Thursday, September 3, 2015

Emancipation from Adulthood (short term)

Dear peeps and strangers from the Internet,

I'm back. Its been a really long time and I have a confession to make. Its been close to a year since I've written anything. But for anyone who travels or has the desire in them, you'll understand perfectly well.

One year ago, Alex and I officially decided that we would take some time off and do some traveling. Not just Thailand and Bali for two weeks, but some real and substantial traveling. For as liberating the feeling is, it also requires a lot of sacrifice and commitment to the cause. I worked 6 days a week for the last 18 months and became tired. In some ways, it felt like I had lost sight of the light in the tunnel. Life became a routine of three quarter lattes, bus rides with crazy cat ladies and staying home on Friday nights so I wouldn't spend money.

When life becomes a routine, a part of your creative spark dies and you don't find the joy in the small things. My world became very small and I became a bit more emotionally flat lined. But two weeks ago, my world opened up again and "traveler's high"  can't even begin to describe my feelings. I arrived in the UK after a 26 hour flight and almost missing a connecting flight (our flight from Sydney was 1.5 hours late leaving because someone had a seizure just as the flight was taxiing.Let me tell you, don't ever look out the window if your flight has to do a three point turn on the Sydney runway, you'll lose your lunch!) but I couldn't help but feel great. After all this time of just working and working, I was finally able to see and experience new places, people and situations. Stories were coming to life right before my eyes but I hadn't even left Sydney. When you're stuck in a routine funk, nothing is worthy of a story or the effort associated with the fabrication. Get me on a plane though, and everything is vivid and worthy of telling.

I will be traveling with my boyfie (Alex) and manfriend (Richard) for the next four months. We're saying "adios" to adulthood for a little while and living like the reckless 20-somethings we ought to be. I'm officially closer to 30 now than I am to 20 which is absolutely terrifying. I feel like i need to step into a government office and verify that I do not agree with the age I am supposed to be. I'm still alright with the idea of Ramen noodles being a sustainable dinner and sharing a room with 30 other strangers in a hostel. That's normal for 26, right?right?! 

I spent a week with my Gma which was great. She is slowly starting to lose her memory so sometimes it's like being with a toddler who can drive a car and has a bank card. Terrifying and rewarding all in the same breath. This year I spent my 26th birthday with her which was extra special because I spent my 16th with her. She woke me up at the crack of dawn to wish me a happy birthday which is the best present I could have received. In a haze of her memories dating from World War 2 with the Italian sweetie shop and fast tracking to the days of working for Mr. Frances in the lawyers office in the 1960's, I felt honoured and cherished that she remembered it was my birthday.

The inner story teller is alive and well. The more I see, feel and experience, I will share it with you. Thank you for being my audience. I will do my very best to bring everything to life and leave you hanging for more.

-K xx


Gma and the Crew at Anstruther

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Blessed



Today, I'm taking a moment to count my blessings. Not the Instagram #blessed kind, but truly thanking the universe and the funny way it makes everything come together so nicely. This day one year and a bit ago, I woke up to the smell of a beef kidney omelette baking in the oven (for those of you who have never had the pleasure of this odour, it smells like piss), two children biting each other which ultimately ended up in a doodle punch to end it and a hung over 6 months pregnant mother.  I thought things were bad but it slowly went downhill from there. The mother's cooking (if you've read previous posts, that's a pretty good indication) was so horrid I used to buy chomp bars and hide them and eat them after everyone went to sleep. The day I gave up was the day I caught the kids smearing jam sandwiches in my bed sheets. I went to strip the sheets and realised there was a tag hanging off the bottom of the sheet. To my horror, it was a Salvation Army tag. The desire to bathe in a tub full of bleach is almost an understatement!

But things got a lot better. I was saved by the kindest & nicest man I have ever met. He saved me from a 'depression slump' and treated me with the respect any person deserves. I was treated more like a daughter and given the liberty to enjoy my space and explore all the elements of "country living". The physical work form day to day was rather rewarding and easy, it was the emotional roller coaster I was recovering from was the most challenging part. But with enough cups of tea from Paul and my nightly routine of feeding the alpacas, I started to calm down and embrace my new life. Paul understood me and what I needed, and for that alone I will forever respect him. Everyday I got to experience something new and meet so many wonderful people along the way. From the moment the little Jack Russell named Tess came to see me at the Truck Stop, I started being grateful. Sometimes taking a stance in your own life, only seeing the positives and opportunities and firmly deciding "the glass will always be half full" and "be thankful you have a glass" are the best ways to take control and love your life. (This was never intended to sound hat cheesy, but it's the best & only way I can explain it).

Fast forward one year later, everything has gone uphill and my life is so different and better. I've got a close & dear friend visiting me from Canada, an adoring boyfriend (we just celebrated a year and a half together in a few days ago), a house to call home filled with the best people I could ask for and a corporate job which boasts a spectacular view of Sydney from the 39th floor. I'm taking a moment today to reflect on how much my life has changed (100% for the better) and will continue to become a thing of beauty.

At the end of the day, your choices are half chance. So are everybody else's.

Friday, August 22, 2014

A Fresh New Start

Dear Reader,

 I suppose I should write a thing or two about what I've been up to in the last eight months & share some wisdom. And I'm sure there are some of you who want to know what happened after I left the vegan, homophobic, racist bible thumper. Grab your mug tea and cosy up for this one, it gets better.

So, the very last you knew of my adventures was this, I basically lived with a demon summoned from hell. I don't think I'd ever cried so much as I did living with her. In between fits of funger and being so sad being so isolated in some valley an hour and a half away from Wagga Wagga. A day or two after we settled into the farm, it became very clear the mother had some issues. Home economics and general home keeping were off with the pixies and there was no personal space or privacy within her house. It was as though I was living in a tree fort with the luxury of "fresh pumped out of the creek" water. I was annoyed with not having four walls surrounding my sleeping quarters and sleeping between two church pews.

Now, this woman on top of evidently being a total nut job, "ran" around Australia (including Tasmania) in 2010. She allegedly did it with her two children in tow and with the aid of backpackers she was picking up and dropping off in various cities along the run. And home became a vintage, 1973 Scania coach liner bus. She ripped out the seats and outfitted it with a bed and a "living room". So when we decided there was no more room in her cluttered home, my school bus became my new digs. It was wonderful getting away from the little demon seeds and not have to worry about waking up to the kids biting each other and dressing their stuffed animals in my socks and undies. But Christ it was freezing! It would dip down to -1 at night sometimes. Sleeping in a non insulated tin bus in the cold is one experience I hope I never have to relive.

One day we decided to drive 1600 km from NSW to Queensland to go stay with her second baby daddy's family. We packed up her truck and the mandatory Beverly Hill Billies trailer full of luggage and food. When I asked Sarah where were staying along the way, she simply replied "hotels cost money. We're gonna pitch tents at truck stops and camp out along the way". Ah yes, nothing like a bit of truck stop sexual assault to get any holiday started! We were three kilometres away from the exit ramp to get on the highway to start our journey when Sarah's phone rang. She actually pulled over to answer which was a blessing for me. On the other end, was the pub owner who's ad I had originally replied to. He was shorthanded at the pub and needed a back packer to cover a few shifts. Sarah said she was willing to "loan me out" for two weeks under the condition I be paid for my work (ironic, considering she didn't pay me anything but paid her seven year old $20 to clean her room!) and that I be returned to them when they got back to their farm. Seemed like a reasonable deal. I was scared senseless because not only did I not know where I was, I was going to stay with a complete stranger in a pub. She dropped me off at a trucker stop and then my psychological demons came to party in my head. I just started crying in this auto mechanics shop, feeling so lost and no idea what was ahead of me. Out of a corner, I could hear some kind of an animal with a little bell attached to it. "For F*cks sake, a cat. Really?" To my delight, this skinny wiry  Jack Russell came out to say hello and distract me until my ride came to pick me up. (For those who don't know, my parents have two Jack Russells in Canada I absolutely loooove them to death. They're one of the top things I miss about home). I decided right there this was the universe's way of telling me everything was going to be alright. I don't think a Jack Russell would cross my path if bad things were to ensue. This was a Tuesday and a trend emerged after that...

Paul arrived and automatically I liked the guy. To my surprise, he was a little bit older but looked very kind and lovely. He brought me back to the pub and straight away offered me something real to eat. Having known Sarah, he knew what dietary delights I had endured for the previous 5 weeks. Tasmanian Brie, Danish Salami and Pinot Noir. I knew straight away this man was sent from Heaven to save me. With that first swig of wine and tantalizing bite of crisp water biscuit and creamy brie, all the prior stress of living with Sarah and her brats washed away. I politely asked Paul if I could stay with him for the remaining 7 weeks and never have to go anywhere near Sarah. He kindly obliged and even drove me back to her farm that afternoon to gather the remains of my belongings.  I'll never forget my first night at the pub so long as I live. Taking a hot shower in a warm house and having my own comfortable bed to sleep in with brand new sheets. Everyday, the pub became more and more like home. I had a proper kitchen with fresh food to cook with. Solar power and propane stoves could no longer jeopardize my culinary escapades. There was lots of space to call my own and some freshly shorn, temperamental alpacas in the back paddock I effortlessly tried to befriend. Paul trusted me to handle his pub and run a tight ship. All the locals in the village seemed to take a liking to me and were always happy to offer extra jobs on their farms for some pocket money. I made a life long friend with this beautiful German woman who's words of kindness and home cooking made me feel closer to home and a little less homesick. Paul's girlfriend Suzy was so kind and another "bossy boots" just like myself. We got along right from the start and I was fortunate to have learned a lot from her - from the art of bending metal to make hooks to tending a beautiful garden. Her ability to "make something from nothing" still floors me. She has the patience and the artistic insight to see the potential beauty in what would be a lost cause to most people.

My Seven weeks at the pub resulted in a lot of comfort eating to over come the turbulence of living from Sarah's, a lot of days on farms doing all sorts of jobs, forging new friendships, running a pub with the local women and savouring time out of the city. At times it felt like time was soft, but in reality it went by in the blink of an eye. I'm approaching the one year anniversary of the start of my farm work.  It feels like a life time ago but as though it was just yesterday. Funny how time starts to play tricks with you as you get older.

I think the goodness of everything needs to be there for everyone to see. I'm truly going to make an effort to update this more often xx


"Tess" who ultimately was the best comfort I could have ever asked for.

Happy Snaps in front of my "house". Later, crazy b*tch

My "home away from home". So many good memories. 




-K xx

Monday, January 20, 2014

Monsters & Vegans Oh My!!

It’s 2014 and about time I started telling a few tales from my roller coaster year of 2013. 2013 started off with a bang and only got better as it matured with age. I was blessed to be able to travel, experience things you couldn't even fathom unless you leave the suburbs and learn so much from everything I did. I was given the opportunity to come to Australia for a visit 9 months ago but I just haven’t gotten around to leaving yet. Even since Australia, I’ve been seeing this beautiful country with my wonderful boyfriend who puts up with me through my fits of “funger” and “hangriness”. We slept in the back of the car travelling to the 12 apostles and snacked courtesy of 711 and any cheap roadside cafĂ©. I got my first job in Sydney which lead me to working with a morbidly obese, ecstasy loving, cocaine raging Greek boss and his petite, gay business partner that was potentially more bitchy than Regina George of “Mean Girls” (Fetch is NOT going to happen!). After a turbulent 5 months of working for the bosses likely summoned from hell, I decided it was time to leave and go do some work on a farm so I could legally stay in Australia for a little bit longer. Now here’s the perplexing part – the government tells you to complete 88 days of farm work but there are no terms or conditions set out for the farmers or industries that take you to complete your time. So basically, it’s at the farmer’s discretion to work you as much as they want for a little to no wage, they don’t have to provide you accommodation and they can even charge you for a shower after they’ve made you work a 16 hour day in the sweltering sun. There’s no agency you can call to make sure this doesn’t happen to you and you can’t call the police because you’re there on your own free will. Unless you come across a Buffalo Bill farmer, then you can call the police. I went to the only place I knew of to find work – Gumtree or as we say in Canada, kijiji. There were hundreds of ads looking for backpackers to come pick fruit, muster cattle, working in shearing sheds, child care that could be signed off as agricultural work, jarring honey, picking beans and killing cattle for Big Macs. It was a tad overwhelming because you have to go out into a rural area and you really have no idea where you’re going to end up or with who. There’s never a mention of a police check on either end and your accommodation isn’t mentioned or shown so you can only hope for the best. I selected an ad that was looking for a girl to work in a pub and do some casual renovation work and painting. It seemed like a nice enough place and I received a response within an hour. Unfortunately they had already found another girl for the spot but there was another family willing to take me for my 88 days. Even better, I could catch a train only an hour away from Sydney and then they would be able to drive me to their farm the next day! The mum was 6 ½ months pregnant with two kids aged 7 and 5. Seemed nice enough – a real liberal, hippie sort from what she had told me over the phone and in our emails. We went back to a rental property they owned and were fixing up. I was told we were only staying the night and heading back to the farm the next morning. I could not believe the state of the house when I first walked in. I’m sometimes criticized for being a bit of a ‘snob’ and doing a mental ‘white glove test’ of people’s homes when I first arrive. Just stepping on the floor was enough for me – there was over a week’s worth of dirt on the floor, jam sandwiches smeared on the walls, a few days’ worth of dishes piled up in the sink and on the floor, a filthy bathroom and just shit everywhere in the house. (sorry about the language mom) I took a deep breath, reminded myself I wasn’t in the city anymore and just needed to accept I had moved in the Beverly Hill Billies. The mum got me started on dishes and cleaning straight away but with no spray cleaners or soap and just a gross old rag. The mountain of housework eventually diminished into a molehill and then it came to lunch. If you know me well enough – there’s no doubt I love my food. It’s a passion that was instilled in me while my mom was pregnant with me. I’ve been well fed my entire life and appreciate a good meal or the effort when someone else cooks for me. But this mum, needed to go back to high school home economics and learn how to boil water properly. I remember being  so hungry and looking forward to a good afternoon fill. Well, instead I got lamb chops that were semi cooked but with no seasoning on them at all (because “salt and pepper are bad for you”). The poor lamb chops were accompanied with a side of spaghetti except she had forgotten to stir the pasta while it was cooking so it was more like a glutinous lump of unidentifiable food that was topped with a tin of tomatoes. Yes, she literally put the pasta on the plate and then just opened a tin of tomatoes and put them right on top of the pasta. My taste buds were crying outrage as I took the first bite and couldn’t believe I was even eating this. I’d never been turned off the idea of eating as quickly as my first day with the hill billies. This was lunch number one, there were 87 to go. My day only got better when it came to sleeping arrangements. The mum had told me not to bother bringing a sleeping bag or a camping mattress because she had an abundant supply for me at her place. After dinner that night, she told me she had actually forgotten to bring me a mattress. No dramas, I had brought a yoga mat and could sleep on that. And then it came, there was no sleeping bag or quilt for me either. Just a picnic blanket that was 1 metre by 1 metre, a tarp on one side and just a thin layer of polyester on the other. It was so cold that night too that I had layered on all my clothes and was still freezing cold. The icing on the cake was realizing that the carpet in the room had been previously occupied by dogs who I’m pretty sure defecated on every square inch of the place. I had the most miserable sleep that night and then woke up in the morning to the smell of urine coming out of the kitchen…

I remember waking up that morning not totally remembering where I was and being confused by the sounds of children screaming and crying and a rather nauseous odor coming from the kitchen. I quickly snapped back that I wasn’t in the city but rather voluntarily in some hell hole. I went outside my room to see the kids biting each other while the mum was taking breakfast out of the oven. When asked if I was hungry, I almost instinctually replied with a “does a bear shit in the woods” but remembered there were young tender minds in my presence and it was responsibility to positively influence them. I replied with a bleary eyed “yes” and eagerly sat at the table waiting some breakfast. What was served to me I wouldn’t even feed to my own dumpster diving Jack Russell. The “quiche” staring back at me was made with cheese, carrot, onion, wilted lettuce, tomatoes which had the rotten bits cut off and beef kidneys. I couldn’t even look or smell this without wanting to throw up everywhere. I pushed my plate away and said I was more of a “coffee first thing in the morning girl”. To my horror, there was no coffee of tea anywhere in the house because they believed caffeine seriously stunted your growth and was terrible for you. Luckily I found a chocolate bar in my bag and that filled me up til dinner that night. We were supposed to be leaving that afternoon to go back to their farm but that was continually pushed to “tomorrow” which really turned into three weeks at their rental unit in the suburbs. Just when I thought things could not get any worse, we arrived at the family farm.

Any low budget horror movie seems to start and finish in some sort of a Tarantino-style abandoned house. In our subconscious, we’re disgusted and can’t imagine such a place exists. We think that some sick bastard has a vivid imagination that no real human being would ever physically be capable of building something like it real life. Well, when we arrived at the family farm at 2:30 in the morning after an eight hour trek, I could not believe what I was seeing. We had arrived to a shack in the middle of a 25 acre field surrounded by olive trees and five angry, territorial goats. Speechless is an understatement for when I entered the house – the stench and the mess were comparable to something you would find in the A&E series “Hoarders”. As part of the reoccurring trend, there was just shit everywhere in the house. Any sense of pride had obviously seeped out through the gaps in the windows and walls into the country night. Sleeping arrangements were once again a treat. This time, I had the luxury of sleeping in between two church pews amongst moving boxes and odd pieces of furniture. The mum was even proud to brag about how she had stolen the pews from a church that had left them outside whilst renovating. I couldn’t think of a worse way to gain bad karma in life!! I woke up the next morning to the two monsters trying to shove their fingers up my nose and had to remind myself this was indeed reality and not some “Chucky” style nightmare!! With the sunlight illuminating the features of the house – I was left speechless. The mess and filth of the house was even worse than what I had seen before. The stench of the house seemed more vivid and there were even more toys and boxes of junk everywhere. So basically I was designated as the house nanny/cook/maid/mediator for the Beverly Hill Billies. My day started off with cleaning a fridge which had been full of food and been turned off for three weeks while we were fixing the rental property. And then all the dirty dishes that had been left for three weeks too. But don’t worry, this was the beginning of domestic bliss and I don’t want to bore you! My time with the Clampetts made me want to pull my hair out but more importantly it made me realize exactly the type of individual I don’t want to be when I grow up. It made me realize I will feed my children three nutritious meals a day and send them to school 5 days a week. This mum thought the teacher was stupid so her kids only went to school 2 days a week and she homeschooled them 3 days a week with bible stories and outdoor adventure time. Yeah, that’ll look fantastic on their university application in 13 years. Oh yeah, did I mention that this mum didn’t believe in cooking any food because she thought cooking food ‘killed’ any nutrition in it and was toxic for your body. So these poor kids would have raw sausages for breakfast along with an apple and celery sticks. Thanks for all of the kick ass breakfasts, mom. Seeing what these kids ate made me wish I could have teleported home for a plate of blueberry pancakes and given you a massive hug.


Don’t worry, there’s a very very happy second part to this story. It involves a country pub, 2 of the nicest people I have the pleasure of knowing, a lot of farm work and the  most quirky but lovely little village the pub is in. And not a single child or crazy pregnant vegan mother is in sight!! Stay tuned for part two coming this week. 

Home Sweet Home. An Engineering Nightmare 

Thursday, August 1, 2013

It happened again…..

It happened again. I didn't think the universe was capable of such a disastrous shit storm in one day. Rest assured, this disaster day will NEVER beat the original one. But it does give it a run for its money. I’ll share another disaster day which involves public transport, dress socks, thermometers and an escalator.

Monday started off like any other day in paradise. A bone chilling morning of 12 degrees (haha!) at 6am to get dressed and catch the Sydney bus to work.  I was running late and forgot my cup of tea to take on the bus. It seems to be whenever I forget my tea the day never seems to start properly. I got on the bus which is always packed with an entertaining assortment of people. There’s the trades men, uni students, the crazy Chinese lady that wears all black and yells at everyone in Mandarin and the odd homeless person. I put my headphones in and mind my own business every morning otherwise someone will try and convert you to being a Jehovah’s witness in the 16 minute bus ride to railway square. True story bro. Got to railway square and went to buy a pie and cup of tea because the ones I made were still at home on the counter. I was going through my bag looking for my wallet only to realize someone had either stolen it on the bus or I’d dropped it (either one is completely convincing).After a fit of swearing and looking like the English version of the crazy Chinese lady on the bus, I had to call the bank in Canada and cancel all my bank cards. Here I was, 7 am without any money, bus cards, bank cards or id. This day could only get better, right? Managed the hour bus ride to work without any incidents and then commenced my 15 minute walk up the 90 degree hill. Okay, slight exaggeration but this hill is incredibly steep. It leaves you puffing and panting like a kid at fat camp that just had to do a 100m dash for a Twinkie.  As I was puffing and panting, it suddenly dawned on me that I had left my work socks at home and had nothing to wear with my steel cap boots!! I even went to a 7/11 looking for socks with no luck. When I got to work and explained my situation, my chef lent me a pair he had in his bag. He’s a bit of a rough-around-the edges, typical English lad. He smokes like a fiend, is a bit of a grub and can be the meanest bastard when he wants to be. He pulled these dress socks out of his bag that were animated with speech bubbles that had BAM! & POW POW!! And WTF?? Written all over them. Not to mention that they had holes in the heels and in the toes of them. Considering all circumstances, I wasn’t even going to question the last time they’d been graced by the washing machine. Beggars can’t be choosers I suppose! The day went by a little bit better than the morning. I made carrot cakes, 2 trays of brownies, caramel slice and a ton of hors d’oeuvres for a cocktail party. As I was taking the brownies out of the 350/180 degree oven, the thermometer on the rack fell off and landed on the top of my hand. It sat there for a few seconds and then I managed to shake it off. I couldn’t do that until I put the tray of brownies down otherwise hot brownie batter would have landed all over me.  As this day went from bad to worse, I decided to leave work early and would go back to Campbelltown to catch the footy/rugby game with Alex and Simon. I was trying to get out of work by 2:00 to get the bus. My boss kept calling me every 5 minutes just asking the dumbest questions and wanting to rant about everything. I ended up missing my first bus and then when the second bus came round, it was running ahead of schedule and did not stop to pick me up!! Fast forward a few hours, I hastily showered and ran for the bus. Go figure with the lucky streak I was having that day, the bus was running late which delayed me catching the train back to Campbelltown. What happened at the train station the icing on the cake.

Just a little side story…

Once upon a time, in a magical place called the Eaton’s centre in downtown Toronto, my dad was out shopping and had me in a little beach stroller/pram. My dad was still pretty new at the whole parenting situation and was pretty excited to be out with me. As we were going down an escalator, my dad had failed to notice the sign which said strollers/prams had to be turned around in order to prevent your baby from falling out and killing themselves. As we were going down, I stood up in the pram, dad lost grip and I went tumbling down the escalator with the pram still attached to me. My dad just about died of a heart attack running down the escalator expecting a dead baby in the pram at the bottom. Fortunately I was still alive (obviously, I wouldn’t be writing this if I wasn’t!) and appeared fine. Dad rushed me to St. Michael’s Hosiptal which is a convenient 250metres from the shopping centre and had me checked for a broken head and bones. I wonder if they built the hospital there for all the first time dads who’s kids fling themselves down escalators! The Doctor said what actually saved my life was a toque/beanie. The one dad put on my head was wayyy too big so he had to roll it a few times to fit me. For every step of the escalator I hit, the toque was there taking the brunt of the beating. Rumour has it I came out of that battle with some pretty legit escalator step marks embedded into my forehead!

Back to the train station in Sydney…

Due to delayed buses and my utter lack of organization, I was running behind to catch the train back for the game. I had about 2 and half minutes to get from one side of the station to the other. I was so determined to get on that train I was running at full speed. Imagine a klutzy giraffe running at full speed and trying to catch a train, that’s pretty much me! I was running up an escalator and suddenly lost my footing. Rather than falling down, I miraculously fell up on the escalator. My iPhone hit the step, then hand and my forehead. Instead of a beanie, an iPhone saved me my splitting my head open and looking like an idiot in the middle of central station. The metal case on my phone has a dent and a piece missing but I can deal with that. Better than looking like Nelly with a band aid across my forehead! I also owe some credit to my shoes too. I lost a row of gold metal studs on the front of my shoe which also slowed my feet down and prevented me from falling down the steps. On a plus side – I made it back to Campbelltown for 6:57 and the kick off was at 7!! and really, 2 for 2 on escalator incidents resulting in no stitches, comas or life threatening blood loss is a pretty lucky streak if you ask me.  


Seems like I don’t have little tidbits of bad stuff that happen here and there. It’s all or nothing with the southern hemisphere. I’m ready for round three universe!
This is going to be a kadoozle of a blog…

GOOD MORNING!! It’s been a little while since I have updated this and I know I left you guys with a bit of a cliff hanger (haha!) on the last post. As per usual, work, life, burnt batches of cookies and unfathomably early mornings got in the way of keeping this on its fortnight roster. I've decided for this blog there will be two parts to it. One on a bit more of a deep & meaningful perspective (god bless those D&M conversation days) and then of course just a filler on some more funny stuff I've encountered on at work, on public transportation and just everywhere else I seem to go. Go grab a double double, a cup of tea or a JD and coke and make yourself cozy.

It takes a village to raise a child…


Here’s the deep and meaningful bit I have to get out of the way. So judging by the title, you’ve probably assumed I’m going to go on some kind of a parenting rant and rope the government into it too. Quite the opposite, actually. In the last four months I’ve been here, a few friends have announced they’re expecting (congratulations!) and others are trying. It is absolutely inevitable that I’ve reached my twenties. My newsfeed on facebook is no longer bombarded with beer pong championship pictures and blackout status updates and tweets. Now, it’s engagement announcements, pregnancy posts and the “my life is over, my kid can hold their own spoon so next week they’re gonna ask me for a lexus” updates. But hey, we’re all in this together. SO, with all this talk of babies and all of us 20-somethings growing up, it has got me thinking about how important it is to support friends having kids and to be there for them whenever possible. To think that they’re raising a tiny little human with an ‘empty slate’ and you can influence them, for better or for worse, is a little mind boggling! It’s quite humbling to realize that you have the ability, skills and responsibility to empower and enlighten such a young, vulnerable mind. With great power comes great responsibility. Last week, I was taking the bus home from central Sydney in peak rush hour. The bus was packed to the nines and sweltering hot. 20 minutes into the bus trip, a mum about 35 years old got onto the bus with a rather cranky, hungry and tired two year old. This kid’s screaming could have been heard from miles away and I’m pretty sure it curdled a few peoples blood. By this time, there was an old woman (about 65-70 years old) seated beside me and mumbling to herself. When this mum got on the bus with her temperamental toddler, she just about had a kitten. She yanked out my one ear phone to get my attention and started whinging to me about the situation. “Can you believe this?” she said “The nerve of this mother bringing on her toddler onto a packed bus in the middle of rush hour. What a little tramp!” Of all the people on the bus, I expected this older woman to be the first to offer a helping hand to try and calm this kid down. But instead, something completely unexpected happened. The “Gen Y’s” stepped up to the plate. iPhones and ear buds were tucked away and four 20-something year old uni students started playing games with this little kid and shared their fruit snacks with him. This kid had an ear-to-ear grin and the whole bus could sense this frazzled mother’s appreciation. I’m sure most of the people on the bus expected an older person to try and calm this toddler down. “Gen Y” is often too criticized for being ultra-vain, narcissistic and facebook obsessed. Maybe we are to some degree. But, strip us of all that, we’re not all that bad. We’ve been taught well by our parents and are one of the more caring and understanding generations. We aren’t likely to scorn that mother bringing the toddler on the packed bus, but instead help her out and make everyone’s bus ride home a little bit better. We’re a generation that grew up in a rapidly changing time with everything from politics to technology. We’ve grown up without ever having to really make sacrifice but we are true victims of sky-high divorce rates and evolving families. We’re a little lazy at times because we were spoon fed too much in life. Yet we’re harshly criticized when we don’t have the adequate skills to complete a job or live our lives as proper functioning adults. Maybe one day, the older generation will come to realize we’re not as bad as we’re pegged to be. We’re rather different and narcissistic, but take some time to break down our barrier and we’re a good bunch. Don’t let a few rotten apples spoil the bushel. 

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

The Unforeseen Joys of Employment…

I think there comes a point in every young professional’s work life that they have to suppress the urge(s) to hijack their workplace, strip everyone naked and make them perform a conga line. You’ll obviously oversee everything and laugh like the raging lunatic you indeed are. I’m coming a little bit close to this point so instead of a sadistic, sweaty, XXX conga line; I’m going to blog about it and hopefully find some humour in this dark, long tunnel.

To fully wrap your head around this blog, I need to fill you in about where I’m working. I’m gainfully employed by a little hole-in-the-wall coffee shop in the CBD (Central Business District) in downtown Sydney. I’m a two minute walk away from Circular Quay, Harbour Bridge and the Sydney Opera House. The CBD is filled with all kinds of interesting people – business people (obviously, duh!), CEOs, the odd morning-after hooker and some homeless people that could be mistaken for the lead singer of a Swedish death metal band. There’s even one guy that periodically wears an eye patch so we call him Captain Hook. The majority of the CBD population are the business people or as I say “frat boys that only slightly grew up”. The boys are hilarious, just like in their high school glory days as jocks, they still travel as a crew and get the exact same matching haircuts (still stuck in 2002 with the frosted tips and gel), get their weekly manicures (I’m not even kidding) and suit up in almost identical suits every day. They usually come into our shop in a rush on their blackberries (yea, they’re basically labelling themselves as walking dinosaurs with one of those things) and order their coffee while in the middle of a conference call. I’ve become quite good at knowing when they’re on a conference call or if their wife is on the other line giving them shit for leaving the lid up, again. When they’re on a conference call, they try to be as quiet as possible because technically they’re not supposed to be out of the office. Because most of these financial jockeys are so rude, I’m as loud as possible and will always confirm their order before ringing it through the register.  You become an expert of receiving cut eye when you do this 10-15 times a day! Some of the lads are just lovely and make your day. Like Levi. He’s the grouchiest yet happiest gay man I’ve ever met. And he’s got the same name as my dog so it’s always a pleasure seeing his grouchy/bewildered mug first thing in the morning for his 6 coffees he has to get for the office (I think someone is the office b*tch!) And then there are the ladies…

LADIES!!

Boy o boy are you ever a confusing lot! You’ll cut every corner possible to keep you mama fuel skinny and healthy (and make it very clear to me it HAS to be skim milk and organic coffee beans) but then order a chocolate croissant with butter on the side. For realz? Just like the financial jockeys, you travel in a pack like the mean girls and are so critical of every other posse that crosses your path. I’ve never witnessed more walking twigs either. You’d give the Paris fashion week a run for its money, no doubts about that. So many fake eye lashes, hair extensions and spray tans. It almost makes me start doubting myself and thinking there’s something wrong with me! There’s a trio of really bitchy, twiggy ladies that come in usually every morning. They each order a skinny latte and a bottle of San Pellegrino. They order the san pan because they say it fills them up the same as food but without the calories.  We call them the pussy cat dolls. Their ‘leader’ of that clique even looks like that 40-something lead singer of the pussycat dolls; Nicole something or other. The one that sings about boobies and groupies, that chick.  To all the ladies balancing work, home life, spray tan dates and “dates” with their sizzling personal trainer (and yes, I unfortunately have had the pleasure of hearing all your steamy secrets and new “workout positions” one too many times) – we salute you!

This one’s for tha hisptas…
To the ultra hipster Jack White, please come back. You’re a breath of fresh air with your perfectly groomed “V for Vendetta” styled mo and chin beard. Your nose ring and rim horned glasses make me laugh uncontrollably because I’m 99% sure both are fake and purely aesthetic. Your pain-in-the-ass need for gluten and dairy free soup and a cup of coffee you never drink hot can be taken care of at our hole-in-the-wall shop. But at least you’re pleasant and have manners unlike the financial jockeys. For the crazy feminist chick in her grunge Nirvana jacket and likely unshaved armpits, power to the anti-Pussy cat dolls of the girl world! I love it when you call people out that jump spots in the line because they’re on a “conference call”. But hell hath no fury greater than you when your coffee isn’t made right either. I guess it’s a double edged blade with you.

Stay tuned for part 2 about the nut cases I work with J

KCCO