Life Lessons - 'Pon My Word https://ponmyword.com We Bring Writing To Life Sat, 15 Apr 2023 02:14:22 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5 https://ponmyword.com/wp-content/uploads/cropped-SiteIcon-32x32.jpg Life Lessons - 'Pon My Word https://ponmyword.com 32 32 The Story of Granny and Fat…Actually About Granny and No Fat! https://ponmyword.com/the-story-of-granny-and-fatactually-about-granny-and-no-fat/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-story-of-granny-and-fatactually-about-granny-and-no-fat https://ponmyword.com/the-story-of-granny-and-fatactually-about-granny-and-no-fat/#respond Mon, 05 Dec 2022 02:57:35 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=3352 A woman once vibrant, full of fun, witty, daring, and super-fit, until… In the 1960s when nutritionists began to take centre stage in the nutrition debate, a whole food section became a narrative of fear, a fear that only grew, and grew exponentially over the years. If you wanted to be really healthy you were advised to give up the staples our ancestors had traditionally adhered to. Dairy products, cream, butter and cheese, eggs and meat, were vilified, food to avoid…if you wanted to stay alive. And the narrative was eagerly embraced. Fats were demonized…because of you know…your cholesterol…and your heart…and while you are at it, just cut out the salt. And thus the narrative grew wings , and the gospel according to the pundits, was manifest, and soon the low-fat craze of the 80s and 90s was in full swing. It’s business you know! Have you noticed that as soon as any diet is gaining ground, for whatever reason, hot on the heels of its popularity, or becoming the brave new world, are the food manufacturers. They must spend at least some of their billions, keeping an eye on the average Joe’s convictions, then paying homage to those same convictions, by offering up their shitty, cheap versions. These guys will stop at nothing. Many of us were taken in by the spin doctors I was, let me tell you. There’s no better way to promote sales than to spin the rhetoric of fear. The spin doctors I am referring to are the sleazy scientists who spin the narratives for food companies, (and for dieticians) coming up with scientific proof regarding health and food, and supplements. Imagine that…getting paid handsomely to spin a web of lies on a daily basis. (And before you ask, no, conscience was not allowed to enter their equation. Please leave it at the door. You can pick truth up for your own family when you leave work.) I imagine it’s hard to give up a fabulous salary once your lifestyle is supported by that salary, however hard your conscience is telling you otherwise. And so, in an effort to keep my family in tip-top condition… I did buy the cuts of meat that I found out later, were once fed to farm animals, the chicken breasts, and the beef fillets. In hindsight it was awful stuff. Low fat meant low taste, and dry as a Salvation Army get-together, no matter how easy you were on the cooking. But I didn’t go the full Monty. I bought lower-fat milk…for at least a week…but gave into the pressures of a fat-loving family. Over time, I started my own research, reflected on my childhood and all the fat we ate, and gradually climbed back up the faith-in-fat ladder. But not Granny… Granny was my friend’s mother. Granny was the life and soul of any party, devilish, always there with a joke, and with a quick repartee. When her grandson described her as an old fart, her response was…then you’d better be careful. I might hang around for longer than might be safe for you. She babysat her grandchildren. She gave speeches at her grandchildren’s weddings, and nobody was spared! She came out to dinner with us regularly. She helped out in our library. But then things changed Granny’s husband died of cancer. She’d tried to save him. She had! She was convinced about the no-fat protocol, even as she saw him waste away. And she was convinced even more after his death. Nothing with fat ever passed her lips from then on. Interestingly she would bring packet soups for lunch to work, and when I suggested they were not so good for her, she replied that she had added chopped herbs to the concoction. One night she came to dinner… I had made the best soup, a broth, using chicken feet to make the stock. It was the elixir of life, I tell you, THAT before I had even added the cream and mushrooms. “You sure there’s no fat in this Maria?” she asked. “Quite sure,” I added. “It’s all good stuff,” I assured her, catching her daughter’s smile. Sometimes lies, for the right reason, are forgiven on the spot. Did you know that? It’s in the catechism of Maria, a soon-to-be-published exposé. To be honest I think it was the first bit of nourishment she ’d had since David’s passing. She licked her lips, dunked her bread roll, and when I asked if she would like more, the answer was yes. The next two courses had their fair share of fat, but she had stopped asking by then. She was on a roll (pun intended) and declared, as she left for home, that it was by far the best food she had eaten in a while. I have no doubt it was! But I suspect she still held the fear of fat! And very soon… Now I can’t put a time-frame on when she became less coherent. Time flashes by in our busy lives, but it would have been little more than a year after this dinner that we began to see the change in her. For a number of years she had helped out at work with us, but soon she was making excuses. She was too busy, she had an appointment. To me she had become afraid of making mistakes. She avoided coming out. And accepting dinner invitations. She forgot to turn off the stove. Soon the diagnosis of dementia was given. And within a short period of time her home, her refuge, was sold and she went into care…something she had always dreaded. And in her lucid times she railed against the unfairness of it all. The facts of ageing The reality is that as we age, there is an increased likelihood of suffering dementia. It’s one of society’s greatest fears. So many markers of age seem to strike all of a sudden, eyes failing, hearing impaired, strength compromised, and vitality just not there. But none of those strikes fear as much as the prospect of a dementia diagnosis. I’ve watched it happen to a family member, a professor of mathematics who travelled the world delivering his research papers, a lover of fine food, and wine (a moderate drinker), who in the last 15 years or so, followed a strict low-fat diet. Not his idea by the way! The decline was soon apparent. And now his days are spent staring into space…not dead as yet, but he might as well be. Sometimes he plays simple childish games with the other demented people, while onlookers cheer. I hate that! And so would he, if he could get his brain in order! But then, maybe he gets something out of it. I just don’t know. Category Theory (something he was passionate about ), or playing quoits? Yours to choose. Hobson’s choice really! And finally a reflection by Professor Fredrik Nyström, on the vindication of fat. “I’ve been working with this for so long. It feels great to have this scientific report, and that the skepticism towards low-carb diets among my colleagues has disappeared during the course of the work. When all recent scientific studies are lined up the result is indisputable: our deep-seated fear of fat is completely unfounded. You don’t get fat from fatty foods, just as you don’t get atherosclerosis from calcium or turn green from green vegetables.”

The post The Story of Granny and Fat…Actually About Granny and No Fat! first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

A woman once vibrant, full of fun, witty, daring, and super-fit, until…

low fat

In the 1960s when nutritionists began to take centre stage in the nutrition debate, a whole food section became a narrative of fear, a fear that only grew, and grew exponentially over the years.

If you wanted to be really healthy you were advised to give up the staples our ancestors had traditionally adhered to.

Dairy products, cream, butter and cheese, eggs and meat, were vilified, food to avoid…if you wanted to stay alive.

And the narrative was eagerly embraced.

Fats were demonized…because of you know…your cholesterol…and your heart…and while you are at it, just cut out the salt.

And thus the narrative grew wings , and the gospel according to the pundits, was manifest, and soon the low-fat craze of the 80s and 90s was in full swing.

It’s business you know!

Have you noticed that as soon as any diet is gaining ground, for whatever reason, hot on the heels of its popularity, or becoming the brave new world, are the food manufacturers.

They must spend at least some of their billions, keeping an eye on the average Joe’s convictions, then paying homage to those same convictions, by offering up their shitty, cheap versions.

These guys will stop at nothing.

Many of us were taken in by the spin doctors

I was, let me tell you. There’s no better way to promote sales than to spin the rhetoric of fear.

The spin doctors I am referring to are the sleazy scientists who spin the narratives for food companies, (and for dieticians) coming up with scientific proof regarding health and food, and supplements.

Imagine that…getting paid handsomely to spin a web of lies on a daily basis.

(And before you ask, no, conscience was not allowed to enter their equation. Please leave it at the door. You can pick truth up for your own family when you leave work.)

I imagine it’s hard to give up a fabulous salary once your lifestyle is supported by that salary, however hard your conscience is telling you otherwise.

And so, in an effort to keep my family in tip-top condition…

I did buy the cuts of meat that I found out later, were once fed to farm animals, the chicken breasts, and the beef fillets.

In hindsight it was awful stuff.

Low fat meant low taste, and dry as a Salvation Army get-together, no matter how easy you were on the cooking.

But I didn’t go the full Monty. I bought lower-fat milk…for at least a week…but gave into the pressures of a fat-loving family.

Over time, I started my own research, reflected on my childhood and all the fat we ate, and gradually climbed back up the faith-in-fat ladder.

But not Granny…

Granny was my friend’s mother.

Granny was the life and soul of any party, devilish, always there with a joke, and with a quick repartee.

When her grandson described her as an old fart, her response was…then you’d better be careful. I might hang around for longer than might be safe for you.

She babysat her grandchildren.

She gave speeches at her grandchildren’s weddings, and nobody was spared!

She came out to dinner with us regularly.

She helped out in our library.

But then things changed

Granny’s husband died of cancer. She’d tried to save him. She had!

She was convinced about the no-fat protocol, even as she saw him waste away.

And she was convinced even more after his death.

Nothing with fat ever passed her lips from then on.

Interestingly she would bring packet soups for lunch to work, and when I suggested they were not so good for her, she replied that she had added chopped herbs to the concoction.

One night she came to dinner…

I had made the best soup, a broth, using chicken feet to make the stock.

It was the elixir of life, I tell you, THAT before I had even added the cream and mushrooms.

“You sure there’s no fat in this Maria?” she asked.

“Quite sure,” I added. “It’s all good stuff,” I assured her, catching her daughter’s smile.

Sometimes lies, for the right reason, are forgiven on the spot. Did you know that? It’s in the catechism of Maria, a soon-to-be-published exposé.

To be honest I think it was the first bit of nourishment she ’d had since David’s passing. She licked her lips, dunked her bread roll, and when I asked if she would like more, the answer was yes.

The next two courses had their fair share of fat, but she had stopped asking by then. She was on a roll (pun intended) and declared, as she left for home, that it was by far the best food she had eaten in a while.

I have no doubt it was!

But I suspect she still held the fear of fat!

And very soon…

Now I can’t put a time-frame on when she became less coherent. Time flashes by in our busy lives, but it would have been little more than a year after this dinner that we began to see the change in her.

For a number of years she had helped out at work with us, but soon she was making excuses. She was too busy, she had an appointment.

To me she had become afraid of making mistakes.

She avoided coming out.

And accepting dinner invitations.

She forgot to turn off the stove.

Soon the diagnosis of dementia was given.

And within a short period of time her home, her refuge, was sold and she went into care…something she had always dreaded.

And in her lucid times she railed against the unfairness of it all.

The facts of ageing

The reality is that as we age, there is an increased likelihood of suffering dementia.

It’s one of society’s greatest fears.

So many markers of age seem to strike all of a sudden, eyes failing, hearing impaired, strength compromised, and vitality just not there.

But none of those strikes fear as much as the prospect of a dementia diagnosis.

I’ve watched it happen to a family member, a professor of mathematics who travelled the world delivering his research papers, a lover of fine food, and wine (a moderate drinker), who in the last 15 years or so, followed a strict low-fat diet. Not his idea by the way!

The decline was soon apparent.

And now his days are spent staring into space…not dead as yet, but he might as well be.

Sometimes he plays simple childish games with the other demented people, while onlookers cheer.

I hate that!

And so would he, if he could get his brain in order!

But then, maybe he gets something out of it. I just don’t know.

Category Theory (something he was passionate about ), or playing quoits? Yours to choose.

Hobson’s choice really!

And finally a reflection by Professor Fredrik Nyström, on the vindication of fat.

I’ve been working with this for so long. It feels great to have this scientific report, and that the skepticism towards low-carb diets among my colleagues has disappeared during the course of the work. When all recent scientific studies are lined up the result is indisputable: our deep-seated fear of fat is completely unfounded. You don’t get fat from fatty foods, just as you don’t get atherosclerosis from calcium or turn green from green vegetables.

The post The Story of Granny and Fat…Actually About Granny and No Fat! first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/the-story-of-granny-and-fatactually-about-granny-and-no-fat/feed/ 0
A Full-Fat Diet Is Just What The Doctor Should Order https://ponmyword.com/a-full-fat-diet-is-just-what-the-doctor-should-order/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-full-fat-diet-is-just-what-the-doctor-should-order https://ponmyword.com/a-full-fat-diet-is-just-what-the-doctor-should-order/#respond Sun, 06 Nov 2022 05:45:36 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=3169 Especially when your weight refuses to shift no matter what… Quite recently this story was posted on Medium. The story refutes the benefits of the ketogenic diet , suggesting that it is really complicated so that people don’t know where to start. The writer also says, “The first problem with diets is that they’re a short-term solution.” And yet, a diet is simply the food choices we make on a regular basis. That’s what diet once meant! So basically whether we eat keto, calories-in-calories-out counting, fast-food, Paleo, eat-all-you-like, move-more-eat-less, they can all be seen as diets. But I get what he is saying. If you are on a diet and it’s not working for you, why on earth would you stick to it? The thing is, there’s no one diet that suits all homo sapiens. And if there is any way to prove that life is not always fair, ask a dieter who can’t lose weight. That reminds me. In the heady days of serious distance running, I used to run with a small group on a Sunday morning. We’d run roughly twenty km well before breakfast. It wasn’t for sissies, let me tell you. One of the guys in the group was over six feet tall, and carried a lot of extra weight. He ran every blessed day, as well as Sunday, and his weight never changed. Yet he still battled the distance with the rest of us. I once asked him if it made him angry, doing so much running and not losing weight. “No,” he replied. “I love running and could never give it up, but I’d sure like to know which ancestor’s grave I trampled on, because he’s sure got it in for me.” It doesn’t seem fair It’s hard to respond to something like that. The rest of us enjoyed different stages of trimness. He was heaviest by far. Of course this was in the days before keto was even a word, because had he known about the protocol, you bet he’d have embraced it overnight. I was thinking about Garry after reading about the keto diet being stupid and just this morning I recalled reading about another Gary – Gary Taubes, an investigative journalist who also struggled with his weight. Gary felt there was a missing link in the obesity issue. Like my other friend Garry, he exercised, was a runner on top of that, ate low fat, denied himself so many fatty foods, including avocado, meat and bacon, but couldn’t shift his weight. Thing is we are all metabolically different… Through thorough research, Gary reached the conclusion that we are all metabolically different. Some people can eat all the carbs in the world, and remain lean. Others just need a sniff of carbs and they are already in trouble. These are the fat storers of this world, whether they like it or not. Fat storing could be classified as a metabolic disease. Metabolic disease? Once you have reached the conclusion that you have been metabolically punished, and that carbs will always be your fighting enemy, and if you want to be lean, should keto become your way of life? To hell with what others say about it being difficult to follow…or indeed that is a health hazard. So is being fat! It’s your decision, and if it allows you to look, feel and think better, why in heaven’s name would you not embrace it? Besides, those who follow keto under the direction of a ketogenic doctor, all find that their markers for health improve out of sight. The case for ketosis Ketosis is the process where your body starts to call foul on fat cells, converting them to ketones. Gary argues that this is the only way for fat people to ditch the fat for life. Nobody is saying that fat people have to forego carbohydrates. They don’t. They can eat all they like of bread and desserts and the likes. There’s no law about it. Just as long as they don’t mind being fat! Let’s face it… We’re always going to fight the different gospels: the low-fat adherents who smugly know that their hearts are in better shape than yours the everything-in-moderation group who know that being fat is all your fault the medical groups who cite so many health risks in not eating bread and beans and whatever else the absolutely no-fat milk and yoghurt consumers who’ve long given up the pleasure of a full-fat dollop of cream just for the pleasure of it Maybe we need a new gospel… The gospel that’s been around for so many years without challenge, is maybe not such a credible gospel. There are many doctors who have already reached the conclusion that we don’t always get things right, especially when it comes to health. They know that carbs are not always friends of the faithful. Many nutritionists have also jumped on board, flying in the face of the mantra they’ve been taught to spruik. As for Gary Taubes, he’s walked the walk, he’s done the research, and as a slimmer, more healthy version of himself, knows he’s found the sweet-spot in healthy living. You can read his book here.

The post A Full-Fat Diet Is Just What The Doctor Should Order first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

Especially when your weight refuses to shift no matter what…

ketogenic diet
Photo by Wesual Click on Unsplash

Quite recently this story was posted on Medium.

The story refutes the benefits of the ketogenic diet , suggesting that it is really complicated so that people don’t know where to start.

The writer also says, “The first problem with diets is that they’re a short-term solution.”

And yet, a diet is simply the food choices we make on a regular basis.

That’s what diet once meant!

So basically whether we eat keto, calories-in-calories-out counting, fast-food, Paleo, eat-all-you-like, move-more-eat-less, they can all be seen as diets.

But I get what he is saying. If you are on a diet and it’s not working for you, why on earth would you stick to it?

The thing is, there’s no one diet that suits all homo sapiens.

And if there is any way to prove that life is not always fair, ask a dieter who can’t lose weight.

That reminds me.

In the heady days of serious distance running, I used to run with a small group on a Sunday morning.

We’d run roughly twenty km well before breakfast. It wasn’t for sissies, let me tell you.

One of the guys in the group was over six feet tall, and carried a lot of extra weight. He ran every blessed day, as well as Sunday, and his weight never changed.

Yet he still battled the distance with the rest of us.

I once asked him if it made him angry, doing so much running and not losing weight.

“No,” he replied. “I love running and could never give it up, but I’d sure like to know which ancestor’s grave I trampled on, because he’s sure got it in for me.”

It doesn’t seem fair

It’s hard to respond to something like that. The rest of us enjoyed different stages of trimness. He was heaviest by far.

Of course this was in the days before keto was even a word, because had he known about the protocol, you bet he’d have embraced it overnight.

I was thinking about Garry after reading about the keto diet being stupid and just this morning I recalled reading about another Gary – Gary Taubes, an investigative journalist who also struggled with his weight.

Gary felt there was a missing link in the obesity issue. Like my other friend Garry, he exercised, was a runner on top of that, ate low fat, denied himself so many fatty foods, including avocado, meat and bacon, but couldn’t shift his weight.

Thing is we are all metabolically different…

Through thorough research, Gary reached the conclusion that we are all metabolically different.

Some people can eat all the carbs in the world, and remain lean.

Others just need a sniff of carbs and they are already in trouble. These are the fat storers of this world, whether they like it or not.

Fat storing could be classified as a metabolic disease.

Metabolic disease?

Once you have reached the conclusion that you have been metabolically punished, and that carbs will always be your fighting enemy, and if you want to be lean, should keto become your way of life?

To hell with what others say about it being difficult to follow…or indeed that is a health hazard.

So is being fat!

It’s your decision, and if it allows you to look, feel and think better, why in heaven’s name would you not embrace it?

Besides, those who follow keto under the direction of a ketogenic doctor, all find that their markers for health improve out of sight.

The case for ketosis

Ketosis is the process where your body starts to call foul on fat cells, converting them to ketones. Gary argues that this is the only way for fat people to ditch the fat for life.

Nobody is saying that fat people have to forego carbohydrates. They don’t.

They can eat all they like of bread and desserts and the likes.

There’s no law about it.

Just as long as they don’t mind being fat!

Let’s face it…

We’re always going to fight the different gospels:

  • the low-fat adherents who smugly know that their hearts are in better shape than yours
  • the everything-in-moderation group who know that being fat is all your fault
  • the medical groups who cite so many health risks in not eating bread and beans and whatever else
  • the absolutely no-fat milk and yoghurt consumers who’ve long given up the pleasure of a full-fat dollop of cream just for the pleasure of it

Maybe we need a new gospel…

The gospel that’s been around for so many years without challenge, is maybe not such a credible gospel.

There are many doctors who have already reached the conclusion that we don’t always get things right, especially when it comes to health. They know that carbs are not always friends of the faithful.

Many nutritionists have also jumped on board, flying in the face of the mantra they’ve been taught to spruik.

As for Gary Taubes, he’s walked the walk, he’s done the research, and as a slimmer, more healthy version of himself, knows he’s found the sweet-spot in healthy living.

You can read his book here.

The post A Full-Fat Diet Is Just What The Doctor Should Order first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/a-full-fat-diet-is-just-what-the-doctor-should-order/feed/ 0
My Friend’s Husband Died A Few Months Ago https://ponmyword.com/my-friends-husband-died-a-few-months-ago/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=my-friends-husband-died-a-few-months-ago https://ponmyword.com/my-friends-husband-died-a-few-months-ago/#respond Thu, 29 Sep 2022 04:37:54 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=3114 On new medication that promised hope, he was determined to improve. That involved his going to the gym regularly, which he did Though we know that dying is as natural as being born, the reactions to each are polar opposites. My friend’s husband James had a life-threatening condition. It was inevitable, therefore, that his disease would progress, as it did. Not that he ever let it get in the way of his living. James loved life… …loved going out for lunch, having a laugh, listening to fine music, the theatre, and ballet. We continued to participate in a lot of socializing with him and his family, and there was never a dull moment. More importantly he was the finest example of humanity that I can think of. When, at a friend’s funeral many years ago, the son of the deceased expressed his dislike for his father, so drank all his father’s Grange Hermitage, James didn’t say a word. The wine belonged to James, and not to the son’s father. But Father Time marches on… By the time James died, he was using a walking frame, and his speech was a little slurred. But still, he continued to play cricket in the back yard of their holiday home, and when he got a little too frail for his boisterous grandchildren, he took on the role of a no-nonsense umpire. The children didn’t often complain, because they learned very quickly that, though Grandad could no longer bowl and catch, he missed nothing of their game and their playing tactics. Besides, he was super-fair… Girls had to play by the rules too. No time for soppiness in the barren backyard of the holiday home. So you fell over, skinned your knee, you’ll be right. Up you get! His you’ll be right attitude saw them all develop an admirable resilience that ensured everyone had fun. He loved them! He loved life. Then Hope shed a light… Some months previously, at one of his specialist appointments, he was offered a new treatment. Cutting-edge medication that would help his mobility. Though the picture painted sounded too good to be true, he jumped at the opportunity. And why not? And gradually things did improve… …enough to allow him to visit his gym once more, to be more mobile, and hopeful for the future. He even speculated on driving his beloved sports car again. And though the family knew that in particular wouldn’t happen, the change in him was incredibly comforting, so they went along with his positive plans. And Father Time continues to march on… One night, he was left alone so my friend could pick her daughter up from the airport. They’d already eaten together. James had his book on his lap, the remote if he wanted to watch TV, and all was seemingly well. She promised to call him from the airport so he could gauge her arrival home, which she did. He didn’t answer her call, so her daughter, a doctor, called the ambulance. He was pronounced dead. No goodbyes. No last words. That semblance of hope that he could pick up the threads, and maybe do some of the things he loved most, was crushed in the moment. One can only speculate on the huge loss that the family felt. He was their everything, yes even in his frailty. One can take comfort in knowing that he always lived life to the fullest… When he was with you, he was there, for you, engaged in anything you wanted to say. Looking back, he was also the consummate entertainer. Some years ago, we were at a dinner party none of us was looking forward to. We’d formed this post-study food group that had its origins in Sydney University. The idea was to emulate the fabulous, affordable eateries around the campus. So we (most of us) quickly learned to cook, and to appreciate finer wines. More than that, we tried to be the best chefs, which meant we were always finding impressive menus from a variety of cultures. But this particular hostess was not a cook. She always had impressive ways of explaining her dishes, but everything was bland and unappetising. The blandness was something we could bet our bottom dollar on! It was almost an art form! And on that night she didn’t disappoint. The theme was Indian, so should have been tasty. But most of us sat there, taking the food for walks around our plates, bringing our best table manners to the situation. At one point, James leaned over to his wife and asked, “What are we eating Love?” There was a momentary thunderclap of silence around the room, after which she said with a deliberate air of frustration, “Oh I don’t know, James!” she said in mock exasperation. “Surely you can tell? It’s the beef curry we had at The Asian Hut last week…REMEMBER?” as she kicked his shin, to which he replied: “Of course! That’s exactly what it tastes like. Love it!” and our hostess smiled in delight, while the rest of us breathed out, releasing enough built-up tension to slice a knife. And a dark horse sings… James had a fabulous tenor voice, that we, surprisingly, weren’t really aware of. On one other occasion, when we were having an Italian night, he got up impromptu and sang the Neapolitan song, Funiculì, Funiculà, just beautifully. Right-hand across chest, shoulders raised, he was the quintessential opera singer. Can you imagine our thunderous applause? It was the start of many fun nights together… Many of us were into music at the time. Between that and his telling of jokes, he will forever be remembered. I don’t think he ever got to the punchlines, and yet, we would all be in tears of laughter, just at his antics in the telling. James’ pride and joy, apart from his family, was his tennis court. We spent many Saturdays at his place. He was by far the best player…there are no prizes being offered to guess who was the worst! And the tennis court? It was always beautifully and meticulously manicured by James himself. So much more I could say about him… …but though he will always be greatly missed, I am personally relieved that he didn’t live on, gradually losing his independence, dependent on people to wash and bathe him, to dress and undress him, and to tend to his every need. He would have hated that. Moreover he would have fought to the bitter end to be in charge. We who knew him can all take comfort in knowing that his end came quickly, and if his suffering was momentary, which is what we are led to believe, going quickly was a blessing. It’s probably how we’d all like to leave this earth… …to die quickly, amidst hope for a few more years of life, even when the odds are not in our favour. But my friend will never die. He can’t. He has created so many fond memories in the hearts and minds of those who loved him. Those can never be erased. And when I personally hear the delightful strains of Luciano Pavarotti, I will once again be in the presence of this hugely empathetic human being who loved life to the nth degree (he WAS a statistician!). Vale, James. Pavarotti – Funiculì Funiculà James had his Grange forgiving moment – so have others… Please read The Ultimate Example Of Forgiveness. To err is human, but to forgive, allows us to be free and enjoy our lives.

The post My Friend’s Husband Died A Few Months Ago first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

On new medication that promised hope, he was determined to improve. That involved his going to the gym regularly, which he did

forgiveness
Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash

Though we know that dying is as natural as being born, the reactions to each are polar opposites.

My friend’s husband James had a life-threatening condition.

It was inevitable, therefore, that his disease would progress, as it did. Not that he ever let it get in the way of his living.

James loved life…

…loved going out for lunch, having a laugh, listening to fine music, the theatre, and ballet.

We continued to participate in a lot of socializing with him and his family, and there was never a dull moment.

More importantly he was the finest example of humanity that I can think of. When, at a friend’s funeral many years ago, the son of the deceased expressed his dislike for his father, so drank all his father’s Grange Hermitage, James didn’t say a word.

The wine belonged to James, and not to the son’s father.

But Father Time marches on…

By the time James died, he was using a walking frame, and his speech was a little slurred.

But still, he continued to play cricket in the back yard of their holiday home, and when he got a little too frail for his boisterous grandchildren, he took on the role of a no-nonsense umpire.

The children didn’t often complain, because they learned very quickly that, though Grandad could no longer bowl and catch, he missed nothing of their game and their playing tactics.

Besides, he was super-fair…

Girls had to play by the rules too. No time for soppiness in the barren backyard of the holiday home.

So you fell over, skinned your knee, you’ll be right. Up you get!

His you’ll be right attitude saw them all develop an admirable resilience that ensured everyone had fun.

He loved them!

He loved life.

Then Hope shed a light…

Some months previously, at one of his specialist appointments, he was offered a new treatment. Cutting-edge medication that would help his mobility.

Though the picture painted sounded too good to be true, he jumped at the opportunity. And why not?

And gradually things did improve…

…enough to allow him to visit his gym once more, to be more mobile, and hopeful for the future.

He even speculated on driving his beloved sports car again.

And though the family knew that in particular wouldn’t happen, the change in him was incredibly comforting, so they went along with his positive plans.

And Father Time continues to march on…

One night, he was left alone so my friend could pick her daughter up from the airport. They’d already eaten together. James had his book on his lap, the remote if he wanted to watch TV, and all was seemingly well.

She promised to call him from the airport so he could gauge her arrival home, which she did.

He didn’t answer her call, so her daughter, a doctor, called the ambulance.

He was pronounced dead.

No goodbyes.

No last words.

That semblance of hope that he could pick up the threads, and maybe do some of the things he loved most, was crushed in the moment.

One can only speculate on the huge loss that the family felt. He was their everything, yes even in his frailty.

One can take comfort in knowing that he always lived life to the fullest…

When he was with you, he was there, for you, engaged in anything you wanted to say.

Looking back, he was also the consummate entertainer.

Some years ago, we were at a dinner party none of us was looking forward to. We’d formed this post-study food group that had its origins in Sydney University. The idea was to emulate the fabulous, affordable eateries around the campus.

So we (most of us) quickly learned to cook, and to appreciate finer wines. More than that, we tried to be the best chefs, which meant we were always finding impressive menus from a variety of cultures.

But this particular hostess was not a cook. She always had impressive ways of explaining her dishes, but everything was bland and unappetising.

The blandness was something we could bet our bottom dollar on! It was almost an art form!

And on that night she didn’t disappoint.

The theme was Indian, so should have been tasty. But most of us sat there, taking the food for walks around our plates, bringing our best table manners to the situation.

At one point, James leaned over to his wife and asked, “What are we eating Love?”

There was a momentary thunderclap of silence around the room, after which she said with a deliberate air of frustration, “Oh I don’t know, James!” she said in mock exasperation. “Surely you can tell? It’s the beef curry we had at The Asian Hut last week…REMEMBER?” as she kicked his shin, to which he replied:

“Of course! That’s exactly what it tastes like. Love it!” and our hostess smiled in delight, while the rest of us breathed out, releasing enough built-up tension to slice a knife.

And a dark horse sings…

James had a fabulous tenor voice, that we, surprisingly, weren’t really aware of. On one other occasion, when we were having an Italian night, he got up impromptu and sang the Neapolitan song, Funiculì, Funiculà, just beautifully.

Right-hand across chest, shoulders raised, he was the quintessential opera singer.

Can you imagine our thunderous applause?

It was the start of many fun nights together…

Many of us were into music at the time.

Between that and his telling of jokes, he will forever be remembered. I don’t think he ever got to the punchlines, and yet, we would all be in tears of laughter, just at his antics in the telling.

James’ pride and joy, apart from his family, was his tennis court. We spent many Saturdays at his place. He was by far the best player…there are no prizes being offered to guess who was the worst!

And the tennis court? It was always beautifully and meticulously manicured by James himself.

So much more I could say about him…

…but though he will always be greatly missed, I am personally relieved that he didn’t live on, gradually losing his independence, dependent on people to wash and bathe him, to dress and undress him, and to tend to his every need.

He would have hated that.

Moreover he would have fought to the bitter end to be in charge.

We who knew him can all take comfort in knowing that his end came quickly, and if his suffering was momentary, which is what we are led to believe, going quickly was a blessing.

It’s probably how we’d all like to leave this earth…

…to die quickly, amidst hope for a few more years of life, even when the odds are not in our favour.

But my friend will never die. He can’t.

He has created so many fond memories in the hearts and minds of those who loved him. Those can never be erased.

And when I personally hear the delightful strains of Luciano Pavarotti, I will once again be in the presence of this hugely empathetic human being who loved life to the nth degree (he WAS a statistician!).

Vale, James.

 

Pavarotti – Funiculì Funiculà

 

Grange HermitageJames had his Grange forgiving moment – so have others…

Please read The Ultimate Example Of Forgiveness. To err is human, but to forgive, allows us to be free and enjoy our lives.

The post My Friend’s Husband Died A Few Months Ago first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/my-friends-husband-died-a-few-months-ago/feed/ 0
Wise Words For A Planet In Crisis https://ponmyword.com/wise-words-for-a-planet-in-crisis/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=wise-words-for-a-planet-in-crisis https://ponmyword.com/wise-words-for-a-planet-in-crisis/#respond Sat, 04 Jun 2022 06:58:04 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=2876 LOVE, the most powerful force there is… Was it Albert Einstein? Maybe it was Margot? Who really did pen that letter “The Universal Force of Love”? Spoiler Alert: It matters not, as it offers a universal message about our belief in Love’s conquering force. So how did I stumble upon it? A few years ago my husband and I spent some time living in Penang, Malaysia. There I met the most beautiful man, who to this day is a very close friend. We shared similar concerns about the environment, about materialism, and the lack of care for the planet. The galloping and frightening pace of change from where we were less than three generations ago, to where we are today, we discussed at great length. Then I asked about Penang… When I first struck up a conversation with him I asked about why the tides around the island no longer behaved as they should? His eyes filled with tears, and he asked me if I’d been aware of the constant noise around the island. That, he told me, was to do with dredging in preparation for building three islands, the size of Singapore around Penang. Yesterday he sent me a bank of wildlife photos taken by another expat some years ago. Almost all of the animals have now disappeared from the island. We discussed in great length, how inconsequential we think we are, to individually effect change. This is when I found out about the Einstein Letter… In response to this discussion, my newfound friend forwarded me a letter written in 1938 by Albert Einstein to his daughter, Lieserl on The Universal Force of Love, which is reproduced below. “When I proposed the theory of relativity, very few understood me, and what I will reveal now to transmit to mankind will also collide with the misunderstanding and prejudice in the world. “I ask you to guard the letters as long as necessary, years, decades, until society is advanced enough to accept what I will explain below. “There is an extremely powerful force that, so far, science has not found a formal explanation to. It is a force that includes and governs all others, and is even behind any phenomenon operating in the universe and has not yet been identified by us. This universal force is LOVE. “When scientists looked for a unified theory of the universe they forgot the most powerful unseen force. Love is Light, that enlightens those who give and receive it. Love is gravity, because it makes some people feel attracted to others. Love is power, because it multiplies the best we have, and allows humanity not to be extinguished in their blind selfishness. Love unfolds and reveals. For love we live and die. Love is God and God is Love. “This force explains everything and gives meaning to life. This is the variable that we have ignored for too long, maybe because we are afraid of love because it is the only energy in the universe that man has not learned to drive at will. “To give visibility to love, I made a simple substitution in my most famous equation. If instead of E = mc2, we accept that the energy to heal the world can be obtained through love multiplied by the speed of light squared, we arrive at the conclusion that love is the most powerful force there is, because it has no limits. “After the failure of humanity in the use and control of the other forces of the universe that have turned against us, it is urgent that we nourish ourselves with another kind of energy… “If we want our species to survive, if we are to find meaning in life, if we want to save the world and every sentient being that inhabits it, love is the one and only answer. “Perhaps we are not yet ready to make a bomb of love, a device powerful enough to entirely destroy the hate, selfishness and greed that devastate the planet. “However, each individual carries within them a small but powerful generator of love whose energy is waiting to be released. “When we learn to give and receive this universal energy, dear Lieserl we will have affirmed that love conquers all, is able to transcend everything and anything, because love is the quintessence of life. “I deeply regret not having been able to express what is in my heart, which has quietly beaten for you all my life. Maybe it’s too late to apologize, but as time is relative, I need to tell you that I love you and thanks to you I have reached the ultimate answer! “Your father,Albert Einstein” Love conquers all How often have we used these words with little or no thought to what they actually mean? Three super-challenging words, once we understand them. If we want to change the world we must first understand our own personal stance on the topic. We must be a force of love. We must demonstrate love. We must learn to forgive. By our actions we must be seen as love. There are many ways to start… The following are just simple ones to set things in motion: giving to a cause, and then giving more living with less so others can live sharing what we have doing with less, much less being part of an agency for healing believing that we CAN make things better modelling ways to heal our world diligently showing the effect of love These are simple, doable acts of love. But there are people in this world who are now taking love to a whole other level, who quietly work to heal our planet, starting in small ways. The ripple of small things can grow to become extraordinary. Meaningful change begins with an idea, and that idea can grow in ways we might never imagine. Have you come across the Blue Economy? Through Medium I have come to know Desiree Driesenaar and her work within the Blue Economy. “We, in the international Blue Economy network, are convinced that entrepreneurs will change the world by changing the rules of the game.” Theirs is a network of love, maybe not quite the bomb of love that Einstein spoke of, but it’s a young network responsible for responding ‘to basic needs of all with what you have, introducing innovations inspired by nature, generating multiple benefits, including jobs and social capital, offering more with less. — The Blue Economy ‘In our current ways of working, people limit themselves in everything they do. They are reductionist. In Blue Economy thinking we unleash abundance. We restore ecosystems and then design new economic ways with everything nature has to offer.’ Desiree offers up the following Blue Economy businesses that might inspire hope, and love in us all. Check them out. Award-Winning Entrepreneurs There are many award-winning start-ups in our Blue Economy network. Have a look at some inspiring examples: Dycle, changing the business case of diapers Ekofungi, Future of Hope and Rotterzwam, changing the world with mushrooms Blue City, changing the world with entrepreneurial labs, architecture, and collaborations Straw by Straw, changing the world of plastic waste Paper on the Rocks, changing the world with stone paper Dutch Harvest, changing the world with industrial hemp Novamont, changing the world with biochemistry The Seaweed Company, changing the world with seaweed Better still, read her inspirational post and see if you too can be inspired by what she and others do, all in the name of love.

The post Wise Words For A Planet In Crisis first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

LOVE, the most powerful force there is…

Einstein Letter Of Love
Photo by Hannes Richter on Unsplash

Was it Albert Einstein? Maybe it was Margot? Who really did pen that letter “The Universal Force of Love”?

Spoiler Alert: It matters not, as it offers a universal message about our belief in Love’s conquering force.

So how did I stumble upon it?

A few years ago my husband and I spent some time living in Penang, Malaysia. There I met the most beautiful man, who to this day is a very close friend.

We shared similar concerns about the environment, about materialism, and the lack of care for the planet. The galloping and frightening pace of change from where we were less than three generations ago, to where we are today, we discussed at great length.

Then I asked about Penang…

When I first struck up a conversation with him I asked about why the tides around the island no longer behaved as they should?

His eyes filled with tears, and he asked me if I’d been aware of the constant noise around the island. That, he told me, was to do with dredging in preparation for building three islands, the size of Singapore around Penang.

Yesterday he sent me a bank of wildlife photos taken by another expat some years ago. Almost all of the animals have now disappeared from the island.

We discussed in great length, how inconsequential we think we are, to individually effect change.

This is when I found out about the Einstein Letter…

In response to this discussion, my newfound friend forwarded me a letter written in 1938 by Albert Einstein to his daughter, Lieserl on The Universal Force of Love, which is reproduced below.

“When I proposed the theory of relativity, very few understood me, and what I will reveal now to transmit to mankind will also collide with the misunderstanding and prejudice in the world.

“I ask you to guard the letters as long as necessary, years, decades, until society is advanced enough to accept what I will explain below.

“There is an extremely powerful force that, so far, science has not found a formal explanation to. It is a force that includes and governs all others, and is even behind any phenomenon operating in the universe and has not yet been identified by us. This universal force is LOVE.

“When scientists looked for a unified theory of the universe they forgot the most powerful unseen force. Love is Light, that enlightens those who give and receive it. Love is gravity, because it makes some people feel attracted to others. Love is power, because it multiplies the best we have, and allows humanity not to be extinguished in their blind selfishness. Love unfolds and reveals. For love we live and die. Love is God and God is Love.

“This force explains everything and gives meaning to life. This is the variable that we have ignored for too long, maybe because we are afraid of love because it is the only energy in the universe that man has not learned to drive at will.

“To give visibility to love, I made a simple substitution in my most famous equation. If instead of E = mc2, we accept that the energy to heal the world can be obtained through love multiplied by the speed of light squared, we arrive at the conclusion that love is the most powerful force there is, because it has no limits.

“After the failure of humanity in the use and control of the other forces of the universe that have turned against us, it is urgent that we nourish ourselves with another kind of energy…

“If we want our species to survive, if we are to find meaning in life, if we want to save the world and every sentient being that inhabits it, love is the one and only answer.

“Perhaps we are not yet ready to make a bomb of love, a device powerful enough to entirely destroy the hate, selfishness and greed that devastate the planet.

“However, each individual carries within them a small but powerful generator of love whose energy is waiting to be released.

“When we learn to give and receive this universal energy, dear Lieserl we will have affirmed that love conquers all, is able to transcend everything and anything, because love is the quintessence of life.

“I deeply regret not having been able to express what is in my heart, which has quietly beaten for you all my life. Maybe it’s too late to apologize, but as time is relative, I need to tell you that I love you and thanks to you I have reached the ultimate answer!

“Your father,
Albert Einstein”

Love conquers all

How often have we used these words with little or no thought to what they actually mean? Three super-challenging words, once we understand them.

If we want to change the world we must first understand our own personal stance on the topic.

We must be a force of love.

We must demonstrate love.

We must learn to forgive.

By our actions we must be seen as love.

There are many ways to start…

The following are just simple ones to set things in motion:

  • giving to a cause, and then giving more
  • living with less so others can live
  • sharing what we have
  • doing with less, much less
  • being part of an agency for healing
  • believing that we CAN make things better
  • modelling ways to heal our world
  • diligently showing the effect of love

These are simple, doable acts of love.

But there are people in this world who are now taking love to a whole other level, who quietly work to heal our planet, starting in small ways. The ripple of small things can grow to become extraordinary. Meaningful change begins with an idea, and that idea can grow in ways we might never imagine.

Have you come across the Blue Economy?

Through Medium I have come to know Desiree Driesenaar and her work within the Blue Economy. “We, in the international Blue Economy network, are convinced that entrepreneurs will change the world by changing the rules of the game.”

Theirs is a network of love, maybe not quite the bomb of love that Einstein spoke of, but it’s a young network responsible for responding ‘to basic needs of all with what you have, introducing innovations inspired by nature, generating multiple benefits, including jobs and social capital, offering more with less.The Blue Economy

‘In our current ways of working, people limit themselves in everything they do. They are reductionist. In Blue Economy thinking we unleash abundance. We restore ecosystems and then design new economic ways with everything nature has to offer.’

Desiree offers up the following Blue Economy businesses that might inspire hope, and love in us all. Check them out.

Award-Winning Entrepreneurs

There are many award-winning start-ups in our Blue Economy network. Have a look at some inspiring examples:

Better still, read her inspirational post and see if you too can be inspired by what she and others do, all in the name of love.

The post Wise Words For A Planet In Crisis first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/wise-words-for-a-planet-in-crisis/feed/ 0
Running A Marathon Has Little To Do With Winning https://ponmyword.com/running-a-marathon-has-little-to-do-with-winning/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=running-a-marathon-has-little-to-do-with-winning https://ponmyword.com/running-a-marathon-has-little-to-do-with-winning/#respond Mon, 30 May 2022 06:05:08 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=2851 It’s about struggle, and effort, and determination, and never, ever, ever giving up. In the end it’s about crossing that bloody fine line. My humble running story – determination can win through… This morning I read a post by Helen Cassidy Page where she had committed to writing one article a day for the whole of this month, her theory being that if she could set her mind to walking a marathon, and completing it, writing a daily article should be a walk in the park. Of course anyone who has actually walked, or run a marathon, knows it’s anything but a walk in the park. It’s more closely related to insanity. Yet many of us offer ourselves up as sacrificial lambs, not once, but often, even when the pain lives on in our minds for a while. In time though, the agony becomes a distant memory, and we are left only with the thoughts of the wonder people we were, the tenacity that held us together, and the roar of the crowd as we limped across the line. I shared a few thoughts with Helen and she urged me to write my experience. Here it is. Arriving on Bougainville Island – in The Pacific My husband and I had been runners for quite a few years, often participating in the annual Canberra Fun Run, some ten kilometres that started in the south of the city and finished in the city centre by the lake. That distance was a relatively easy run for us. Though never star performers we could still put in impressive times. But then we chose to live and work in PNG for a while… …on the beautiful island of Bougainville, beautiful one day, perfect the next. (Home of Bougainville Copper Ltd.) To be honest there was little to do there. We found out very quickly that it was an island where you made your own fun, sail, run, play squash, or golf, and we determined to do just that. I quickly found a Hash House Harriers’ group and joined it immediately. It was a diverse group of women from all corners of the globe. They were very welcoming, and intent on having fun. Fine by me. We did some great runs together. I soon found out that a marathon was being held in July…it was May at that time. May. Only ten women were participating fully. Others were doing a relay…more about that later. I asked about participating, but was assured that I could never be fit enough… Say what? Red rag to a bull! I quietly registered and joined some women in daily pre-dawn runs, which meant starting at 5am, running for one hour. It’s the best time of the day there, warm, but not hot and humid! On the weekends we would do the full marathon distance (40km from memory), taking different routes but never doing the actual route. Well, we soon became very fit And I had kept quiet about my marathon hopes. (I waited until the last minute to submit my name.) Sometimes I’d hear discussions on our hash runs, bets about who would take out the first three places, two young teachers from the international school where I was teaching, and another local girl. And even when they learned that I was planning to participate, the names of the three putative ‘winners’ never changed. Surprise? No So the morning of the race began. As I said, I’d never run the route before. All I knew was that we would start off in the mountains of Panguna (the mine site), in pitch black, at 4am. All I had to do was follow the torch brigade up five km of steep terrain, and the rest would be easy, all downhill to Arawa, and the beach. Sounds easy, doesn’t it! I set off with friends but eventually we all lost each other and the road stretched out, and I was alone with the dark, the quiet, and my thoughts. And then – suddenly a car screeched to a halt… …and some tall black men jumped out. All I could see were flashes of pearly-white teeth. I screamed! I really thought this was it. My life would be over in a flash. I don’t know how fast I ran, but I’m sure it was impressive. One of them caught up to me. By this time I thought my heart would explode. “Don’t worry!” he called as he ran alongside. “We’re in the relay.” Damn! I should have realized! My husband was also participating in the relay. I relaxed immediately. So, I regained my senses and ploughed on… Soon the sun was up, a hot, unforgiving sun that I was ill-prepared for. I had no water with me as I’d been assured there would be drinks on the way, which was true, sickly, sugary drinks. Not exactly ideal liquid for a runner. But along the way I met up with many male runners who showed me where to find fresh water creeks. We’d have a chat as we greedily gulped it down, then back on our way we went. Once again, I was alone with my thoughts and questioning the sanity of my decision. Apart from the unrelenting heat, and muscle soreness, the run stretched out, the odd car hooting as they passed us by. Towards the last three km, there was a right turn that would take us to the Arawa township, and home. Temptation! By this time, like most others, I was totally and utterly exhausted, and the temptation was there. Turning right would end my pain. Clearly though, the organizers had got that one covered. They’d set up a cheering squad, including staff and students from school, to keep us all going. At one stage I looked back to see if any other women were behind me. One was a friend Christine. She immediately became my competition. Friend as she was, I couldn’t allow her to beat me, and painful and wiped out as I felt, somehow I found the energy to put one foot forward after the other, and cross…the…line. I’d made it! Christine was only a few paces behind, but I had beaten her. What was most important though, was that I had completed the marathon. I came third, and completely changed the projections. The number one female was the gym teacher, the second was also a teacher, but the youngest by far, and third was little old me. So the pundits got it wrong To be honest I would have been happy just to have finished the marathon. That was truly my intention. Gaining a place was just a little icing on the cake. Did I do another one the next week? Of course not, but I did a fun-run two weeks later. It was challenging enough but the element of fun prevailed. And that, when I think about it, is another story worth sharing. But not for now. The lesson? Meantime, all I can say is, if you want to do something, don’t listen to the naysayers. Go ahead and at least try. You can do one of two things, succeed, or fall a little short. To me, there is no failure. That is the preserve of the professionals. Ours is just to give anything we want to do our best shot. If we succeed, great. If we don’t there are always lessons to be learned. “When you try something you risk failure. When you don’t, you ensure it.”

The post Running A Marathon Has Little To Do With Winning first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

It’s about struggle, and effort, and determination, and never, ever, ever giving up. In the end it’s about crossing that bloody fine line.

running a marathon
Photo by Quino Al on Unsplash

My humble running story – determination can win through…

This morning I read a post by Helen Cassidy Page where she had committed to writing one article a day for the whole of this month, her theory being that if she could set her mind to walking a marathon, and completing it, writing a daily article should be a walk in the park.

Of course anyone who has actually walked, or run a marathon, knows it’s anything but a walk in the park. It’s more closely related to insanity. Yet many of us offer ourselves up as sacrificial lambs, not once, but often, even when the pain lives on in our minds for a while.

In time though, the agony becomes a distant memory, and we are left only with the thoughts of the wonder people we were, the tenacity that held us together, and the roar of the crowd as we limped across the line.

I shared a few thoughts with Helen and she urged me to write my experience. Here it is.

Arriving on Bougainville Island – in The Pacific

My husband and I had been runners for quite a few years, often participating in the annual Canberra Fun Run, some ten kilometres that started in the south of the city and finished in the city centre by the lake.

That distance was a relatively easy run for us. Though never star performers we could still put in impressive times.

But then we chose to live and work in PNG for a while…

…on the beautiful island of Bougainville, beautiful one day, perfect the next. (Home of Bougainville Copper Ltd.)

To be honest there was little to do there. We found out very quickly that it was an island where you made your own fun, sail, run, play squash, or golf, and we determined to do just that.

I quickly found a Hash House Harriers’ group and joined it immediately. It was a diverse group of women from all corners of the globe. They were very welcoming, and intent on having fun. Fine by me. We did some great runs together.

I soon found out that a marathon was being held in July…it was May at that time.

May. Only ten women were participating fully. Others were doing a relay…more about that later.

I asked about participating, but was assured that I could never be fit enough…

Say what? Red rag to a bull!

I quietly registered and joined some women in daily pre-dawn runs, which meant starting at 5am, running for one hour.

It’s the best time of the day there, warm, but not hot and humid!

On the weekends we would do the full marathon distance (40km from memory), taking different routes but never doing the actual route.

Well, we soon became very fit

And I had kept quiet about my marathon hopes. (I waited until the last minute to submit my name.)

Sometimes I’d hear discussions on our hash runs, bets about who would take out the first three places, two young teachers from the international school where I was teaching, and another local girl.

And even when they learned that I was planning to participate, the names of the three putative ‘winners’ never changed.

Surprise? No

So the morning of the race began.

As I said, I’d never run the route before. All I knew was that we would start off in the mountains of Panguna (the mine site), in pitch black, at 4am.

All I had to do was follow the torch brigade up five km of steep terrain, and the rest would be easy, all downhill to Arawa, and the beach.

Sounds easy, doesn’t it!

I set off with friends but eventually we all lost each other and the road stretched out, and I was alone with the dark, the quiet, and my thoughts.

And then – suddenly a car screeched to a halt…

…and some tall black men jumped out. All I could see were flashes of pearly-white teeth.

I screamed! I really thought this was it. My life would be over in a flash. I don’t know how fast I ran, but I’m sure it was impressive.

One of them caught up to me. By this time I thought my heart would explode. “Don’t worry!” he called as he ran alongside. “We’re in the relay.”

Damn! I should have realized!

My husband was also participating in the relay. I relaxed immediately.

So, I regained my senses and ploughed on…

Soon the sun was up, a hot, unforgiving sun that I was ill-prepared for. I had no water with me as I’d been assured there would be drinks on the way, which was true, sickly, sugary drinks. Not exactly ideal liquid for a runner.

But along the way I met up with many male runners who showed me where to find fresh water creeks. We’d have a chat as we greedily gulped it down, then back on our way we went.

Once again, I was alone with my thoughts and questioning the sanity of my decision.

Apart from the unrelenting heat, and muscle soreness, the run stretched out, the odd car hooting as they passed us by.

Towards the last three km, there was a right turn that would take us to the Arawa township, and home.

Temptation!

By this time, like most others, I was totally and utterly exhausted, and the temptation was there. Turning right would end my pain.

Clearly though, the organizers had got that one covered. They’d set up a cheering squad, including staff and students from school, to keep us all going.

At one stage I looked back to see if any other women were behind me. One was a friend Christine. She immediately became my competition. Friend as she was, I couldn’t allow her to beat me, and painful and wiped out as I felt, somehow I found the energy to put one foot forward after the other, and cross…the…line.

I’d made it!

Christine was only a few paces behind, but I had beaten her.

What was most important though, was that I had completed the marathon. I came third, and completely changed the projections.

The number one female was the gym teacher, the second was also a teacher, but the youngest by far, and third was little old me.

So the pundits got it wrong

To be honest I would have been happy just to have finished the marathon. That was truly my intention. Gaining a place was just a little icing on the cake.

Did I do another one the next week?

Of course not, but I did a fun-run two weeks later. It was challenging enough but the element of fun prevailed.

And that, when I think about it, is another story worth sharing. But not for now.

The lesson?

Meantime, all I can say is, if you want to do something, don’t listen to the naysayers.

Go ahead and at least try.

You can do one of two things, succeed, or fall a little short. To me, there is no failure. That is the preserve of the professionals.

Ours is just to give anything we want to do our best shot. If we succeed, great. If we don’t there are always lessons to be learned.

“When you try something you risk failure. When you don’t, you ensure it.

The post Running A Marathon Has Little To Do With Winning first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/running-a-marathon-has-little-to-do-with-winning/feed/ 0
They Spent 5 Million Dollars…And Yet, We Watched The Reality Show, That Told Us HOW, Right To The End. Why? https://ponmyword.com/they-spent-5-million-dollarsand-yet-we-watched-the-reality-show-that-told-us-how-right-to-the-end-why/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=they-spent-5-million-dollarsand-yet-we-watched-the-reality-show-that-told-us-how-right-to-the-end-why https://ponmyword.com/they-spent-5-million-dollarsand-yet-we-watched-the-reality-show-that-told-us-how-right-to-the-end-why/#respond Tue, 10 May 2022 06:54:41 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=2741 Then this morning Jessica Wildfire turned our guilt up some notches when she wrote her article… “No matter how big your house is, how recent your car is, or how big your bank account is. Our graves will always be the same size. Stay humble.” There’s a show here on ABC TV. It’s called, Grand Designs. The initial series was set in Britain, and the one that prompted this post, is in New Zealand. As the title would suggest, the show is all about the trials and tribulations of building homes bigger than Ben Hur, and grander than most of us could ever imagine. Having watched a few in the past, and knowing what to expect (it’s all staged) we usually switch off and read instead. But last night, could have been the wine talking, we left it on and watched it to the bitter end. That was a big mistake! The home was being built on a block (blocks?) of land overlooking the ocean. Let me rephrase that. The home was being built on a hill overlooking the ocean, and would take full advantage of the curve of the shore line. Everything about the home would make it stand out from every neighbour’s home. There was no doubting that when you arrived, you’d know. This was indeed, the house that Jack built. With an important difference… Jack’s house build was just in Jack’s head and the actual building was in the hands of master craftsmen whose skills were tested to the nth degree. Everything about this house was irregular, slightly-bowed double-glazed window frames, twists and turns of walls so as not to miss anything from the ocean in front of them, bathrooms large enough to invite others in for the party, a brass kitchen (my thoughts were immediately transported to my stainless- steel fridge and the paw marks I am forever removing, and that drives me mad)…but a brass kitchen (read grease, and snotty kids seeing themselves in the cupboard doors, and general grime!). I could never be up for that… I already need another 24 hours in my day! Also, this couple (Jack and his wife, for clarity!) elected not to use natural wood on the external walls, instead using copper sheeting! So what have I left out? Ah yes the theatre…a room that had more rooms than I have friends! To be honest it was a little off-putting, and we questioned why we found ourselves watching the story of indulgence, right to the bitter end. WHY? Why would you even think they needed such a huge space? Who could possibly be comfortable enough to visit? If they wanted to sell it in a hurry, would there be a market? If times got tough, would his couple hang together? And then I thought. THIS is exactly the reason we have such disharmony in the world. We have the those standing tall, as in super-wealthy! Then we have the rest of us… My husband and I didn’t grow up in wealthy families. Money was always in short supply, but we were fed, and cared for, and loved. Fed! Cared for! Loved! It’s pretty much what we humans need more than anything else. Sure, an education helps, learning how to care for all manner of things is paramount. Fixing things up is necessary, and being there for each other through thick and thin, well that’s what gives meaning to life But a lot of this has been misaligned if you put it into the context of human beings harmoniously living together right now. Well we’re not! This morning I read this story by Jessica Wildfire. She says she’s trying. She’s trying to be the best human she can possibly be, living simply and severely reducing her carbon footprint. She asks: What are you doing? Jessica talks about teaching English to migrants, as I did, for many years, and how grateful her students were for the time and energy she put into making them bi-lingual. This was not a job that paid well. She did it because she cared. Also, in her time as a journalist “I wrote about homeless shelters and Native American land rights. I wrote about inner city violence and police injustice. I wrote about prejudice in the education system. I wrote about mental illness.” As she coached, mentored, counselled and advised “I spent entire mornings walking forms around to keep students in school. I spent entire afternoons arguing with administrators who wanted to drop them and keep their money. “My colleagues and I escorted students to therapy after sexual assault and pregnancy scares. We bought them lunch and dinner. We gave them bus money. We gave them rent money. “We gave them grocery money.We gave them gas money.We let them cry on us.” The fact is, like Jessica, there are many people trying to make a difference. Some do more than others. She also points out that making a difference is becoming harder and harder. You have to read her story to fully appreciate what she is saying. As wars rage around the world and prices soar because of them, she wonders what is really at the root of this problem. Her ‘aha’ moment came when she realized that greed is at the root of everything. From the oligarchs in Russia, to the people who build inordinate mansions that could house several families, the common denominator is greed. The trouble is, whether we like it or not, we are all, right now, in lock-step with, and paying for that greed. SO… Lets get back to Jessica’s question, What are you doing? It’s a touchy question to ask, but could you be accused of greed? Are you living beyond the means of the planet? Are you a display of selfish indifference to the in-your-face environmental changes you already see, but do nothing about? In what ways should, (not could), you backpedal in order to reduce your carbon footprint on this planet? What example will you set? Because the time is NOW No longer can you live with unfettered freedom, to use the planet for your comfort. No longer can you behave in a particular way because nobody will notice? Jessica asks what you plan to do right now. How much DEGROWTH (her coined word) could you put into practice? This is mine. It’s not admirable, but it’s a start. I have started to rewild my garden The neighbours know nothing of this, but they will, when spring comes around. I’ll have a sign that explains what I am trying to do. I have packets of seeds lining the sunny windowsills in my home. Some of them I will simply scatter when spring comes around. I have removed all lawn, and I’m preparing it for a garden of flowers, or vegetables, instead. Sure it won’t always be a perfect garden, but it will be in tune with Nature. I have started to save my vegetable seeds. They are planted in plastic containers kept from shopping. They will be used again and again, so though I still feel guilty that I am not standing up enough against plastic, I have at least started to reuse it. I have put to good use all the cardboard boxes I used when we moved house. They are now breaking down in what will be my new ‘lawn’. We’re very strict when to comes to water usage. Two-minute showers when Canberra was in drought, are still two-minute showers! Nobody has complained so far! “The greatest threat to the planet is the belief that someone else will save it.” Guess what? YOU are that SOMEONE! Tell me what you are doing. Collectively we could do better than most of our self-serving politicians, at least here in Australia, whose nebulous promises might, futuristically speaking, really have us gasping for breath.

The post They Spent 5 Million Dollars…And Yet, We Watched The Reality Show, That Told Us HOW, Right To The End. Why? first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

Then this morning Jessica Wildfire turned our guilt up some notches when she wrote her article…

grand designs
Photo by Claudia Altamimi on Unsplash

No matter how big your house is, how recent your car is, or how big your bank account is. Our graves will always be the same size. Stay humble.”

There’s a show here on ABC TV. It’s called, Grand Designs. The initial series was set in Britain, and the one that prompted this post, is in New Zealand.

As the title would suggest, the show is all about the trials and tribulations of building homes bigger than Ben Hur, and grander than most of us could ever imagine.

Having watched a few in the past, and knowing what to expect (it’s all staged) we usually switch off and read instead.

But last night, could have been the wine talking, we left it on and watched it to the bitter end.

That was a big mistake!

The home was being built on a block (blocks?) of land overlooking the ocean.

Let me rephrase that. The home was being built on a hill overlooking the ocean, and would take full advantage of the curve of the shore line.

Everything about the home would make it stand out from every neighbour’s home. There was no doubting that when you arrived, you’d know. This was indeed, the house that Jack built.

With an important difference…

Jack’s house build was just in Jack’s head and the actual building was in the hands of master craftsmen whose skills were tested to the nth degree.

Everything about this house was irregular, slightly-bowed double-glazed window frames, twists and turns of walls so as not to miss anything from the ocean in front of them, bathrooms large enough to invite others in for the party, a brass kitchen (my thoughts were immediately transported to my stainless- steel fridge and the paw marks I am forever removing, and that drives me mad)…but a brass kitchen (read grease, and snotty kids seeing themselves in the cupboard doors, and general grime!).

I could never be up for that…

I already need another 24 hours in my day!

Also, this couple (Jack and his wife, for clarity!) elected not to use natural wood on the external walls, instead using copper sheeting!

So what have I left out? Ah yes the theatre…a room that had more rooms than I have friends!

To be honest it was a little off-putting, and we questioned why we found ourselves watching the story of indulgence, right to the bitter end.

WHY?

  • Why would you even think they needed such a huge space?
  • Who could possibly be comfortable enough to visit?
  • If they wanted to sell it in a hurry, would there be a market?
  • If times got tough, would his couple hang together?

And then I thought. THIS is exactly the reason we have such disharmony in the world.

We have the those standing tall, as in super-wealthy!

Then we have the rest of us…

My husband and I didn’t grow up in wealthy families. Money was always in short supply, but we were fed, and cared for, and loved.

Fed!

Cared for!

Loved!

It’s pretty much what we humans need more than anything else. Sure, an education helps, learning how to care for all manner of things is paramount. Fixing things up is necessary, and being there for each other through thick and thin, well that’s what gives meaning to life

But a lot of this has been misaligned if you put it into the context of human beings harmoniously living together right now.

Well we’re not!

This morning I read this story by Jessica Wildfire.

She says she’s trying. She’s trying to be the best human she can possibly be, living simply and severely reducing her carbon footprint.

She asks: What are you doing?

Jessica talks about teaching English to migrants, as I did, for many years, and how grateful her students were for the time and energy she put into making them bi-lingual.

This was not a job that paid well. She did it because she cared.

Also, in her time as a journalist

“I wrote about homeless shelters and Native American land rights. I wrote about inner city violence and police injustice. I wrote about prejudice in the education system. I wrote about mental illness.”

As she coached, mentored, counselled and advised

“I spent entire mornings walking forms around to keep students in school. I spent entire afternoons arguing with administrators who wanted to drop them and keep their money.

“My colleagues and I escorted students to therapy after sexual assault and pregnancy scares. We bought them lunch and dinner. We gave them bus money. We gave them rent money.

“We gave them grocery money.
We gave them gas money.
We let them cry on us.”

The fact is, like Jessica, there are many people trying to make a difference. Some do more than others.

She also points out that making a difference is becoming harder and harder. You have to read her story to fully appreciate what she is saying.

As wars rage around the world and prices soar because of them, she wonders what is really at the root of this problem.

Her ‘aha’ moment came when she realized that greed is at the root of everything.

From the oligarchs in Russia, to the people who build inordinate mansions that could house several families, the common denominator is greed.

The trouble is, whether we like it or not, we are all, right now, in lock-step with, and paying for that greed.

SO…

Lets get back to Jessica’s question, What are you doing?

It’s a touchy question to ask, but could you be accused of greed?

Are you living beyond the means of the planet?

Are you a display of selfish indifference to the in-your-face environmental changes you already see, but do nothing about?

In what ways should, (not could), you backpedal in order to reduce your carbon footprint on this planet?

What example will you set?

Because the time is NOW

No longer can you live with unfettered freedom, to use the planet for your comfort.

No longer can you behave in a particular way because nobody will notice?

Jessica asks what you plan to do right now.

How much DEGROWTH (her coined word) could you put into practice?

This is mine. It’s not admirable, but it’s a start.

I have started to rewild my garden

The neighbours know nothing of this, but they will, when spring comes around.

I’ll have a sign that explains what I am trying to do.

I have packets of seeds lining the sunny windowsills in my home. Some of them I will simply scatter when spring comes around.

I have removed all lawn, and I’m preparing it for a garden of flowers, or vegetables, instead. Sure it won’t always be a perfect garden, but it will be in tune with Nature.

I have started to save my vegetable seeds. They are planted in plastic containers kept from shopping. They will be used again and again, so though I still feel guilty that I am not standing up enough against plastic, I have at least started to reuse it.

I have put to good use all the cardboard boxes I used when we moved house. They are now breaking down in what will be my new ‘lawn’.

We’re very strict when to comes to water usage. Two-minute showers when Canberra was in drought, are still two-minute showers! Nobody has complained so far!

“The greatest threat to the planet is the belief that someone else will save it.”

Guess what? YOU are that SOMEONE!

Tell me what you are doing. Collectively we could do better than most of our self-serving politicians, at least here in Australia, whose nebulous promises might, futuristically speaking, really have us gasping for breath.

The post They Spent 5 Million Dollars…And Yet, We Watched The Reality Show, That Told Us HOW, Right To The End. Why? first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/they-spent-5-million-dollarsand-yet-we-watched-the-reality-show-that-told-us-how-right-to-the-end-why/feed/ 0
Living In A 3rd World Country Where Your Everyday Belongings Send A Wealth Message https://ponmyword.com/living-in-a-3rd-world-country-where-your-everyday-belongings-send-a-wealth-message/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=living-in-a-3rd-world-country-where-your-everyday-belongings-send-a-wealth-message https://ponmyword.com/living-in-a-3rd-world-country-where-your-everyday-belongings-send-a-wealth-message/#respond Tue, 26 Apr 2022 07:36:24 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=2678 …and leaves you to have to deal with the ensuing problems My first few days on Bougainville Island were quite frankly, a culture shock. We arrived on Friday morning, were met by one couple who took us to our new home, (provided by the company), showed us our survival kit, four of everything in terms of crockery and cutlery, plus a few cooking utensils. We then went to the supermarket. I was supposed to shop there? The shelves looked just like our Australian supermarkets when Covid was at its height and people were panic-buying…empty. Bananas, pawpaw and pineapple were in plentiful supply. It was the tropics after all, but all vegetables were foreign to me. And there weren’t many. To this day I can’t recall what I bought, nor do I remember what we ate over the weekend, but the feeling of being on an alien planet, was front and centre. I later found out about the Tuesday morning markets, run by residents of Panguna, up in the mountains. These people left home at midnight, trekked all the way down the mountains with their produce, and trekked all the way back when produce had been sold. Sadly, there were no markets open on a weekend. We were then left alone, ill-prepared for a long weekend, knowing not a soul, with no car, and no idea about the layout of the island. Nobody called… Nobody took pity on us…just the two of us, with some books, and an unspoken wish to hop on the next available plane. We did a lot of walking, checking out the few stores available, the sailing club, the one hotel, and at least we tired ourselves out. But it was still a long weekend and family and friends seemed so very far away. Of course we learned later that this rarely happens to newcomers on the island. Dinners and drinks are organized, as well as food drop-offs, and potential friends dropping by to say hello. We just scored a dud welcoming duo! I can’t even imagine what was in their minds. In a reversal of roles, I would have cooked up a storm (not from supermarket produce), left a few bottles of vino to drown their insecurities over, and ensured enough people would drop by with the required empathy to sink the Titanic. But all good things do come to an end and it wasn’t long before we viewed the three days as little more than a bad dream. Within a few weeks we’d bought a car, met some squash players, and had been invited out by people from our respective work places. Life had taken on a whole new glow. By the way, the only expat women who were allowed to work on the island were nurses, doctors, chemists and teachers. Can you imagine the number of covert workers operating there (read hairdressers and dressmakers!)? And so our lives churned happily on, as we worked, built up friendships, and engaged in sport. It truly was a blissful existence. But on two occasions my husband had to return to Australia for business. Isn’t it always the case that things go awry when you are left on your own? Our new home just happened to be minus curtains The tropics, with no curtains? So I went to the only maker on the island. No need for measurements. Houses were either A, B, or C. This meant they were fully air-conditioned (for management), partly (for professionals), and C, for tradesmen. No air-conditioning for the C group! Don’t even ask me to explain that. From memory I could choose from 4 different fabrics. Yippee! My husband left for Sydney and my new curtains were being delivered that same day. They arrived as promised, the only problem being that the selvage that runs the length of the fabric was visible when the curtains were hung. From memory there were markings and lettering on the selvage. I pointed this flaw out to the business man, but somehow my words were lost in the translation, and in no time at all, a policeman was on my doorstep. I was petrified. He threatened jail for me if I didn’t pay on the spot. Fortunately, by this time, I had met a woman from Adelaide. I asked if he knew Mary Kath. He did. She was married to an indigenous man, the town planner, who immediately left work and soon sorted out the curtain issues, and the payment. I will be forever grateful to him. And then… The next event was the breakdown of the washing machine. Keep in mind there was no shopping for clothes on the island, as there were very few businesses, so if anything happened to your clothes you were in trouble. This means that you should have come prepared for a shop-free year Also, living on a tropical island meant that we changed our clothes a lot. Every piece of clothing held value! Every piece of clothing got worn. So, the machine was not functioning, I called maintenance who assured me they’d have it fixed by the end of the day, and I headed off to work at the international school. I came home to find the machine in working order, but all my clothes (from inside the machine, just to be clear!), were gone. I contacted maintenance, who assured me they had found no clothes in the machine. Remember…my husband was still missing in action… Now the bulk of my clothes had been stolen, yet I couldn’t prove anything, and I had no idea what to do. Of course these days you’d send that sort of event to the keeper, get online, order your pretty little heart out, and within a week have a whole new wardrobe. But these were different times Sure, we were in the tropics and needed summer clothes. But in Adelaide it was winter. Not even a ghost of a chance of ordering dresses or shorts…or getting family to buy them. Now on the horns of a dilemma. And I was so homesick. But word gets around on an island And soon a covert seamstress having heard my story, arrived on my doorstep, a bunch of patterns and fabric in her arms. One problem solved. I could have kissed her! One problem solved, but then another rears its head. Say hello to Jep! Jep came knocking on our door just a few weeks before my husband left and we engaged him to do our garden once a week. Things seem to grow overnight in the tropics. He seemed pretty good and we’d always pay him extra. It was the honourable thing to do. But then one morning, still on my own, he arrived, but said he had no money to pay for petrol. I gave him money for that, plus his payment for his work, and left. We never saw him again! We also found out that his name was Jeff (no ’f’ sound in Pidgin), and he was notorious for screwing new expats and disappearing for a few months on end…waiting till things had been forgotten about, and do his same rounds on another part of the island, to new, unsuspecting expats. So, now I’m without clothes, almost in jail, and feeling totally lost and abandoned. But Lazarus returns bearing gifts My husband returned armed with new running shoes, t-shirts and socks, some things we were unable to buy on the island. We were participating in a fun run on the following Sunday, so the new shoes were perfect. I’m a little hazy on details, but I do remember we won two gigantic umbrellas on the day. By the time the run was over, rain was pelting down so the umbrellas were a godsend. We got home, stripped (almost) on the balcony, leaving behind the umbrellas, clothes and shoes, and went inside to have showers. Half an hour later we went out to retrieve our things. They were all gone! Super-expensive shoes, socks, and t-shirts, worn once, plus new umbrellas, and despite having our door open, we heard nothing. How could that be? How could both of us not have heard? Seems this is the work of highlanders. They’re also referred to as rascals. They are incredibly deft. By comparison, we must have been incredibly deaf. The rascals were also very much responsible for the petty crime that existed on the island. Still we shrugged the experience off, determined to be super-vigilant in the future. But watch out for the parties! And then, the pièce de résistance…we held a large party to farewell friends who were returning to New Zealand. All our windows had been opened up for cross-ventilation, but when we went to lock them, after everyone had left, all the little screws that my husband had so carefully sat on the window ledges, had been stolen. If you guessed that their plan was to enter the house after we’d gone to bed, you’d be spot on. The thing is, we personally had little that was worth stealing, but the rascals saw things differently. Any expat would have belongings worth selling. So to secure what we had, meant that we had to wait up till 4 am for security to come and fix the whole locking system. Had we had enough? Of course not. I have simply highlighted what can go wrong in a foreign country. We learned to live and socialize with the local people, and to love many of them, truth be told. We still had the most amazing time on the island. This was an adventure, and you can’t classify it as such, unless you can relate all the happenings to friends back home, and have them reeling in horror. I can tell you right now, the true Bougainvilleans are the gentlest, sweetest people you could ever meet. I taught many of their children, and they were memorable for all the right reasons. Still, things can and do go wrong when you are living in even the most beautiful of places. Messages can be misinterpreted. People can misconstrue the simplest of communications. Doctors who have ventured to the tropics for a good time can have a devastating effect on a few, when they put their pleasure first. And there are certainly times when you wish things had turned out differently. But we two intrepid visitors, who left with no intention of returning, did in fact do so. Stay tuned. Running in the tropics is a great way to test endurance. It’s also a wonderful way to find your, YOU!

The post Living In A 3rd World Country Where Your Everyday Belongings Send A Wealth Message first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

...and leaves you to have to deal with the ensuing problems

living in a 3rd world country

My first few days on Bougainville Island were quite frankly, a culture shock.

We arrived on Friday morning, were met by one couple who took us to our new home, (provided by the company), showed us our survival kit, four of everything in terms of crockery and cutlery, plus a few cooking utensils.

We then went to the supermarket.

I was supposed to shop there?

The shelves looked just like our Australian supermarkets when Covid was at its height and people were panic-buying…empty.

Bananas, pawpaw and pineapple were in plentiful supply. It was the tropics after all, but all vegetables were foreign to me. And there weren’t many.

To this day I can’t recall what I bought, nor do I remember what we ate over the weekend, but the feeling of being on an alien planet, was front and centre.

I later found out about the Tuesday morning markets, run by residents of Panguna, up in the mountains.

These people left home at midnight, trekked all the way down the mountains with their produce, and trekked all the way back when produce had been sold.

Sadly, there were no markets open on a weekend.

We were then left alone, ill-prepared for a long weekend, knowing not a soul, with no car, and no idea about the layout of the island.

Nobody called…

Nobody took pity on us…just the two of us, with some books, and an unspoken wish to hop on the next available plane.

We did a lot of walking, checking out the few stores available, the sailing club, the one hotel, and at least we tired ourselves out.

But it was still a long weekend and family and friends seemed so very far away.

Of course we learned later that this rarely happens to newcomers on the island. Dinners and drinks are organized, as well as food drop-offs, and potential friends dropping by to say hello.

We just scored a dud welcoming duo!

I can’t even imagine what was in their minds.

In a reversal of roles, I would have cooked up a storm (not from supermarket produce), left a few bottles of vino to drown their insecurities over, and ensured enough people would drop by with the required empathy to sink the Titanic.

But all good things do come to an end and it wasn’t long before we viewed the three days as little more than a bad dream.

Within a few weeks we’d bought a car, met some squash players, and had been invited out by people from our respective work places.

Life had taken on a whole new glow.

By the way, the only expat women who were allowed to work on the island were nurses, doctors, chemists and teachers.

Can you imagine the number of covert workers operating there (read hairdressers and dressmakers!)?

And so our lives churned happily on, as we worked, built up friendships, and engaged in sport. It truly was a blissful existence.

But on two occasions my husband had to return to Australia for business.

Isn’t it always the case that things go awry when you are left on your own?

Our new home just happened to be minus curtains

The tropics, with no curtains?

So I went to the only maker on the island. No need for measurements. Houses were either A, B, or C. This meant they were fully air-conditioned (for management), partly (for professionals), and C, for tradesmen. No air-conditioning for the C group! Don’t even ask me to explain that.

From memory I could choose from 4 different fabrics. Yippee!

My husband left for Sydney and my new curtains were being delivered that same day. They arrived as promised, the only problem being that the selvage that runs the length of the fabric was visible when the curtains were hung.

From memory there were markings and lettering on the selvage.

I pointed this flaw out to the business man, but somehow my words were lost in the translation, and in no time at all, a policeman was on my doorstep.

I was petrified.

He threatened jail for me if I didn’t pay on the spot.

Fortunately, by this time, I had met a woman from Adelaide. I asked if he knew Mary Kath.

He did.

She was married to an indigenous man, the town planner, who immediately left work and soon sorted out the curtain issues, and the payment.

I will be forever grateful to him.

And then…

The next event was the breakdown of the washing machine. Keep in mind there was no shopping for clothes on the island, as there were very few businesses, so if anything happened to your clothes you were in trouble.

This means that you should have come prepared for a shop-free year

Also, living on a tropical island meant that we changed our clothes a lot. Every piece of clothing held value! Every piece of clothing got worn.

So, the machine was not functioning, I called maintenance who assured me they’d have it fixed by the end of the day, and I headed off to work at the international school.

I came home to find the machine in working order, but all my clothes (from inside the machine, just to be clear!), were gone.

I contacted maintenance, who assured me they had found no clothes in the machine.

Remember…my husband was still missing in action…

Now the bulk of my clothes had been stolen, yet I couldn’t prove anything, and I had no idea what to do.

Of course these days you’d send that sort of event to the keeper, get online, order your pretty little heart out, and within a week have a whole new wardrobe.

But these were different times

Sure, we were in the tropics and needed summer clothes.

But in Adelaide it was winter. Not even a ghost of a chance of ordering dresses or shorts…or getting family to buy them.

Now on the horns of a dilemma.

And I was so homesick.

But word gets around on an island

And soon a covert seamstress having heard my story, arrived on my doorstep, a bunch of patterns and fabric in her arms.

One problem solved. I could have kissed her!

One problem solved, but then another rears its head.

Say hello to Jep!

Jep came knocking on our door just a few weeks before my husband left and we engaged him to do our garden once a week. Things seem to grow overnight in the tropics.

He seemed pretty good and we’d always pay him extra. It was the honourable thing to do.

But then one morning, still on my own, he arrived, but said he had no money to pay for petrol. I gave him money for that, plus his payment for his work, and left.

We never saw him again!

We also found out that his name was Jeff (no ’f’ sound in Pidgin), and he was notorious for screwing new expats and disappearing for a few months on end…waiting till things had been forgotten about, and do his same rounds on another part of the island, to new, unsuspecting expats.

So, now I’m without clothes, almost in jail, and feeling totally lost and abandoned.

But Lazarus returns bearing gifts

My husband returned armed with new running shoes, t-shirts and socks, some things we were unable to buy on the island.

We were participating in a fun run on the following Sunday, so the new shoes were perfect.

I’m a little hazy on details, but I do remember we won two gigantic umbrellas on the day. By the time the run was over, rain was pelting down so the umbrellas were a godsend.

We got home, stripped (almost) on the balcony, leaving behind the umbrellas, clothes and shoes, and went inside to have showers.

Half an hour later we went out to retrieve our things.

They were all gone!

Super-expensive shoes, socks, and t-shirts, worn once, plus new umbrellas, and despite having our door open, we heard nothing.

How could that be?

How could both of us not have heard?

Seems this is the work of highlanders. They’re also referred to as rascals.

They are incredibly deft. By comparison, we must have been incredibly deaf.

The rascals were also very much responsible for the petty crime that existed on the island.

Still we shrugged the experience off, determined to be super-vigilant in the future.

But watch out for the parties!

And then, the pièce de résistance…we held a large party to farewell friends who were returning to New Zealand.

All our windows had been opened up for cross-ventilation, but when we went to lock them, after everyone had left, all the little screws that my husband had so carefully sat on the window ledges, had been stolen.

If you guessed that their plan was to enter the house after we’d gone to bed, you’d be spot on.

The thing is, we personally had little that was worth stealing, but the rascals saw things differently. Any expat would have belongings worth selling.

So to secure what we had, meant that we had to wait up till 4 am for security to come and fix the whole locking system.

Had we had enough?

Of course not. I have simply highlighted what can go wrong in a foreign country.

We learned to live and socialize with the local people, and to love many of them, truth be told.

We still had the most amazing time on the island. This was an adventure, and you can’t classify it as such, unless you can relate all the happenings to friends back home, and have them reeling in horror.

I can tell you right now, the true Bougainvilleans are the gentlest, sweetest people you could ever meet.

I taught many of their children, and they were memorable for all the right reasons.

Still, things can and do go wrong when you are living in even the most beautiful of places.

Messages can be misinterpreted.

People can misconstrue the simplest of communications.

Doctors who have ventured to the tropics for a good time can have a devastating effect on a few, when they put their pleasure first.

And there are certainly times when you wish things had turned out differently.

But we two intrepid visitors, who left with no intention of returning, did in fact do so.

Stay tuned.

Running in the tropics is a great way to test endurance. It’s also a wonderful way to find your, YOU!

The post Living In A 3rd World Country Where Your Everyday Belongings Send A Wealth Message first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/living-in-a-3rd-world-country-where-your-everyday-belongings-send-a-wealth-message/feed/ 0
The Life-Changing Helsinki Bus Station Theory https://ponmyword.com/the-life-changing-helsinki-bus-station-theory/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-life-changing-helsinki-bus-station-theory https://ponmyword.com/the-life-changing-helsinki-bus-station-theory/#respond Wed, 30 Mar 2022 06:35:16 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=2546 A metaphor for achieving success What could a bus station possibly have to do with motivating students? Or anyone for that matter. Enter “The Helsinki Bus Station” Theory The theory had its birth in a graduation speech made by American/Finnish photographer Arno Rafael Minkkinen. There he aimed to inspire graduating students to believe in themselves, to think positively about their chosen careers (photography in this case), and not to be derailed by the views of others. That, he said, would be the difference between success, and failure. Think Positively – Think Helsinki Bus Station – of course The lateral thinking Minkkinen suggested to the graduates that all they had to do was understand the operation of the main bus station in Helsinki, and their success would be assured. The metaphor was simple, perfectly-pitched, and easy to relate to. One can only imagine every new graduate thereafter, spilling onto the bus station, and poring over the schedules in an effort to comprehend the theory, feeling assured that it would change their lives. Analogy not clicked in yet? Simple, but you might not agree… Come with me and try to imagine that main bus station. In your eyes it may be a little on the daggy side. Many bus stations are. Or it may be bursting with state-of-the-art technology, and you can confidently hop on board, safe in the knowledge that you will reach your destination. You get to choose your destination right from the get-go… The message (caveat, if you will), is that, once you do so, you must stay on the bus! How hard can that be? In his speech, Minkkinen aimed to impress upon the graduates that their careers and successes might hinge on how well they can understand and learn from, his metaphor for success. Your turn to imagine… There are two dozen platforms on the station, laid out in a square. ‘At the head of each platform is a sign posting the numbers of the buses that leave from that particular platform. The bus numbers might read as follows: 21, 71, 58, 33, and 19. Each bus takes the same route out of the city for at least a kilometer, stopping at (say three) bus stop intervals along the way.’ You pick a career direction – maybe you focus on making platinum prints of nudes – and set off ‘Now let’s accept that each bus stop represents one year in the life of a photographer, meaning the third bus stop would represent three years of photographic activity. Ok, so you have been working for three years making platinum studies of nudes. Call it bus number 21.’ You’ve worked hard on your art work and you are excited. You know you’re talented, and stand apart from the others in your field. But when you present your portfolio to the curator of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, he asks if you are familiar with the nudes of Irving Penn , an eminent artists in the same field. It was only a question! But your heart sinks to your boots. Your confidence ebbs. Did you choose the right pathway? Three years of work, you realize, three years that you can never reclaim are now totally, and utterly wasted. So what do you do? You catch a cab straight back to the bus station! You hop on another bus and you begin a whole new journey, a different photographic route, this time more determined than ever. Another three years pass with the outcome pretty much the same as the first. It’s now six years since you graduated with not a lot to show for it! You were pretty sure this time, that yours was cutting edge stuff and this would be your breakthrough. With a few expletives under your breath, you head straight back to the station to pursue yet another angle of photography. This kind of response, if repeated often enough, will mean that, at the end of your working life, you will not have a damned thing to show for all you have done. Yet it could have been otherwise. Well what mistakes did you make? Only one actually…you forgot to stay on the bus! Here’s the harsh reality. Had you done that, stayed on the bus, people would have started to have a view on the differentiation in your work, to appreciate all the things that set your work apart from others, and you would have had the acclaim and following you deserved. Minkkinen goes on to explain… ‘The buses that move out of Helsinki stay on the same line, but only for a while — maybe a kilometer or two. Then they begin to separate, each number heading off to its own unique destination. Bus 33 suddenly goes north. Bus 19 southwest. For a time maybe 21 and 71 dovetail one another, but soon they split off as well. Irving Penn is headed elsewhere. ‘It’s the separation that makes all the difference. And once you start to see that difference in your work from the work you so admire — that’s why you chose that platform after all — it’s time to look for your breakthrough. Suddenly your work starts to get noticed. Now you are working more on your own, making more of the difference between your work and what influenced it. Your vision takes off. And as the years mount up, and your work begins to pile up, it won’t be long before the critics become very intrigued, not just by what separates your work from a Sally Mann or a Ralph Gibson, but by what you did when you first got started.’ He urges all students to think about this… The work you might have done twenty years ago could suddenly become acclaimed and quite valuable. You’ve made your mark. You’re a revered photographer. Eventually your bus will come to a halt and you, the passenger, can rest. It may represent the end of your working life, your retirement, or your death, but your life’s work will be there for all to see, the imitations, the breakthroughs, the highs and the lows, and the distinguished, all because you chose to stay on the bus! So what lessons can we take from this story? Have faith in yourself. Recognize what staying on the bus means. Accept that criticism and comparison are the chisels to help you improve. Use your energy to fuel improvement. Refine your craft. Learn to love your fellow passengers. Stay positive! Never give up. The most important thing to remember is that, it’s not how hard you work. It’s not the hours you put in. But it has lots to do with working more cleverly and finding ways to improve your craft. Choosing your bus is the first step. Staying on the bus for the long haul, and embracing your challenges is the second. So just do it! Stay on the bus!

The post The Life-Changing Helsinki Bus Station Theory first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

A metaphor for achieving success

Helsinki Bus Station

What could a bus station possibly have to do with motivating students? Or anyone for that matter.

Enter “The Helsinki Bus Station” Theory

The theory had its birth in a graduation speech made by American/Finnish photographer Arno Rafael Minkkinen.

There he aimed to inspire graduating students to believe in themselves, to think positively about their chosen careers (photography in this case), and not to be derailed by the views of others. That, he said, would be the difference between success, and failure.

Think Positively – Think Helsinki Bus Station – of course

The lateral thinking Minkkinen suggested to the graduates that all they had to do was understand the operation of the main bus station in Helsinki, and their success would be assured.

The metaphor was simple, perfectly-pitched, and easy to relate to.

One can only imagine every new graduate thereafter, spilling onto the bus station, and poring over the schedules in an effort to comprehend the theory, feeling assured that it would change their lives.

Analogy not clicked in yet? Simple, but you might not agree…

Come with me and try to imagine that main bus station. In your eyes it may be a little on the daggy side. Many bus stations are.

Or it may be bursting with state-of-the-art technology, and you can confidently hop on board, safe in the knowledge that you will reach your destination.

You get to choose your destination right from the get-go...

The message (caveat, if you will), is that, once you do so, you must stay on the bus!

How hard can that be? In his speech, Minkkinen aimed to impress upon the graduates that their careers and successes might hinge on how well they can understand and learn from, his metaphor for success.

Your turn to imagine…

There are two dozen platforms on the station, laid out in a square.

At the head of each platform is a sign posting the numbers of the buses that leave from that particular platform. The bus numbers might read as follows: 21, 71, 58, 33, and 19. Each bus takes the same route out of the city for at least a kilometer, stopping at (say three) bus stop intervals along the way.’

You pick a career direction – maybe you focus on making platinum prints of nudes – and set off

‘Now let’s accept that each bus stop represents one year in the life of a photographer, meaning the third bus stop would represent three years of photographic activity. Ok, so you have been working for three years making platinum studies of nudes. Call it bus number 21.’

You’ve worked hard on your art work and you are excited. You know you’re talented, and stand apart from the others in your field.

But when you present your portfolio to the curator of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, he asks if you are familiar with the nudes of Irving Penn , an eminent artists in the same field.

It was only a question!

But your heart sinks to your boots.

Your confidence ebbs. Did you choose the right pathway?

Three years of work, you realize, three years that you can never reclaim are now totally, and utterly wasted.

So what do you do?

You catch a cab straight back to the bus station!

You hop on another bus and you begin a whole new journey, a different photographic route, this time more determined than ever.

Another three years pass with the outcome pretty much the same as the first.

It’s now six years since you graduated with not a lot to show for it!

You were pretty sure this time, that yours was cutting edge stuff and this would be your breakthrough.

With a few expletives under your breath, you head straight back to the station to pursue yet another angle of photography.

This kind of response, if repeated often enough, will mean that, at the end of your working life, you will not have a damned thing to show for all you have done.

Yet it could have been otherwise.

Well what mistakes did you make?

Only one actually…you forgot to stay on the bus!

Here’s the harsh reality. Had you done that, stayed on the bus, people would have started to have a view on the differentiation in your work, to appreciate all the things that set your work apart from others, and you would have had the acclaim and following you deserved.

Minkkinen goes on to explain…

The buses that move out of Helsinki stay on the same line, but only for a while — maybe a kilometer or two. Then they begin to separate, each number heading off to its own unique destination. Bus 33 suddenly goes north. Bus 19 southwest. For a time maybe 21 and 71 dovetail one another, but soon they split off as well. Irving Penn is headed elsewhere.

‘It’s the separation that makes all the difference. And once you start to see that difference in your work from the work you so admire — that’s why you chose that platform after all — it’s time to look for your breakthrough. Suddenly your work starts to get noticed. Now you are working more on your own, making more of the difference between your work and what influenced it. Your vision takes off. And as the years mount up, and your work begins to pile up, it won’t be long before the critics become very intrigued, not just by what separates your work from a Sally Mann or a Ralph Gibson, but by what you did when you first got started.’

He urges all students to think about this…

The work you might have done twenty years ago could suddenly become acclaimed and quite valuable. You’ve made your mark. You’re a revered photographer.

Eventually your bus will come to a halt and you, the passenger, can rest. It may represent the end of your working life, your retirement, or your death, but your life’s work will be there for all to see, the imitations, the breakthroughs, the highs and the lows, and the distinguished, all because you chose to stay on the bus!

So what lessons can we take from this story?

  • Have faith in yourself.
  • Recognize what staying on the bus means.
  • Accept that criticism and comparison are the chisels to help you improve.
  • Use your energy to fuel improvement.
  • Refine your craft.
  • Learn to love your fellow passengers.
  • Stay positive!
  • Never give up.

The most important thing to remember is that, it’s not how hard you work. It’s not the hours you put in. But it has lots to do with working more cleverly and finding ways to improve your craft.

Choosing your bus is the first step. Staying on the bus for the long haul, and embracing your challenges is the second.

So just do it!

Stay on the bus!

The post The Life-Changing Helsinki Bus Station Theory first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/the-life-changing-helsinki-bus-station-theory/feed/ 0
‘The Hare and The Tortoise’ An Allegory About Life? https://ponmyword.com/the-hare-and-the-tortoise-an-allegory-about-life/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-hare-and-the-tortoise-an-allegory-about-life https://ponmyword.com/the-hare-and-the-tortoise-an-allegory-about-life/#comments Sun, 20 Mar 2022 04:16:38 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=2295 The hare won! Here’s why… {allegory (noun): A story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one – OED} In Aesop’s tale about the Hare and the Tortoise, the hare outshone. (Bonus: Check out previously unpublished allegorical poem at the end.) What does that mean for us? If I were to ask you which animal in the world is the fastest, it’s probable you’d come up with the cheetah, the fastest land animal in the world. It’s a big cat that takes three seconds to go from the speed of nought, to the speed of 68 miles per hour, a big cat that can turn in mid-air while sprinting, a seriously impressive cat. And then, if I asked you which is the faster, a hare or a tortoise, you would all agree that the hare wins hands down. We base that conclusion on the impressive short-term bound of the hare, from which it has to recover. So perhaps all is not as we imagine. Well, someone’s actually studied that… Adrian Bejan, professor of Mechanical Engineering at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, conducted a study which was published in the Scientific Reports journal. His research came up with a very different result. When the movements of specific animals were averaged out over a lifetime, it was discovered that the fastest animals are often the slowest. Think about that for a moment! Maybe Aesop was ahead of the pack when he wrote his fable all those years ago. Was he talking about habits by any chance? Teachers who read this story to young children often end up explaining to them that the lesson learned is that, slow and steady wins the race. For five or six year olds that is a reasonable deduction. But it runs deeper than that… The story about the Hare and the Tortoise is not as simple as we first imagine. The tale is really an allegory, a simple story on the surface, with a deeper meaning running beneath. The hidden meaning here is very much about we humans, that some people are born with natural talents that could take them anywhere, if used wisely, but waste them due to idleness or laziness. Others work slowly and methodically, and are often the people who produce the best results. The tortoise’s character is meant to show how despite his sluggishness, and lack of natural speed, it was his perseverance, hard work, and focus that allowed him to win the race, that is, to finish off what he set out to do. When we read this fable as adults, the message is instantly clear. We easily see both the tortoise and hare in people we know in real life. The race is not really a race at all. Read allegorically, it is actually a moral about life itself. The story expresses the belief that in life, the slow and steady, those with attention to detail, the ethical and upstanding, will, at the end of the day, always top the quick and mercurial, when all’s said and done. The fable in fact, is very much about principled behaviour Have a think about the hare. He truly is a fickle character. He knows his ability. He stands apart from the tortoise in physical talent, but he underestimates the tortoise. The very notion that a sluggish animal like him could even think about challenging a hare, is a joke. So, he does what all conceited people do, takes the challenge in his stride, easily outpaces the tortoise in the first instance, and lets his guard down by having a sleep. Consequently, he loses the race. Those who identify with the tortoise, the methodical and thorough, the highly-ethical, care not for the capricious. They keep their end goals in sight, and work diligently towards them. The fact is, it doesn’t matter who does what job. It matters not what your station in life is. What does matter however, is that the job you have been commissioned to do, is done well. Principled action is the quality that will see you being valued, and chosen, over others. I’ve added a little allegorical poem Winner Takes All Are you a ‘slow runner’? Does running feel bad? Do your friends always beat you? Do they laugh when you’re sad? Do you hate all those races That you HAVE to be in? The ones that are long, The ones you can’t win? Well cheer up my friend Because soon you will see That winning is easy As easy can be! It’s not about having Tall legs that are lean, Like the hare in the tale The one who was mean. The one who was smug And who knew he could beat Turtle his friend, (He was mad with conceit!) But Turtle, whose legs Were short and not thin Was strong and determined And knew he would win. He knew that the hare, Would be out for a lark. So the comp would be merely A walk in the park. So imagine the laugh that he made When he saw, His friend on the kerbside With a very slack jaw Which from there emitted Some snoring impressive, The noise of which Was truly excessive. A noise that allowed Clever Turtle to creep Silently by, With Hare still asleep. Imagine the sorrow. Imagine the shame. When one groggy hare Awoke from his game. And found that the race Was over and done, And that Turtle The slow one. Had actually won!

The post ‘The Hare and The Tortoise’ An Allegory About Life? first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

The hare won! Here’s why…

The hare and the tortoise
Photo by Yisa Guo on Unsplash

{allegory (noun): A story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one – OED}

In Aesop’s tale about the Hare and the Tortoise, the hare outshone.

(Bonus: Check out previously unpublished allegorical poem at the end.)

What does that mean for us?

If I were to ask you which animal in the world is the fastest, it’s probable you’d come up with the cheetah, the fastest land animal in the world. It’s a big cat that takes three seconds to go from the speed of nought, to the speed of 68 miles per hour, a big cat that can turn in mid-air while sprinting, a seriously impressive cat.

And then, if I asked you which is the faster, a hare or a tortoise, you would all agree that the hare wins hands down.

We base that conclusion on the impressive short-term bound of the hare, from which it has to recover. So perhaps all is not as we imagine.

Well, someone’s actually studied that…

Adrian Bejan, professor of Mechanical Engineering at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, conducted a study which was published in the Scientific Reports journal.

His research came up with a very different result. When the movements of specific animals were averaged out over a lifetime, it was discovered that the fastest animals are often the slowest.

Think about that for a moment!

Maybe Aesop was ahead of the pack when he wrote his fable all those years ago.

Was he talking about habits by any chance?

Teachers who read this story to young children often end up explaining to them that the lesson learned is that, slow and steady wins the race.

For five or six year olds that is a reasonable deduction.

But it runs deeper than that…

The story about the Hare and the Tortoise is not as simple as we first imagine.

The tale is really an allegory, a simple story on the surface, with a deeper meaning running beneath.

The hidden meaning here is very much about we humans, that some people are born with natural talents that could take them anywhere, if used wisely, but waste them due to idleness or laziness.

Others work slowly and methodically, and are often the people who produce the best results.

The tortoise’s character is meant to show how despite his sluggishness, and lack of natural speed, it was his perseverance, hard work, and focus that allowed him to win the race, that is, to finish off what he set out to do.

When we read this fable as adults, the message is instantly clear. We easily see both the tortoise and hare in people we know in real life.

The race is not really a race at all. Read allegorically, it is actually a moral about life itself.

The story expresses the belief that in life, the slow and steady, those with attention to detail, the ethical and upstanding, will, at the end of the day, always top the quick and mercurial, when all’s said and done.

The fable in fact, is very much about principled behaviour

Have a think about the hare.

He truly is a fickle character. He knows his ability. He stands apart from the tortoise in physical talent, but he underestimates the tortoise. The very notion that a sluggish animal like him could even think about challenging a hare, is a joke.

So, he does what all conceited people do, takes the challenge in his stride, easily outpaces the tortoise in the first instance, and lets his guard down by having a sleep.

Consequently, he loses the race.

Those who identify with the tortoise, the methodical and thorough, the highly-ethical, care not for the capricious. They keep their end goals in sight, and work diligently towards them.

The fact is, it doesn’t matter who does what job.

It matters not what your station in life is.

What does matter however, is that the job you have been commissioned to do, is done well. Principled action is the quality that will see you being valued, and chosen, over others.

I’ve added a little allegorical poem

Winner Takes All

Are you a ‘slow runner’?

Does running feel bad?

Do your friends always beat you?

Do they laugh when you’re sad?

Do you hate all those races

That you HAVE to be in?

The ones that are long,

The ones you can’t win?

Well cheer up my friend

Because soon you will see

That winning is easy

As easy can be!

It’s not about having

Tall legs that are lean,

Like the hare in the tale

The one who was mean.

The one who was smug

And who knew he could beat

Turtle his friend,

(He was mad with conceit!)

But Turtle, whose legs

Were short and not thin

Was strong and determined

And knew he would win.

He knew that the hare,

Would be out for a lark.

So the comp would be merely

A walk in the park.

So imagine the laugh that he made

When he saw,

His friend on the kerbside

With a very slack jaw

Which from there emitted

Some snoring impressive,

The noise of which

Was truly excessive.

A noise that allowed

Clever Turtle to creep

Silently by,

With Hare still asleep.

Imagine the sorrow.

Imagine the shame.

When one groggy hare

Awoke from his game.

And found that the race

Was over and done,

And that Turtle

The slow one.

Had actually won!

The post ‘The Hare and The Tortoise’ An Allegory About Life? first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/the-hare-and-the-tortoise-an-allegory-about-life/feed/ 2
A Shitty Garage Sale That Almost Destroyed Our Faith In Human Nature https://ponmyword.com/a-shitty-garage-sale-that-almost-destroyed-our-faith-in-human-nature/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-shitty-garage-sale-that-almost-destroyed-our-faith-in-human-nature https://ponmyword.com/a-shitty-garage-sale-that-almost-destroyed-our-faith-in-human-nature/#respond Sat, 05 Mar 2022 04:19:40 +0000 https://ponmyword.com/?p=2160 Restored By One FABULOUS Family “Not all those who wander are lost. Some are just looking for lost parts of their tool kits”. (Apologies to J.R.R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring) Have you ever run a garage sale? If so, you may relate to this story. There again, if you have lots of experience with such sales, you may deduce that my husband and I are perfect fruit loops, which I think may be close to the truth. So, what started all this? We’d just sold our home, and with that, a fair amount of our furniture. But, as with most of us, we had lots of great stuff left, much of it expensive – however, we still needed to get rid of it. A friend suggested a garage sale. Please note, she’s no longer a friend! Was joking about that, but just let me say, I will never, ever have a GS again. So clearly, given the tone of my introduction, you’d already be intuiting that we know nothing about garage sales. Correct! Though now we have painfully acquired some awareness. Rookies we were, and any information we have gleaned in having our first/last, is of no use to us. We will never have another. If ever there was a clear case of having our souls ripped apart, it happened on that day and we were left utterly bereft. It’s not that we were disorganized! My husband is a mathematician and if anyone is organized, he is! Just ask the tradie who left us a 3 cubic metre skip, how he, my husband, managed to insert five of the said cubic metres into the same space. It was impressive. I’m considering hiring him out So, we’d spent the most part of two weeks getting things ready, putting prices on things, and making sure people could easily get in and out of our driveway. Most people are kind…most! We found that out on the day. Some insisted on giving us more than we asked, and that warmed our hearts. Some quality items didn’t sell, though, and we soon found out why… At the end of the two hours, when everyone had departed, my husband wondered why many of his quality tool kits had not sold. When he checked, some pieces of the kits had been pilfered, so were no longer complete ‘kits’. We can only imagine whoever snaffled them was missing parts from theirs. That was devastating for us. Anyone who knows my husband also knows that he’s meticulous about looking after things. But, it was what it was. No going back in time. Then, serendipity stepped in… We were exhausted, somewhat deflated, and about to close up shop when a woman, her son, and her mother-in-law arrived. The mother explained that her son, a student, was moving into his first share-house and just needed a few things. Did we have anything left? This young man was the type of son we all dream of, polite, enthusiastic, and wanting to do the right thing. I gave him lots of kitchen utensils, a food mixer, can-opener, coffee percolator, and such stuff, telling him that I couldn’t charge him for anything as I had used them forever and who knows, they could die tomorrow. So needless to say he went off happily with enough kitchen equipment to start his own restaurant. His grandma, who’d just arrived from Tasmania, fell in love with, and purchased a dresser, his mother a few pieces of furniture, plus some unworn dresses for her daughter. So eventually we said goodbye to them, and sat down with a cool, comforting beer. This was an exercise never to be repeated! And then, the icing… Shortly after, and quite unexpectedly, there was a knock on our door. There, smiling widely, was this same delightful trio, laden with bottles of wine and chocolates, because…they felt guilty! They felt guilty because we’d charged so little for everything. We very well may have, but that didn’t particularly matter to us at the time. But what did matter, is that they cared enough to find a way to repay us in kind. Now, that really di mean so much to us. Happy (kinda) ending Our world is full of so many different types, those who get as much as they can for as little as possible, those who do a fair deal, and those who, in one simple act, restore our faith in human nature. I wonder. Will our trio ever know? “The meaning of life is to find your gift. The purpose of life is to give it away.”

The post A Shitty Garage Sale That Almost Destroyed Our Faith In Human Nature first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>

Restored By One FABULOUS Family

Garage Sale
Photo by Alexander Shustov on Unsplash

“Not all those who wander are lost. Some are just looking for lost parts of their tool kits”. (Apologies to J.R.R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring)

Have you ever run a garage sale?

If so, you may relate to this story.

There again, if you have lots of experience with such sales, you may deduce that my husband and I are perfect fruit loops, which I think may be close to the truth.

So, what started all this?

We’d just sold our home, and with that, a fair amount of our furniture. But, as with most of us, we had lots of great stuff left, much of it expensive – however, we still needed to get rid of it.

A friend suggested a garage sale.

Please note, she’s no longer a friend!

Was joking about that, but just let me say, I will never, ever have a GS again.

So clearly, given the tone of my introduction, you’d already be intuiting that we know nothing about garage sales.

Correct! Though now we have painfully acquired some awareness.

Rookies we were, and any information we have gleaned in having our first/last, is of no use to us. We will never have another.

If ever there was a clear case of having our souls ripped apart, it happened on that day and we were left utterly bereft.

It’s not that we were disorganized!

My husband is a mathematician and if anyone is organized, he is!

Just ask the tradie who left us a 3 cubic metre skip, how he, my husband, managed to insert five of the said cubic metres into the same space. It was impressive.

I’m considering hiring him out

So, we’d spent the most part of two weeks getting things ready, putting prices on things, and making sure people could easily get in and out of our driveway.

Most people are kind…most! We found that out on the day.

Some insisted on giving us more than we asked, and that warmed our hearts.

Some quality items didn’t sell, though, and we soon found out why…

At the end of the two hours, when everyone had departed, my husband wondered why many of his quality tool kits had not sold.

When he checked, some pieces of the kits had been pilfered, so were no longer complete ‘kits’. We can only imagine whoever snaffled them was missing parts from theirs.

That was devastating for us. Anyone who knows my husband also knows that he’s meticulous about looking after things.

But, it was what it was. No going back in time.

Then, serendipity stepped in…

We were exhausted, somewhat deflated, and about to close up shop when a woman, her son, and her mother-in-law arrived.

The mother explained that her son, a student, was moving into his first share-house and just needed a few things. Did we have anything left?

This young man was the type of son we all dream of, polite, enthusiastic, and wanting to do the right thing.

I gave him lots of kitchen utensils, a food mixer, can-opener, coffee percolator, and such stuff, telling him that I couldn’t charge him for anything as I had used them forever and who knows, they could die tomorrow.

So needless to say he went off happily with enough kitchen equipment to start his own restaurant.

His grandma, who’d just arrived from Tasmania, fell in love with, and purchased a dresser, his mother a few pieces of furniture, plus some unworn dresses for her daughter.

So eventually we said goodbye to them, and sat down with a cool, comforting beer. This was an exercise never to be repeated!

And then, the icing…

Shortly after, and quite unexpectedly, there was a knock on our door.

There, smiling widely, was this same delightful trio, laden with bottles of wine and chocolates, because…they felt guilty!

They felt guilty because we’d charged so little for everything.

We very well may have, but that didn’t particularly matter to us at the time.

But what did matter, is that they cared enough to find a way to repay us in kind. Now, that really di mean so much to us.

Happy (kinda) ending

Our world is full of so many different types, those who get as much as they can for as little as possible, those who do a fair deal, and those who, in one simple act, restore our faith in human nature.

I wonder. Will our trio ever know?

The meaning of life is to find your gift. The purpose of life is to give it away.”

The post A Shitty Garage Sale That Almost Destroyed Our Faith In Human Nature first appeared on 'Pon My Word.

]]>
https://ponmyword.com/a-shitty-garage-sale-that-almost-destroyed-our-faith-in-human-nature/feed/ 0