Showing posts with label sharks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sharks. Show all posts

Beach Dreams, Evangelical Atheism, Zoo Visits, and Boredom

1. Showed Tim and Jack Elliot Freeman's cover of Friday.  I love it. A couple of people said it's better than the original.  I agree!  I think it's fun and fantastic.  But I don't hate the original as much as some people.  I think it's dumb, but in a cute and fun way.

2. Went to bed and had an Australian related dream.  It was one of those confusing dreams where the scenario and characters kept changing.  I'll just talk about the part in which it was Australia-related.  I'm a movie theatre that's filled with Australians.  They get excited every time they hear an Australian accent on the screen.  I think it's a bit much.  I don't get excited every time I hear an American accent.  But then I think about how it might be because the Australians are in America.  I think about times I've been in Australia and how I got excited over Texas-related things.  

I'm not sure if that's really true.  I do get excited about seeing American food in Australia. It's not really an American-pride thing, but just curiosity over which of the many American food products will Australians use to represent America. 

I don't get excited about hearing American accents in Australia.  In 2007,  I felt awful every time I heard one (minus family and myself).  In 2009,  I no longer hated it, but I can't say I loved it.

Why do I feel this way?  I'm not sure exactly.  It could be that it's a reminder of home, and also a reminder that one day soon we'll have to return to home.   I think there's also some jealousy, because some of the American accents might not be coming from tourists.  They might be coming from migrants, or expats.   In 2007 I really wanted that for myself, so I had a bit of that green monster syndrome.  In 2009 I wanted it too, but not as desperately as 2007.  

3. Wanted to share my other dream about Australia.  It was a lucid one. I'm at beach in Australia.   It's crowded, but very idyllic.  There are people surfing in the water, people playing, and dolphins leaping in the air.   Everything is beautiful.  

I am surfing or body boarding.  I decide to be brave and go farther from shore.  I'm a bit nervous about sharks because I tend to have sharks in my dream.  I'm waiting for them to interrupt the perfection.   After I get far out into the water, I head back and look around for sharks. I'm not too scared since it's a dream and I won't get killed.  Still though, I'd rather not experience a shark attack.   

I look around me as I head back to the shore.  I see a lifeguard helping someone.  I become a bit paranoid and worry the person has been attacked by a shark. What if the shark is still around? I look around to the other side of me.  Is that blood?

I leave the water without getting attacked by a shark.  I walk along a street full of shops that's adjacent to the beach.   I stop in a store that has a woman who looks like a bear.  She has these short bear-like arms.  It seems to be a costume though...maybe.   I take a photo of the shop, worried slightly that I'll be scolded.  But no one says anything.   I leave and walk some more.   I feel I'm on a time restraint, that it's almost time to wake up, and I need to turn around soon to walk back.  But then I decide that I can just wake up wherever, and I don't need to be at any certain place.  I can just keep walking, and when I wake up, I'll wake up.

As I get towards the end of the street, I'm wanting to find out the street name so I can write about it on my blog.   But I can't find a street sign.   I do see something saying Circular Quay, but I'm thinking it can't be the street sign.  I don't know of a Circular Quay street.   (a wharf yes, but not a street)

When I get to the end of the street I make my way back.  I try to decide if I want to go down another street or walk down the same street.  I choose the latter because I want to see the shops I saw before.  I want to see that my lucid dreams can be consistent and not have the settings constantly change. 

I am frustrated to find that I can't find the stores I passed before.   I'm thinking it's bad enough the settings in my lucid dreams can't stay consistent from one night to another night....but it's really bad that they can't stay consistent within the same dream.  

4. Thought about our 2007 and 2009 trip to Australia.  In 2007, I desperately wanted to move to Australia.   I had the idea that I couldn't be okay unless we did that.   I think I still wanted that in 2009, but not so desperately.  It was a maybe type thing.   But I do remember getting really pleased when Jack mentioned wanting to move there.    And Tim started showing interest in moving there as well.  I was so happy about that.  So in 2009, I think it was still something we were considering.

Now we've kind of moved away from that.  Every so often, we'll talk about retiring in Australia. And I half-jokingly make suggestions about Jack attending university there.  But for the most part, the dream has been shelved.  I'm wondering if that will change when we go back.  Will Australia pull us back in to wanting to move there; or will we be satisfied with the idea of being occasional tourists? 


How would our world change if we knew for sure there was life after death, and it was easy for our dearly-departed to talk to us via the Internet?   

The Dead are Online, a novel by Dina Roberts 

 

5. Read my cousin's blog entry about almost having to do a dine and dash type thing.  

6. Annoyed by an evangelist atheist commenter on the Gay Marriage in Australia page.  Derek's not impressed that progressive Judaism backs gay marriage.  He says, It is counterproductive to get support from moderate religious groups.  Why? Religious people are not rational because they believe in magical beings.   

I don't think it's irrational to believe in the supernatural.  I think it takes a leap of faith.   Sometimes we can believe in stuff without absolute scientific proof.  I think that's only irrational when we get the idea that others need to believe in the exact same thing we believe.

I think it's nice that atheists fight for separation against church and state; and I think it's good that they try to counter the argument that Christians are the only ones who are capable of moral behaviour.  But I think it's unfortunate that some of them have taken things way too far, and have become equally judgmental and zealous in their evangelism.

Fanaticism is never pretty...no matter what the form. 

7. Thought more about faith vs. scientific proof.   Sometimes things can be proven in a laboratory.   Other times we can know or believe things without science.  I know I love Australia, but I can't scientifically prove that I do.

When someone says that they love us, do we accept it on faith or demand scientific proof of this love?  Well, sometimes they might do things that make us doubt that love.  We might seek out some type of evidence of their feelings.   Our experiences with the person and our gut instincts tell us if the love is real or not.  The thing is though we can never have 100% proof that they love us.   In the end, we have to accept it on faith. Or reject it.

Even our belief in science is dependent on some amount of faith.   How do we know there really was a scientific study?  How do we know it wasn't staged or faked?   How do we know the results were obtained ethically?  How do we know the scientists weren't paid by corporations to spread misinformation?   When I think this way, I feel I'm going to go completely paranoid, so I try to have faith; that when I read about studies in respected journals, news sites, and medical sites, they're relaying honest and accurate information.

8. Thought about debate I had with my aunt regarding Aspartame.   She thinks it's an evil poison.   She believes this from what she's read on the Mercola website, and from other health newsletters she reads.   I did my own research and found from Wikipedia and various medical sites that it's seen as safe.   I put my faith in Wikipedia, government health sites, and certain medical sites.   Now I don't have 100% perfect faith in  any website. But I have more faith in some, than I do with Joseph Mercola.   My aunt doesn't trust the government or Westernised medical sites.  She thinks they're manipulated by corporations.   She has more faith in Mercola.    I think Mercola is out to scare people into buying his various health products.  So I don't have a lot of faith in him.

In the end, we all choose who and what we'll have faith in; and we really don't have absolute proof that our faith is directed towards a better avenue than other people's.

My aunt could be right. I could be wrong.  

9. Went to the zoo, and took photos of the Australian-related stuff. As I've mentioned before, the Fort Worth zoo gets on my nerves because they don't offer recycling bins.   That just seems wrong in any place, but especially wrong for a zoo.

On the plus side, they do have a lot of Aussie stuff.

10. Uploaded the zoo photos.  Here are some of them:




 I was looking around the zoo for all the Australian-related stuff; then I realized I had to look no farther than my husband and son.  They both ended up wearing Australian t-shirts.   Tim wore a Manly one, and Jack wore a Canberra one.  I'm ashamed to admit that I didn't wear one.  But I wear one almost every other day. 


The rock climbing exhibit is called Tasmanian Tower.   It was closed today.   I think it's almost always closed.



Here's an Australian sign.



Here's some more Australian stuff, including the flag.



 Here's Jack and I next to the map; plus a girl loving on Victoria. 

  

 

I love this photo of a cockatiel.  It's all blurry, but I like it because it reminds me of movies (or TV shows) where someone unconscious is waking up.  You know how the movie tries to show you what they're seeing?  So the photo reminds me of someone who's woken up with a cockatiel staring at them.

If I ever go unconscious, I'd love there to be a cockatiel staring at me while I awaken.   

Well...anyway....I did manage to take a non-blurry photo of the same cockatiel.  


11. Went to Barnes and Noble while Tim and Jack went to the Apple Store.  I went to the spirituality section and glanced quickly at the books to see if there were any Aussie authors.   I'll explain about that later.  But anyway, I got bored quickly and went onto the travel section.  I picked up a Lonely Planet Guide to Australia.  It was very thick and comprehensive.   I looked at a few pages.  They had ideas for various trip itineraries.   One was for six months, and it looks AWESOME.    I think it would be my dream holiday.  I told Tim I want to do it for my fiftieth birthday.  If that doesn't work, hopefully we can do it sometime in my 50's and 60's.  I guess earlier is better than later...because of health and grandchildren issues.   I have hope though.   My parents are 62/63, and they do a ton of international traveling.  I hope to be as in good health as them.   

12. Thought about how it would be really cool if I still had this blog when I'm in my 60's.   

13. Figured I should go back to the whole spirituality thing.  The other day I thought about what I wrote in my blog, about my sisters not knowing how and why I became obsessed with Australia.   Then I thought crap.  What if they read that (because the younger one reads my blog occasionally now) and they ask me.  So Dina....how DID you get obsessed with Australia?  

I guess I had one of those imaginary conversations.   It was with my sister.  So I answered the question in my mind.  It made me think about things. 

After I started having many dreams about Julian McMahon, I became obsessed with the dreams.  That led me to being obsessed with dreams and spirituality.  I started reading spiritual books and going to spiritual websites.  It seemed many of them happened to be written by Australians. Then even two American spiritual books I read had the mediums visiting Australia and raving on and on about how wonderful it was.  So Australia might have gotten drummed into my brain.    This, plus the fact that photos of Sydney Harbour reminded me of a mystical wonderful dream from my childhood, might have led to the whole Australia obsession thing.  

14. Remembered something else...a story I've told before.  But I'll be annoying and repeat myself.   Okay, so today we went to the University Park Village.   For me, this is kind of the birth place of the spirituality obsession which led to the whole Australia obsession.  I thought about all that when I walked from the parking lot to the bookstore.   

When Jack was around three or four, I had plans one day to take him to University Park Village.   Every time I thought of those plans, I had this happy mystical excited feeling. Then I realised it was because I had recently had a dream about Julian McMahon that took place in the University Park Village parking lot.   

So we went there with me feeling all happily mystical and obsessed with my recurring dreams.   We went to the bookstore.  Jack looked around the children's section.  He probably played with Thomas the Train thing.  There was a a psychology section close by so I decided to grab a book to alleviate some boredom.   They had dream books and I picked up one.  Even though it was a psychology section, the book was a spiritual one by Robert Moss.   

Oh.  Yeah.  Anyway.   I wanted to look at the spirituality section today to see if many authors were Australian.  So, that's what I did today...for about twenty seconds.   It got boring. And to be honest, I'm really skeptical of spiritual writers these days.   I think most of it's crap.   I'm still spiritual, but I try to depend on my own dreams and synchronocity for guidance and delusions.   

15. Read Andrew's blog post about Digby Graham killing Rhys Marshall. While drunk. Graham hit Marshall hard enough to kill him.   The case was brought to court.  Graham was charged with manslaughter, and then found not guilty.  

Andrew thinks this is very wrong.   

I agree with Andrew.  

16. Read article about Digby Gram.   It doesn't provide much information, but I agree with some of the commenters.  I especially agree with what Roger says, One would hope that there were more extenuating circumstances other than the fact the accused was drunk. It is interesting to note that if the accused were driving in such a condition he would receive a significant fine and a disqualification for a period of time.  As a distant observer of the trial, unfortunately, the takeaway message is that it's OK to get drunk and punch someone, if they die then that's just bad luck. There are certainly no winners in this case, least of all justice for the family of the deceased.

I definitely don't think drunkenness is a valid excuse for murdering someone. If you're a violent drunk, then don't drink!

17. Had an idea.  What if people had to get a license in order to buy alcohol?  What if it wasn't just about age?  And if you were arrested for violent behavior due to drinking you'd lose the license.   Yeah, I know.  People could still drink by having other people buy their drinks for them.   But it might be somewhat of a deterrence.  Maybe?   

18. Felt guilt and regret for ending a friendship with someone I met through my blog.  Then I read her last email to me.  I had skimmed it before and then put it in the trash because I felt it would be too mean.  I'm a wimp when it comes to that stuff sometimes.    But today I decided to fish it out of the trash  to get an idea if I did the right thing or not.  After reading the email carefully in its entirety, I no longer feel guilty for ending the friendship.   The email was hateful, irrational, and showed a lack of reading comprehension skills.  And it wasn't the first email like that I have received from her.   

I definitely feel I did the right thing.   

19. Tempted to tell the whole dirty dramatic story, but I'll refrain from giving into that temptation.   I'm sure bits and pieces will leak out when I encounter stuff that reminds me of the failed friendship.  

20. Decided to admit that my reason for canceling the Australia trip wasn't just for financial reasons.   I became a bit scared of the person alluded to in #18 and #19.   Really, I think I blew things out of proportion.   Although this girl can be nasty when you disagree with her about things, and overreacts to things she THINKS you wrote in your email; she's probably not dangerous.  Still....after a disturbing incident, my imagination started running in all kinds of directions and I felt safer being an ocean apart from her. 

That's not to say the financial bit wasn't a huge part of it too.  I mean that was definitely the main thing.  But I think I was also becoming paranoid.   I'm good at that sometimes.  

21. Realized I'm sort of a hypocrite.  I complain that this girl doesn't read my emails carefully before answering them.  Then I put her email in the trash without carefully reading it.  However, I read all her other emails carefully before responding.   Plus, the friendship was already over.   I had told her twice not to write to me anymore.  So she shouldn't have even been sending me the email.

22. Read article about an Australian anthropologist who warns that all our use of digital technology is not giving us time to be bored.   Why is this a problem?   Because boredom gives us time to think, and thinking time leads to creative ideas and imaginative thought. 

It also leads to worrying thoughts, paranoid thoughts, angry thoughts, depressing thoughts, etc.

Sometimes our technology toys lead to creative thought.  Jack just created a Sims family for my neighbourhood.  He gave me the whole story.   The husband used to be the leader of a church, but he quit that job.  The wife was a very successful chef of a restaurant.    Then one of her patrons got poisoned and she was blamed.  She was framed and blamed, and lost her prestigious career.   

That's one of many imaginative stories Jack has created.

I do agree that some quiet time is probably good for the brain.   It's sad if we have to busy our minds with other stuff at every moment,  because I do think there are benefits to daydreaming.  But has any human really managed to totally eliminate daydreaming from their lives?   At the very least, you have a few minutes of daydreaming time in the shower.   I daydream while in the shower.   I daydream on the toilet.   I daydream while washing dishes.   I daydream while in the car (I can't read because it makes me carsick).  I daydream at night before I go to sleep. I have plenty of daydreaming time.

Another thing is when my mind really wants me to think about something, it won't allow me to do other things.   If I'm excited or anxious about something, it's hard for me to concentrate on anything except my thoughts.  For example, when I went to the doctor a few weeks ago, I had to wait for about an hour and a half.   I read my book for awhile, but I couldn't concentrate.   So I just stood in the examining room, waiting and waiting.

When Jack has an appointment that makes him nervous, he won't read a book or play a video game.  He can't concentrate.  He just kind of stands around; thinking, talking, and acting nervous.  

23. Looked up I, Robot on IMDb because Tim was watching it.   I saw the director was Alex Proyas, and recognized that name.   I thought he was one of the Harry Potter directors, but didn't see that on his credits.  Then I realized he's one of the Australians I've written about. I remembered when I saw The Crow on his list of movies. 

24. Did some exploring on Rotten Tomatoes and learned that Noah Taylor is in a new movie. It's called Submarine.   IMDb says it was released in the UK in October and Canada in September.  They don't list a release date for Australia. What's that all about?

Lizards, Dolly, Coffin Bay, and Borders

1. Dreamed briefly about Peter Singer. I learn he has resigned from an organization because he doesn't like something they support.   Later (in a dream within a dream) I tell Andrew about my dream.  He doesn't seem to be a big fan of Singer.  

2. Saw a very cute baby Eastern Water Dragon on Mim's blog.  Mim has a whole collection of animal photos on Flickr.  That's cool.  I LOVE this parrot.

You know....I think my two favorite Aussie animals are lizards and parrots.And I also like the bats.

Here's an adult version of the Eastern Water Dragon.  We don't get big lizards like that in our backyard.

3. Saw a website about Eastern Water Dragons.  They swim, so their name is appropriate.  They also live in the eastern part of Australia, so that part of their name fits as well.  

4. Read my post from yesterday, and saw that when I mentioned Logue and his wife leaving their child to go on an American adventure, I forgot to specify the amount of time they were away (six months).  I was very mysterious....but that was an accident. Anyway, I fixed that.  

By the way, I DO proofread. I'm just very bad at it.  

5. Read article about man being killed by sharks in South Australia.  That's very unfortunate.

6. Read article about government creating a new multiculturalism policy. They're going to try and fight racism, and do away with discrimination. I personally don't understand what's so new about that?  Wasn't that their goals all along?  

7. Saw that Western Australia is now being attacked by bad weather.  Queensland got Yasi. Darwin got Carlos.  Western Australia has Dianne.

8. Struggled to understand the Scott Morrison funeral thing.  This article helped. It's the first time I paid any real attention to the story, so I needed a basic background type thing.

Is Morrison being insensitive, racist, or just cheap?  I don't know.

It does seem like a waste of money.  I AM insensitive sometimes when it comes to burial issues.   These people came on a boat to escape something, right?  They must have had really difficult lives.   I'm guessing their families had bad lives too.  It seems to me it would be better to put the $300,000 to better use.  I mean I wish they could use the money to help the family members in some other way, besides ferrying them over the funeral.  I don't know what could be done though.

Oh. Never mind. I got it all wrong. This editorial is setting me straight. I thought they were bringing people from some far off country.  The relatives are on Christmas Island.  The funeral is in Sydney.    Why didn't they have the funeral on Christmas Island?  Or are there also relatives in Sydney?

Anyway, if there is good reason for the funeral to be in Sydney, and there are relatives stuck on Christmas Island, I'd say it would probably be nice for the government to pay for their plane tickets.

9. Saw news of a shark attack.  I can't tell if this is the same one, or a new one. I'm going to read the article.   Okay. It's the same one. I saw it on Facebook just now, and it looked like it was new news.

10. Looked up Coffin Bay on Google Maps.  This is where the shark attack happened. Lord Wiki says the name of the peninsula it's on is Eyre Peninsula.

The name Coffin is morbid, but does not refer to people dying in the area. It was named after a friend of Matthew Flinders; Isaac Coffin.  

11. Learned about the Argyle Cut in Sydney.  It's like a cut out tunnel that gives a passageway between Miller's Point and The Rocks.  The works was begun by convicts using primitive tools.   Then folks decided to speed the process along, and they used some explosives.

I think this MIGHT be it on Google Maps. 

12. Saw this article, which says that in three days, Carlos caused more rain in Darwin than Melbourne, Hobart, and Adelaide get in a year. All three combined, or alone? Either way, that's a lot of rain.

Okay.  I read further down. It's each place separately.  Carlos caused 732 mm of rain. The average rainfall of Melbourne is 648 mm. The average for Hobart is 616, and the average for Adelaide is 549.

13. Learned of a famous Australian singer named Peter Dawson. Here's an old photo of him. To a small degree, he reminds me of Kenneth Branagh.

 Here's Dawson singing Auld Lang Syne.  

14. Saw this photo.  Maybe it was taken by the Anne Geddes' ancestors.

15. Listened to Peter Dawson sing Waltzing Matilda.  I find it to be kind of....maybe....soothing?   It makes me want to curl up on a cruise ship bed and take a nap.

16. Listened to Peter Dawson sing On the Road to Mandalay.  The title of the song sounded familiar, but the song itself doesn't.  Oh!  You know what.  I was probably thinking of "On the Road to Gundagai".  

17. Listened to Peter Dawson sing Song of Australia.  I've never heard the song before.    This website has some information about it.  It was a winning song in a 1859 competition. Caroline J. Carleton was the winner.  Well, she wrote the lyrics.  Someone else wrote the music.

Sadly, both of Carleton's children died on the voyage from England to Australia.

18. Looked up Dolly magazine because someone mentioned it on Facebook. I guess it's like our Seventeen magazine in America.  

I'm going to take some Dolly quizzes.  

My relationship is healthy, although I really don't know what I'd do if I found out Tim stalked his last girlfriend.  I can't imagine that happening though. Tim is SO not the stalker type.   

I started taking a test about whether I'm positive, or not.  One of the questions has some formatting issues.  Oh well.  

Here's a page of girl celebrities.   I wonder how many are Australian.  

They have a list of five crushiest girls. All of them are American. Although Kristen Stewart IS half-Australian.

19. Looked at the other actresses featured as girl-crush Dolly people. It looks like most are Americans.  So Australian youth really ARE being infiltrated with American culture.

There's a British girl here; Carey Mulligan.  Oh!  And I see Emma Watson.  She's not American.

There's one Aussie girl on the page; Tammin Sursok. The magazine emphasis that she's becoming successful in America.

This magazine is a bit shameful.  They really need to showcase more Australians.

Wait.  There's more girls.   This page has a bunch of Americans as well. There's two British girls, so that's good.

Well, I'm glad to see that the page on Kristen Stewart DOES mention that her mom's Australian—from Queensland.   

Oh my....this thing keeps going. The third page has Gemma Ward. Again, they make a big deal out of her American career.

I'm going to quit here.  I think this magazine lists almost every teen celebrity out there. It's just a shame that the top three pages feature mostly Americans.  

I just thought of it though.  It's not just Australian teens that are lacking on the list. They don't have any of the Nickelodeon teens that we were watching a few months back. Maybe they're less popular in Australia?  

20. Decided to see if Aussie teen boy stars are given more attention by Dolly.  

A guy from Dallas is in the top five. Mark Salling.

Miracle of miracles. There's an Aussie in the top five. Liam Hemsworth.

And there's more Aussie guys featured on the first page. We have Xavier Samuel from Twilight.   There's some guy named Harrison Gilbertson; and and there's Dan Sultan from Bran Nue Dae.  My friend has mentioned him. And I guess I've probably seen him while watching clips from that movie.

21. Consulted Lord Wiki about Dan Sultan. I was curious about whether he was Aboriginal.  He is.  His mother is from the Arrernte and Gurindji people.  

22. While using the toilet, decided that no matter what country you're in, popular teen magazines are probably going to be complete shit.  They're good at making kids feel they're not good enough.   You're not thin enough.  You're not fashionable enough. You're not rich enough. Maybe in Australia, they make you feel bad for not being American enough.  Or maybe it's just Dolly that does that.  

I guess in America, teens are made to feel they're missing out for not living in Los Angeles or New York.  I probably felt that when I was a kid.  It's like the whole world is centered in those two cities.  If New York and Los Angeles loves you, you're a hit. But who gives a crap if Fort Worth or Brisbane loves you.

23.  Listened to Dan Sultan sing "Old Fitzroy".  I watched a bit of the video, when I wasn't looking at old pictures.

24. Listened to Dan Sultan sing Bran Nue Dae from Bran Nue Dae.  I can't believe it's taken me this long to listen to the title song.  It's awesome.   I HAVE heard some of it before.....I think in the trailer.  

25. Saw a collection of photos of Percy Grainger and his mother.  

26. Read more of The King's Speech.  Some of it makes me a bit melancholy.    Lionel Logue and the Duke (not yet king) spent a ton of time together. Then the Duke did so well, he really didn't need Logue anymore.  And he was very busy.  So they kind of drifted apart, and it seems Logue mourned the relationship more than the Duke.  It reminds me of stories like The Giving Tree and "Puff the Magic Dragon".  

It also reminds me of this song.   I'll give you a moment to watch it, and cry.....

Okay?  Done?  Let's move on. 

I think though that Bertie and Lionel are going to get back together again. I'm on the chapter where the king (Dumbeldore) dies, and so eventually Bertie will inherit the throne. He'll probably need Logue's help again.  Will their friendship be restored, or will Logue sacrifice his branches, leaves, and apples for the king?

27. Remembered that, on the walk home from the ice cream shop, we talked about deadly Australian animals, and which is the deadliest. I said I thought I had heard it was horses or cows. I remember hearing that. If it IS true, it's not because horses and cows are the most vicious, aggressive, and venomous. It's probably because humans interact with those animals the most.

To figure out the deadliest animal, we'd probably have to look at various factors.....

1. How sharp are their teeth and claws?
2. How venomous are they? 
3. Is there an anti-venom?
4.  Are there many of them?
5. Are humans likely to encounter them?

28. Tried to find the thing about horses (or cows) being the most dangerous animal in Australia. I had no luck with that. Maybe I dreamed it.  

Ah! Never mind.  I found it.   Here's an article. It says horses are the most dangerous, followed by cows and dogs. Out of the animals with a scary reputation, the shark is the only one high up on the list.  That surprises me. I would have guessed it to be crocodiles or Box Jellyfish.  

29. Saw something disturbing on Facebook.  I went to find an article about it.  Two bookstores in Australia (Borders and Angus and Robertson) are having some difficulties.    So....they're requiring customers to spend twice the amount that's on their gift card. I guess that means if you have a ten dollar gift card, you have to spend twenty dollars.  That is CRAZY.   

The article says it's probably legal for them to do this.  Legal, maybe. But it seems very unfair.   

Gift cards are my favorite type of gifts. I might have to rethink that now.

30. Read good news about lost men being found.  They had disappeared in the flood waters. If these men decide to tell their story, we won't be buying it from Borders.  I'll probably buy it from Powells.   I hope they don't ever go out of business!

31. Tried to find out what's going on with Borders. This article says that in America, they're NOT going completely out of business.   But they are closing down several stores.  For now, they're saying gift cards will be honored.  

32. Looked at the Australian Borders website.  They say the same thing that I read in the article.   Gift cards are no longer available, and you have to pay double to use your gift card.

33. Looked at the Borders Australia Facebook Page.  There's lots of angry people. Then there're other people telling the angry people not to take it out on the people working at the shop.   They're in a tough situation too.  They're going to be losing their jobs.  It's a bad situation all around.

Sonata Arctica Chris says,  just want to say to Borders, When you charge $150 for a book in-store that I can buy for $40 from your american online store including postage, what did you expect to happen. 

A store employee from Borders responds.  People like you need to put yourselves in the shoes of the employees. Do you not care that our jobs are on the line? No, all you care about is getting on your high horse and stating your opinion. Get a life.


I think Borders (and all companies) should have rules about store employees coming onto Facebook and debating/fighting with customers. It looks VERY unprofessional. I mean it's one thing if they fight on a unrelated Facebook page....but on the actual company page? Yikes.

Now I do think it's wrong for people to abuse employees for something that is not their fault.   However, employees need to understand that certain situations will make the customer angry. And they need to be able to handle this in an empathetic and patient way.

This is like what happened at Cook Children's Cityview, Jack's ex-pediatrician's office.   Tim called to cancel an appointment.  He was put on hold for over five minutes. This aggravated him. When the receptionist came back online, he expressed mild annoyance. This could have ended right there with an apology.  Instead Tim's mildly expressed displeasure was met with a callous and very unapologetic attitude.  This made Tim angry, and it escalated into a loud and angry conversation.   Then the doctor sent us a letter saying that Jack was fired as their patient. The general idea is that they can be as rude as they want to us. And we're just supposed to smile and take it...because they're medical professional Gods.       

Really.  How hard is it to say.  I'm very sorry we kept you waiting.  We've been extremely busy today.

34. Thought about employees of Borders.  It IS sad that they'll be losing their jobs.  I hope they have an easy time finding new jobs.  Now what are their rights when it comes to customers?

I think they have the right NOT to get physically assaulted in any way. They shouldn't get punched, stabbed, shot, spit at, bit, etc. 

They have the right NOT to be called names.  I mean rude names. It's fine if they're called by the name on their name tag.

They have a right NOT to be threatened with violence.   

But I don't think they should expect dissatisfied customers to meet them calmly with a smile.  There's going to be some anger.   There's going to be some loud voices.   As customers need to understand it's not the employees fault, the employee has to understand that the anger is not truly directed at him or her.  However, if the employee has an attitude like the employee on Facebook, then the anger may become intensified, and it may then be truly directed at the employee.  

Colin Thiele

Colin Thiele wrote Storm Boy. That's about all I know.

Storm Boy was recommended to me by a few people...or maybe one person. I forget.

It didn't really look like my type of thing, but I decided to give it a go. I felt annoyingly obligated to like it.

Guess what.

I liked it.

It's a beautiful book.

It's sad though.

I read it at a time when I was losing a lot of faith in humanity. The book kind of confirmed the feelings I had were valid. But there are also very decent people in the book, so it's hopeful rather than depressing.

I don't remember the exact details, but for at least part of the book, Storm Boy is homeschooled. I think he's pretty much unschooled, actually. Instead of sitting in a classroom and learning that way, he learns by immersing himself in nature and talking to adults.

Anyway, I guess I shall start my research.

Lord Wiki says baby Colin was born on 16 November 1920. He'd be a Scorpio.

The birthday website says he's a 3 in numerology.

3 Scorpio....that's quite a combination. The 3 is social. The Scorpio stings. They're all dark and mysterious.

Baby Colin was born in Eudunda South Australia. The town is about an hour north-east of Adelaide. It seems its claim to fame is Colin Thiele himself. There's a statue of him in some garden place.

Lord Wiki says that the Thiele family was Barossa German. Barossa....isn't that Geoffrey Rush's pirate name?

Nope. But close! The pirate name is Barbossa. You just have to add a B in there.

I need to read about this Barossa thing.

Lord Wiki says it's a dialect of German that's common in South Australia. That's pretty cool. Maybe it's kind of like Yiddish. Yiddish is a Jewish dialect of German.

There were a lot of Germans in South Australia...specifically in the Barossa Valley area. Barossa Valley is known for their wine. It's also a good place to get German food.  Well, obviously.

When Thiele was a child he spoke only German. He didn't learn English until he went to school. Lord Wiki says Thiele went to several schools. One of them was Kapunda High School. It looks like the school was once owned by Sidney Kidman....or at least the building was.

Thiele attended the University of Adelaide.

He fought in World War II.

After all that, he did some teaching.

He has written over a hundred books. Wow.

I'll look at his books in a minute. It seems Lord Wiki has a whole separate entry on them.

Starting from 1955, Thiele had very bad arthritis. He would have been only about thirty-five then. But yeah...I know some people get it when they're young.

In his later years, Thiele moved to Queensland. He lived in Dayboro. I'm going to find it on Google Maps....

It's about an hour north-west of Brisbane.

Thiele died on 4 September 2006. That's a day after my mom's birthday. He had a wife, two children, seven grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. It sounds like he was very blessed--successful career and he lived long enough to see his great-grandchild.

Okay. Now I'm going to look at his books.

Lord Wiki has a huge list. I'm going to look at only a few.

His first children's book was published in 1969. That was called Yellow Jacket Jock. I guess then most of his writing fame occurred in his later years. Yellow Jacket Jock is about a child who lives near a dangerous river. Because of this, he has to wear a life jacket.

Crap. I got it wrong. I thought the books were listed by the year they were published. They're not. It's alphabetical. I have to look closer to see which was published first.

The first book was actually Sun on the Stubble. This was published in 1961. In 1996, it was turned into a miniseries. The plot sounds autobiographical. It's about a German child living in South Australia.

I'm going to see if I can find another website; one that will list the books in chronological order. I prefer that.

Oh, forget it. I can't find any list I like.

I'll go back to Lord Wiki.

It looks like Storm Boy was the next book. It came out in 1963. A movie adaptation came out in 1976.

An actor named Greg Rowe played Storm Boy. From his filmography, it looks like he later starred in other adaptations of Thiele's work.

The movie won the AFI award for best film. That's pretty impressive.

Here's a scene from the movie. I would love that life. I'd love to take our homeschooling lifestyle to the beach. I mean homeschooling in the suburbs is great, but a beach setting would be so much better.

Here's a where are they now video thing about the kid in Storm Boy. Rowe has children of his own now. He lives in Canada. When he went to Australia, he brought DVD's home of his movies. He showed them to his kids. That's cute.

I think I'll ignore the publishing dates now, and instead just look at the titles that spark my interest.

He did an Australian Mother Goose book. It looks beautiful.

There's Blue Fin. That was the other Thiele movie that Greg Rowe starred in. The movie came out two years after Storm Boy. It's about a boy who is not good at sport. It seems his father doesn't much approve of him. Then they all go on a boat together. Disaster strikes!

I've decided to do something else. I'm very unsettled here. Can you tell? It's a pain looking through Lord Wiki because some of the books have become so rare. It's hard to find any information about them.

SO...instead I'm going to look at Gleebooks website. They have a list of his books; ones they have available. I prefer to know more about the books he wrote that are more popular, not-out-of -print, available, etc.

I also want to look at Amazon.com as well...see which of his books are available in America.

Crap again. Gleebooks doesn't really provide much information about the books either.

Why am I having so much trouble?

Forgot looking at a list of books. I give up.

I'm going to look at this Colin Thiele website instead. They're selling Thiele's final picture books on the site. They're about bilbies. Cool. I like bilbies.

This page of the site has photos and information about the garden statue of Thiele. It's really lovely. I'd probably cry if I saw it in person. It would get me all emotional. It has a pelican in it. For those who are Storm Boy virgins, pelicans play a big part in the story.

The University of South Australia has some stuff I can look at.

They provide a biography.

Thiele's paternal grandfather migrated from Germany. I wonder if his maternal grandparents were German as well. I wonder how integrated the family was. Did the grandparents and parents never learn English, or did they just choose to speak German at home with their child?

After he finished with the University of Adelaide, he also did some learning at the Adelaide Teacher's College. Then when he returned from the war, he did some more teacher preparation.

From 1946 until 1955, he taught English at Port Lincoln on the Erye Peninsula.

I'm going to look at Google Maps. Well, I see it, but it's hard to explain. I think South Australia has three peninsula's. Adelaide is on the right one. Port Lincoln is on the left one. Then there's another one in the middle.

Fish is a big industry in Port Lincoln.

The season of Survivor set in Australia were filmed near Port Lincoln. I think I actually watched that season...or some of it. I got really into it, and had a hard time deciding whether to watch that or Charmed. We didn't have a DVR at the time, so I had to make very difficult choices.

Oh, never mind. This Port Lincoln Survivor is way different from the one I saw. I saw the American show filmed in Australia. The Port Lincoln show was an Australian version of the show. The one I watched was in Northern Queensland.

See though...there was a time I liked reality TV.  I also watched some of the Real World. Then I lost my love for all that stuff.

Oh yeah. Back to Thiele....

From 1957 until 1963, he taught English at Wattle Park Teacher's College. Lord Wiki says Wattle Park is a suburb in Adelaide.

In 1964, he became vice-principal. A year later he became principal.

We probably don't need to know the exact details of his whole education career. I'll just say he did teaching until 1980. Then he retired. He would have been about sixty then. I wonder if he stayed that long in the job because he loved it, or was he not making enough from his books? I would imagine he'd make enough money writing. I could be wrong though.

It was in 2000 that he moved to Queensland. He was there for the last six years of his life. I wonder if he liked it. Did he adjust to it well, or did he miss South Australia?

IMDb says there were two other movies made from Thiele's books. The Fire in the Stone is about a boy searching for an opal thief. The movie was directed by Gary Conway who has directed episodes of various popular Australian TV shows...Neighbours, Prisoner, Flying Doctors, Country Practice, etc.

I'm not sure if the other movie (Gotcha) was based on a book, or if Thiele wrote the story for the film. It's a short film; only twenty-four minutes.

This site describes the plot of some of Thiele's books.

February Dragon is about a bushfire in New South Wales. Well, no. This other site says it takes place between Melbourne and Adelaide. I believe that more since Thiele is from South Australia.

February. Do most bushfires happen in February? Tim and I have been talking about NOT going back to Australia during a February. I'm a little nervous about going during a bushfire again...especially if we plan to be in Victoria. I know you can't predict these things, but if it's more common in certain areas at certain times.....I'd rather plan accordingly.

The Hammerhead Light is about a young girl who is friends with a lighthouse keeper. That sounds good. I bet I'd like it.

Seashores and Shadows is about the hunt for a shark. I'm sure I'd love that. I like shark stuff.

This South Australia website has some information on Thiele.

Thiele was the fourth of five children.

Thiele's ancestors were some of the first German migrants to South Australia. It sounds like there might have been three brothers....Samuel, William, and Johann Christian Thiele. I'm guessing they would have come in the mid 1800's. For the goldrush maybe? Was there gold in South Australia?

Here. This website has information about gold in South Australia. Actually, it happens to be the same South Australia site....just a different page. I googled and ended up at the same site.

The site says that gold wasn't as big in South Australia as it was in Victoria. But there WAS some gold there. The main gold years were in the 1890's. This was decades after the goldrush in Victoria. I'm not going to read the whole article. I'm lazy. But from what I see, people did LOOK for gold in earlier decades. I guess they didn't have much luck though. But the Thiele ancestors could have come looking for gold. Maybe? I do wonder why they left Germany. Was something bad going on around then?

The grandfather came in 1855. What was happening in Germany then?

Well, there was a war from 1848 until 1852. I'm not sure if that would have created a wave of German immigrants.

Okay. Cool. This website here has a whole history of Germans in Australia.

Most German emigrants came to America, but some others went to Australia.

In the 183o's and 1840's many Germans left the homeland because of religious persecution. But the site says this didn't happen much after that. It probably didn't apply to Grandpa Thiele then.

Some migrated because of economic situations.

In 1848, there was some kind of revolution. Many Germans left then.

Well, I guess I'll just have to keep guessing.

Wait no. I think I got the answer. The German Australia site says that it was Lutherans who came in droves to South Australia. Thiele was Lutheran and from South Australia. I'm guessing his family was in that group. Plus, I misread the German website. I thought they said religious-type fleeing ended in the 1840's. What they really said is that it stopped being the LEADING cause.

I was just googling some more, and learned Thiele died on the exact same day as Steve Irwin. I'm guessing Irwin's death overshadowed Thiele's death.

Anyway, I think I'm going to end this here.....

Budderoo National Park and Minnamura Rainforest

The next place on my list to write about was Jervis Bay, but I'm going to skip that for today and write about Budderoo National Park. The reason is, looking a the map, I'm thinking we'd do this the same day we do Kiama

I'm trying to figure out the days. We'll have five full days in the South Coast. The first few days will be a weekend, and I'd like to spend those days relaxing at the holiday park—beach stuff and hanging out. Relaxing.

Then on the weekdays, I'd like to do the exploring. I'm wondering if I have too much stuff planned for those three days. Symbio and Stanwell Park will take one day. I figure we can do Kiama and Budderoo on the same day. I really don't think looking at a blowhole and a pink post office needs to take up that much time.

I'm not completely sure we'll go to Jervis Bay. Originally, we planned to go there so Tim could scuba dive, but then later he talked about doing that near Bare Island or Hawaii instead. I'd still be interested in Jervis Bay though. I dreamed about it once--and it's white sands.

I think what we WILL skip is the dolphin cruise. Frankly, I'm not much into dolphins. They're cute, but I'm more of a shark girl. I don't think Tim and Jack care much about them either. If I'm going to dolphins, I'd rather do something like Monkey Mia. Although it seems that might be getting too touristy.

Okay, I guess it's time to start the research.

Lord Wiki, please tell me about Budderoo.

Never mind! Lord Wiki really has nothing to say. I've rarely seen Lord Wiki so speechless before.

This Kiama website has some information. It won awards in 1993, 1994, and 1995 for environmental tourism. When I see things like that, it makes me wonder. Why didn't it win the award AFTER that? Did they stop giving out that award? Did something better come along? Or have things gone downhill in Budderoo? Inquiring minds want to know.

The website says it takes one hour to complete the Minnamura rainforest walk in Budderoo; and two hours if you want to include the falls. I guess we'll see how much energy we have. Who knows....we might be so in love with the Kiama Blowhole that we stay there all day and never make it to Minnamura.

Okay. I found something good. This website has a lot of information. He'll have to take the place of my Lord Wiki today.

There are four different types of rainforests in Minnamura Falls. I have a feeling I wouldn't be able to tell them apart. You know, I don't know if I've ever been to a rainforest before. Is that pathetic? I shall have to ask my mommy and daddy because I've done the majority of my life's traveling with them. I mean we do go to places without them(like Australia) but I definitely know we didn't do rainforests on our last Australian vacation. We also go to Disney World and NYC without my parents. No rainforests there. Although Disney World does have the Rainforest Cafe. For all you rude people who say The Rainforest Cafe doesn't count, I bet you're the same mean people who'd say eating at the Outback Restaurant doesn't count as an authentic Australian experience. If the bloomin' Onion aint REAL Australia, than what the hell is?

The website doesn't give the name of the Koori group that lived there, but does say they spoke the Dharawal language. I'm guessing they were the Wadi Wadi.

I found this website with Dharawal words.

Moon = Yanada. That's pretty.

Mother= wiyanga

I like the language. It's very pretty. I'd love to hear it spoken more.

It seems early on, in the white people days, a lot of the rainforest was lost because of the timber industry. If I'm reading this right, eventually this came to an end because people found other forests to cut down in northern New South Wales. So, I think that's why a little bit of rainforests in the south remain.

The trees people were after were red cedar, and the nickname of the trees was red gold.

This website has more information about the trees. They were soft and easy to cut down. In the olden days, the people didn't have big tree-cutting-down machines. They just had axes. So, they liked a tree that was easy to cut down. Because so many of the trees were lost, it is now illegal to mess with them within state forests. Isn't it usually illegal to mess with ANYTHING in a state forest? You know that saying......Take only Pictures. Leave nothing but footprints.

Dairy became the big thing in the Kiama area. I think I mentioned that in the last entry--and the dairy farm that didn't work out so well....became an amusement park.

The first butter factory in Australia was around this area. I love butter. See, another sign of how hard it would be for me to be vegan. Although, I'm probably okay with the butter substitutes. I like butter and anything that tastes remotely like butter.

In 1896, Minnamura Rainforest was listed as a Crown Reserve. I'm not exactly sure what that means, but I'm guessing it's like a protected heritage site.....something along those lines. Or maybe it means Britain claimed the land as its own. I'm not sure.

In 1936, a man named Howard Judd became a park ranger there. The rainforest has a plaque in honor of him. He was a self-taught Botanist. I like self-taught. College/Uni is great. But I think we can learn a lot on our own, without it. I don't think you need a formal education to become an expert on something. Although, if I was going to get brain surgery, I'd probably want someone with a formal education. Maybe. Probably.

Judd did a lot of research in the forest and figured out all the tourism that was happening wasn't good for the trees. One of the things he did, to try to prevent too much destruction, was build new pathways and footbridges. This wasn't enough though, so in the 1980's, plans were made to build a boardwalk. With the boardwalk, people could visit the rainforest, but the trees had some breathing room.

The big project was finished in 1991. They not only gifted the tourists with a boardwalk, but also a cafe and visitor information center.

I'm excited about going here. Maybe we'll have a snack in the cafe. I wonder if they serve the bloomin' onion......

What would our world be like if we
knew for sure there 
was life after death, and 
we could easily talk to our 
dearly-departed on the Internet?

The Dead are Online a novel by Dina Roberts