Better with the ONLY Commodity

I have not posted for some time due to a series of issues which (other than technical ‘issues’) can best be explained as ‘family issues’ – of course in avoiding work or coming up with excuses these can be explained in a number of ways, all prefixed with ‘family’ or ‘personal’ followed by words such as:

issues
This is a good one as it is really criptic and people dont want to ask – and if they do you can just tell them you can’t talk about it due to some legal issues (using issues twice in the one sentence is a surefire was to get them to stop asking).

tragedy
Unfortunately this must have some truth to is as people will ask what – it is okay because a grandparent that nobody knows can in fact be tragically ill over a very long period and can even die a couple of times so long as you dont mix excuses with the same people.

dramas
Almost as fantastically cryptic as issues but often leads people to think that you may be in some danger – use it only when you can become upset and that will stop people from asking anything further.

bullshit
A great one for men (actually they are all good for men talking to men because no man wants to get involved in another man’s business which may involve showing any emotion) – so bullshit is fantastic and then all other men can reply ‘Yeah, I know what you mean, fucking families – bullshit!’ – and then everyone continues on their way and you get to take that day off to play golf.

So which one am I going to use for my lack of posts.

None….. it’s one I just discovered!

It’s over spending and living on credit.

That’s what I have been doing and when I took stock I realised that I was approaching bankruptcy and no matter where I went I couldn’t get any credit, I couldn’t get any refunds and most of all not even my friends or relatives could give me a loan (mainly due to personal or family issues, tragedy, dramas or bullshit).timeismoney

Yep, it had come to that point where I was completely out of and could not get hold of the only commodity that counts – time.

I actually had enough money, a nice home, a good wife, kids to be proud of but, no time.

I actually did an audit and realised that some out of control spending had to go.  Some things I just couldn’t afford.  I decided that the following were going to get culled or only be used in my spending regime under the strictest of circumstances:

Television
I had decided this a long time ago but kept on spending – in fact during the audit I found that it was a massive hidden cost.  It was like finding the leaking tap around the side of the house that had increased my water bill tenfold but I hadn’t noticed.  It was a continuous drip that accumulated into a massive expense. And, in all honesty do I care who cooks the best roast or who gets voted off the island or who the Bachelor picks to stay with for 5 minutes during the finale  Solution: Never switch it on unless you have really planned to watch something.  Never choose it as the first option to ‘relax’ when you have nothing else planned – plan something else (doing this may be a new skill that has to be learned and may require some training!)  Advanced Budgeting:  Sell a few that fill your house and have only one in the house. (Read a book, that helps too!)

Regrets
I realised that I had been paying a huge amount of interest on regrets that were bad investments in the first place.  The worst part of these debts is that it prevented me from borrowing anything now, and as it turned out that now can be a very long time.  It is hard to give yourself a credit rating when you give yourself no credit.  Solution: It actually dawned on me that these interest payments either had to be written off as bad debts – which means basically forgiven – or paid in full.  Most times the final payment can be made with a simple ‘sorry’ (you have to actually mean it!). Advanced Budgeting:  If you get your credit rating back, don’t lose it again – remember Albert Einstein’s definition of insanity regularly referred to by me which is “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result”.

Doing What You Hate
After my wife was diagnosed with breast cancer we decided that our days would not be filled dragging ourselves through our days doing things we didn’t have to and in fact hated.  It was simple – 1). We hated doing the dishes – we bought a dishwasher; yeah it was a few dinners we couldn’t go out for or ‘luxuries’ we wanted now that we would have to save for, but the investment was worth it. 2). We hated cleaning – we got a cleaner – yes, this was a luxury and a pretty big expense and sometimes seems like a waste of money (although it is giving someone a job) – but, when we get home on that fortnightly Wednesday to a wonderful clean house it is all worth it.  3).  Stop working at that job.  Yeah, we all have to live but we also all die and if you need some reminding have a dinner party with all your immortal friends and get them to bring around all the things they are going to take with them when they die.  It has to be said…. if you do what you love you will never work a day in your life.  I like to add, that if you work all your life at something you hate, then in all honesty you are a bloody idiot.  Plus for those of you who want to say I work to live not live to work – get a grip – work life balance is a myth created by people who don’t want to work – it is just called ‘life’ sort it out or live in the previous paragraph.  Solution:  Figure out what it is that you are doing that really is not adding to your life and ween yourself off of it – save for the dishwasher – find the cleaner who needs the work and you can afford – have a dream about your work and start (even tiny steps) to make it happen.  Advanced Budgeting:  Stop. Really, really have a look at your values and live them.  Read these posts: Better an appreciative question,  Better at Leaving, Better Authority, Responsibility and Concern…..

Hanging Out With People Who Don’t Add to Your Life
Wow this is a biggy.  This is not often so much about the debt you are getting into but all the commodities your are lending when you actually know you will never get paid back.  Yeah, we all do it and then get a bit sooky and ‘hurt’ when they renege on the loan – I love it when they tell you they thought it was a gift not a loan!  If you are in a circle of friends and all talking about the person who isn’t there, then you are in the wrong circle of friends.  Not adding to your life does not necessarily mean taking away from it – it can be as simple as holding you in a place that you never thought you would settle for (see above paragraph).  I think understanding that happiness is not the absence of despair is very important.  I think it is also very important that we give up the ‘life-long-friend no-matter-what’ as an idea that is good in theory but rare in practice – it is just that we don’t let it go when it is already gone and we end up hanging around with someone we hate and talk about when they are not in the circle.  If you need more than one hand to count your ‘real friends’ on let me know your definition of a real friend… bet it’s different from mine.  Loyalty is my base value; but that loyalty must also be to my base values.  Solution: Figure out who rings who and for what reason and stop ringing and often this ‘problem’ just goes away.  Lose the obligation and the initiation and you lose the friend you suddenly realised you didn’t want anyway.  Advanced Budgeting:  Pick right in the first place.  Some of my best friends are my newest friends – met me and our values met – it’s not hard after that.

So here we are knowing where the spending has gone rampant and ready to do a budget.    The thing about all budgets is working out what are essentials and what are luxuries.  I was thinking about this recently where most people (read children, teenagers…) think that a flat screen TV of at least 50 inches and a mobile phone are essentials.  I remind my children that the essentials are actually food, water, shelter, clothing, safety and a reasonable chance at an education… all else is a bonus – especially going over on your data use by hundreds of dollars because talking about nothing was considered essential!

I think any new budget should consider the advice from those that have really run out of time as in what I wrote in my post Better an Appreciative Question about the “Top 5 Regrets People Have on Their Deathbeds.”

So here’s my new budget:

I will be truly present where I am at that timeIMG_4828
Tips & Tricks
– If I am talking to you face to face I will not answer my phone
– Better than the above, I will put it on silent during any conversation (and out of sight)
– I will listen more than I talk
– I will be more Mindful

I will be on time and expect the same
Tips and Tricks
– Let everyone know this – actually do it
– If you are late I will leave, start eating, not extend our time together as you wasted yours and undervalued mine (it is the ONLY commodity)286a25da583cd8f2814bdc5c22cac286
– I will not reschedule or wait just because you rang 5 minutes before to tell me that something else got in the way (I hear something else was a priority above me and when I do hear your excuse because I have waited half and hour – I think ‘really?’ that was more important than me).
– See above point – I am not answering my phone or it is on silent

If I catch myself getting into old habits I will stop
Tips and Tricksremote_image_1327309237 – Budgeting is like dieting – you have to watch it all the time and when you are halfwaythrough the hamburger you bourght from old habits, on impulse, it doesn’t mean you have to finish it (who ever does that!!)
– you know where the switch is to turn the TV off stand-by but you never do it…. life is full of switch to flick, you just have to do it…..  angry/forgiving…. sad/happy…. dissatisfied/grateful….

I will live my mantras and remind myself constantly
Tips and TricksScreen shot 2014-12-11 at 4.28.27 PM – Write ’em down, put em up – big posters, dream boards, wish lists inthe open are hard to ignore (especially if they are on top of the TV!) and need explaining to friends and family – now we are all on the same page!
– I will be Be peaceful, Be mindful, Give a positive impression, Live in harmony and not make things to complicated

Finally…

I will follow my true instincts and values
Tips and Tricks
– this is the ‘daily limit’ on your account that stops you bankrupting yourself
– even with my new budget I will not go against my values and instincts (we are on the top of the food chain by having the best instincts and intuition)
– I will break my budget rather than my heart, if in my heart it is a good purchase (I will wait for my friend who is late if they need me that day, sometimes I will need to talk a bit more than listen, sometimes my budgetary requirements will clash and I will follow me heart)

Living My New Budget

Sorry that the practical advice about how to save those minutes in folding the clothes or making the bed or getting that meeting over or report done is not here…..  our time is not wasted by doing things, it is wasted by us not doing the right things in the right priority.

I know people who know the price of everything and the value of nothing…. it really is about counting the pennies (usually from heaven!) and the pounds will look after themselves (Translation – look after the cents and the dollars will look after themselves).

Considering the average life is over 2 BILLION seconds you have to think, where have the ones gone already and what am I going to do next…..

Hang on a second, rarely is.  You cant get it back, it’s spent.

Being fugal isn’t the answer, being wise is.

The other day someone told me they could not make a funeral as a meeting had been rescheduled at the same time….. (that is the end of that comment and sentence as I can’t think of what to say…. how about WTF!)

Strangely enough following on from the above I went around to the friends’ house whose funeral it was, and guess what, it was all still there – he didn’t take any of it with him……

So……ATM - NO FUNDS
I will spend wisely.
I will spend on things of value.
I will not live on credit.

I will ensure when I go the the ATM (the At The Moment machine) that I don’t get my card skimmed and my accounts are balanced.

 

 

 

 

Better with Des Steele, my friend.

Below is my eulogy to my mate Des Steel.

Recently I received copies of the eulogies from his son Rowan Steele and his great mate Graham Puckridge – I have included these eulogies in this post as well (on 24/12/2014) and will repost this on Facebook and Linkedin.

_____________________________________________________________________________

I went to the funeral recently for my old mate Des Steele.

I am a better man for having had him as my friend.

I will miss him.

I had the honour of doing one of the eulogies.  Below is the text of the eulogy.

 

Des was my friend.

Des was a member of the South Australia Police Pistol Club since the mid 70’s, he had his last shoot on the 30th November 2014 when he a Kelly Dog went up the Club for the last time.

Today members of the club are wearing their red shirts in honour of Des.

Des will always be remembered and honoured at the club in the annual awarding of the ‘Des Steele Trophy’ – which was established in 1997. It is always one of the last trophies to be awarded at the Annual General Meeting after people have stepped forward to collect their highest score trophies, most improved trophies, etc etc….. then would come the announcement of the Des Steel Trophy – always a highly guarded secret. At this time there would be shuffling of feet and lowering of eyes as the trophy was usually awarded after the annual interstate trip to the APSPC and was awarded for

“the behaviour Des would be most proud of.”

 Des surprisingly enough only ever won the trophy once in 2004 – when he was on a road trip to Brisbane with 3 team mates, Miller, Webby and Davey-boy-Goad.  Des was left to navigate while Dave drove and the others slept – when they awoke they had travelled 400 km closer to Adelaide, but unfortunately they were travelling to Brisbane, Des only winning the trophy once is testimony to the good company he kept at the club.

Des was my friend: 

I will miss his handshake

I will miss our long chats where would often lament – and use words such as lament – about:

Life
It’s joys, it’s trials and it’s futility – Des’s philosophy of life was so often expressed in literary greats such as Shakespeare, that Des could quote and recite by heart:

Henry the Fifth, Act 4, Scene 3

Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot,

But he’ll remember, with advantages,
What feats he did that day. Then shall our names,
Familiar in his mouth as household words
This story shall the good man teach his son,
From this day to the ending of the world,
But we in it shall be remembered,
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers:
For he to-day that shreds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne’er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition;
And gentlemen in England no-a-bed
Shall think themselves accurs’d they were not here,
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispins day.

I will miss our discussions about literature, about stories
– Sanders of the River

– The Washing of the Spears
– The Indian Rebellion
– Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee
…. And both of us badly reciting poetry

I will miss our chats of love, of women,

I will miss our chats of family and children

I will miss how we laughed about:
– Life, love, women and family
– How we laughed at each other…. And everyone else
– How we laughed about religion – I think most of us know Des’s opinion of who God was…. No man could be so cruel
– I will miss the irreverence….

…. And we would often say, even lament, “Life is often grave, but it need not be serious”

I will miss our beers together:
– Beers at the Pistol Club
– Beers in the Police Club
– Beers on the boat
– Beers out the back
– Beers in the lounge (the last lounge room on earth where you could smoke inside) 

I will miss our friendship…. as so many of you will:
– The old scholars of PAC
– The RSL
– Peter Alexander, Puk
– The men and women of the SAPPC
And all the friendships in the Police and throughout his working and travelling life. The friendships he had with his dogs – and the last, Kelly-Dog

Des’s friendships spanned the years, the generations, occupations, locations, adversity…. and the tyranny of time. Each of these friendships were personal.

Des was a man who if he was your friend, he asked for nothing, listened well, and through this, your life was somehow better. Many of us may not be able to specifically remember the last conversation we had with Des – but we will always remember the way he made us feel…..

Des never underestimated the finality and often futility of life – we would often discuss what appeared so often, to be people living a life oblivious to the only one certainty….

We spoke of it but Des was not like this – He knew that real happiness could be obtained by taking it as it comes, not taking it to seriously and always having time for a beer.

Des in the end didn’t have many possessions, but he surrounded himself with things that didn’t cost much but were of real value… his friends, his photographs, books, his Mum’s paintings. Des only ever used the word ‘JOY’ when he spoke of his children and especially his grandchildren… It is not the man who dies with the most toys that wins, it is the man who dies with the most joys.

Recently, I thought that we had discovered the words to sum up our muses, his sage advice and his counsel :

From Macbeth (Act 5, Scene 5, lines 17-28)

There would have been a time for such a word.
To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,
To the last syllable of recorded time;
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player

That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more.
It is a tale,
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury

Signifying…. nothing 

It would be at this time, at other funerals I have attended, that I would sit back down next to Des and he would lean over and whisper – “But we’re still here.”

Des Steele, was my friend.

I have lived, and will continue to live a better life, and perhaps be a better man, for having known him.

Des Steele was my friend.

And, I will miss him.

_____________________________________________________________________________

Eulogy by Graham Puckridge

Desmond Luke Steele J.P. 11-7-1928 to 3-12 2014

Firstly thank you to all who have travelled long distances to be here. My name is Graham Puckridge and I have known Desmond Luke Steele and his Family for the last 35 years. It is a privilege and honour to be asked by his family to speak with you today about an incredible man who was a philosopher, a sage, a mentor, a raconteur, a confidante and above all a fantastic friend, Father, Grandfather and companion, to many of us here today.

Des was born at Wayville in 1928. He was one of two children and had a younger Sister Trish, who sadly passed on many years ago. His Father was a teacher at Prince Alfred College and so naturally Des attended Primary and Secondary school here. PAC has always been in his blood and it is fitting that we are holding his memorial in in this Chapel in the College, which was so special to him. To say Des was religious would be an overstatement. He described himself as being an agnostic who believed in divine malevolence. However, he liked to have an each way bet on religion and was always quick to point out that he won the scripture prize here at PAC and he could quote heaps of passages from the bible, none of which he practiced.

After PAC, Des went to Adelaide University where he started studying Medicine. I believe he started a couple times and I think he did about 3 years of medicine before leaving Uni. From what Des told me, he wasn’t the most dedicated student and was too easily distracted with the social side of Uni life.

In 1946, Des went to Darwin where he took up a job as a Registrar of Mines for the Northern Territory. He was responsible to the Commissioner of Mines and when not in Darwin he spent his service around Adelaide River and Rum Jungle. Darwin was still damaged from Japanese attacks and very much a wild frontier town still ravaged with bullet holes. He loved it and thrived on the carefree territory lifestyle. He played football and went shooting crocodiles and buffalo and developed a love of diving, spearfishing and the sea that has stayed with him all through his life. He has described to me how he loved to go diving on the many shipwrecks in Darwin Harbour.

He came back to Adelaide about 1952 and later married his first wife Betty, which produced Rowan and then Alana. He took up a Job in Nuriootpa with one of the wineries working in the Lab and then later moved to Port Pirie where he worked in the laboratories of the Smelters. One of the sayings he picked up in the Barossa locals, which has stayed with him all this time, was “Oh gosh, it is 11 o’clock already so soon already. Where’s the time gone.”

Des then worked as a Rep for a Drug Company called Upjohn, which saw him having to drive all over South Australia in a VW visiting Country Doctors to promote pharmaceutical products. A lot of the country roads were unsealed and he told me what a fantastic car the VW was and he loved to tear up the dirt roads in it. Often he caught up with Doctor’s he knew from his Uni days and would enjoy their hospitality. One occasion he was drinking in the local Pub with the Doctor, when he got called to do an emergency appendectomy. He grabbed Des, got him to put on a gown, scrub up and help him in surgery. He remembers the patient waking up half way through and having to administer chloroform or ether to get them knocked out again. They then rushed back to the Pub to get some beers in before 6 o’clock closing.

I am not sure of the year, but sadly Des and Betty separated and he later on married Roberta. That produced two more daughters, Amanda and Rebecca. Roberta has also travelled from Darwin to be with us here today.

Des took on a job as a Parole Officer with Correctional services. This brought him into contact with the Police and other Law Enforcement Organisations and was to be his chosen career until he retired in 1991.

Unfortunately Des and Roberta separated and Des met and married Cathy. Cathy already had a Son Matthew and Des took on Matthew as his own Son and has been an enduring father figure to him ever since.

All marriages are not made in heaven and Des and Cathy eventually parted ways about 1986. Des then started his long lasting relationship and deep friendship with Helen Michos, which has endured for the last 28 years. Helen’s Son Evan also has looked upon Des as a significant Father figure and mentor in his life and Des was very fond of Evan and his Daughter Hayley. So in a nutshell, Des Steele, 3 marriages, 6 children counting Evan, and 7 Grandchildren Jack, Ellie, Thomas, Amelia, Zack, Poppy and Halely, whom he loved dearly and his world revolved around. Des didn’t become a Grandfather until he was about 73 but often said his Grand children gave him so much Joy.

I first met Des about 1979, when he used to be a regular at the Police Club. He was always very friendly and sociable and loved a drink. Boy did he love a drink! He was a Senior Probation Officer at the Adelaide Gaol and he was very passionate supporter of the Police and C.I.B. in particular. I learned that Des was part of a Group called the Combined Investigators Association, which was a way all the Law Enforcement and Justice organisations networked and socialised together back then before computers, to exchange information, make the system work and get the job done. Through Des, I met a lot of useful contacts and friends in the Justice system many of whom are here today.

I moved to Kadina CIB in 1982 and Des and his children, Matthew, Amanda and Rebecca as well as Kelly dog one, where regular visitors on Friday nights and weekends when they used to go to Wallaroo for weekends fishing. Des had a V8 Valiant, which he used to call the “Ethnic Rolls Royce” and he would call in for a couple quick drinks with the boat on the way to Wallaroo and still be there near midnight. Jean and I eventually began to look forward to these nocturnal Friday night visits as Amanda, Rebecca and Matthew used to fuss over our young Son Brett and wheel him all over Kadina in his stroller until he went to sleep whilst we enjoyed cold frothies.

Des often took me fishing at Wallaroo. On one occasion, we were at Point Riley, it was dead calm and the water like glass. No fish were biting. We decided to go snorkelling and get some scallops. After we had been in the water for a while, we saw a huge school of garfish at the back of the boat. We got back in the boat and bagged out in no time. We returned to shore and went to the Wallaroo Hotel and Des said the fish would be okay and he would fillet them later. It wouldn’t take him too long as he had done a fish filleting course he said. Needless to say no fish got filleted that night and he awoke in the morning to the hum and buzz of blow flies trying to carry the boat and fish away. That’s when I first heard Des’s strategy for dealing with any problem. The ever reliable “F1. Not to worry it doesn’t matter.”

In 1984 the Kadina CIB started an Annual Xmas get together called the ‘Captains Night’ to thank those who had supported us during the year. This function eventually morphed into a fund raising event and ran for 27 years, raising hundreds of thousands of dollars for Yorke Peninsula charities. Des was a great supporter and only missed one year in 27, after a shoulder operation. He eagerly looked forward to it each year and everyone was always very happy to see him. When we used to leave Adelaide to drive up, as soon as we were out of the City limits, he would give a big sigh and say, “It’s all back there mate, I can feel it all dropping away.” He always loved a road trip anywhere and took any excuse to get away, especially to Yorke Peninsula. No trip to Yorke Peninsula was ever complete without a stop at Port Wakefield for a Pie or Pasty from the Bakery.

Des lived in his Family House at Young Street Wayville, just a short distance from the Show grounds. In 1988 he had to sell this home, which he loved dearly and I rented my vacant house at Westbourne Park to him on condition that I could use a room when I eventually shifted back to Adelaide in 1989. For about 6 months, myself and his two dogs Kelly one and Baron, were housemates. We had a lot of laughs. Talk about the odd couple.

Des used to get lamb off cuts from the butcher and cook them in the oven for the dogs. One night we arrived home from the pub peckish to find the fridge empty and two hungry dogs. The smell of the cooked lamb meat was too tempting so, in we hopped into the dogs dinner much to the look of disgust on both dog’s faces.

Another time I was cooking roast pork in the weber on the front verandah and the smell of the crackling had wafted down the street. Des could smell it as he walked up from the bus stop and was drooling at the mouth by the time he got in the gate. I had not even had a chance to do the veggies or gravy, but he didn’t care. He was famished and he got stuck into the meat and crackle like he hadn’t eaten for a week. The next day he was feeling off and went to his Family Doctor complaining of stomach pain. The Doctor who he had been at Uni with, poked and prodded, hummed and haa then sat down and wrote out the sick certificate for “ Fucking Gluttony”. The Doctor was smoking in the Surgery and Des said, “Give us a smoke Doc. No Des, they are bad for you.”

Des bought his current home at Clearview in 1989 and we moved him out there. We have kept in constant contact since then. He retired from Corrections in 1991 aged about 63 and took on the role of being a Pensioner. He was impressed by all the things he could get for free from the Government and he used them wisely. He also became a Justice of the Peace.

In the early nineties his daughter Alana was living in San Diego and Des did his first overseas trip to America to visit her. Des soon made friends with a man, whose Son was an Officer in the US Navy. He was privileged to tour the USS Chancellorsville and be treated to US Navy Hospitality. He was also a regular at the Mission Beach Golf Club bar where Alana used to work. He also made friends and contacts in the San Diego Police.

One of Des’s lifelong passions has been the old west, cowboy movies and western songs. He also had a fascination with Mexico and tried unsuccessfully to learn Spanish. I called it murdering the Spanish language, but he persevered. He did eventually achieve his dream to do a trip to Tombstone to tour the old west and Mexico, he even went to the bull fights.

When he returned he would try and impress everyone with his fluent Spanish and his favourite phrases;

Senor Lo siento, yo no sabía que ella era su hija

  • Sorry Senor, I didn’t know she was your daughter

por favor no me disparar Soy australiano

  • Please Don’t shoot me I am Australian

To this day his email name is Eldesso

Trips

I was fortunate to do many trips with Des. You couldn’t ask for a funnier person to go on a road trip with. His wit and humour kept me laughing and entertained. Des loved the British humour of Monty Python and all the ‘one liner’ gags that came out of it. Especially The Holy Grail and Life of Brian

  • In 2000 we travelled to Bunbury in Western Australia, to catch up with his US Navy mate Sean McLaren whom he had met in San Diego. We met the USS Higgins when it arrived in Bunbury and were privileged to spend a week with Sean on and off the ship. We got access to all areas that civilians would never be allowed to go and it was fascinating.
  • (USS Higgins – Sean McLaren. Nazi’s be bumped into, potato Nazi, forest Nazi, harbour Nazi, rogue locust.
  • Snotty bitch at function on ship Mayors wife.
  • In 2003 his friend Sean visited Brisbane in the USS Blue Ridge, so Des flew there to meet and spend time with him. He was treated like a king on the ship and again got access to all areas.
  • Pistol Club trips weekend Qantas cancelled all flights
  • Point Turton Caravan Park. Only same sex couple in caravan park. Grey nomad couples. “I bet the girls will have heaps of jobs lined up for us when we get home”.
  • Parsons Beach where he felt most at peace and shared so many happy times with his children and grand children.
  • Elliston/Venus Bay, Bairds Bay, Gawler Ranges (Jobby mounds)

 

Funny stuff

There are so many funny anecdotes I could tell that we would be here all day. So perhaps they are best left for later this afternoon when we have a few drinks and celebrate Des’s life in the way he would of wanted us to.

  • Telemarketers Indian telemarketer ringing his home. Hello Mr Steeley. How are you today Sir? No very well I am afraid. Just come back from the doctor and I have to take ……………….. bowels……….Thanks very much for ringing to see how I am.
  • Feigning dementia when getting phone calls from the Tax Office or Centrelink.
  • Garry Johnson’s 50th “I thought I was coming to a 50th not a beauty pageant”
  • Matthews wedding,   “I forgot how attractive you were.”

PASSIONS

Football, Motorcycles, Police Pistol Club, Small boat club, sailing The Alana, Enfield RSL, Fishing, The sea, The Police Club, His many Dogs including Kelly Dog,

The Family shack at Parsons beach, Reading

Parsons Beach was where he felt most at peace and shared so many happy times with his children and grand children.

Desisims

  • Fair component of fuck all
  • F1
  • It’s a wonderful thing we are doing
  • IGA and family court. Checkout guy. That is more than I got for my last visit to the Family Court.
  • Minlaton Bakery. Can you tell me my name and where I live
  • You need a new computer. Either that or a psychiatrist.
  • Indian sales man at door who lost his shoe and never came back.
  • Jehovah’s witnesses at front door. ‘Absolute Drama’
  • Oh you want sugar as well. I suppose you want Milk.

Apart from good times, Des has always been there for me through difficult and challenging times.

Operations

Des had a few Operations over his life. He had both knees replaced one in 1990 and one about 2006. He wasn’t a good patient and absolutely hated being in hospital.

  • After his last Knee Op the nurses found him wandering around Memorial hospital at night with no pants on trying to rescue everyone from train accident.
  • Memorial Hospital when he had his knee OP. He hated the hospital food and wanted me a to bring him a Villi’s pie. He sat there Munching it in ecstasy saying “Graham I can feel all the goodness going right through me, doing me good” I asked him about the cholesterol and he told me he couldn’t see any.
  • Bad patient. Nurses kept coming in and opening the curtains. He would get up and close them.

 

The Heart Valve

Last year Des was told he would have to have an Aortic valve replacement. As you can imagine he wasn’t happy about this, but fortunately he got on an experimental program to have this procedure done by catheter rather than thoracic surgery. After lots and lots of testing to see if he was suitable candidate and numerous delays, he finally had the procedure done in April this year. He was only in hospital about 10 days and the results were remarkable. He recovered quickly, looked and felt better, had more energy and I used the analogy that it was like dropping a new engine in an old Holden. I really thought he had dodged a bullet and got himself another 10 years. He was looking forward to the future and was even in the process of downsizing to a smaller home so he could enjoy life a bit more, with more financial choices and without the worries of home maintenance and upkeep. Sadly that hasn’t eventuated. Des wanted Sue and I to meet him to inspect a Unit he was looking at moving to last Tuesday but he never arrived. All I can tell you is that he passed away so quickly at home, that he would not of known anything about it. This is what he wanted. Des was absolutely terrified of having a stroke or some other ailment that meant spending his remaining years in a vegetative state.

Des had many dear friends from all walks of life and it would be impossible to acknowledge you all today, except to say you know who you are and how much you meant to him. I would however, like to specially thank Des’s neighbour and friend Ray Burman, who saw him nearly every day and was a great help to Des and a carer to Kelly Dog.

Des was funny, intelligent, irreverent and proudly politically incorrect and we loved him for that. His sense of humour and wit was incredible. In many ways Des was an 18 year old in an 86 year old body. He was an inspiration to us all that, that life is meant to be lived. It has been an honour to have shared so many years with Des on his journey through life. Addios Amigo and Rest In Peace mate. We will all miss you and Kelly Dog so very very much. Thank you.

_____________________________________________________________________________

Eulogy by Rowan Steele

Dad was born on the 11th July in 1928 at Wayville to James and Isla Steele.

He had one sister Patricia with which he had a typical brother/sister relationship. Sometimes teasing, sometimes competitive but always loving.

Grandad Steele was a teacher at Prince Alfred College and that’s where Dad went. He played footy for PAC and still caught up with old school mates at the reunions.

When Dad finished school he travelled up to Darwin as Registrar for Mines. Tales from the territory always provided us kids, and his friends with lots of entertaining stories.

He raced motorbikes up there for a while and became a bit of a local celebrity, not only for the enthusiastic way he embraced the Territory lifestyle but for his skills on an old BSA scrambler.

Back in Adelaide, Dad had a few jobs but the main one was Probation and Parole Officer for Correctional Services. Sometimes Dad could whinge for Australia but it was this job that he enjoyed the most, both on the job and all the friends he made (outside of the lock-ups of course).

In Adelaide, Dad met and married our mum. That’s where Alana & I came into the picture.

That wasn’t meant to be and after a while he met and married Roberta. They had two children and Alana and I scored two sisters, Amanda & Rebecca.

That wasn’t meant to be either and Dad eventually remarried again. This one really wasn’t mean to be but on the up-side it bought Matthew into our lives. Dad loved Matt with all his heart and adopted him into our family. Dad finally learnt his lesson and found some stability with Helen as his girlfriend.

All us kids had an atypical upbringing but I mean that in the best possible way and none of us would swap it for quids. We were always surrounded by dogs, motorbikes and a rough and tumble lifestyle that looking back on it always makes me smile and makes me feel the better for it. Most of us can remember seeing a bit too much when Dad would walk around the house in his lap-lap or in a pair of speedos with the elastic gone out of it. That’s why in later years we got him board shorts to wear around the house and on the boat.

Dad loved life, loved a laugh, loved women, loved a beer, loved his kids and his grand-kids, loved his mates, loved pouring money into his boats (well maybe not loved that part) and of course he loved Kelly-dog.

All of you here have your stories of shared good times with Dad and he’d be stoked you came here to pay your respects. He’d also want you not to be upset. We all loved Dad and have some great memories we’ll keep with us. That’s exactly what Dad would want. He’d want everyone to remember the times they shared with a smile, a laugh and a beer.

If anyone is keen, we’ll be heading back to the old Police Club in Carrington Street for some beers, laughs and storytelling.

Lastly, I just want to thank you all for coming today and finish off by quoting Dad:

“It’s a wonderful thing we’re doing”.

Love you pop.

 

Better Hard Work (or Work Hard)

2014 - Blog Quotes_0001I am sitting at my computer typing as that is the only part of my body that can move.  My wife and I just spent all day gardening at a property that we own that we suspect the tenants lived an alternate lifestyle of never going into the garden.

This was the second day in a row (last night I went to be at 9.00 pm and slept for 11 hours  without stirring before getting up today and going back to the property).

We had a good day.  It was worthwhile work and was fulfilling.

At one stage (it was 27 degrees so it was warm) we were ready to chuck it in but decided to attack a Triffid that had grown in the front yard which had a root base the size of Tasmanian.  After about 2 hours we had dug it out;  the trailer looked like a teetering tower of sticks and my arms looked like they had hung out the phone box in the horror scene from Alfred Hitchcocks ‘The Birds’ (Sorry if you don’t get this reference, but it was a horror movie that scared us all in the 70’s or was it the 60’s) (Sorry, but I also have to mention last night I told a joke to my 21 year old daughter about two eskimos who were in their kayak and were cold so they lit a fire – the fire of course burnt their kayak and they drowned – I said the moral of the story was “That you can’t have you kayak and heat it too” – she didn’t get it, and I felt old…..)

So, today we did some worthwhile work that was fulfilling.  I think the main thing was that we weren’t sitting at a desk doing things that didn’t seem important or that didn’t get dirt under your fingernails (Of course all the dirt is gone now as I just stood under the shower for about an hour – no doubt this waste of water created the extinction of a rare North Siberian amoeba….. but I really needed it!).

2014 - Blog QuotesFor the first time in a long time we are having take away pizza for tea, because someone else makes it, cuts it up and brings it to your door – which is about all we can managed at the moment.  I am sure the person making the pizza doesn’t think their job is worthwhile, but to me, tonight it was.

The is no profound lesson in today, other than working hard….. somehow…… just feels good.

I would usually link this to my other posts about how I see the world, but, really, I just can’t mange it I am so tired.

I think worthwhile and fulfilling hard work makes me a better man.

 

Better at Leaving

I was talking to a friend the other day about leaving a situation behind and how if you don’t do it clean it will always come back to haunt you.  We were talking about relationships and as we were talking I kept thinking about work situations.

I also has to confess to them that I was smoking again and it was because I hadn’t left clean – I thought just one more time for old times sake, as a bit of a celebration of going 5 months without a cigarette…..  Yes, well that didn’t work out so well.  The break has to be clean and forever.

But, with smoking I came up with reasons for myself that were, and still are valid; but somehow emotionally they had not become a part of me, but just something I was doing for the time being.  (You can read about them in Better Stop Smoking).

I told my friend about my failed attempt (about my 10th) and said that I had not broken clean and remembered why I had left smoking behind – I think these sort of things are things that we have to remind ourselves of daily.

2014-0-10-10 Stay or Go Sign

Stay or Go

Also the reasons for leaving anything have to be valid for them to be maintained.  Nothing worse than discovering later that your reasons for doing something were as invalid as the doing in the first place and possibly caused more damage than the original behaviour; although this may not completely apply to smoking – any reason to give up smoking I think is valid!

So the questions about staying or going or leaving something are a good start to deciding that choice AND if it is the right choice.  Try these:

Is this all just a bad fit for me.
I am a great believer is saying if it doesn’t feel right it probably isn’t.  I always wonder a people saying ‘it didn’t feel right, but…..’

The people you are with have written you off
I think this follows on from the above in that you can usually feel this.  It is like the kids 18th Birthday – they don’t want you there.  In addition it may not be intuition it may be that they have told you!

I’ve written off this mob
It is often something we do, but hang around anyway.  It is also one of those situations that if it is accompanied by the one above, to use today vernacular…. awkward!

I’m treading water
Nothing more to learn here and it can often feel as if hanging around is actually making you dumber.

Nothing to see here
I’m looking around, trying my best, but, really, there is nothing about this that I really like.  Tolerance is not enough – see above about being written of and writing them off.

It makes me sick
And I mean literally.  The thing about this is it often makes those around you feel sick as well – dragging everybody else down, especially friends and loved ones is just sharing your pain.

Had a good day today – so!
I have a saying about doing worthwhile work.  If you can’t see anything worthwhile in what you are doing, and from what you understand nobody else appears to be able to either – Bye!

Is it toxic
I suppose it is something we often don’t notice until we realise I hate them, they hate me, it is shit, it’s making me sick and really, what the fuck was I thinking (this really applies to smoking!)

A few years ago I was in a situation that fulfilled all of the above requirements but was there for years.  I read a book called “Who Moved My Cheese” by Dr Spencer Johnson.  It is a book about a quite (pardon the pun) cheesy story about two little men and two mice. I read this book and decided that ‘they’ (I love the spooky, scary, responsible and nameless group who fuck up our lives called – ‘They’) were no longer responsible for how I feel – bearing in mind that at the exact time that I realise this I realised that ‘they’ didn’t think that they ever were.  This had been a long term thing, 11 years and it had taken me about 11 minutes to read the book and I was completely gone and never looked back 11 days later.  As a matter of fact, in the above situation the last time I walked away after not packing my baggage but throwing it away I actually (really and literally) cheered and laughed!

As you may have read on my quotes page one of my favourite quotes is the definition of insanity, which is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.  I think it is also insane to be doing the same thing over and over again and not noticing.

I have mostly written about going, but I am sure, in the future I will write about staying – it’s just today I realised that leaving things behind often needs that bridge burnt not only to stop you going back but also to stop them following you – in some cases figuratively and others literally!

I know sometimes we have to live with things (like kids!) and sometimes it is hard to walk away.  But, if you decide to walk, and you have decided for all the right reasons, never look back ever – NEVER take one more puff from that cigarette.

Also when you walk away often you walk towards what you have always been looking for.  For me part of being a better man is knowing that where I am now, being with the people that add to my life is because sometimes in the past I had to leave things behind.  Sometimes that leaving was walking away, sometimes running and for the most part it was about getting them out of my head.

I have not doubt if I had not, today I would not be sitting here in our home looking forward to where we are going next, as opposed to lamenting where I have been.

 

Better at War

I have been working on a post about my circles of authority, responsibility and concern over the last couple of days (I will post it soon but this post just came into my head and needed to be done now…). These circles expand and contract in what seems like a random manner and I and trying to gain some control…. especially over my circle of concern.

But…..

Today (well this week, as it has taken me some time to write this post) we decided to send out troops to Iraq and other places unknown to fight (read advise and assist in missions).

My circle of concern expanded to the entire world as opposed to my usual sphere which is the state of my bowels, the price of smokes and the kids driving me crazy.  I started to think about a bloke sitting in his house, with his family, and perhaps his kids and perhaps a couple of goats, and how in a minute, some other people are going to come around, not for a barby and a few beers, but to massacre him and the kids, and probably the goat.

I got to thinking about how this makes me angry.

I have spoken a lot about angry and the links we have in our community with friends, family and of course, the community, and the world.  (NB:  You may note that I have not made all those links – hyper-links –  in this post because I want it to be just about this).  I have said in the past that my definition of being a man includes standing up for those who can not stand up for themselves.

And I think about the man, and his wife, and his kids, and his goat and think that it is really unfair that he lives in fear.  I want to help him

But….

My step son is not going to war, my step daughter is not going to war, my daughters are not going to war.  If they were going to war to defend the man and his family and his goat I would hope that I would understand that this is about doing what is right.

But….

He (or she) is going to war in a part of the world that has been at war for thousands of years.  He is going to war in a part of the world that is a lot of desert and a lot of oil.  He is going to war in the part of the world that creates wars through religion and has had to defend itself from religion (just thought I would mention in a round about way ‘The Crusades’).  He is going to war because someone who won a popularity competition and a whole lot of other people who also won popularity competitions said we should go to war and defend… or sorry was it attack… or sorry was it defend… or sorry was it advise….  or sorry was it disrupt…. or something else… I forget…..

Digression – I am going to have a brain operation and the nurse introduces me to Mr brain surgeon and said that he is the most popular brain surgeon in Australia as he was voted in by everybody else (well at least half of us anyway) that he was supposed to be in charge of brain surgery – and I ask what are his qualifications? and they say he hung around hospitals and talked to a lot of nurses and once drove an ambulance and when he was at university joined a group called the people who want to be brain surgeons which was separate to his studies then a group of people who liked him preselected him to be the local brain surgeon – and that was good as he was being told what to do by the brain surgeons in Canberra and then he became the top State brain surgeon and then rode a bed down King William Street saying he was going to ban pokies and after there were more pokies in South Australia he went to Canberra to be one of the brain surgeons who were opposed to the other brain surgeons then he was voted by his friends who were the brain surgeons to be the top brain surgeon of his friends and then all the people said he could be the top brain surgeon and operate on any brains he wanted – but he had lots of advisers who once wanted to be brain surgeons or who knew brain surgeons and then told him what to do and he did it so long as everyone liked him…..

So we, not the brain surgeons or the rest of us, are going to war.

I hate it That this man and his family and his goat, may be killed.

I hate it when you put your hand in a bucket of water and pull it out and it doesn’t leave a hole and even when you stir up the water you can look in a moment and it looks just the same as before.

Are we stirring the water with our men and women: our soldiers lives.

We love our Australian soldiers as they are brave, honest, fearless and no matter what they fight for, they make us proud….. Why, because they fight for the ideals, beliefs and values that we uphold, but they live them in the dirt and the dust and the blood and the death that we lament in a 10 second grab on the news just before the sport and the anticipation of the outcome of the Bachelor.   (Makes you gag a bit doesn’t it…)

Are we getting operated on by brain surgeons who have won a popularity competition.  If we knew the name of the man and his family and his goat, would we say, come to Australia and be my neighbour, but bring your own bucket and don’t stir up the water.

I don’t want the man and his family and his goat to not feel safe in his house as I do in mine…..  But I don’t want our sons and daughters to die for the winner of a popularity contest who is mates with another winner of a popularity contest who have decided to stand up to a bully by proxy.

I hate bullies, but…..  I think we should kill all the bullies, but then wouldn’t I be a bully….

It hurts my heart to think of the man and his family and his goat.

Again, as in many of my posts, I am sorry, and feel sorry for his deleamour.

But, today, I say…. Against just about everything I believe in….. I can’t help, because in doing so it would hurt me and my family and my goat, too much.

Plus, just one more thing.  I didn’t vote for this.

I know if I was the better man, with my family and my goat, I would not say send your sons and daughters to die for me.  Really, I am sorry,  but I know you will understand.    And, I do.

Better with Six-Percenters

I wrote a post not that long ago, Better with Bob, about a guy who was my mentor.

One of the things Bob taught me was about Six-Percenters.

Bob came up with the theory that about 6% of all people are difficult to deal with. I heard Bob talk about this over the years and think he was mellowing a bit when he said, they were difficult to deal with, because he initially referred to them as dickheads.

I have to agree on both counts.

Do you know a six-percenter?  Perhaps you are the six-percenter in the room. You know who they are. The difficult person in meetings, all meetings, every time. The person who has their hand up first to ask why we have to volunteer. The person who knows their job specs back to front, and works to them, exactly. They are the person with the boss, the union, their wife, husband, boyfriend, girlfriend and lawyer on speed dial; just in case they have been dealt with in a manner they see as unfit for their standing.

It you don’t think they really exist, get on a 50 seater bus travelling interstate and you will always know who those 3 are who are going to cause ‘difficulties’ all the way, even before you leave suburbia. (3 is 6 percent of 50!)

There is another sad aspect to six-percenters. They attrack about 14% of the rest of the population as their followers or perhaps, better described as their posse.  This 14% are the ones that perhaps are a bit weak or more importantly need a leader to follow.

Now our six-percenters and their posse are a reasonable 20% of the people you have to deal with.  I am sure Bob was aware of this and the old adage that you spent 80% of your time dealing with 20% of the people!

The unfortunate part about six-percenters are that there is no point in trying to make them change – they will only change when they want to.  There is however a chance of saving the 14% all the time.

Those 14% just need the right leader to follow.

I suppose leadership is constantly about learning, and perhaps learning who you six-percenters are and not wasting time on them and finding the 14% and giving them someone else to follow.  Bearing in mind that leadership is different to leading (see my page under Better Stuff, Better at Leading with a leadership model Bob gave me).

Do we all spend too much time dealing with and having angst with six-percenters.

Waiting for them to change while they are possibly the greatest thorn in your side is a difficult proposition.  It is often that little prick (both literally and figuratively) that can lead to an infected sore, septicaemia and then death!

A question I often ask myself is why I am allowing someone else to dictate my happiness.  The answer is in the question, in that, I am allowing them.  I suppose my wife summed this up best in her muse My Happiness.

The most terrifying thing about six-percenters is that you may be one.  More terrifying is that you are part of the 14% in the mindless posse!  I am sure we all have six-percenter and 14%er moments in our life.  Some of us may even have been six-percenters, who for some reason changed.

In my post Better Hatred or Hated I explored the danger of anger and hating in your life.  I think dealing with six-percenters is often used as an excuse for not being a good leader.  I understand that good leaders also need good followers.  We do spend a lot of time talking about leadership when perhaps we should be teaching our kids about ‘followship’.  Bearing in mind this is not new and was around long before rocket science with Aristotle the Greek philosopher saying 200 years ago:

“He who cannot be a good follower cannot be a good leader.”

I know it is often hard to demonstrate good ‘followship’.  It often doesn’t have to do with me being part of the troublesome 20%, but that I don’t trust my ‘leader’.  Trust and values are the key I think.  I briefly wrote about values and trust in my post Mindfulness – Trust and have tried my own method of finding what my values really are which I describe on the page ‘Values‘ under the menu item Better Things on my home page.

So where are trust and values connected in both leadership and followship.  Surely if I believe, what you believe and I have the same values as you, then I trust you, I will follow you – simple really.  So, why doesn’t that always work so well.  Perhaps another key factor is that we all lose sight of the purpose of where we are going.  The six-percenter can always ‘win’ because they destroy the virtuous purpose with meetings, budgets, project projections, etc etc that we all have allowed to rule our lives.  Probably a good time to look at the real purpose of a lot of things – well, everything really.   I wrote in Better Hatred or Hated  that the ‘winner’ dies with the most joys not the most toys.  I think the six-percenter concentrates their life on the toys and even when they get them’ complain that they didn’t come with batteries.

My plan now is be a better man and to make sure that I am not the six-percenter in the room.

 

Better at Time Machines

As I have been experimenting with my blog, I have been going over recent posts and fixing up any errors. These are usually spelling (Yeah, I know, there are probably still heaps of spelling errors… never was my strong point!) errors or typos. To date in all my reviewing and editing I have left the basis of the content the same.

I have been wondering though, if the time will come that if I no longer believe in something I wrote in the past, I will change it or write a new post to clarify some new position, I now, just as vehemently hold, as I did the one in the past that I originally wrote about.  (I think I understand what I just wrote?)

My problem with changing a previous post is that I feel as if I am cheating my past.

Sounds like a bit of a who cares or so what scenario, but, would it be the same if we suddenly looked in our history books, or old copies of the newspaper and found that the past had somehow changed.  It would be like the changing of history in the novel (and then movie) “1984” by George Orwell.

I suppose it is not the change that troubles me, but, the possibility that it would be accompanied by denial.

But, I think we all create time machines with our memories.  Keeping a blog or a journal is a bit of a reality check on what really did happen – or more to the point, our view of what happened at the time.

Keeping all these records are a good thing unless they just remind you of bad times and bad people.  I suppose that one of the advantages of time passing is that memories and feelings do fade; well most of the time.

I definitely think there is a ‘limitation of time on childhood trauma’ and in saying that I am not saying that bad things didn’t happen that changed and destroyed lives or there weren’t bad people in our lives in the past that may still need to be punished; what I am saying is that there is only one life so why should we let someone or something from our past wreck our future.

In the book Too Soon Old Too Late Smart by Gordon Livingston (a really good read by the way) he goes on to say that we are responsible for most of what happens to us – I am sure this is not always the case, such as when we are kids, but we are most certainly responsible for what we do from that time on.  Most importantly, for me, who lives regret as a daily mantra he said:

“Coming to terms with the past is inevitably a process of forgiveness, of letting go, the simplest and most difficult of human endeavours.  It is simultaneously an act of will and of surrender.  And often seems impossible until the moment we do it.”tardis-in-space-tardis-6289810-1280-768

So maybe the ‘time machine’ is actually in us, we just have to switch it on.

I know one thing, I took his advice a few months ago with someone I had spent an entire lifetime hating.  And I just stopped hating them, I actually forgave them, and I let it go.  It was an act of will and surrender and I really didn’t know what it was like until the actual moment I really (Really!) did it.  Suddenly I was in the Tardis with Dr Who and I did turn back time.  The unfortunate part is that at that same moment I realised how much time I had lost.

Maybe my quest to be a better man is about using the time machine for good not evil.

 

Better in the morning

image
This is just a quick post, because it is morning and we are all in a hurry…..

Well usually.

I am still in Bali and I captured my morning in the attached picture….

I was thinking how I usually spend my mornings rushing to go somewhere, usually late, kids and family also rushing, hurried breakfasts, mad drives to work with all the traffic working deliberately just against you (see my post on Bali driving)

So this morning it is a quick post to say, don’t miss the morning, don’t miss that moment when your day is just starting and might just be the best day of your life.

I have missed too many mornings, which led to bad days.

I am not always better in the mornings, but I think I will take a little more time to notice….. Wonder how I will go when I am back home….?

Have a better day, have a better morning.

Better being privileged

Tonight I watched a segment on one of the news program’s about a young footballer who was supporting a fan (who was only 17) who was recovering from a stroke.  The footballer said he would kick a footy with the young lad when he could walk.  The segment showed when they were both at the oval and the young stroke suffer kicked a gaol.  The absolute joy on the young fellas face was only matched by the smile on the young footballers face.

I liked what I saw.  The young footballer didn’t have to be involved at all but he chose to.

Then the cynic in me kicked in……

I thought the the footballer was one of the football privileged who SHOULD be putting back into the community. He was one of the people that we look up too, gets the big bucks and leads a life of privilege. I know he has worked hard for it, and has to work hard each week to make the team. I know that he is also expected to be a role model and put himself up each week he walks out onto the field.

I started to think that my cynicism was levelled at the wrong person, the wrong group of people.

What about all the politicians who earn big buck yet only appear to do things for political gain not community well being: what about the multi million dollar earning CEO’s that live a life of luxury: what about all the celebrities that make a movie or two and live a life of excess and privilege?

Suddenly I started to count the imbalance of privelege in our society and what everyone else had and what they did with it incomprison to me.

I thought I was not a person of privelege: then I started to count the things I have and not the things I don’t have. It may be about the things I need and the things I want.

I have clean water to dring, in my house.
I have good food, whenever I want.
I have shelter and clothes.
I live in a great country.
I am free.

I started to think what I had done with my privileges.

If the news program came to my place and said we want to do a story on what you have done with your privelege, what would their story report on.

Probably some weak stuff I half volunteered for in the past and all the entrepreneurial things I am going to do in the future.

I realised that we wait for the celebrities, footballers and CEO’s to show us the way… Because they should, it is their responsibility!

Maybe I should be better with my privelege and stop worrying about everyone else and start worrying about everyone else.

I am sure there is a great deal of privelege in having the choice to be a better man.

Better News Isn’t Always Good News

I wrote a post on Facebook the other day which read:

“A little bit of good news can make a big difference in your day”

And, that little bit of good news did make my day a whole lot better.  But, this is my life, remember.  It all collapsed when the little bit of good news turned into a whole lot of unknown bad news.

Don’t you hate that!

So, is it still a good day – yeah, I reckon so.  Why?  Because I’m still here.

I really have this problem in that my bits of bad news are really not that bad, yet they smash me in the head like catastrophes.

Most times nobody dies and most times they are my ‘first world’ type problems.  It’s that perspective thing again – I saw it when I wrote ‘Better Dead‘ and I am trying to live it a bit more; but life does get in the way.

So, my good news, turned bad news, is now just news.  I am still here and my day, week, month, year goes on.  I am sure that most of the rest of the world didn’t really notice me having a shit day.  I know there are lots of other people, some my friends, some just because they are Palestinians, who are having worse days than me – and they have no end in sight, perhaps ever.

Well, I’m still here.