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Oscar Wilde wrote: “Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.”
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Friday, January 18, 2008
Black Watch
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Thursday, January 17, 2008
Above Loch Broom
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I'm not quite sure why this recollection came to me when it did. But it did so I wrote it down then sent it to a friend, twelve years after the event. (I know it's 12 because the van is 13 years old.)
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
One of the reasons I like The Guardian
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Creation stories, so central in the religions of the Middle East, play a surprisingly marginal part in Greek myth. The Greeks had nothing to set alongside the resounding "In the beginning" in the book of Genesis, where one eternal God creates the universe out of nothing. For the Greeks there was no single canonical version of creation, but a number of overlapping stories.
Monday, January 14, 2008
The road from Inverness to Lochinver
It was an uneventful day at work, one that bordered on the tedious. A lengthy e.mail exchange with Spike – word games and lists of likes – passed the time. Spike wrote (in part of her answer to one of my smart arse points) that she likes “lots of other things”. I wrote back, “name 23”, which Spike did, of course, then challenged me to do the same. Number 17 on my list was “the road between Inverness and Lochinver via Ullapool”. Spike wrote back saying, “expand”, so I did:
You cross the bridge at Inverness, Beuly Firth below you, town to the left. From North Kessock to Strathpeffer the countryside is tame, pastoral land. It's pretty to look at but in a cultivated, manicured way. You follow the A835 North West rising to Loch Glascarnoch, which has been dammed. It's rough terrain; isolated mountain country where very few people live. Wind, rain and snow are not uncommon. The road follows the route of a mountain pass, the summit of which leads you to a high road along the north shore of Loch Broom; a long, long sea loch the sight of which leaves one breathless. Ullapool is at the western end of Loch Broom. Turn right. Head north. There's a long steep rise away from the town with astonishing views back along the loch. You keep going, though, because there's plenty more driving to be done.
The countryside beyond Ardmair, as you head north, seems immeasurably older than the area around Loch Broom. Beyond Elphin (which has a very weird café) people and cars become fewer and farther between. A narrow road cuts its way between enormous hills, tough plugs that even glaciers couldn't grind down. One feels wholly insignificant in this place, which is no bad thing. Turn left (north west) at Ledmore. Watch out for deer crossing the road because by now it's dusk. Loch Assynt's black water is on your left, a huge scar-tissue ridge sits on your right. Suilven, one of the most glorious mountains in Scotland, pops up then vanishes as the road twists and turns. Just before Lochinver, turn north again then west along the single-track road to Achmelvich where Ray and Anna have a croft with sheep and rabbits and vegetables, two cows, some ducks, geese and a pig. There's a warm fire, a pot of tea brewing and dinner waiting at a table where friends are happy to share news while a storm rages in from the sea.
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Suilven
You cross the bridge at Inverness, Beuly Firth below you, town to the left. From North Kessock to Strathpeffer the countryside is tame, pastoral land. It's pretty to look at but in a cultivated, manicured way. You follow the A835 North West rising to Loch Glascarnoch, which has been dammed. It's rough terrain; isolated mountain country where very few people live. Wind, rain and snow are not uncommon. The road follows the route of a mountain pass, the summit of which leads you to a high road along the north shore of Loch Broom; a long, long sea loch the sight of which leaves one breathless. Ullapool is at the western end of Loch Broom. Turn right. Head north. There's a long steep rise away from the town with astonishing views back along the loch. You keep going, though, because there's plenty more driving to be done.
The countryside beyond Ardmair, as you head north, seems immeasurably older than the area around Loch Broom. Beyond Elphin (which has a very weird café) people and cars become fewer and farther between. A narrow road cuts its way between enormous hills, tough plugs that even glaciers couldn't grind down. One feels wholly insignificant in this place, which is no bad thing. Turn left (north west) at Ledmore. Watch out for deer crossing the road because by now it's dusk. Loch Assynt's black water is on your left, a huge scar-tissue ridge sits on your right. Suilven, one of the most glorious mountains in Scotland, pops up then vanishes as the road twists and turns. Just before Lochinver, turn north again then west along the single-track road to Achmelvich where Ray and Anna have a croft with sheep and rabbits and vegetables, two cows, some ducks, geese and a pig. There's a warm fire, a pot of tea brewing and dinner waiting at a table where friends are happy to share news while a storm rages in from the sea.
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Suilven
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Lust Caution
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Saturday, January 12, 2008
Cinderella
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Tonight’s show was Rossini’s Cinderella. As always the music was lovely and the singing was delightful. Kamahl was in the audience this evening. He was big here in the seventies, I think. I wouldn’t have known the man if he fell on my lap. Ita Buttrose was in too, so she has renewed her first nights subscription just like us. Ita passes me on the steps each night we’re in the Hall. She has no recollection that we’ve met and no idea of who I am. It’s odd to be so forgettable at times, invisible almost. I think it has something to do with the wheelchair. It could simply be, however, that I’m forgerttable.
Tuesday, January 08, 2008
Amazing Grace
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"having heard all of this you may choose to look the other way but you can never again say that you did not know".
Monday, January 07, 2008
Small Hours
Small Hours
Alone in the dark.
Drunk, perhaps,
on too much red wine
or the doomed romanticism
of youth just fled
as the realisation of adulthood
sinks into one’s consciousness
to stop me in my tracks
beside a battered old couch
in a small flat
with a large window;
looking out over a bay,
crescent shaped,
reflecting the light of a full moon
dancing on the tiny ripples
of a night tide, ebbing
as the night itself must ebb
in anticipation of the dawn
on a lazy Sunday
when there may time to recover
before the world requires me
to recommence the charade.
(after a song by John Martyn)
Alone in the dark.
Drunk, perhaps,
on too much red wine
or the doomed romanticism
of youth just fled
as the realisation of adulthood
sinks into one’s consciousness
to stop me in my tracks
beside a battered old couch
in a small flat
with a large window;
looking out over a bay,
crescent shaped,
reflecting the light of a full moon
dancing on the tiny ripples
of a night tide, ebbing
as the night itself must ebb
in anticipation of the dawn
on a lazy Sunday
when there may time to recover
before the world requires me
to recommence the charade.
(after a song by John Martyn)
Sunday, January 06, 2008
The Golden Compass
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Saturday, January 05, 2008
Sigur Ros:Heima
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Friday, January 04, 2008
La Boheme
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Geoffrey Robinson QC was in the audience with women I took to be his author wife and their daughter. He looked quite the Bohemian lawyer himself in a brightly coloured Joe Bananas-style jacket. Jody Bruin, Director General of the NSW Department of Aboriginal Affairs was also there with her partner / husband (I assume, given they were so public) Roger Wilkins, former Head of the Cabinet Office in Bob Carr’s Government. The Governor’s car was there too when we left but I didn’t see her in the hall tonight. Maybe she was at José Carreras, who was singing in the Concert Hall. Of course none of these dignitaries know I’m alive and on the planet, although that’s not quite true.
Geoffrey Robinson almost did an International Day event for us in 2006 but it came to nothing in the end, largely because we couldn’t make the dates work for his summer return to Sydney. Governor Bashir attended the ‘hypothetical’ (coincidentally) at the Christopher Reeve do at Darling Harbour in 2001, so she listened to me debate spinal cord injury with Mrs Reeve, Natasha Stott-Despoja and others for over an hour but when we bump into one another at Opera first-nights she can’t remember who I am from Adam or is maybe simply too polite to interrupt and I kind of think she doesn’t need me bothering her during one of her nights off. And now that I think of it, Jody Bruin attended our launch of the Critical Bridges DVD on educational transition points and people with disability, which we staged on the 5th December 2007 in Sydney. My goodness … I’m almost famous!
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Hot New Year's Day in Sydeny
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