Posted in Fiction

One Kind Word Can Warm Three Winter Months…

Japanese proverb

Waiting for the bus after the gym. A coffee with my journal.

It’s still winter here but the solstice has passed and the days are getting longer. Being so far south we start getting very dark and dreary around 4:30 pm. Did I mention cold?

This was a pretty quiet week with not much on so I just focused on wellness meaning I did not fall off the reformer at Pilates class. I have always had such good balance but now when standing on that moving carriage while doing squats I use the balance pole. It’s important to know your limits whether liking it or not.

I finished up the book The Force of Nature, about the three women walking the John Muir Trail in the North American rockies. It was an interesting read but not as good as the next bit of travel writing I am listening to.

Not the image I would choose for this cover.

My way-My way- a Camino memo by film director Bill Bennett. Bill Bennett was born in England and raised in Brisbane, Queensland. He started university as a medical student but ended up working as a journalist for Australian Broadcasting . He then moved into the film industry as a film director, producer and screen writer. He has won awards from the Aus Film Institute but I am not familiar with any of his films.

He is 59 yrs old and had wanted to walk the Camino trail in Spain for years but finally bit the bullet. He couldn’t say why but the story of his travels focuses on his thoughts of changing his competitive nature, anger, rudeness and a general bombastic nature. He doesn’t present as a very man to get along with due to his string ego and arrogant manner. He does come face to face with these traits and refers to himself as Bill (his arrogant self) or Camino Bill where he behaves in a milder, more gentle and generous behaviour. He wants to use this experience to change and he often sits in the backs of churches along the way to reflect on this entire experience and what it means to him.

I have read a few books about the Camino pilgrimage. Many of them dive into the history or the terrain almost completely. This book is enjoyable to me because he is excellent at describing people and sharing their stories. He loves talking to people. He loves stories. His wife accuses him of interrogating people but he can’t help himself as he really wants to know the stories of those he meets. He does mention the churches, the food and the climate and terrain but the main focus of his trip is the people.

I am listening to this on audible. I enjoy books on audible that are told in the first person. However the narrator is a woman and I didn’t check that when I downloaded the book. I thought it would feel like it was a woman doing the walk instead of the man. But that hasn’t happened. I have a very clear image of Bill being male and the narration has not bothered me at all. I hardly notice it. I will finish this in no time as I am really enjoying it.

I didn’t do any photography this week but I did spend time editing photos and studying videos and written work on street photography. I’ll post a couple of photos I edited.

An older photo I took of a canal in Amsterdam. It needed cleaning up.
This was originally a colour photo but changed it and cropped extra trees out of it. New South Wales coast.

This coming week will be much busier. I have my annual MS appt with my neurologist but that is a walk in-walk out appt. He says hello, checks my balance and hand strength and wishes me well for another year. I am fortunate my MS has always been quite benign.

I have a photo club meeting and an excursion to a small country town north of here to take photos. I’ll do a separate photography post on that.

I have Adam’s book club at Fullers mid week to discuss The Sea The Sea by Iris Murdoch. Looking forward to that. Then later in the week is an Agatha Christie play at our Playhouse theatre with a couple of friends. Should be fun. Sets are always good for her stories.

That about wraps up the week. I have been thinking about the books I read and rather than writing plots and thoughts of a book I have finished in my book journal, I have started to think of the image, a picture that represents the book. If your book was to be illustrated what would the photos be?

For The Sea The Sea I see a photo in my mind of the rocks and the angry waves upon them. I also see the living room of the old house as though a set from a play. In My Way- My Way I see Bill Bennett limping down a dirt trail with fields on either side of him. A clear sky overhead. Another image is of him sitting in the cafe having his Coke Zero with four glasses of ice as the Spanish only seem to put two cubes in each glass and he wants as much ice as he can get.

Question for today: What is the image in your head of the current book you are reading or have just read? What is the first photo that comes to mind? Think what is your first illustration that comes to mind?

Lift yourself up this week with a good book and something fun.

Posted in Fiction

A Very Cold Sunday

“What good is the warmth of summer, without the cold of winter to give it sweetness.” 

LIFE

You awake in the morning, listening to the rain. The bed is warm and cozy. Your fuzzy dogs are near. What do you do?

I got up, made a hot coffee, jumped into my gym gear and drove to the gym where I proceeded to do a 30 minute jog on the treadmill, some arm weight machines, and a lot of stretches while listening to geared up tunes. I had to tell myself winter cold is a state of mind and you’ll feel really good if you get yourself some exercise.

While I prefer to walk outdoors it isn’t always possible or comfortable with the cold rain.

BOOKS

I am almost finished with the latest book I’m enjoying called Force of Nature by Joan M. Griffin.

This is the story of three women in their fifties who hike the 200 mile John Muir track through 200 miles of mountains.

From google– The John Muir Trail passes through what many backpackers say is the finest mountain scenery in the United States. This is a land of 13,000-foot and 14,000-foot peaks, of lakes in the thousands, and of canyons and granite cliffs. The John Muir Trail is also a land blessed with the mildest, sunniest climate of any major mountain range in the world.

The trail is 211 miles long and runs (mostly in conjunction with the PCT) from Yosemite Valley to Mount Whitney, in California. Winding through the famed Sierra Nevada, the JMT visits some of the crown jewels of America’s park system: Yosemite, John Muir and Ansel Adams Wildernesses, Kings Canyon and Sequoia National Parks end of google

I am enjoying the camaraderie of the walkers with each other and others on the trail. The adventure is high. It is an arduous track and the challenges are hard at times not to mention the enormous lightning storms around them with little shelter. The blurb on the book compares this book to A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson. I wouldn’t go that far. Bill Bryson is a much better writer than this one as he is a professional writer and he is also much, much funnier. There is a bit of naval gazing from the women which Bryson doesn’t do but I would still recommend this book to readers who enjoy stories of middle aged or older women who get out of their comfort zone to take on challenges, whatever they may be.

PHOTOGRAPHY

I did a good walk in town of a few kilometres walking around Hobart, then up to North Hobart to a cafe for a cappuccino and a slice of lemon tart. The cappuccino was a bit of a disappointment as I ordered it in a cup and it was served in an espresso cup. Who does that? I was in too good of a mood to complain. I don’t know if it was a newly hired young staff member or a money saving exercise by this particular cafe who has been known for that but I just moved on. Such a first world issue.

On my local travels in Hobart and back to the bus stop I chatted to some women I found interesting. Either their culture, dress or smile attracted my attention. Here are the three lovely women.

I loved this beautiful, colourful outfit. The colours were just gorgeous.
This young woman was so interesting to me in her gothic dress. It always interests me when someone takes the time, especially on a cold winter’s day to express themself through an outfit.
The two of is sat together at the bus stop and chatted. She is a migrant from Sudan and has been in South Hobart for 17 years. She recently moved to South Hobart where I live and her home is just down the road. She was beautiful and her English was remarkable.

COMING UP...

I have an 85th birthday lunch this week with a dear friend. Then Tuesday I have another dinner with some of my older friends. One is 89 and she just had a bad fall but she’s already up and about and back to her job at a community centre she works at. We are a tough bunch. Other than the social business, we should all engage in for better health, I hope to have a photography day out and of course two more gym sessions.

Now feeling so self righteous for my gym work today I’ll be sure to have a slice of cake or two this evening to celebrate. I made the cake yesterday and cake is a treat to us so I don’t feel bad at all.

ANIMALS…

Our beautiful wet Ollie. Weather never bothers him. He spent the first 12 weeks of his life with his breeder living outdoors and he loves it! He often sits outdoors for as long as an hour at night, in the dark listening to the owls and the possums and the neighbours and often doesn’t want to come in. He appreciates his time alone without the other pets and us around. Such a deep thinker.

GETTING TO KNOW MY READER FRIENDS…

What is a challenging or memorable experience you had out of or in your comfort zone?

Until next week, stay well.

I love this weather!!!
Posted in Fiction

There is more treasure in books than in all the pirate’s loot on Treasure Island. Walt Disney

Hi people 🌻

LIFE

The golden possum who comes into our yard quite often for a carrot. They lack a pigment that makes them blonde instead of black/brown and they tend to skip a generation.

MORE LIFE:

I decided to post up something today because I am trying to kill some time. I have a colonoscopy tomorrow 😏 and of course the prep is today. Without going into too much detail…six yrs ago I received the kit our government sends out people of a certain age for bowel screening. I am one of the few that used it and it came back positive so had to have a check up. After the colonoscopy then I was told there was a small pre-cancerous growth and it was removed. Three yrs later I was still clear as I had to change some of my diet and take a light medication. If I’m clear tomorrow I don’t need to go back for five years. I know people don’t like to talk about it, but in Australia bowel cancer kills more people than heart disease so if you’ve not had this procedure maybe think about it more seriously. I am grateful for having been sent the kit six yrs ago. This has been your public health message for the day. 😃

I’m not going to illustrate a colonoscopy 😜

BOOKS:

On a better note, I finished Charlotte Wood’s latest book, Stone Yard Devotional. The blurb on the book states:

“A woman abandons her city life and marriage to return to the place of her childhood, holing up in a small religious community hidden away on the stark plains of the Monaro.*

She does not believe in God, doesn’t know what prayer is, and finds herself living this strange, reclusive life almost by accident. As she gradually adjusts to the rhythms of monastic life, she finds herself turning again and again to thoughts of her mother, whose early death she can’t forget.

Disquiet interrupts this secluded life with three visitations. First comes a terrible mouse plague, each day signalling a new battle against the rising infestation.

Second is the return of the skeletal remains of a sister who left the community decades before to minister to deprived women in Thailand – then disappeared, presumed murdered.

Finally, a troubling visitor to the monastery pulls the narrator further back into her past.

With each of these disturbing arrivals, the woman faces some deep questions. Can a person be truly good? What is forgiveness? Is loss of hope a moral failure? And can the business of grief ever really be finished?’

I found the tale to just be a steady, almost linear narration, if that can be said, with a lot of dipping into the past. I enjoyed the writing but at times it moved around from topic to topic and I had to back track again. I thought the descriptions of the location were good but I didn’t always feel much for the characters. The description of the nun who died was more of an outline but the time leading up to the arrival of her bones at the premises were more descriptive. She had been missing for several years and then her remains found. Permission had to be granted by authorities to bury her at the convent.

I never completely understood the reasons why the protagonist left her home, husband and all she had for her childhood memories , yet it seemed she had to in order to come to terms with her mother’s death and a couple of other issues. Then interwoven throughout the entire story, like fabric on a loom was this enormous mouse plague that is very gruesome in its description. Mice eating the head of a pigeon, running in the neighbouring fields in their thousands, making so much noise in the walls of the buildings.

Then a couple of other characters are thrown in who went to school with the woman, causing more childhood memories. One was a woman who was bullied by the protagonist in high school and she is trying to overcome her feelings of guilt now she is an adult.

It is a story I’m not likely to forget, the tempo of the book was steady but I got a bit bored with the repetitive memories but I am the type of person who just wants people to ” get on with it”.😳 o others may not be bothered.

I think overall there was more to enjoy than not enjoy. I like her writing. The other book I read by Charlotte Woods was the Weekend which I really liked but that dealt in memories also. I thought that book was more cohesive in the telling of the tale.

But do feel free to disagree with me. I’d like to know what others thought. I’ve not read reviews yet but now I’m finished I will.

PHOTOGRAPHY

I didn’t do any this week but did study it a bit and edited some of my fungi photos. I will include a favourite below.

Fungi at Mt Field national park in southwestern Tasmania.
June 2024

FAMILY:

Ollie’s big news is he learned how to shake hands. That little fuzzy paw sticking out is just the cutest thing I’ve seen in awhile. Peannie doesn’t have it yet. She is too food focused on the treat. I really thought she’d get it before him as she is so smart at other things. She figured out that after the postie delivers mail to the front of house where mailbox is, he then drives his postie motorbike up the road and around the curve and passes the gate at the back of our yard. So the routine is: bark at postie at mailbox in the front, then run as fast as she can to the back of the yard and watch him drive by again. Ollie is right behind her but she is much faster. Ollie wasn’t sure why he was running after her in such a panic but now he gets it. Dogs are so funny.

I hope all of you have a good week.

MY QUESTION FOR THE WEEK:

What made you laugh this week?

Bye for now ❤️