Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The Earthrise Diary (JUly 2012)


                                   The Earthrise Diary (July 2012)

© text Don Diespecker 2012; individual © is retained by authors whose writings are included in this text.

           Ah, fill the Cup: --what boots it to repeat
           How time is slipping underneath our Feet:
           Unborn TOMORROW, and dead YESTERDAY,
           Why fret about them if TODAY be sweet!

           From Edward Fitzgerald’s translation of The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam XXXVII

 July 28 2012. In some ways it’s been one of those months, otherwise, July has also been interesting and even exciting. The weather as expected has been cold and wet—and also has been mild and sunny at times. The excitements and stimulations of the Master Class in Brisbane linger pleasantly and continue to inspire a swag of writings that demand much time and energetic imagining—and remembering.
Red cedars in the neighbourhood have leafed and are looking surprisingly pink. Like the flowering wattles certain trees start leafing or flowering in the winter well ahead of spring. I’ve noticed that for a couple of weeks now when driving to Coffs Harbour the wattles are flowering along the highway. I love the smell of flowering wattles and like to put my face close and close my eyes when I sniff that intriguing scent—not that I’ve been doing that on busy highway drives, but I’m reminded of my first acquaintance with flowering wattles in South Africa when I was young—and that distant time has nagged again at memory because I’ve been writing essays about rivers and those scribbles include the Blyde running through Pilgrim’s Rest (blij originally in Dutch and now bly in Afrikaans, meaning “happy”). And I was a happy kid in the old Transvaal most of the time. Mindfully running through some of that imagery in turn reminded me of inviting members of workshop groups to discover what their sense of smell might evoke: almost anything will evoke imagery featuring scenes or experiences from the past when sniffed with one’s eyes closed: the smells of the busy forest, a musty curtain, a sinle bloom of the dark red Joyce carnation.
And at the end of July there’s plenty of leftover anxiety as a consequence of some deep dark problem in the mail department of the computer’s software: my otherwise wonderful Turing machine began resisting my attempts to reach my Inbox (let me give Turing credit for his ideas that eventuated in our being able to use computers that might have seemed miraculous in his day). Not being able to access email is maddening. It’s just as well that we aren’t all zipping about in interstellar space vehicles and dependent on faultless performances from our onboard computers: we might otherwise never reach our destinations nor ever again see the beautiful blue planet we call home. When my computer’s email becomes inaccessible due to a perverted gizmo beyond the computer (at the so-called server) that behaves as if protecting my computer from access by the world and I have no control over that misguided ‘over-protection’ I’m stymied: I need expert assistance. Ironically I’ve been permitted to send emails, but have not been allowed to receive any. I managed to contact my computer teacher, KS, who with his partner has sensibly removed from the madding crowd to another part of the country—on holiday—and where they were so far away as to be virtually in another country. K was in the Kimberley in distant WA, more or less, where the scenery was admirable but the conditions for communications were less so. K’s advice: it would take too long to sort it out by phone; therefore, get the machine to the computer fixer-uppers in Coffs Harbour. –And that’s what I did.
The uncomplaining machine was disconnected from its wires and cables, tenderly carried to the carport and strapped into the back seat of the Honda (the Honda perhaps enjoyed its company and I suspect that the pair of them on such occasions perhaps develop rudimentary (or, who knows, perhaps very advanced) ways of sharing information… (‘What’s up, little Mac?’ ‘Alas, Big Fella, my email Inbox is compromised.’ ‘Yeah, I hear there’s a bit of that going around. Hang in there, little buddy and we’ll get you to the electronic techs.’ ‘Will they respect my frailty?’ ‘Sure they will—or I’ll ensure that the three of us will drive into the fixer-uppers without benefit of their front door.’ ‘Oh!’).
Long story short: I booked the Mac in to the repair shop on Saturday morning, July 14 and coughed up the required $50 toward defraying costs and to keep the Mac in the queue. As there was no chance of the queue diminishing for days I chose to take the machine home again and to use it to complete work on an essay. (The old Honda was perhaps impressed by our speedy return to the car; I left it to the Mac to explain). The reader may begin to suspect that machines in my care are influenced in ways that are anthropocentric, but I’m not yet sure about this because we humans tend to invent parts of the future by writing stories.
July 29 2012. On July 18 the Honda and I navigated the return to the fixer-uppers where I left the Mac to wait her turn and where she was surrounded by enough other computers to launch vehicles to the moon and beyond; she wouldn’t have been in any sense alone, but it was a wrenching moment for me, her driver. No matter how lightly I might write about computer separation I suspect I’m not the only computer driver in the world who has come to depend on these powerful machines. It’s bad enough having to kick my heels for most of a day or even a half day in Coffs Harbour while the Honda receives an expert servicing from the dealers: it’s hellish to not have any access whatsoever to the Mac for a week or more. We are way beyond mere convenience and the requisite partial dependency on computers: it is as if we have chosen to become enslaved to the extent that we can no longer live independently apart from the machines. A USB flash drive or whatever they’re called is a backup, reassurance, even a talisman and a protector, but nothing beats one’s own computer solidly sitting on the worktable and efficiently keeping us In Touch not only with The World, but with the thousands of words of Stuff that may be called to duty at the press of a button: entire drafted novels, a swag of essays, family histories, innumerable documents of varied otherness. Sigh.
By July 25 I was twitching in every fibre and desperate: how would I pay bills that may now imminently be presented to me via the Mac? I planned to be in Coffs Harbour (to shop) and telephoned the fixer-uppers: would my machine be fit for duty if I were to visit during the early afternoon? There was a good chance, I was told, although my poor Mac had only just received pre-med and been prepared for theatre in the last half hour. I took the chance. I would at least be close by and on hand if she was likely to be in recovery by early afternoon. Naturally she was not quite out of danger when breathlessly I visited. No, there was no point in my hanging around and fretting. Yes, Majok or Matthew would phone me, perhaps tomorrow, or if and when. I lurched back to the Honda, a victim of my emotions and began the homeward journey.
At this point I beg to explain that although the Honda can get from the home stable to the fixer-upper’s door in about one and a quarter hours without blowing a gasket or collapsing in a heap, applied stoicism if not heroism is generally required by the Honda’s carer-operator to help by guiding us both over Darkwood Road and the bridges (sections of this rural road are horrible and hellish, to say nothing of the reprehensible driving by some of our rural lost souls and the bitumen ends at Richardson’s Bridge; also, parts of the metalled road near my place appear as if shelled or mortared, the craters now filled with murky water); and there are seven river and two creek bridges between home and the Trunk Road at Thora. For those who came in late the Bellinger is a most beautiful example of a serpentine river (criss-crossed by Darkwood Road). Nobody can ever be bored in the Darkwood. Those of us who live upstream of Richardson’s must grin and bear the dangers of needing to use these unsealed parts of the road (I think of myself, suddenly, as a member of the Unsealed Ones).
I reached Earthrise just a little frazzled and after tenderly stroking the warm exterior of the Honda and offering words of comfort—as one would warm down a favourite riding horse—I tottered over to my house, slumped across the threshold and crawled up to the kitchen for a strong cup of Assam tea, a dash of milk, no sugar. Three gulps later I reached feebly for the phone: there was a message. I listened to Majok’s polite voice and learned that the Mac had just been fixed and was expectantly awaiting her driver. Urgently I called Majok back. What time would they close? About 5.30-ish. I advised I would be there on the fixer-upper’s doorstep, quivering. And I was, all in good time. I rescued my Mac and brought her home. I had returned a second time to home and beauty, stepping very discreetly over the muddy patches and the slippery stones with the Mac in my arms. I divined that the Mac and the Honda had enjoyed each other’s company and I was very happy indeed: I had crossed and recrossed the Bellinger and tributaries 36 times that day (40 if I include the high bridge on the Trunk Road at Thora), the Mac was soon reconnected to her favoured wiring and power source. Darkness was falling and my unfinished cup of tea was cold, but the Mac and I (and not forgetting the old Honda) were home safe, again.
                                                                   *
The temperature now is 18˚, the same as yesterday, but yesterday was cloudier and there had been a breeze that caused the red cedar leaves to bob and sway; today was a little warmer. Both days found me at the back of the belvedere at lunchtime, furtively reading; I have so much on my plate that I’ve felt guilt-ridden if I haven’t spent every waking moment playing catch-up and frantically herding words: the Diary, re-thinging essays and re-submitting some to flinty-eyed unknowable editors at new destinations, endless notes to myself, the new draft of an essay on my adventures in Iran years ago, old diaries and letters to find, and map research in my big Atlas; draft emails to friends, transferring photos from camera to Mac, axing firewood, laundry, dish-washing, remembering to eat. –And walking. The river level is lower: some of the phenomena seen down at Richardson’s Bridge can now be partially seen here at the Plains Bridge (sunlight projecting images through the water to riverbed stones).
To get to sleep I imagined some of the restaurants and dining rooms of long ago: there was the tourist-class dining saloon on the old Gerusalemme, a Lloyd-Triestino vessel that had been a hospital ship in WW II (in 1950 I saved the price of the fare—more than 50 pounds but less than 100 pounds—to travel from Durban to Italy. The tourist class was filled with young and old from everywhere; most of us were young and carefree and if I remember correctly, it was also the time when the Korean War started. The food was wonderfully Italian (a variety of pasta and other dishes) and included at no extra cost were carafes of red wine at lunch and dinner. I began my long flirtation with red wine.
I also remembered low-cost (medical) student restaurants near the Odeon Metro in Paris, the table waitress who used to chuck a damp cloth to whoever sat furthest away and the table was progressively wiped clean. The same waitress would come boldly down from an upstairs kitchen holding balanced in her arms and atop one another all our plates of dinner: Strassbourg sausage or rice or beef stew.
And I remembered innumerable ‘teahouses’ (chaikanas) in Iran that were often in the middle of nowhere, what we might now think of as truck stops and where a plate was always piled high with fluffy white rice, a skewer of kebab and a big square of white ghee and sometimes a raw egg as well and if it could be found outside, a sprig of something green: young blades of wheat and possibly grass on occasions—and in one such place where there was little else but the ‘teahouse’ and desert sand and scrub and a mountain, we were assisted to climb the rock-face base of the adjoining mountain to uncomfortably see ancient rock carvings depicting warriors and weapons and the mighty Darius ((522-486). –That was Behistun in western Iran and on the rock-face, there was a cuneiform inscription in Old Persian, Elamite and Babylonian that provided a key for the decipherment of cuneiform in other languages (the rock carvings are enormous and dangerously high (about 100-ft) above the ground and the artists/stonecutters removed a convenient viewing ledge before leaving the site more than 2,000 years ago: the panel is 15-m high x 25-m wide. Brilliant art perilously made and displayed—what other eatery on Earth could boast that a stone’s throw from the ‘restaurant’?
In snowy Sarajevo: rich spicy meat dishes—lots of meat—and a roaring clientele and the restaurant filled with smoke and laughter during that ‘austere’ time in the old Yugoslavia in the mid ‘50s: somehow we were included in the most friendly way. And somewhere in Denmark in the 1950s in a small country town Pam and I joined the Sunday Lunch locals when the main course was new potatoes in their jackets, butter melting overall and the casseroles hot and steaming—and where we were made welcome: those new potatoes made a delicious main course.
 
Creative Writing

Welcome to visiting writers: my cousin Jill in Vancouver, British Columbia; my friend Russell Atkinson who lives in Bellingen, NSW, and my friend and psychologist colleague, John Morris who lives at Kiama, on the South Coast of NSW. –Each of us, I’ve just realized, are retired from the busy marketplace. The theme this month has enabled my guests to focus on vehicles.

                                                The Gas Gauge
                                                                                                                      Jill Alexander

 One day last month my friend Signe and I headed off to my cabin for a few days. The cabin is situated in the foothills of Mt. Baker, not far from the Canadian border and on the U.S. side in Washington State. Our plan was to spend a day at an outlet Mall several miles down the freeway from the city of Bellingham, the closest city to the cabin. We headed out in Signe’s car, a 2002 Honda CRV. She loves her car and has mentioned on many occasions that it has never let her down. I took her on an isolated route I knew through back roads and lovely farm country. We felt as though we were in the wilderness, as we saw only an occasional farmhouse and passed only one car. Signe made a couple of comments in passing about her gas gauge and how she thought it hadn’t moved much since we’d left the cabin. All was well until the car shuddered and came to a stop. We soon came to the conclusion that the gauge had been stuck and we were out of gas. The skies had opened and it was pouring rain. The car was well into the road so we put on the 4-way flasher and worked at remaining calm. This became more difficult when we realized there was no cell phone reception. After about 20 minutes we saw a car approaching. It passed us and then stopped and backed up to see what was wrong. A very friendly and kind young couple said they would try on their Smart phone and see if they could get through to BCAA. After several tries and lots of static they finally got through and were connected to the local AA. Miraculously their phone was able to bring up the exact location of our car to pass on. We were told that there might be a 90 minutes wait as the AA driver was on another call. So we said goodbye to our Good Samaritans and sat in the car out of the rain. Signe and I have known each other for over 50 years so we soon were reminiscing about the past and events we tried to remember from our nursing and university days. The time went quickly and exactly ninety minutes later the truck arrived with two gallons of gas and directions for us to the closest gas station. Two hours later we arrived at the Mall and carried on with our plan as if nothing had happened. On our way home we stopped for dinner at a pub close to the cabin called the North Fork Brewery, Pizzeria and Wedding Chapel. The owner is a minister from some obscure spiritual church who brews this great beer, cooks the best pizzas and occasionally puts out a sign that reads: “Closed. Wedding in session.” 
Our little holiday ended with a few days of walks, reading, listening to music and playing two-handed bridge, all around a roaring open fire in the living room.

     Jill Diespecker Alexander is a retired nurse and business owner and is presently writing her life story.
 jillalexander@shaw.ca
                                                             *
                                                      Clive’s Bike

                                                                                                                       Russell Atkinson

After some argument I removed all the valuables from my pocket and put them on the curb. “Look here Clive, I’ll swap you this tree frog, bunch of keys and these beaut marbles for a ride on your bike to the bottom of the hill”. This removed all of Clive’s objections. Promises to his parents about not letting anybody, especially me, borrow his new bike were overlooked.
As I swung into the saddle to begin my heady descent a chill churned my guts and a presentiment moved behind the happy anticipation of a speedy downhill, no-hands, wind-whistling ride. I don’t remember much after that or before it. 
Reports varied, but the consensus opinion was that the front wheel of the bike was flipped at right angles to my descent by contact with a stone and I was catapulted into the air like a rocket. Maybe twenty feet up according to one startled witness 
The first part of the hurtling body to hit the road was the skull. It was a heady ride indeed. Concave fracture of the scull with a star fracture on the left side; assurances to my parents by the doctors of my immediate demise; months comatose in Manly Hospital; assurances to my long-suffering parents of a miracle at my survival but dark hints of permanent damage. Distraught, Mother enlisted the aid of a Christian Science healer, who had a word to God about the situation. For some obscure reason inscrutable Providence decided to heal my cracked skull and start me once again up the long winding road.  
Slowly the visual and auditory senses wavered back into some semblance of a world. Like a newborn baby I learned to put it all together again. Of course, having done it once was a great help, though it has often occurred to me that whatever was learned prior to the ride has had little effect after it. So without my being a Christian I contrived to having been twice born. I was thirteen. The year was 1943.
Being born at all is the first error we all make, but being born at the start of the Great Depression is an added error of bad timing.
So it is that hearsay, a few blurred memories and a photograph or two testify to the fact of my presence on the planet prior to the event that became known in the family as Russell’s Accident. It was pronounced in capital letters to distinguish it from all the other accidents.

     Russell Atkinson is a much-published author (books and articles on   Hindu philosophy, memoirs, and aspects of naturopathy).
     E: theako@westnet.com.au
     Blogsite: www.theoldestako.wordpress.com
                                                                   *
                                                The Beer-Sodden Rover

                                                                                                                              John Morris

   Melbourne—cold and wet—late lecture at the Uni of Melbourne. I have an hour before Money and Banking ll (maybe in today's terms MB 2010). I look at my watch—mmm—5.30 pm and lecture at 6.30 so I have to wait an hour before I can get into the warm Public Lecture Theatre (now there’s an oxymoron if ever there was one). The PLT is freezing at this time of year but less freezing than outside.  Generally it’s warm enough for me to nap intermittently while Sammy Weller (aged Professor of Economics) discourses on the pluses and minuses of the gold standard, and Greshams's Law. 
But wait—some relief is at hand—in the late afternoon I generally craved a beer and maybe because that craving lay in my money and banking sub conscious I recalled that a can of Fosters possibly lay in the boot of my car awaiting some crisis such as this to leap into the here and now. 
The car in question was my new Rover, a car I had saved for and denied my wife and myself the fruits of my long and subservient employment with the State Government of Victoria. I fondly imagined that I was the envy of all other motorists and that they would be so impressed on confronting my prestigious vehicle they would immediately grant me right of way.  I was in the habit of sneering at those with Holdens and Fords and even the little monsters from the Morris Garage (MG's) which were all the rage at the time This fantasy gave me relief from the ever-present acknowledgement that I was indeed a lowly servant of the public at a wage that was to be truly sneered at and that I aspired to being well above my current station in life.
Be that as it may, this quite upmarket machine, one from the great days of British motoring almost certainly held the highly prized can of beer in its bosom. So I gathered my poncho around me (stolen from the quartermaster of the Melbourne University Regiment during my days as an anti tank gunner) and dashed through the rain to the car near the Union Building.  Had I any inkling of the pain to come I would certainly have chosen a non-alcoholic libation at the Union Caf. 
   Leaping into the car to avoid any further drenching I found the can tucked away in the boot.  Sadly, it had lost its chill and was in an almost lukewarm state, doubtless due to its proximity to the exhaust pipe. I was not deterred.  Now, in those days there were no such things as a can which came with a built-in opening device or tab to pull and so the thought came starkly "How the f ... am I going to be able open this thing?” The chill of the late afternoon and the beating of the rain against the windshield and the need for momentary alcoholic respite from the reality of my position at the bottom of the employment ladder ensured that my basic plan was not jettisoned. Beer cans at that time were made of steel, not aluminium, and constructed so as to require more than ordinary force to access the contents A lever with an arrow-shaped cutter which was clamped onto the rim of the can was what was needed.  Unfortunately, on this occasion it was as unobtainable as was a high grade for me in M and B II.  Finally, my mind traversed through the contents of the car toolbox searching for viable tools and/or procedures for opening obdurate cans of Foster's Lager. Then I all but shouted, "Voila!" "Ecco!" "Yessss!" The image of an available hammer and screwdriver emerged from the thought bubble.
Of course it was too wet and windy to open the can outside of the car and so I sat the can on the car floor, positioned the head of the screwdriver on the centre of the can and gave it a decent whack.  But this was an extraordinarily resilient can.  The screwdriver just bounced off the tough steel top of the can.  So I whacked the driver again and again until the resisting metal succumbed and rewarded me with the hiss of escaping gas. I was ready for another whack but my vision was obscured by the   cloud of beer vapour issuing from a tiny hole I had managed to pierce in the can. The cloud increased in intensity.  I had lost control of the situation.  It was impossible to either get the screwdriver to widen the hole and it certainly could not be plugged. I had become the victim of this colourful application of the laws of Physics that had to do with the pressure inside and the pressure outside of a container, the temperature gradients applying, and the contribution of the tiny orifice at the centre of this micro disaster. The contribution of my own stupidity did not escape me. 
Now dear reader, my colleagues, a jealous bunch, had often suggested that my car was no more than a middle aged, middle class vehicle. While these observations hurt I clung to my complex of superiority. However, while its fittings and performance were of a superior kind it did have an Achilles Heel. It had been designed with a grey felt lining that matched the colour of the upholstery.  No thought had been given to the propensity of this material to absorb toxic evil-smelling beer vapour.  The fabric dealt with the misty beer spray as a cobra deals with a mongoose. Not one square foot of the lining was denied its full share of the Foster's Brewery product.  I winced.  I swore blue oaths. I cried and invoked all manner of gods and demons to ward off the full realization of the consequence of this tragic moment. The car, in my eyes, was now all but worthless.
There was no way the car could be restored to its former glory. I tried everything I could think of including ammonia, desiccated lemon peel, onion and garlic puree, new car spray, and several full cans of toilet deodorant.  There was no way to reduce the smell. It had become a built- in feature of the car. I got to the stage where I did not even want to drive it to work fearing I would be contaminated and my puzzled clients would seek other counsel.  The sneer value of my chariot had evaporated but the beer had not.  The jealous colleagues who later travelled with me would sniff the odd perfume and feigning innocence would enquire as to its origin.  I was cut to the quick when one passenger exclaimed, "What the hell has been going on in this car?" Ladies were too polite to draw attention to it and thereby elicit what might be a very embarrassing response.  I usually played dumb and usually deflected the proffered insults and asked, "Is it that noticeable?" One bright spark advanced the notion that the smell closely resembled that of a Hong Kong Brothel at the peak of the hot season.  His acquaintance with the low life in Hong Kong might be questionable but the accuracy of his statement was not.

John Morris spent a heap of Catch 22 years in the Regular Air Force and Army and retreaded to do the same thing in Departments of Psychology in several universities.
John presently resides in Kiama, NSW, contemplating the vicissitudes of life and the vagaries of the Tasman Sea.
vk2bes10@bigpond.com

                                                                             *
Next Month: Diary readers are cordially invited to write about an experience in a well-remembered eatery or eateries: "An unforgettable eatery experience (cafĂ©, teahouse or chaikana, diner, coffee shop, self-serve, restaurant or banqueting hall) where you ate an unforgettable meal--anywhere in the world. Unforgettable may mean something wonderful or something awful..." I’ll be pleased to include such writings in the next (August 2012) Diary if you will kindly send them to me as email attachments.  don883@bigpond.com
July 30 2012. It goes quickly, doesn’t it? I sat in the sun again at lunchtime today. The sun was pleasantly warm. I read more of Wallace Stegner’s Crossing to Safety. I like his style. The story is set in 1937 and is about two couples that meet and become good friends; each of the husbands teaches in the English Department of an American university; one of those protagonists narrates the story. Good writing and good thoughts between the lines. It’s an American Classic.
Earlier this month I also read Ian McEwan’s Enduring Love, an unusual story and a page-turner. The author’s language is clear and sharp—he has a way with words and puts the right one always in the right place. The plot focuses on a peculiar and troubling psychological condition. A good read.
On reflection: I now realize that I need help in several departments. I’ll have to have access to a 24/7 IT trouble-shooting genius computer fixer-upper, at least one versatile gardener who can double as chauffeur at times of stress (mine, not his or hers) who also is a motor mechanic, Also, I’ll need a cook/house-maid, a scullion, a genius or comprehending person who understands Income Tax forms and has the ability to complete my Return without needing to ask a single question of me, and a gamekeeper or two with expertise in chiding restless brush turkeys and probably bandicoots that overdo hole-digging in what otherwise I could call ‘my lawns’ and prevent possums from playing Extreme Catching Games at night across my steel roof. Additionally I’ll require  a physiotherapist/osteopath/ENT specialist/cardiovascular specialist, and a bodyguard to watch my back and protect me from fishing eagles, wild dogs, giant goannas and water dragons and bad-tempered poisonous snakes in the dangerous garden.

Time to go. Thanks to Jill, John and Russell for permission to include some of their writings. Be well, all. Best from Don.