Around Brisbane

Having university assignments coming out of my ears for another couple of weeks, it means that getting away for very long is pretty much impossible.  One of the joys of Brisbane, or I suppose anywhere in the world, is that even going about boring everyday stuff, there are always hundreds of little interesting things going on around you.

Here’s a few photos from my recent days around university and home…

Distractions

I am coming into the final weeks of this semester at university.  With seven assignments due in the next month, I should be hard at work on these.  Instead I find myself scouring the internet for information on an idea I’ve had.  You know one of those projects you have a dream about and upon waking in the morning, it’s all you think about?  Well two days ago, I had one of those ideas and ever since I have been going through details to make it a reality.

The problem is that my idea is quite large and therefore wouldn’t be able to be fulfilled until March/April 2014.  Which is 23 months away.  Plenty of time.  Unlike my impending deadlines for my seven assignments at the end of May 2012.  And yet, I can’t shake my enthusiasm to start planning my project, even though I have more pressing responsibilities at uni.  Here lies the great problem with procrastination.  It’s far more fun to plan an overseas adventure than it is to analyse the techniques used and their link to social context in Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights.  And without passing my classes at uni, the projects I dream up will never become a reality… because I will spend the rest of my life at university repeating subjects until I finally finish something.

So with this in mind, I guess the logical choice is to get back to writing assignments.  For it’s only one month away until the end of the semester and then I can spend seven weeks plotting and planning the logistics of my new project.  I guess in the mean time you’ll just have to watch this space to find out more…

Nostalgic Fear

I am nervous now.  Two sleeps to go and it’s time to board a plane and get out of here.  It’s not the flight or even the time over there that makes me nervous.  It’s everything.  But mostly it’s the coming back at the end of the trip that scares me most.  The last time I came back from an overseas adventure I was broke, broken and soon after heartbroken.

It’s been almost two years since my phenomenal adventure through Asia and Africa.  I loved every moment of it too.  I spend a large portion of my time lost in daydreams, reminiscing and plotting how to get back overseas and amongst the world again.  Now that the moment is finally upon me, I didn’t realise I would be so scared.  The rational part of me knows that I will have a blast and come back from California full of new stories, memories and planning another escape from Oz as soon as possible.  Somewhere though, hiding in a tiny recess, in the depths of my brain/heart/soul sits the memory of returning home in 2010.

I’d lost all my money playing Black Jack Poker in Vietnam, cutting my travels short and sending me back to Thailand to collect the rest of my belongings.  The shards of self-esteem that were left, now hung in tatters from my soul as I wallowed in my failure to see what had happened and disheartened at having to go home early through my own stupidity.  I was somewhat relieved upon finding my friend/guide/angel Jem at the hostel.  I was able to debrief on my travels and chat about all the lessons I’d learnt along the way while waiting for my flight back to Australia.  Then three weeks after arriving home Jem died.  He knew it was going to happen.  I knew it was going to happen.  It didn’t reduce the shock or heartbreak felt though.  It still destroyed me.

So now sitting here, looking over my pile of clothes and books ready to be packed, I’m having waves of nostalgia mixed with stress and nerves sweep over me.  The awful thought of “What if…” creeping in and waking me up in the middle of the night or paralysing me with fear at the most ridiculous moments during the day.  And the rational part of me shaking my shoulders and screaming “Stop it!!  You are going to have so much fun and everything will be fine!!”  And it will be.  As long as I remember the lessons learnt last time.  To just let go and enjoy the moment, but still pay attention.  Pay attention to the people, the places, the culture, the sights and sounds, take it all in, but let go of the stress and see what happens.

Sitting here staring at the pile of clothes and books and my empty pack, I’m amazed by what will trigger the human body/heart/soul into such fear.  Fear over things long since dealt with, fear over things that really are not that big.  Some people have fears of spiders, flying, lizards or swimming.  I on the other hand seem to have developed a fear of coming home.

Superheroes

I had to read Beowulf for High School English.  That was many years ago and I don’t remember any of it.  Now, I’ve had the pleasure of re-reading it for my Introduction to Great Books class.  I still don’t remember any of it.  But from my general understanding of the lecture on the book, Beowulf is a great hero.  He has three epic battles against monsters and wins, but is mortally wounded in the last battle.  The end.

There is the condensed summary of the first noted epic tale recorded in the history of literature.  I feel I have not done Beowulf justice.  He was a hero after all.  He boozed and plunder treasure, he killed “monsters” to save the great norse halls from falling into another’s hands, he was committed to the cause – a true hero.  There was no love interest (the most recent Hollywood movie version where he hooks up with Angelina Jolie doesn’t count, as her character is the second monster he kills).  So after analysing a text I understand very little about (it was the hardest piece of text I think I’ve ever come across reading), I now have to write a creative piece placing a modern-day superhero into an epic story in the tradition of Beowulf.

I’m at a loss as to what to write.  I don’t know very much about superheroes.  I know that there are a lot of movies (and sequels) made by Hollywood based on comics.  So maybe i need to spend the night “researching” the afore-mentioned movies to gain a better understanding of the genre… that or I’ll just make up my own superhero.  After all it is creative writing, so I should be allowed to do that.

Beauty

What is beauty?  Is it the colour of someones hair, eyes, skin?  The labels on their clothes?  The school they’ve attended, the make up they wear or the suburb they live in?  Or is it what’s beneath the surface?

Beauty is a midnight sky littered with silver flecks of stars.  It’s reaching out to someone to hold their hand in love, friendship and support.  Beauty is the leaves turning from fresh summer green to autumn gold.  It’s a smile or laugh shared.  Beauty is in the warmth of a breeze across the grass or the touch of fingertips on skin.  Beauty radiates from deep within.

Absurd Possibilities

“In order to attain the impossible, one must attempt the absurd.”

~ Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

There are some things in life that seem so far out of reach, completely unobtainable.  Impossible.  And yet they can still be reached.  Sometimes the universe directs things, other times it’s through our own decisions and choices, stepping outside the realms of reality and normality that allow us to achieve the seemingly unachievable.  Letting go of our preconceived notions of how we should live and going with the flow no matter how absurd or silly we may feel.  But no matter how absurd a situation is at least there is always a possibility of attaining the impossible… simply because you tried.

Conversations with an angel

My skin stuck to his arm lying under my neck.  Sweat formed from the contact, running down my neck and dripping onto the sheet.  My lower leg was hooked over his.  The skin that touched his burned, his veins close to the surface to try and cool down.  My thigh hovered above the bed, the skin pimpled as it cooled in the air, counteracting the heat.

He snored lightly.  The sound mixed with the rumble of the air conditioning unit, protruding into the room awkwardly through the window.  It balanced precariously on the windowsill, the constant drone and hum threatened to loosen the rusted brackets holding it in place.

Humidity crept over me, clinging like a wet blanket.  It sucked the air and with it, life out of me.  Heat drooped my eyelids shut.  I tried to fight against it.  Tried to hold onto him.  My hand on his chest slipped, slowly sliding down his ribs, sweat loosening my grip.  My hand hit the bed and humidity and sleep closed in.

 

He stared straight at me.  I wanted to look away.  But his gaze held mine and there was no way to leave.

He raised the drink to his lips and took a sip, his eyes locked on mine.  He put the drink back on the table and finally broke eye contact, cocking his head and sighing.  It was only slight, a small wisp of breath exhaled, but the air changed.  It carried the weight of his exhalation now.  Relieving him of some of the burden, somehow.  He looked at me again.

“What if…”

I stared back, waiting.  Words built up behind my lips, wanting to escape.  I clenched my teeth, locking them in.  Be patient.

“What if… I told you I was an angel?”

The words floated in the air.  He didn’t move.  His eyes held mine.  The words were painted across his face, in the wrinkles above his brow, as he sat silently waiting for me to respond.

“I’d believe you,” I said.

“Why?”

I breathed deeply, exhaling all control of the conversation.  I wasn’t sure where we were going and it frightened me, just a little bit.

“It would make sense,” I said.  “Everything that’s happened between us, it seems so random, but it’s not.  Does that make sense?”

He nodded.

“I told someone the other day, that had my mum not been there when I met you, I’d swear you weren’t real.  Maybe you’re a part of my imagination,” I said, nerves got the better of me, the words just poured out, my teeth unable to secure them in my mouth anymore.  I wanted him to speak, but he didn’t.

We both took a sip of our drinks.  The cold coke and Jack Daniels soothed my dry throat in the late afternoon Bangkok heat. The metallic grey and dirty green storm clouds that gathered on the edge of the city skyline, teased with the possibility of cool relief.  Tuk tuk’s tore past and the banter of tourists and locals bartering over prices blurred into the sidewalk. Everything existed, but ceased to exist around us.

“I’m real,” he said, after a while.

“I know you are,” I wished the noise in my ears would go away.  My head throbbed as I struggled with the words and sentences I wanted to try to say.  “I’m sitting talking with you now.  You have to be real. ”

He laughed, “Then why do you believe me?  It’s a bit of a far out announcement for someone to make,” he said.

“There are just things you seem to know or understand about me, about us.  There’s nothing random about you and me being here in this place right now,” I said.  “Neither of us is supposed to be in Bangkok.  We weren’t suppose to see each other again.  It was two months ago today that we started travelling together and this is our third country we’ve met up in.  There are just lots of really little seemingly unimportant details, that when you add them up or think about them, they seem a bit out of this world.  I’m not sure of the pattern yet, because I’ve only just started paying attention to it, but it seems as though everything happens in some sort of order or number of times.  It’s strange.”

“You’re different now,” he said.  “I noticed it as soon as you arrived.”

“I feel different.  I’ve learnt a lot since last time I saw you,” I said, glad for the change in conversation.

“Sorry I had to be a bastard to you at the end of Malaysia.  If I wasn’t I knew you wouldn’t let go and you’d never have experienced the things you needed too.”

I bit my bottom lip, those last few days we’d spent together months ago, I’d left in tears.  I hadn’t been ready to say good-bye.  But my travels had taken me on journeys I didn’t think were possible, since then, only to put me here now with Jem.  I could feel the change between us.  He was open, warm and radiated love and life through every gesture, word and look.

“You were a bastard,” I said, with a smile, “I was so upset with you at the time.  I realised somewhere in Africa why you did it though.  So thanks.”

“I hated doing it.  I could see how much it hurt you.  I’m glad you learnt something out of it though.”  His eyes, one steel blue and the other half blue on top and the bottom half brown, stared at me again.  A smile rested gently on his face.  “Tell me what lessons you learnt?”

“Lots of stuff.  The one that I put the most effort into was not drinking so much.  I’m able to just a have a few now and only on odd occasions.  It’s so nice to have my brain back.”

Jem laughed.

“I needed to have a functioning brain too.  Africa was hard work.  I loved it though.  It put perspective back on my life.  For the first time in a long time I was happy.”

“I knew you’d love Africa,” he said.

“I’m so keen to go back and travel and live there.  It’s an amazing place.  I love the way of life it’s so simple.  I felt at peace while I was there.”

“It’s definitely different to anything else,” he said and ran his fingers over the prayer beads around his neck.  He pulled them out from under his shirt and slid them around to find the threads hanging at the end.  He stroked the frayed strands and stared thoughtfully down the street.  Sweat rolled down his neck into the fabric of his shirt.

“I’m going to die soon,” Jem said.

The drink at my lips shook.  I watched my hand, willing it to steady as I put the glass down.

“It’s the reason why I won’t get involved in a relationship with someone,” he said.  His eyes bore into me, watching for my reaction.

A rush of shivers raced through me.  My feet and fingers left full of pins and needles.  I tried to keep my face from giving away all the emotions hurtling around inside me at that moment.  I knew it was pointless, but I tried anyway, concentrating hard on keeping my face and eyes steady, stable.

“I know it’s going to be sometime soon.  But I don’t know where or when.  I can’t have a girlfriend or a family and do that to them,” he said.  He was still staring intently across the table.

“How do you know?” I said, taking a risk to open my mouth and speak.

“It comes back to the whole being an angel thing.  Every person that comes into my life does so for a reason.  I know what’s going to happen to them before it does.  So I try to help them or guide them through it,” he shifted in his seat and took a sip of the melting drink.  “I know it sounds crazy,” he said.

“No, not crazy,” I said, his words struggled to sink in.  “But I don’t want you to die.  I hope you’re wrong on this one,” I said smiling at him, but feeling confused, sad, at the same time.  I’d finally lost control of the conversation altogether.

“I’ve never told anyone, what I’ve just told you,” he said.

We sat together, staring across the table at each other.  Words raced through my head, but I couldn’t bring my self to speak any of them anymore.  They weren’t enough now.  We were silent, but the hive of activity and noise on Soi Rambutree swirled around us.  Tourist and locals were filling up the tables between the road and the Buddha statue and fairy light fence line.  Shisha smoke wafted along in the balmy breeze that had moved in, dragging with it the steel clouds over the top of the buildings at an increasing pace.  The chilled out lounge music was turned up a notch as the nightly backpacker mode kicked in.

It was too much.  I wanted some space.  I wanted all these tourists to go away and leave us alone in our own little world.  I just wanted to be alone with Jem.  I ran my fingers over the bands tied around my wrist.  They were real and I needed to bring myself back to reality.

“I got you something,” I said.  “I’d been looking for it since Malaysia.  I finally found exactly what I was after the other day at Patong beach.  It’s up in my room.  I’ll just go get it,” finally I’d created an escape.

“I’ll come too.  It’s hectically hot out here and there’s a storm coming.”

He finished off the drink and followed me inside the hostel.

 

Something shifted.  I reached out beside me.  He was still there.   I ran my fingertips down his arm to feel the band tied around his wrist.  It was black leather and had four strands braided into a fishtail pattern.  A matching brown band was tied around the wrist of my hand, that gently touched his now.

He had shifted in his sleep.  We were no longer touching.  He’d rolled over on to his side, facing away from me.

The afternoon’s conversation still haunted me.  Staring at his back, I willed him to roll over.  To wrap his arms around me, to make me feel comfortable, even if I didn’t fully understand why I was scared.

Jem let out a loud snore, then his breathing quietened again.  He didn’t move though.

I leaned close to him, the smell of sweat, shampoo and soap mingling together.  I kissed him lightly between the shoulder blades, tasting the smell of him and pursing my lips together to lock it in.  I put my clothes on and found my room key on top of the desk.  Picking up my thongs and carrying them, so I wouldn’t make a noise, I gently opened the door.   I watched Jem, lying there on the bed, and then the door closed softly with a click.

 

 

Summer

Wakeboarding, and I have to mention wakeskating too, is a weird and wonderful sport.  Where pro’s, amateur’s and grommets all hang out and party together.  Where the morning of a competition they wake up and have a beer for breakfast or they haven’t slept at all.  Health and fitness regimes include smoking copious amounts of cigarettes and dancing around when they are really drunk.  It’s a sport where a pro can rock up at a cable park, not ridden it in twelve months and still take out first place in the competition.

It’s not a sport to make money out of, it’s a lifestyle.  For the pro’s it’s getting to follow the sun and warm weather all year round.  For everyone else it’s the feeling of being out on the water shredding.  It clears the head and nothing else matters, except the cable and your board.  Everyday there is a new story, new tricks learnt, new shenanigans to get up too.

Coming to the end of the last weekend comp of the season it’s almost a little sad.  Winter will start kicking in and half the riders will migrate overseas, while the rest of us go back to school, work or just drift off into other things.  Then summer rolls in again and everyone gets back together for the crazy shenanigans to start once more.

Heaven

I was never a big believer in heaven.  Until someone I knew died, I’d never been able to even imagine heaven.  When my grandfather died it was the first time I’d considered that there was the possibility that he was sitting up on a cloud somewhere, watching over us all.  So every time the sun sets turning the sky and clouds purple, orange and pink, I can now imagine people sitting up amongst the beautiful colours, smiling down at the world below for the people they love and have left behind.

Travel Bug

Right now my mum is on a big ship cruising down to Antarctica.  My dad just flew back to the US last week and flies out to Nigeria next week.  I have friends working or travelling in Canada, snowboarding and family living overseas teaching.  Everyone seems to be planning trips overseas… except me.  Wait, let me rephrase that.  I am planning trips overseas, it’s just that it will be a very long time before any of them come to fruition.  And I’m jealous.  The travel bug is rearing it’s ugly head laughing in my face, after having just bit me on the neck, injecting me with it’s highly intoxicating venom.

No matter how I plot and plan, the universe is conspiring against me ever leaving home.  Sitting around with my wonky knee all day, gives me plenty of time to trawl the internet for things to do and places to go.  The list continues growing.  Unfortunately the money to fund any of these plans is completely depleted and I am now at the point where selling off body parts to make money is looking like a grand idea.  I have a right knee going cheap.  In fair condition, doesn’t quite straighten or bend, and knee cap clicks back into place most times…

At least in my travel bug induced delirium I can continue to dream.  Beaches I would lie on to catch up on reading, mountains I want to climb, food I want to eat/cook and languages I want to learn.  I’ve spent some time narrowing down the prospects, as it is better to have a clear goal of a few destinations and maybe then I will reach them sooner.  This is my new theory, as aiming to see everything in this great, big old world of ours was probably a little far-fetched.  Not out of reach, but overwhelming to contemplate.

My travel bug destinations:

- Amalfi Coast, Italy

- Big cities and little villages for contrast, India

- Beaches and jungles, Ecuador & Columbia

- Any of these in Africa: Botswana, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Zambia, Uganda, Mali, Madagascar

- Burma (Myanmar)

- Base camp, Nepal

- Swim with the humpback whales, Tonga

- Learning to cook through Sri Lanka

- Snowboarding, Japan

- Learning to speak Spanish, Spain

Hopefully soon, one of my posts will actually be from one of these places…

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