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Showing posts with label booze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label booze. Show all posts

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Entry for May 24, 2007: Dark

In an earlier blog entry I mentioned the season of ‘Daylight Savings’ which has long past and no I am barely tolerating the season of ‘I hate that it’s dark when I get home in the evenings.’

There were a few other Swim Dizzy defined seasons, and I’ve got a two more to add...
  • Red wine season which tends to be the cooler months of the year.
  • And there is GNT season, which is when the weather warms up a bit.
  • Then there is the Micro season of Scotch on the rocks, which occurs at the end of a night of drinking Cider.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Entry for April 21, 2007: Another of my very irregular weekly summations.

I had some great comments on my Melbourne trip by the usual suspects. I think I now have a deeper appreciation of some of these individuals. I have to heartily agree with Hot Claws, that alcohol is a wonderful thing.
The reflections thing in the video is something that I’m building an internal fixation with. I like the additional content in each frame, and confusion that the reflection adds to a shot.
Gypsy mentioned vanilla flavoured cigars, which coincidentally was what my companion was smoking.

Specking of video.
I've posted some clips from my time on a boat off the coast of Spain last year on the Lonely Planet web site.
There is a competition on, where the video with the top number of ratings wins a new computer and camera.
I could use a new camera

Ordinarily I wouldn't spruik people like this, but it's the Lonely Planet, who are a pretty cool travel book type company, and their Ozzie.

It’s a good site, and there are lots of interesting homemade travel videos to look at, so it’s not like I’m inviting people to an Amway meeting :-)


Earlier in this blog I posted a video of the shenanigans occurring around the perimeter of the V festival which was staged earlier in the year.
I made a comment on how I was surprised how lax the security was compared with other festivals I’d seen.

Click here for previous entry...


There have been recent news reports detailing the excessive advertising that was displayed within the festival. This included a few commentators criticizing the amount of alcohol promotion that kids were being exposed to.
I guess the organizes might have been more interested in getting the kids eyeballs inside the gig then keeping them out.


The Catholics have decided to abolish Limbo.
It’s nice to see the Christians referring to this ‘limbo’ concept as a hypothesis. I wonder what other spiritual constructs will also turn out to be theoretical?
Where does this leave purgatory?

Vatican 'abolishes' limbo

The Vatican has determined that limbo does not exist, opening the gates of heaven to babies who die unbaptised, a member of a high-level theological commission told AFP today.


"The many factors that we have considered ... give serious theological and liturgical grounds for hope that unbaptised infants who die will be saved," says a document published by the US magazine Origins with the approval of Pope Benedict XVI.


The medieval concept of limbo as a place where unbaptised infants spend eternity but without communion with God seems to reflect an "unduly restrictive view of salvation," the document says.


In 1984, when Benedict headed the Vatican's doctrinal enforcement body as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, he said he was "personally" in favour of scrapping the 13th-century notion, which he termed a mere "hypothesis."


"We cannot know with certainty what will happen" when an unbaptised baby dies, said panel member Paul McPartlan. "But we have good grounds to hope that God in his mercy and love looks after these children and brings them to salvation," he said, quoted by the Catholic News Service.


Sunday, January 7, 2007

Entry for January 07, 2007: New years message

Hiya,
It’s a new year and I’m back to blogging.


First up, Christmas.
I can be a 'grumpy old man' when this time of year rolls around.
I don't have a TV so I get to miss a big chunk of the commercialisation type thing, and this has helped reduce the degree of season surliness.
Some of the best Christmas’s I've had, was when I was travelling and living in hostels.
Christmas would be a coming together of all the strangers that were living in the hostel at that moment.
Not having friends and family around forced everyone together and it was simple and nice.

No baggage or expectation, Just food and fellowship.


This year I was a dirty whiner, and told everyone that I was sick of spending the Christmas/New year period isolated in my flat next to the beach in sunny shiny Sydney (yeah I know, I said I was a dirty whiner)
So I had heaps of invitations suddenly appearing (I will take anything from a ‘pity fuck’ down to a ‘pity dinner party’ or ‘pity meet up for a cup of coffee.’)

My immediate relatives and I got together the day before Christmas. Four generations sitting around a long table, the top of which was uneven as it was jerry rigged from a series of small table’s hidden beneath a couple of table cloths.
I think I made the comment ‘when did we become the Walton’s?’
All the girls were trying to out ‘domestic goddess’ each other. All the boys were trying to out talk each other.
At one point I visited the toilet which was down the other end of the house, and realising the I could still hear everyone perfectly, muttered to myself ‘gee we make a lot of noise when we all get together!’

The thing with ‘hanging out’ with family is that I don’t get a choice in who these people are. So I get to hang out with all sorts, including people with right wing political views. These people have started making comments like ‘what a disaster Bush has been,’ and I’m left weirded out that it’s taken them almost seven years to work this out.


Christmas day dawned grey, and it was real quiet out on the streets (I set fire to a couple of cars and no one noticed.)
A ‘quiet one,’ is where the family has disappeared off to celebrations with their partners families.
I detoxed by drinking a few refreshing G&T’s. Ate oven fries, crumbed fish, and drained a bottle of red for Christmas dinner.
Afternoon saw some golden rays bathing the city.


Boxing Day
Saw me arriving for dinner with my mates. A lovely couple who have a deaf little dog, a brilliant liquor cabinet, and who have finally found a sunny corner for their two ‘pot plants.’

Then there was a BBQ with an ‘inner circle’ group from work, so my commitment to building contacts within the industry is proceeding nicely.
There was the usual bitching about our respective employers.
Most of the people had bought their kids along, so in the future I will need to find a child that I can steal for a night.


Chilled out till New Years Eve, where I joined a billon other bodies in the city.
In Sydney a lot of people gather down at the harbour where we watch fireworks mounted to the high curving iron span of the harbour bridge, from barges floating down in the harbour, and from a few of the tall buildings in the city.
The fireworks started and the concussive shock of the ignitions, showers of sparks reflected in walls of windows, the spotlights mounted on the bridge, sweeping the swirling gunpowder smoke haze, was giving me World War Two flash backs, and I wasn’t born then!
One of the rocket platforms floated in the harbour twenty meters away from where I was standing.
My clothing shivered, and the wharf that I was standing on shook with each air burst over head.
Supposedly three tons of crackers where burnt that night.

I was standing close to a group of girls who were screaming in some sort of prepubescent multi orgasmic release.
I kept looking around to see if Robbie Williams or Johnny Depp had suddenly materialised somewhere nearby.
I left around two, and noticed on the way back home that lot’s of women were wearing really impractical footwear. Lots of minuscule-flappy-sandaled-heeled numbers. I reckon some would be cleaning out between their toes when they got home, what with all the debris lying around like mashed cans spilling puddles of beer, cigarette butts, broken glass bottles, vomit, possibly blood, and sticky discarded chips smothered in tomato sauce.

The only people more busy then the buses and street sweepers at two that morning, were the ambulance crews.



Sunday, December 10, 2006

Entry for December 10, 2006: Crap, I feel like crap.

We had the work Christmas party on Friday.

Some genius decided that it would be a good idea to have everyone stand in a field next to a theme park (packed with children on holidays) for three hours, with the only cover being a tree up one end of the paddock.

A large group of us clustered around in the meagre shade, and we were accurately compared to a herd of cows looking for shelter.

Its winter everywhere else it would seem, so I need to set the scene.

Imagine somewhere really hot (Americans can think of Death Valley, Brits will remember Spain in the summer, and Eastern Europeans can use Chernobyl as a benchmark)

Now set a couple of tables out, and across the glaring white tablecloth, marshal regiments made up of bottles of beer, and plastic cups of cheap white wine.

Next door, line up a crew of minimum wage unfortunates (this is minimum wage in Oz so it's not quite as bad as minimum wage in the U.S.) to stand in the sun dressed up like penguins, to man the row of bain-maries filled with sausages, and sweaty chicken drumsticks.

The whole affair was pretty badly organised. It took me more then two hours to discover that there were bottles of champagne and red wine available behind the bar (at least red wine is tolerable when it is lukewarm.)

A work Christmas party, is made up of a crowd of people desperately trying to socialise, and the main thing we have in common, apart from drinking, eating, and fucking (pardon for the language Gypsy) is that we all work for the same company.

Which is why I was desperately trying to steer conversations away from work, cause invariably it would turn into a bitch fest (and I'm really tired of complaining.)

So being as I work in the more technical part of our biz, the conversation gravitated towards talking about Nintendo's new game console, the Wii.

One controls this new game console, by waving around a plastic wand.

It's very kinetic, involving for all ages, and hilarious to watch others play.

After three hours roasting in the sun (I have a touch of red today,) a group of us jumped on a water taxi and headed across the harbour to a boutique brewer over in the city centre.

Over the six hours, others appeared (word of mouth is an amazing thing) and hidden away in the bowls of a harbour side pub, we all allowed the alcohol and the dark closeness to take us under.

There arn't any photos cause I reckon it's a bit rude to take a camera to work functions where there will be booze (hidden microphones I'm ok with.)

I didn't score a snog but there were lots of emotional people sobbing into drinks, and hugs.

There were bosses declaring that they weren't bad people. I told the six foot plus-square jawed-Italian-sky diver, that emotionally he was a five year old, and that he had never suffered (it turned out to be a good call.)

And there was one girl, who was surround by a group of guys, soulfully consoling her about her break up with a boy in the office, who was now dating the blond that had snogged half the guys at last years Christmas party (a group of guys consoling a drunk girl is code for a group of guys jostling to be the one that takes her home.)

There is something about a work Christmas party, and a release of pressure.

Woke up Saturday morning to find a trail of clothes across the flat leading to the shower.

It was a perfect morning lucky. It's been really hot the last couple of days, but the sea breeze blew through the flat, cooling my forehead.

Drank lots of water, napped a bit (once on the floor,) wondered down to the rock pools to molest the crabs for a bit.