Tuesday, November 06, 2001

It's November already. Where has the year gone? This year I've chucked one job in, discovered another, been to Europe, signed up for the Dole, been poor, been rich, lived in unsuitable circumstances, found a new place to live, disappointed people, astonded people, surprised and even impressed people. If i wrote all the details of my last 12 months you might think it's been stressful, and in parts it has, but as a whole it doesn't feel the least bit stressful or eventful.

Last night was Guy Fawkes night. For a week before the 5th of November, Fireworks are onsale to the public of New Zealand. It used to mean a week of letterboxes blowing up and .. no wait.. i keep being interrupted (mostly by Jonathan who recently inhaled some fresh air and seems to be wide awake) so I've lost the entire point of this paragraph - coupled with the fact my information pertaining to Guy Fawkes, it's whys and wherefores is so limited I'm bailing on this particular topic.

So yes, the weather is chilly. It feels like winter actually. The water was calm this morning but the ride in on the Ferry was extra cold. I can't see me leaving my coat behind yet, it'd have to be pretty warm to forego it's woolly-warmness out on the water. The other night - Friday - I caught the 1130pm boat home. A very nice, very tipsy man sat and chatted with me. He had just quit his three month old job because the pressure of Foreign Exchange was too much for him. He had no plans and realised this time of the year was not the best time to be unemployed, especially with a toddler and another on the way. His wife was less than pleased, he said, but he felt it was the right thing to do at this time. I was typically supportive and wondered if he'd still feel that way after 6 months on the unemployment benefit but he just smiled.





Wednesday, November 07, 2001

summer in Auckland
Wet. Not that usual light drizzly stuff that you can shake off, but the really wet heavy raindrop stuff that makes your hair stick to your face and dribbles down the back of your coat and makes you wish you'd invested in an umbrella anytime before now.

The Ferry was packed, upstairs being too wet to utilise. I sat a table of three men, fortunately, only two were talking. The other was reading the paper and I was staring into space. That whole "on the Tube" look comes in so handy at times like this.





Saturday, November 10, 2001

First chapter from The Princess Bride, showing how JJ sounds as if he wrote it, and how Buttercup has shades of Freya.

The year that Buttercup was born, the most beautiful woman in the world was a French scullery maid named Annette. Annette worked in Paris for the Duke and Duchess de Guiche, and it did not excape the Duke's notice that someone extraordinary was polishing the pewter. The Duke's notice did not escape the notice of the Duchess either, who was not very beauitiful and not very rich, but plenty smart. The Ducthess set about studying Annette and shortly found her adversary's tragic flaw.

Chocolate.

Armed now, the Duchess set to work. The Palace de Guiche turned into a candy castle. Everywhere you looked, bonbons. There were piles of chocolate-covered mints in the drawing rooms, baskets of chocolate-covered nougats in the parlors.

Annette never had a chance. Inside a season, she went from delicate to whopping, and the Duke never glanced in her direction without sad bewilderment clouding his eyes. (Annette, it might be noted, seemed only cheerier throughout her enlargement. She eventually married the pastry chef and they both ate a lot until old age claimed them. Things, it might also be noted, did not fare so cheerily for the Duchess. The Duke, for reasons passing understanding, next became smitten with his very own mother-in-law, which caused the Duchess ulcers, only they didn't have ulcers yet. More precisely, ulcers existed, people had them, but they weren't called "ulcers". The medical profession at the time called them "stomach pains" and felt the best cure was coffee dolloped with brandy twice a day until the pains subsided. The Duchess took her mixture faithfully, watching through the years as her husband and her mother blew kisses at each other behind her back. Not surprisingly, the Duchess's grumpiness became legendary, as Voltaire has so ably chronicled. Except, that this was before Voltaire).

The year Buttercup turned ten, the most beautiful woman lived in Bengal, the daughter of a successful tea merchant. This girl's name was Aluthra, and her skin was of a dusky perfection unseen in India for eighty years. There have only been elven perfect complexions in all of India since accurate accounting began). Aluthra was nineteen the year the pox plague hit Bengal. The girl survived, even if her skin did not.

When Buttercup was fifteen, Adela Terrell, of Sussex on the Thames, was easily the most beautiful creature. Adela was twenty, and so far did she outdistance the world that it seemed certain she would be the most beautiful woman for many, many years. But then one day, one of her suiters (she had 104 of them) exlaimed that without question Adela must be the most ideal item yet spawned. Adela, flattered, began to ponder on the truth of the statement. That night, alone in her room, she examined herself pore by pore in her mirror (this was after mirrors). It took her until close to dawn to finish her inspection, but by that time it was clear to her that the young man had been quite correct in his assessment: she was, through no real faults of her own, perfect.

As she strolled through the family rose gardens watching the sun rise, she felt hapier than she had ever been. "Not only am I perfect," she said to herself, "I am probably the first perfect person in the whole long history of the universe. Not a part of me could stand improving, how lucky I am to be perfect and rich and sought after and sensitive and young and..."

Young?

The mist was rising around her as Adela began to think. Well of course I'll always be sensitive, she thought, and I'll always be rich, but I don't quite see how I'm going to manage to always be young. Ane when I'm not young, how am I going to stay perfect? And if I'm not perfect, well, what else is there? What indeed? Adela furrowed her brow in desperate thought. It was the first time in her life her brow had ever had to furrow, and Adela gasped when she realised what she had done, horrified that she had somehow damaged it, perhaps permanently. She rushed back to her mirror and spent the morning, and although she managed to convince herself that she was sitll quite as perfect as ever, there was no question that she was not quite as happy as she had been.

She had began to fret.

The first worry lines appeared within a fortnight; the first wrinkles within a month, and before the year was out, creases abounded. She married soon thereafter, the elsfsame man who accused her of sublimity, and gave him merry hell for many years.

Buttercup, of course, at fifteen, knew none of this. And if she had, would have found it totally unfathomable. How could someone care if she were the most beautiful woman in the world or not. What difference could it have made if you were only the third most beautiful. Or the sixth. (Buttercup at this time was nowhere near that high, being barely in the top twenty, and that primarily on potential, certainly not on any particular care she took of herself. She hated to wash her face, she loathed the area behind her ears, she was sick of combing her hair and did so as little as possible). What she liked to do, preferred above all else really, was to ride her horse and taunt the farm boy.

The horse's name was "Horse" (Buttercup was never long on imagination) and it came when she called it, went where she steered it, did what she told it. The farm boy did what she told him too. Actually, he was more a young man now, but he had been a farm boy when, orphaned, he had come to work for her father, and Buttercup referred to him that way still. "Farm Boy, fetch me this"; "Get me that, Farm Boy - quickly, lazy thing, trot now or I'll tell Father."

"As you wish."

That was all he ever answered. "As you wish." Fetch that, Farm Boy. "As you wish." Dry this, Farm Boy. "As you wish." He lived in a hovel out near the animals and, according to Buttercup's mother he kept it clean. He even read when he had candles.

"I'll leave the lad an acre in my will," Buttercup's father was fond of saying. (They had acres of them).
"You'll spoil him," Buttercup's mother always answered.
"He's slaved for many years; hard work should be rewarded." Then, rather than continue the argument (they had arguments then too) they would both turn to their daughter. "You didn't bathe," her father said.
"I did, I did" from Buttercup.
"Not with water," her father continued. "You reek like a stallion."
"I've been riding all day," Buttercup explained.
"You must bathe, Buttercup," her mother joined in. "The boys don't like their girls to smell of stables."
"Oh, the boys!" Buttercup fairly exploded. "I do not care about 'the boys'. Horse loves me and that is quite sufficient, thankyou."
She said that speech loud, and she said it often.

But like it or not, things were beginning to happen.

Shortly before her sixteenth birthday, Buttercup realised that it had now been more than a month since any girl in the village had spoken to her. She had never much been close to girls, so the change was nothing sharp, but at least before there were head nods exchanged when she rode through the village or along the cart tracks. But now, for no reason, there was nothing. A quick glance away as she approached, that was all. Buttercup cornered Cornelia one morning at the blacksmith's and asked about the silence. "I should think, after what you've done, you'd have the courtesy not to pretend to ask" came from Cornelia. "And what have I done?" "What? What?...You've stolen them." With that, Cornelia fled, but Buttercup understood; she knew who "them" was.

The boys.

The village boys.

The beef-witted featherbrained rattleskulled clodpated dimdomed noodle-noggined sapheaded lunk-knobbed boys.

How could anybody accuse her of stealing them? why would anybody want them anyway? What good were they? All they did was pester and vex and annoy. "Can I brush your horse, Buttercup?" "Thankyou , but Farm Boy does that." "Can I go riding with you, Buttercup?" "Thankyou, but I really do enjoy myself alone." "You think you're too good for anybody, don't you Buttercup?" "No; no I don't. I just like riding by myself, that's all."

But throughout her sixteenth year, even this kind of talk gave way to stammering and flushing and, at the very best, questions about the weather. "Do you think it's going to rain, Buttercup?" "I don't think so, the sky is blue" "Well, it might rain." "Yes, I suppose it might." "You think you're too good for anybody, don't you, Buttercup?" "No, I just don't think it's going to rain, that's all."

At night, more often than not, they would congregate in the dark beyond her window and laugh about her. She ignored them. Usually the laughter would give way to insult. She paid them no mind. If they grew too damaging, the farm boy handled things, emerging silently from his hovel, thrashing a few of them, sending them flying. She never failed to thank him when he did this. "As you wish" was all he ever answered.

When she was almost seventeen, a man in a carriage came to town and watched as she rode for provisions. He was still there on her return, peering out. She paid him no mind and, indeed, by himself he was not important. But he marked a turning point. Other men had gone out of their way to catch sight of her; other men had even ridden 20 miles for the privilege, as this man had. The importance here is that this was the first rich man who had bothered to do so, the first noble. And it was this man, whose name is lost to antiquity, who mentioned Buttercup to the Count.







Saturday, November 17, 2001

Davey, at the Buzz Bar
Sunny Saturday. I've been up all day and the boys are cleaning the cars - mine included - so it must be time for me to lounge around the computer. Dave, my Ultra guy, is coming 'round tomorrow to put up my satellite dish [insert yay here]. He's a lovely guy, last time he did lots of odd jobs for me so I'm glad he's my contractor again this time. He isn't the guy in the pic, although his name is Dave too (actually, they could be brothers they look similar). So hello faster downloads from tomorrow.

I'm glad I didn't cancel my Ultra service when I moved. They've restructured all the pricing and you have to buy the dish and modem etc now and that runs to around $400 or so. But, being an 'old' customer, I get to keep my cheaper connection and my 2 gig/month download. Which, btw, was breached by double a month or so back, and although iHug charged me for it they also credited my account for it too so it didn't cost me anything. This, is why, I stay, with iHug. They just do things like that sometimes. Plus, they have Dave.

I'm still enjoying work, and this flatting thing seems to be working out okay. My fingers are getting itchy to sew again - how fabulous. Sue said she has a big table at home in storage and she's gonna lend it to us which, besides having more space to eat when people come over, I'll also be able to get some patchwork done. I know, I say that all the time but I really am missing it. Typical me, wait til it gets hot and summery to decide to sit under a blanket and quilt. But hey, it's very satisfying to me.





Monday, November 19, 2001

Plans of Mice and Men and Mish and Mornings often run astray. I was awake roughly every half an hour last night waiting for my alarm to buzz me awake at 0430. I was awake five minutes before it went off and turned it off, hauling my sleep deprived body from my nest, to stagger out into the chilled morning to see the Leonids Meteor shower that had been predicted to be the last best time to see them in 130 years. The estimates were running at between 800-8000 meteors per hour. Sounds pretty exciting doesn't it?

Being in the city, the lights were playing against me and so I realised that I would have to wander down to the riverbank, where it was extra dark and away from the streetlights. The sky is virtually starless until your eyes get used to the low light. and the dark. and the shadows. and the dark shadows. and the night. and every horror movie I've ever seen. with the camera angles seeing a lone female on a deserted reserve. in the dark. in the shadows. not paying attention. in the dark. in the shadows.

Okay so I'm just a big girl's blouse. All I could think about were tiny gremlins and freaky things scuttling about in the bushes ripping my considerable guts out and leaving me twitching in the predawn light.

So I didn't see the flaming Leonids, if in fact they were visible at all. And now I'm tired and embarrassed and a chicken livered dork-wannabe.





Thursday, November 22, 2001

trapped and alone
He said, that scorched almond is calling your name. I said, no it's not.. it's calling yours Jonnnnaathannnnn he was so sure it was saying miiiiiiiicccchhheeeelllllllllllllllllllllllllllleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee so I agreed and said yes, it was me the almond was calling, but I was mean. I wouldn't let the scorched almond off that easily. He had lost his brothers and sisters to the ravenous humans, every one he ever knew, gone. and now, he was alone. alone and unsure of his future. the torture, of being kept alive - alone - to un unknown fate. for a cruel purpose.




Monday, November 26, 2001

The year is flying past. It's nearly December again. I'm looking forward to the holidays so I can just soak up sun and not do much in the way of thinking.

This morning i woke to the sound of my female housemate vomitting. It's not the first morning she's woken to chunder, I hope she's not pregnant and I hope it wasn't the chicken korma I cooked last night. the rest of us are fine *so far*. The Boys were on the Internet last night giggling their brains out. They are very silly chooks sometimes. I like them though. Michael asked me if i'd like a blanket box and I said I would so he said he'd make one for me. How nice is that? Very, that's how nice it is.

I've been a bit under the weather of late, all tired and worn out and not wanting to move much. I know.. hard to tell from normal, but even more so. When I think about it I've had a BIG 12 months and I guess I just need to not do anythingking for a while and then I'll be okay.

The very best thing about having a Blog is that I get to talk about myself endlessly and forever. It's all about me, Baby. Yeh.





Thursday, November 29, 2001

Last night I stopped at the Pakuranga Highway Shell service station to check the balance of my bank account using the ATM there. There was an old man standing at the machine and I stood behind him in turn. But he was having trouble. He was a really old man, all stooped and his feeble shaking fingers trying to pluck his ATM card from the slot. Seems it was stuck - neither in nor out - and he got flustered and turned to me and said something about the machine taking his card. I could see the card in the slot so offered to help, using my card to push his card in. And it worked. He thanked me and said "hold my crutch" shoving his hand warm green crutch whilst he punched the numbers. He did something wrong because his card was once more out of the slot and he was trying trying trying to shove it back in but the angle he was shoving wasn't allowing the card to be accepted. About now he gave up and said I could have my turn and shuffled a little to the right but not much. He watched me key in my PIN and talked at me about how many times he's lost cards to ATMs and I called up my balance and he still stood there and continued to tell his banking stories. I finished and turned to leave but his arm hooked into my arm and he started talking so quickly that it took me a moment before I realised what it was he was saying, it was something about a Doctor, and a patient, and a penis then when I realised he was telling me a rude joke he was into the second one.. another Doctor another Patient another Penis and into the third - same theme and we've only moved about two paces and finally I managed to extricate myself from his arm and called him a Ratbag and he assured me he could 'go for hours' and I expressed no doubt whatsoever that he could indeed, and I left.




 

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