe.   They have the right to suspect I'm making things up.

I'm not.

But how does anyone know that?

They just give me the benefit of the doubt.

If I started bragging about my credentials, though, and saying there are articles out there about me....shouldn't I then have links to the articles?

What if I talked about us going to Australia, but didn't have one photo of us in Australia?   Would that not make people a bit suspicious?

59. Decided my talked-about credentials for this blog are that I'm weird, I'm American, and I'm obsessed with Australia. My blog posts are proof enough of my weirdness and my obsession.   I think most people would believe I'm American. If not, they could watch one of my videos and hear my American accent.



Although I could be an Australian faking an American accent. Or maybe I'm a Canadian.

I could be a Dutch person pretending to be an American who is obsessed with Australia.

Jack and Tim are speaking American too, though. It would be a bit far-fetched to imagine our whole family is faking it.