Week 6, briefly

Week Six doesn’t deserve much of a mention, I’m afraid. I’m busy and I’m stressed. I’m not home much and I’m not sleeping well. If I’m honest, most of the week passed in a blur.

I do know the week was partially salvaged by skatey times:

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And it was capped off pretty well by Laneway Festival, which was a really fun day despite the lack of shade and resultant sunburn:

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But that’s about it.

So brevity is the order of the day, peeps. Let’s hope Week Seven brings a bit more to the table.

‘Til next time,

Sig

Week 5: Dudsville

Here’s the truth: week five of this Happy Days malarkey was a dud. I couldn’t keep my head above water, I chased my tail, I felt like everything I touched fell apart. And I worried, about a lot of things. However would I manage to write a good, positive post when, all things considered, all things were not great?

As it turns out, there is one seriously effective cure for a crap week, and that, my friends, is Eddie Vedder. Throwing caution and budget to the wind, I took myself off to the Adelaide Big Day Out after work on Friday in the sweltering heat and rocked my socks off to some truly awesome bands. It might be two minute noodles for dinner this week, but it was so worth it.

In between it all, when I thought about it, there were actually some other nice things about last week too:

  • Two fun fresh meat intake nights at derby, one of which was followed by beers at the pub and some of the funniest conversation I have had this year.
  • Lunch and a cheeky cider with some former work colleagues who inspire me no end and remind me that I am capable of coping with a lot, even when I tell myself otherwise.
  • Catching the genuinely delightful Saving Mr Banks on the spur of the moment over the weekend, then waxing lyrical about all of life’s ups and downs over some inordinately large glasses of Belgian beer with a good mate.

So all it takes is a music festival and a bunch to drink. Worth noting, people. Worth noting.

‘Til next time,

Sig

Week 4: that time of year again

It’s that time of year again when Adelaide is transformed into the City of Lycra for the Tour Down Under, creating a cityscape full of tightly wrapped packages and latte-sipping cyclists at every early morning turn. My week, while everyone was hopping on the cycling bandwagon and there was lots of talk of legs and jerseys which went somewhat over my head, disappeared in a blur of meetings and emails, which resulted in an ever-growing ‘to do’ list and chain-drinking tea like an addict.

It was little things that made the early cut for my Happy Days post: crunchy leaves, new nail polish, fresh flowers in my bedroom:

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But Adelaide puts on quite a good show through the summer months, and yesterday my friend Rose and I hit the city for the first Orchard Cider Festival in Hindmarsh Square. Part of the city council’s Splash Adelaide campaign, it was a celebration of locally made ciders, food and music. All in all, a pretty lovely way to spend a sunny afternoon:

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It’s also that time of year again when the nation is gripped by Australia Day t-shirt controversy and the uncomfortable anxiety that comes with knowing a good portion of the coming days will be spent cringing and head-shaking at brazenly offensive posts and messages littering social media. For me, Australia Day will be spent as is traditional  – just a day, with friends and beer and barbecued meat and music, as we collectively grumble over the order of the songs in the Hottest 100 and I quietly worry that the portion of songs I’m even familiar with is smaller again. I expect it to be a thoroughly enjoyable day.

‘Til next time,

Sig

Week 3, by the numbers

Here’s a little numeric snap shot of the week that was:

5. The number of days over 40 degrees.

4. The number of days with heat-related public transport delays.

2. The number of thunderstorms.

2.5. The number of hours locked out of my house on a 40+ degree day.

200. The number of dollars spent on locksmith.

3. The number of beers consumed while waiting for locksmith.

300. The number of times I now check in my bag for keys when leaving the house.

I’m not going to lie. By midweek I was struggling to come up with anything that I might be able to include in my ‘happy days’ post for this week. It was hot and humid and my clothes stuck to me in unflattering places. It was hard to sleep. It was hard to eat anything that wasn’t salad. Everything seemed twice as difficult, twice a frustrating, half as fun. Still, the weekend came along in its charming weekendy way, the cool change rolled in, and suddenly things were looking up.

On Saturday I caught up with some dear friends who have just returned from some overseas gallivanting. They visited me for lunch and I baked and we chatted and it was all kinds of nice. Then I spent the afternoon/evening with my sister’s family, helping to stick up a wall decal, sipping sparkling wine, and doing my best storybook voices as I put my niece to bed. It was a good day.

Sunday saw me boarding a bus and heading out to the Adelaide Hills for the annual Crush Festival. Our trip took in three wineries (Barristers Block, Bird in Hand, and Maximilians) and each had a different vibe, with music, good food and fine wines being very much the order of the day. Sure, I went over budget, got a little bit sunburnt and drank an alarming amount of wine, but I’m not complaining. Well, I’m not now that I’ve had a ham and cheese toastie, a strong cup of tea, and some panadol to ease my aching head…

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‘Til next time,

Sig

Happy Days: Week 2

This week was a hectic one. It was my first week back at work since the Christmas holidays and my plans of starting the week quietly by cruising through my emails and pottering around here and there were very quickly quashed by that big old thing called reality. It was a busy week indeed and my work days flew by. In amongst it though, some fun stuff happened:

1. Back to derby training. I admit to be very daunted by the idea of returning to derby training after a two and a bit month break. I entirely expected to be back to my giraffe-legged worst after so long, and to embarrass / injure myself within the first fifteen minutes. It turns out, fortunately, that I can still remember how to skate and that my extracurricular fitness stuff from the last little while might actually be doing something, because I smashed my personal best in my five minute endurance laps. I am really looking forward to derby in 2014!

The fabulous Billie Verdin (L) and November Pain (R - that's me!).

The fabulous Billie Verdin (L) and November Pain (R – that’s me!).

2. Trying a new place to eat from my ‘must try places to eat’ list. This week I had lunch at United Latino Cocina (ULC), on Francis Street in Adelaide. I have been meaning to try this place for ages and I’m so glad I finally did. Awesome food and a great selection of tasty Mexican beers. I rate it 4 out of 5 sombreros, and will be going back for more at my earliest opportunity.

United Latino Cocina - sporting great tomato tin light fixtures.

United Latino Cocina – sporting great tomato tin light fixtures.

 

Tostada con Pollo. I'm not going to lie: this was all kinds of amazing.

Tostada con Pollo. I’m not going to lie: this was all kinds of amazing.

3. Impromptu beach day with the fam. Isn’t it true that sometimes the things you plan the least are the most fun? Yesterday, quite unexpectedly, I hit the beach with my sister and family. This is a pic of my niece and nephew, who are pretty much the most entertaining people I know:

Little bundles of cute.

Little bundles of cute.

4. Afternoon tea with some of my fave ladies. Today I met up with some great friends for afternoon tea (read: ladylike afternoon wine times). The weather was perfect, the setting was lovely, and there was a whole smorgasbord of deliciousness to enjoy. I love long, lazy afternoons full of good company and conversation, and today was one of those.

Lemon sorbet with chocolate filled raspberries. We know how to party.

Lemon sorbet with chocolate filled raspberries. We know how to party.

 

‘Til next time,

Sig

Forget your troubles, come on, get happy

Today, while full of the best intentions to be productive and creative for an afternoon but managing somewhat predictably only to read the internet, I stumbled upon a thing called the 100 Happy Days Challenge. It’s a little mood-boosting initiative designed to get people noticing the happy things around them, big or small, that may otherwise be lost in the chaos of the day to day. Participants are encouraged to snap a photo to capture the moment, and share it via their fave social media platform using the hashtag #100HappyDays. There’s something about this concept that I like, and I think it’s the simplicity of the message. It is easy to forget that in each day there are things to smile about, to treasure, to be grateful for, or to remember.

I’ve set myself lofty time-constrained challenges before and, like new year’s resolutions, they generally last about 7.53 days before I give up (I’m looking at you, photo-a-day challenge). What I thought I might do – or aim to do – instead is blatantly copy the general idea and use it as a premise for a weekly blog post with a few key happy things from the week. The idea being that weekly rather than daily commitment is a) easier and b) less inclined to end up with haphazard and half-hearted photos in my instagram feed of pointless things like ‘today’s sushi’ or ‘the train, on time’.*

Being the first Sunday of the year, this seems a good time to kick things off.

Week 1:

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  • Catching up with an old friend for a nice long chat over a tasty pub lunch.
  • Planning a proper budget and discovering, happily, that I will not be destitute, homeless and selling my body by March.
  • Remembering to a) find and b) clean my mouth guard in preparation for returning to derby training after a two month hiatus.
  • Finally remembering what holidays are about and spending an afternoon listening to David Bowie, sipping tea, eating fancy chocolates, and reading a magazine.

Perhaps it really is, as they say, the little things.

‘Til next time,

Sig

 

 

 

 

*Leaving more room for cat and food pictures, obviously.

Resurrection

This is the first year for a long time that I have started the new year without a raging hangover. It’s not the only thing that is different about this new year, but it seems strangely positive and somewhat motivating that I am not spending the first day of a new year with my head in the toilet and a urgent need for all things bacon.*

2013 was a monster, and by the end it pretty much got the better of me. That circumstance dictated I should ferry myself about on new year’s eve, sober but for two lonesome, strategically timed beers, seemed an unfair end to a dud year. In actuality however, I got to go to two different new year’s parties without having to pick and choose. It meant I was able to spend time with friends both old and new, reminding me there was some good in the year and a whole cast of amazing people in my life. It also meant I got to start today – my 2014 – with a clear head and an open mind. I’m a little bit pleased with how it turned out.

I’m not one for resolutions, or keeping them, but I feel like I should be setting some goals for 2014, even if the list is mostly full of ordinary things like booking that overdue trip to the dentist and organising my banking. Write more, skate more, do more would also make it into my planning in one form or another, as well as last year’s roll-over goal of learning to use chopsticks (it’s a life skill, right? I should really get onto that).

All in all, my new year’s eve was far better than expected, and I hope that theme continues into the thick of 2014.

This is me theoretically basking in the new light of a January morn.

This is me theoretically basking in the new light of a January morn.

*This is not strictly true. Bacon urgency is not dependent on a hangover.

Book Review: Full Dark House by Christopher Fowler (2004)

full-dark-houseIsn’t it lovely when something turns out to be an unexpected treat? I read a lot, I read all sorts of stuff, and I don’t always choose my reading matter with some highfalutin, intelligent purpose in mind. In fact, I often pick a new book to read on a complete whim – because I need something to read and it’s there, because the cover stood out, because the author has an amusing name. I’ve discovered some great reads this way, and I was thrilled that this was true of Full Dark House, a recent selection made purely out of the blue. I was unfamiliar with Christopher Fowler, but I needed a quick fix and it sounded like a page turner – with a quirky cover to boot.

The first in a series of British mysteries, Full Dark House opens with a bomb destroying the London headquarters of the Met’s Peculiar Crimes Unit (PCU) and ending the 60 year partnership of its longest serving detectives. Bryant and May’s first case together – a ‘phantom’ stalking a controversial new production of Orpheus in the Underworld during the Blitz – seems to be connected. But how?

With parallel stories cutting between the present and 1940, a cast of memorable characters, and Fowler’s ability to paint a sometimes far-fetched plot with enough charm to render it plausible, Full Dark House was tough to put down. The writing is energetic and effervescent, brimming with wit and clever turns of phrase, and full of engaging and unexpected plot twists. Fowler conjures a vivid image of London during the Blitz, and the mythic, bleak setting amplifies the sinister nature of the crimes to great effect. The Palace Theatre looms large in the narrative, as much a character as any of the production company players.

The PCU deals with ‘unusual’ matters – the sort of crimes that call for a different way of looking at things. At times echoing the quirkiness of Douglas Adams’ Dirk Gently, Fowler weaves mythology and elements of the supernatural seamlessly into his fast paced novel. Bryant, with his eccentricities and unorthodox methods, and May, with his dapper charm and logical brain, leap off the page as they try to solve this gothic mystery, successfully avoiding staid ‘odd couple’ clichés. The pairing is part Sherlock Holmes, part Fox Mulder, and ultimately it is their solid friendship that makes Bryant and May a hugely entertaining, immensely likeable duo.

Though I discovered him only recently and at random, Christopher Fowler has written numerous novels and short stories across several genres, and to much critical acclaim. Among his award successes, he won the August Derleth Award (Best Novel) for Full Dark House at the British Fantasy Awards in 2004.  With eight other titles in the series, Bryant and May have been added to my list of guaranteed future reading.

10 Things That 10 Weeks of Roller Derby Has Taught Me

I couldn’t shake the nerves. I bent lower to tie my laces, eyes downcast, heart thumping a tattoo in my chest. Before me, on the track, they glided along like swans on the water; graceful, natural. Their speed was effortless, their movements fluid. I knew my own movement was ungainly, my speed non-existent, my balance intermittent at best. I watched as one girl spun around and in one seamless motion was skating backwards. I felt a knot in my stomach. What if I couldn’t even go forwards? I rolled a skate experimentally on the floor. Indoor boards were new. Indoor boards were slippery. Start slow, I told myself. Get a feel for the floor. Don’t be intimidated. Then, more forcefully, don’t make an idiot of yourself.

*   *   *   *

Back in January I went along to the first fresh meat intake session for 2013 being run by Adelaide’s mixed gender roller derby league, Light City Derby. I was terrified and no amount of smiling, welcoming faces could put me quite at ease. Two good skating buddies came with me, thank goodness, and we threw ourselves into the first session. It was challenging but it was rewarding. High on endorphins and inspired by what we saw around us, we stuck with it and went back the next week, and the next.

I watched myriad bruises blossom over my body, felt oceans of sweat pour down my forehead and back, and fought with my inner demons who insisted for weeks that I was wasting my time. I kept trying, listened to the words of encouragement from league members and tried to take on board every tip they could offer. At the end of ten weeks, I didn’t pass my skills test but ticked off more skills than I ever thought I could. But the experience of those ten weeks was more than ticks in boxes. People say roller derby has this strange power that reverberates through your life, making it more than a sport. My first fresh meat experience taught me some big lessons, and I think they’re lessons that can apply outside of derby too. I’m no derby expert, and not everyone’s experience would be the same as mine, but in ten short weeks, this is what it I learned:

1.       Falling down is a good thing

One thing that’s guaranteed in roller derby is that you will fall down. My first hurdle was letting it happen instead of freaking out and flailing my limbs around trying to stay upright. It was scary being so far outside of my comfort zone and knowing I could take a tumble and hurt myself trying to do something my skills weren’t quite up to. Despite this, I knew my skills would never be up to it if I didn’t try. It only took a few falls to realise that falling down wasn’t going to kill me, that I could pick myself back up, keep going, and get better.

2.       Don’t worry about what everyone else is doing

It took me ages to figure this one out. For the first few weeks I felt like I wasn’t keeping up. It seemed to me I was last to pick up baseball slides, slowest on track for endurance, completely unable to jump, while other Freshies were leaping tall buildings in a single bound. Finally, on the verge of quitting, I figured out what was wrong. I had been so worried about how I compared to others that I forgot to focus on developing at my own pace. No one was worrying about me. They were focusing on their own abilities, their own problem areas, mastering a new skill.

3.       No one will laugh at you for messing up

A lot of the training drills weren’t easy, and I usually felt out of my depth. At first it surprised me when I made mistakes and no one told me to give up and take up knitting instead. There were always people there to pick me up, dust me off, point out where I went wrong and encourage me to keep trying. After all, they had to start somewhere too.

4.       There is no substitute for practice

It seems an obvious thing to say, but roller derby really does give back what you put in. Weeks where I was short on practice time were more challenging than weeks where I made extra effort to get out and skate between training. Spending extra time on wheels was the best thing I could do.

5.       Asking for help is not a sign of weakness

Once I realised that no one was judging me harshly for not quite nailing crossovers yet, I discovered that if someone can do something and you can’t, chances are they will be more than happy to give you some pointers. They’re not trying to outshine you, and they won’t think less of you if you say, “I need help with that, can you show me?” They’ll more likely give you a pat on the back for wanting to learn.

6.       I can do stuff I didn’t think I could do

Here’s a secret. My worst enemy is not the blocker who I know is about to hip check me into next week. It’s me. I talk myself out of doing things all the time by assuming I’ll be bad at them. I’m uncoordinated, I’ll say. Not strong enough. Not a natural. What training showed me, was that I can do things. I can even do some of them well. And that’s with wheels strapped to my feet! What else have I been missing?

7.       Your muscles will love you for using them

Sure, they’ll scream at you the next day and you’ll hobble around the office or uni or home like a cowboy, but your muscles really love that you’re using them. I have a desk job, write a lot, and love a good book or movie. That’s a lot of sitting. I’ve never been sporty and don’t go to the gym. What that meant was my body really copped it when training started. But the sudden shift has made the difference I feel more noticeable. I’m fitter, happier, more productive (thanks, Radiohead!).

8.       Being surrounded by like minded, talented people is good for the soul

There’s nothing more satisfying than being surrounded by people who are on the same wavelength as you. You share a common interest and can giggle when you knock each other over. By far the best thing about roller derby so far, for me, has been the awesome people who make it happen. They are inspiring, supportive and fun, and work hard to make newbies like me feel welcome as they induct me into the derby world.

9.       Roller derby  is a totally awesome sport

Athleticism, major speed and cat-like agility. A fast paced game with hard hits and big falls. Clever names and fishnets. On wheels. What’s not to love?

10.   I am going to keep going

Really, as I went through the ten weeks of training, I ran the full gamut of emotions. I experienced phases of seeing improvement, of hitting a plateau, of completely screwing up, and of improving again; I’ve had low moments and I’ve had major boosts in confidence. I’ve spoken a lot in this post about the benefits of soldiering on, and I think that’s the point. Perhaps most importantly, I learned the benefit of pushing myself to keep going, and that’s what I intend to do. Roll on Fresh Meat v2.0!

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