18 November
2009
Rain on the roof at the right time this morning,
all caught up on my jobs,
no reason to get up until the rain stopped.
Just one tiny job in my inbox when I do –
looks like it's gonna be a skint xmas.
We Exotic Refugees
Refugees and migrants from all
over the world
make life much more interesting
and colourful
and – if they venture into food
enterprises – flavourful
here in Hamilton .
It would be even better, for me
at least,
to benefit as much as possible
from contact with their diverse
cultural outlooks
if they’d venture out more from
the safety
of the company of their own
people
into situations in which I
could meet and joke with them,
as I’ve been lucky to do with a few.
I know how they must feel,
though,
about mixing with other people
who seem unsettling to them.
Shit, how I know how they must
feel!
Drawing A Distinction
When
I’m composing and performing
these
little observations, recollections,
musings,
narratives, and rants
I’m
completely without fear
of
any audience, or of anything
in regard to
trying to tell the truth.
At
almost all other times, however,
I’m paralysed by
constant terrors.
Another Distinction
Solitude is when being all alone
seems to be the most preferable
of several attractive alternatives.
Loneliness is when being all alone
seems to be the least noxious
of several unattractive ones.
New Year’s Eve
My younger daughter was born on New Year’s Eve –
most considerate of her,
tax-wise,
there on Guam ,
but it’s never
been a celebratory time for me.
I’ve never been all that big on New Year’s Eve.
The last time I stayed up past midnight to welcome in a year,
drinking and carrying on and stuff,
was at the end of 1962 and the start of 1963.
The next year I was on an airplane
on the evening of December 31,
and by the following year
I was staying up drinking almost every evening anyhow,
and saw it as amateur night.
Then I got a dog whose birthday was December 30,
and for several years
entertained
guests on the eve before new year’s.
Going to bed early on December 31
has become a point of honour for me.
It suits my critical viewpoint,
my social deficiencies,
and my misanthropic reclusiveness.
It’s a part of my identity,
something that my last wife
was incapable of understanding.
My Status
My relationship status is
divorced –
divorced from too many wives
and lovers,
divorced from people in
general,
divorced from family in any
meaningful way,
divorced from nature,
divorced from life.
I Do Have A Friend
I do have a friend –
a real friend,
more than just a pleasant
acquaintance,
or a facebook cyber-friend
or somebody I get along with
the rare times we encounter
each other –
I actually have one actual
friend
who comes by about once every week or two
to visit for lunch and to show me her creations
and to see if I’m doing okay.
Sometimes when she doesn’t come by
she calls to check in with me –
or maybe it’s to see if I’m
still alive.
My friend sometimes worries about me.
My friend confides in me and asks my advice.
My friend respects my integrity, my intellect,
and my specialist skills, and I respect hers.
My friend takes things of mine that need fixing,
and either she or her husband fixes them.
My friend hugs me when she’s excited,
or when I’ve helped her or her husband,
or when I just look as if I could use a hug.
My friend shares her triumphs and sorrows with me.
My friend listens to my weird-shit music without complaint.
My friend discusses complex ideas with me.
My friend expresses appreciation
when I help her with her English.
My friend knows when she’s upset me
and seems upset about it herself.
My friend seems to understand
and condone my unhappiness.
It
Figures, Eh?
The only time for years that people just dropped in to visit me
was the only time that I requested that nobody do so.
The
Last Job
Signing on in September 2005
as a contract editor with a
Melbourne-based online editing agency
with the unfortunate name of WordsRU
almost literally saved my life.
I don’t know whether that was fortunate,
unfortunate, or neither,
and I’m not going to explain it here.
For
several years my work for WordsRU
provided
me with a living,
mental
stimulation,
a
sense of accomplishment,
and
a way to pass the time –
sometimes
all too well.
I
had to take a stress break in 2008 after a long stretch of working
eleven and twelve
hour days seven days a week.
Then
the bloke who owned WordsRU had a stroke,
his
middle-aged son took over, and things started to go downhill.
The
son’s management style, for example,
relied
heavily on threats and bullshit,
and my talented
chief editor consequently quit-got-fired.
Eventually
he decided that we needed a new website,
and
through arrogance and incompetence
he
fucked it up,
and business
nose-dived.
Fortunately,
this happened just a couple of months
before
I qualified for national super,
so
I didn’t have to sell my house in order to survive.
I
spent a year with plenty of time to compose verses,
then
saw an ad for copywriters on facebook from a newish agency,
answered it, and
signed on at the end of February 2012.
My
last job for WordsRU was grossly undersold to an irritating client,
but
I didn’t mind,
and
shined on till I finished it,
and
when I was done I felt a whole lot better
than
I had for a long, long time.

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