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freezing night

22 Jun

Steve and I have just signed up for broadband, and we’ve set up a wireless router, so I am quite happily writing this in my room. It’s a freezing night. I’m sitting at my desk, toes burning from the cold. We’ve got two heaters running, I am wearing my nightgown, pyjama bottoms, robe, woolen socks and slippers, and my feet are still freezing. The wind keeps howling past the house and rattling the scaffolding outside. It really is one of the coldest winters New Zealand has had in some time. Down in the South Island, there are people who have been without power for close to two weeks, what with all the heavy, heavy snowfall down there. I don’t know how they are managing. We have power, and it’s still crazily cold.

Friday tomorrow, and I couldn’t be more pleased. I haven’t been well, and the cold is still lingering a bit. Still, I went back to work on Wednesday. Things at work are strange, what with my team shifting from the thirteenth to the first floor of our building, getting a new team leader, and Simon, my closest workmate, leaving the company. It almost feels like a new job – except the work is still pretty boring. I’ve been desperate for something new to do for so long, and really am growing tired of feeling ignored. Whether this is the intent or not, it’s the end effect.

However! Tomorrow is my American Gothic class party. Gothic pizza party. Costume essential… And Saturday, Daph and Graeme are coming round for dinner. Sunday is an afternoon movie at Ben & Tash‘s with soup and bread. It’s going to be great.

Oh! And I forgot to mention, I finally got round to getting my hair cut. Six months plus it’s been, since I last had the chop. It’s nice. It feels light and flowey. Flowy. (both look wrong)

Have also completed a couple of articles for NZGamer: a preview for the Legend of Zelda: The Phantom Hourglass, and a review of the very awesome puzzle game, eets. I recommend eets. Go check it out.

But now I’d better head off – I have to burn a CD of music for the gothic party. Will post pictures!

sick (and a few goals)

20 Jun

Hello, I’m writing to you from home today! I have been home for the past five days with a hideous cold – I even spent saturday night puking into a bucket. Nice eh. Today (Tuesday) finds me back in the land of the living, though I would by no means say I am anywhere near 100%. The last few days have gone by in a complete blur. It’s completely bizarre – I think I slept for the middle three days, and today made myself stay awake for most of the day (though I did have a few naps) in an attempt to acclimitise myself to having to get up for work tomorrow.

I suppose the one good thing about going to work tomorrow is that I’m actually on leave for half the day – so I will only be in for the morning. Then I will be heading home to wait for the Telstra man to come and install cable for Steve and I – so from tomorrow onwards, we will have cable TV and a cable modem. I am finally leaving dial-up behind me forever! (Well, for now, anyway.) I hope the cable TV thing isn’t going to be a pain. I mean, I hope we don’t wind up living in front of the TV or something. We pretty much got it so we won’t miss out on sports (rugby, motorbikes, that sort of thing) and I thought getting the Rialto channel might be nice, etc. etc. etc. It all feels a bit…normal, really. It’s going to take a bit of getting used to.

I’m wracking my brain, trying to think of news, but of course, I’ve been home sick, I haven’t got any news. Apparently we have moved down to level 1 at work, so when I return I’ll probably spend most of the morning unpacking all the boxes I packed way back on Thursday. I have a bit of a window view, so it’s not all bad, but I reckon I was ripped off, as we were initially told that we’d be choosing desks based on how long we’d been working at the company – and there are quite a few people with better spots than mine. Ah, to hell with it. I’m looking for a new job. Must remember.

Speaking of which, I have applied for a couple of jobs this evening – both web writing positions, which I think is the only area in IT that I could tolerate at the moment. Fingers crossed. You never know.

One thing that I did do today (aside from finishing my damn embroidered spacegirl on a pillowcase which has been taunting me for the better part of a year) is make a list of a few things that I would like to complete this year (sheesh, I should just come right out and say it, yes, they’re goals). They are:

  • get a new job
  • pay off my credit card
  • finish honours (research topic)
  • work on the first draft of my novel

I realise that possibly these are just things to do, but I am not usually a goal-y planny type, so these are pretty good for me. Next year’s thoughts might include:

  • think about doing a Master’s degree
  • publish something (creative)
  • get a part time job

again, not anything earth-shattering, just some things I would like to think about.

Oh, and I’ve been meaning to upload a few more photos. Just… generally. Here you are:

bedroom view

steve and friend

(doh, sorry it’s sideways)

camping on the weekend

20 Apr

Just thought I’d post a few photos of the trip Steve & I took on the weekend. We went down to Palliser Bay, on the south coast of the North Island, near Lake Ferry.

Palliser Bay

South of the North Island

Ti Trees

me

Trailer

letters

20 Mar

Hey! Urk, Christmas comes along and then suddenly it’s March… How did that happen? Hope you had a good one! And a good Paddy’s Day too. I went down with Suzanne (and Steve, the new beau, though I guess he’s not that “new” any more… 1 year together now!) to the Irish Club, to celebrate with cheap pints of reasonable Guinness and dancing girls, live music and lots of Irish accents. It was nice to get away from the main strip of pubs where it takes fifteen minutes to reach the bar! All and all quite good. Where did you get to?

We just turned our clocks back on the weekend, and noticed immediately as it got darker earlier. It’s colder too. Still – Steve’s just moved in to my flat…hopefully it’ll be nice and cozy this winter! I’ve got pet fish and a friendly cat and a tomato plant on its last legs. Job is shite (hopefully things are getting better for you in that department though?) but aside from that I’m happy. Doing my honours part time at uni.

Oh cool, drama at the Gaiety! Are you still doing that this year? Hell, and an apartment in Nice… Awesome! Are you renting it out or are you guys going to use it during the holidays? And a Vespa! Steve’s got a motorbike that we go for the odd trip on (in Jan we went down around the northern part of the south island), but we’ve been thinking about getting a scooter for around town. Sounds awesome!

Anyway, sorry for slacking off over the past few months… Hope you guys are doing well! Do you get to see much of James at all?

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Jeez, a scrapbook from the past! What a laugh… Wasn’t that some clothing design thing we were going to do? (I think I have some drawings somewhere…)

Switzerland – Las Vegas sounds like the life! What does your fiance do – do you both work from both places? I’m back in Wellington now – I’ve been back since the middle of 2003. Currently doing the office slave thing, and working on my honours degree part time. I have absolutely no idea what I want to do with myself. Something interesting, preferably not in IT. I’ve considered the academic route, but it’s hard to know what it would really be like. Maybe it could get me back to the states for a while though, who knows! How do you find being back, after being over in Switzerland for so long?

Aside from that, I’m living in a flat up in the hills, and my boyfriend’s just moved in with me this past weekend. He has a place about an hour up the coast (up near Paraparaumu!) but is renting it out now. We’re going to try and save some money, and then who knows… Travel, work overseas perhaps. We’ve been thinking about teaching english in Southeast Asia.

So yeah, things are good! Write, and let me know what you’ve been up to!

Sooty Shearwater

7 Mar

That’s right, Steve & I are bird rescuers!

Last night Steve was driving back to my place when he saw quite a large brown bird in the middle of the road, flapping around. He stopped and put it on the grass in this park by the side of the road. He drove on, but saw it had hopped back on to the road. So he turned around, and got back to the bird in time to see some jerks in a red car drive straight over the top of it!

He pulls over and another guy has stopped too, and has the bird under his jacket. He takes it over to a quieter spot and puts it there. Both guys leave.

Steve arrives at my house but I reckon we shouldn’t leave it there, it could be in shock, have broken wings, who knows what. So we ring the SPCA and find out that there’s actually an after-hours number, and some poor guy is on call that night. We go back down to the park, with my laundry basket and a towel to throw over it. When we get there though, there are already a couple of girls there with a large cardboard box, also looking for the bird. They also saw the near-miss, and ran home to get a box for it. Only problem is, the bird is nowhere to be found.

But I found it! Hiding in the bushes… we managed to catch the poor wee thing, shove it in the box, and then Steve & I took it to the SPCA in Newtown, where we met the poor guy who had been dragged out of bed for some bird…

Today though, Steve rang the SPCA to see if our wee chickie was okay. Turns out he is a Sooty Shearwater and he was sent to a bird sanctuary!

Awwwww.

changes are a-foot

23 Feb

Just before I decided to write this I thought I’d check my horoscope. Ah hell, go on, ridicule me. Anyway, what I read was this:

If the doorknob doesn’t want to turn today, Jessica, don’t force it. You will only succeed in breaking the key in half. Perhaps you just need to try another door. If things don’t flow smoothly into place, then they probably weren’t meant to be. Life shouldn’t have to be a struggle. Our job is to be happy. Remember that the next time you find yourself in a long line, view the situation as a relaxing period of rest.

This is actually eerily accurate (isn’t that how we describe any accurate-sounding horoscope? as ‘eerie’?) as things haven’t been flowing as, er, fluidly as I’ve hoped lately. Everything – work, the flat, university, financially, has encountered little hiccups along the way this month. I feel like today I’ve finally put some steps in to try and, as my horoscope so succinctly put it, try another door.

So, today I wrote Sandy an email, telling her that I would have to pull out of her Masters’ writing class. For starters, I shouldn’t be spending that much money when I’m forking out over a thousand bucks (closer to two?) to finish my Honours degree this year (and when I went ahead – yes I did – and got that Nintendo DS. Oo but it’s good.). I also don’t have a short story on hand that I really feel good about submitting to the class as a masters-level sorta thing. I don’t really want to whip some shite up, just to submit it for the sake of it. I want it to be something good. It’s a shame, a real shame. She only offers the class every year to year-and-a-half, and I may have missed the boat. But that class, combined with reading and studying for my honours, would have left me with little spare time, and extra mounting debt, at a time when I’m meant to be trying to pay these things off. It also feels good to pare things down a little, to not be so all-over-the-place.

I’ve also got a second job interview tomorrow. Fingers crossed. I am officially on a short list with one other person, so I guess I have a 50-50 chance of getting the job. I don’t know what I will do if I don’t get it. Just keep on, I guess.

Also, some new people have moved into the flat upstairs, and they are fucking noisy. They’re also all about twelve years old, and seem to be outrageously, insanely happy about being in a flat, where I guess they can get drunk any time of the day they want! This depresses me and makes me insanely nervous and worried. Someone came home at 2:30am this morning, clomping around in the room above mine for half an hour. Steve said something to them today (floors are paper thin, can hear everything upstairs), but they didn’t apologize or seem too concerned. I really don’t feel like looking for another place to live right now. I hope these people don’t stress me out. I feel stressed out thinking about them, and usually not much really gets to me. Maybe I’m just getting old.

Happy Birthday, Discombobulated!

20 Feb

Today finds us celebrating my diary-x fifth anniversary. Unfortunately, diary-x is not functioning at present. Gee. I was planning to celebrate my “birthday” with a bit of fanfare and promises of sending out mix tapes or something similar to anyone who felt like getting in on the feelgoodness of it all. Unfortunately I suspect I won’t be hearing from any of those people I’ve been in touch with via my diary over the years. In any case, if you’re keen, flick me an email and I’ll see what I can do.

It’s actually turning out to be quite a quiet day here at work, for some reason, so I guess I’m at leisure to detail a bit of what I’ve been up to. The weekend was busy; Steve did the Karapoti (as I mentioned earlier), coming in at around 3 hours 45 mins. The official times aren’t up yet so I’m just going by my watch. It was a quite interesting day though. I managed to get in a bit of reading for class (American Gothic), and even did a bit of knitting in the car. We both flaked out pretty early in the evening (disturbingly I think I was more tired than Steve was).

Sunday kicked off with a bottle of French champagne, as we gathered our stamina for the day ahead. Yes, champagne, and leftover meatballs and tomato sauce (home made, of course) on toast. Hmm… better than it might sound. We then kicked into overdrive (read: we left the house) to gather the rest of the supplies for the BBQ we were having that afternoon. It was a bit of a farewell sort of do, with Steve’s Raumati mates all coming round to say goodbye. It was lovely, and quite touching – a beautiful evening, with everyone sitting in the hot sun, eating lemongrass prawns and fish curry, drinking wine and beer and watching the sun set out over Kapiti Island.

End o’ the day

17 Feb

End of the day. All I’m capable at this point is surfing the web and looking at highly amusing links:

Seizure Robots

Monkeys that Talk

del.icio.us (keep your links all in one handy place)

Lunch break was nice today. Went down with Steve to pick up his Karapoti pack from the bike shop on Courtenay Place. We decided to walk back along the waterfront to check out the yachts from the Volvo Ocean Race. Saw the “Pirates of the Carribean” boat, though as far as I could see, there were no pirates on board. Apparently Johnny Depp is wandering around Wellington somewhere though. Maybe he’s dressed like a pirate.

Oh, and on the way back to work we saw a whole lot of people standing around on the wharf looking at something. Turned out to be a small pod of dolphins, just cruising around. They were swimming quite slowly – I hope they were just resting or something.

Is it home time yet?

moist and sort of yuck

18 Jun

Hi, I haven’t been around much lately – I’ve been sick for the past three weeks with a mysterious ailment which could be whooping cough. After two weeks of horrible spasming coughs I finally went in to the doctor on Monday (it’s Friday today) and had some tests done and got some antibiotics. I don’t know that much about antibiotics really, I don’t know how long it’s meant to be before you really feel like you’re making some progress. I think my cough is getting better but I still wake up two or three times in the night, choking, coughing, unable to breathe. It’s pretty scary. I had the last two days off work and didn’t leave the house once. Sat around in my robe reading (at the moment I’m re-reading Kerouac’s “Dharma Bums”, a book that reminds me of my second year at university) and sleeping and computering. Not particularly exciting, but I think I have improved a little.

It’s really winter now: you can hardly see the harbour through the window. Everywhere you look you see grey and rain. The sky is that dirty-grey color, not even a steely gray that makes being inside feel cozy. Or maybe it’s just because I’m sick, everything feels like the inside of a lung. Moist and sort of yuck.

But it’s friday. Jeremy’s coming over for dinner tonight (Aart’s famous meatballs). Might go for a drive over to the Wairarapa with James tomorrow, and there’s this writing workshop on Sunday for Radio New Zealand that I’m going to go to. They’ve got a programme that’s going to be on in September called “Open Season” or something, where they want the general public to write for radio. I really don’t know what to expect but I’m going to go along. They’re looking for poetry, short stories and plays. I’ve been trying to write more but with no real space of my own it is proving to be quite difficult.

My dad wants to go halves on a house with me, so I’ve been looking in the papers at properties and going to the odd open home. It’s all early days at the moment, but I quite like the idea of setting up a place of my own. A four bedroom, rent out one or two of the rooms and turn one into a writing room. I can certainly think of worse things, anyway.

My mom’s finally got her car back after the accident. And my dad sold his Suburban, the one he bought new in 1984 when my grandparents came out to the States and we drove around canada – the six of us plus the dog. That car’s been like an extension of my dad – like a foot or something. It seems strange to think that it’s gone now – a guy from Blenheim bought it, who works for Firestone (so already it has some nice new tires!) with three wee kids. Quite nice, really.

Oh, and my Old Icelandic class is getting together this Saturday as well – going to our lecturer’s for dinner and to watch the first part of Wagner’s Ring Cycle. I have never seen this before, apparently it is “hard core” opera, but it’s all based on similar mythology to what we’re studying at the moment. Cool. It’s in 5 parts – the longest is something like 5 hours long, but the bit we’re watching is only a few hours. Should be a laugh anyway.

dampish fishtank massage Pacific pigeon freak

2 Apr

Hey. Well, things have been going pretty well here, in this place – the Capital city of the most isolated country in the world. It’s Friday, and for we poor slobs who live from 6pm – 7:30am Monday to Friday, plus weekends, it’s like being on the verge of a religious epiphany. In this part of the world it’s Autumn (as opposed to what seems to be the rest of the world – even Australia’s still practically in the middle of Summer), which means shitty, overcast days and a general dampish feeling in the air. Still, from where I’m sitting, if I crane my neck around about 50-60 degrees, I can see one of the Picton ferries coming into the harbor, catching the sun. It’s pretty peaceful.

I splurged last weekend and bought myself an all in one fishtank (well, I did have to get a heater). It’s very, very cool, and has rocks and plants and even water in it, which has been nicely aging over the last week. All I need now are some fish. My parents are coming to stay at my place over Easter (four day weekend!!) and mentioned they might bring me a fish or two as a housewarming present!

I don’t have any major plans for the weekend, aside from using my voucher for a half-hour massage tomorrow. I’m booked in for 11:30. Mmm…massage! After that I’m meeting Daph and Graeme at the Black Harp at 1:00 for lunch. (They’re using their vouchers from 12-1, then we’re going to use another prize voucher Daphne won at the Black Harp.) Should be a cheap day! Can’t go wrong! I’ve also got a pile of books I intend to work my way through, plus there’s Italian study for the test we’ve got coming up on the 9th, and some Old Icelandic translation and reading to do. I’m actually considering doing just Old Icelandic next semester. I love Italian, but at the same time, it’s going to get more complicated as we go along, and I am going to start running out of free time. I can just see it now. Plus it would only mean one day up at uni per week. Not that I don’t enjoy it up there, but it gets rather stressy when you’re constantly trying to get back to work etc. etc.

Travel is on my mind again, especially now that I’m a permanent employee here and thus eligible for a nice 4 weeks worth of holidays per year. I really want to save it up and then use it for a month’s holiday somewhere. But where? I’m thinking maybe the Pacific somewhere. Rent a place for a month and hang out.

*********
This from Monday’s Dominion Post:
Pigeon Gets A Gong
A Royal Air Force pigeon that delivered the first news of Allied success from the Normandy beaches on D-day – June 6, 1944 – will be recognised as the greatest pigeon to have served its country. Gustav, a grizzle cock pigeon, will be honoured in a London exhibition at the Imperial War Museum’s 60th anniversary show. He will get the Dickin Medal, the animal equivalent of Britain’s highest military honour. He died when his breeder stepped on him.
*********

It’s about half four and time is ticking (initially wrote ‘tickling’) by slowly. I’m really looking forward to tonight. No plans, just some reading, writing, gin and tonics and a little Old Icelandic translation. Most of my weekends have seen something similar.

Aedan is apparently in NZ – in Wellington – at the moment, over from Ireland. James went out for dinner the other night with him but I decided not to go. Sometime back during the time I was in Dublin we had an incident where he asked me at lunch if New Zealand had an IT industry. I said “no, we ride around on sheep and use abacuses.” He stood up and picked up his tray and said “everything’s always a joke with you!” and stormed off. He didn’t speak to me again – what a freak. Nobody else could believe it, and I didn’t think it was worth the hassle to try and figure out what his problem was.

Ben’s also coming back soon – in a month, I think? And I even got an email from Brugt recently, saying he was also coming over, sometime in November, to try and get work in a mountain hut. Nice. So it would seem that leaving (for the moment) is not all that necessary – everyone seems to be coming to me, these days.

my daily routine

26 Feb

There are quite a few things I’ve been experiencing, and thinking about lately, that I’ve really wanted to write about. Trouble is, whenever I sit down to write, I can’t remember what it was that was occupying my thoughts so much. So I guess a general overview will do for now. Hopefully that will lead to something more specific.

I think I’m settling into my house now. Maybe it’s a physical action – the furniture sinks further into the carpet, you settle down into a rhythm, a little routine. You know what time you need to get up in the morning, you know what you want to have for breakfast. I like my little fridge, and my shelves in the kitchen with all my stuff.

I wake up in the morning, around 6:30. Well, my alarm wakes me up. Because my alarm is really just my stereo set on a timer, I usually lie in bed for a while listening to music. I keep my watch on the bedside table so I can put it on and then I know exactly how long I have to luxuriate before dragging myself out of bed. I know I could just set the clock half an hour later, and get up straight away, but there is something necessary about this little morning lie-in. Maybe it says something about my personality, maybe I am just lazy. Maybe I just like to listen to a little music first thing in the morning.

I usually try to shower in the evening, so as to maximize morning lie-in time. So I get up, turn up the music a little, and then get dressed. Lately I’ve been having a Berocca first thing. I’ll brush my teeth, brush my hair, maybe put on a necklace. Put on my shoes. Then I get out two pieces of toast from the freezer, plus an avocado and tomato from the fridge. I put the bread in the toaster, and usually go do something else while I’m waiting for that. Once the toaster pops, I have to put it down again. The first session defrosts the bread, the second one toasts it. Usually after this, I’ll slice the tomato and get out the salt and pepper. When the toast pops again, I scoop out some avocado and smear it on the bread – like butter, only thicker. Then I put a few slices of tomato on, then grate lots of pepper and sprinkle a little salt on top.

By that stage I’ve only got about five minutes left until I have to leave the house (7:30), so I sit on my bed, or at the table, and munch on my toast and read at the same time. At the moment I’m reading Nicholson Baker’s A Box of Matches, which I’m sure has somewhat inspired this entry.

Then I walk to work. Last week, during the flooding, I caught a ride to work with Daphne and Graeme a few times. Daphne works right across the road from me, as well as living across the road from me. Rather strange how these things work out. But I walk usually. I walk down my hill, then down the next street, until I reach Aro Street. I walk along until I get to the crosswalk by Patel’s and Aro Video, then I cross to the other side, past the Aro Street Cafe (-which has lovely lights outside. I love walking up Aro street once the sun has gone down), past where the gas station used to be, and is now probably being turned into some sort of housing. I walk through the Aro park, past the pigeons, and up the steps that lead to the Abel Smith Street/The Terrace intersection. From there I walk along the Terrace. It takes 15-20 minutes to walk from the far end of the Terrace to where my work is. By the time I get to work I’m usually fairly warm, no matter how cold it is outside.

Then I get to work. I catch the elevator to the 13th floor (spooky!), and turn my computer on. I do a little bit of work, plus check my emails, and then I go get a cup of coffee.

The morning usually passes without event. I like to take my lunch at around 1-1:30, so I have a smaller chunk of work in the afternoon. I find it more manageable somehow. If I don’t have anything to do (no letters to post, no shopping to do), then I’ll sit up in this room off the kitchen, where there are a few leather couches. I’ll have my miso soup and read for an hour. It’s really great. Otherwise I’ll meet a friend for lunch, or just go for a stroll, usually ending up in some bookstore (Parson’s, or Dymock’s, or Unity Books) or a music store (The CD Store, usually). Today I have to mail a cheque (funny how I’ve started spelling that the kiwi way, rather than the american way – “check”) to pay for my insurance, and I have to buy a birthday present for a friend of the family. I hope I get some reading time in there.

It’s funny how I don’t want to write about my work stuff in detail. I don’t even want to explain it. Needless to say, I get back to my desk at around 2-2:30 (usually later if I’ve been having lunch with a friend), and then the afternoon usually passes pretty quickly. Then I walk back home, the same way as when I walk to work. Sometimes I’ll stop at Patel’s or at the greengrocer’s across the street to pick up a few things for dinner.

Then it’s the climb up the hill, up the steps, to my house. Tickle the cat who usually sits up there. Check the mail. Up to the house, step over the plants at the door, take off my sweater. Read mail or generally tidy up. Put groceries away, etc. Check phone for messages. Get changed into slobby home clothes (e.g. blue cords, beatles t-shirt).

Then I’ll either read or fire up my computer to kick off some downloading, or to do some writing, or just to mess around. Maybe hunt for caterpillars in my bok choy. Sometimes I pop over to Daphne’s place.

Sometimes, if I’m hungry, I’ll start cooking straight away, but usually I don’t eat until around 7-7:30. At some stage I’ll have a beer, or a gin and tonic.

I listen to lots of music.

Sometimes Jeremy comes round for dinner. We’ve got a very loose agreement that he comes round for dinner, then I go over. Maybe every few weeks or so. Still, it’s nice to cook for someone else. Daphne has me round every once in a while too.

And that’s pretty much it. I like to take nice long baths and read and drink beer. Tidy up. Do laundry. It’s all fairly domestic and solo. I leave the weekends for the crazy stuff.

Have I even mentioned that over the last two weekends I’ve seen David Bowie and Billy Connelly? I haven’t? Shame on me! I’ll have to save those for a later entry. Don’t let me forget.

Day four in the wee house

4 Feb

So I’ve been in the wee white and red house for three days now. After the floods over the weekend I think things are still trying to dry out. I think the floor in the kitchen is nearly there. What a nightmare. It was raining so heavily. I know I haven’t really explained all of this, but I’ve got an entry I wrote at home I’ve been meaning to stick up here. To be honest I’m tired of talking about it. Forgive me. There was a leak into the kitchen, I had to call the landlady up in Auckland and then call a plumber to get it fixed. He came out in the pouring rain but couldn’t do anything till the next day. Things got a bit damp. Luckily it was contained in the kitchen.

But that aside, I’m really enjoying living there. I thought that it would take a while to get used to living alone – but I love it! Perhaps it’s because it is such a little place – the thought of another person living there is just out of the question! (It’ll be interesting to see what happens when Aart comes over. I’m sure it will be fine. But it will be…cozy.)

I’m heading home this weekend. Getting the bus up there, and then driving my grandpa’s car back to Wellington as my aunt is buying it. So I will bring down a load of things for the kitchen – plates, cutlery, pots, pans, a popcorn maker, coffee pot, one of those hand blender things. A toaster. It’ll be good to be able to cook properly, even though there isn’t an oven.

friday five

30 Jan

(from www.fridayfive.org)

At this moment, what is your favorite…

1. …song? “Guns of Brixton” – The Clash

2. …food? Probably Roti Chanai at the moment. There are so many different Malaysian restaurants around Wellington at the moment, that it’s actually quite fun to compare them all. Damn nice!!

3. …tv show? Father Ted will always be a firm favorite. But that Queer Eye is just so damn good! I get excited like a child up late on New Year’s when that show comes on.

4. …scent? Easy – the smell of tomato leaves, or tomatoes as they’re growing on the vine.

5. …quote? “Either that wallpaper goes, or I do…” (Oscar Wilde, on his deathbed in a hotel room)

My new house

29 Jan

I’ve been meaning to tell you all about my new house, the one I’m moving into this coming weekend. Now’s the perfect chance, as things are pretty quiet here at work this morning. It’s a cute little downstairs bedsit in a white house with white trim that sits up on a hill, surrounded by trees. All around are little (everything is cute and little) paths and other weird Aro Valley houses. There’s a guy who lives in the upstairs flat with a hammock strung across the balcony.

I don’t have a balcony, but I do have a little patch of grass outside my front door, and a good spot to do some gardening. Last weekend I went out to the California Garden Centre (that place is amazing!) with Daph and Graeme, and bought a few punnets of veggies and things: rocket, bok choi, tomatoes and geraniums. The room is small, but not too small. The bathroom has a bath! The kitchen is tiny, and has been painted yellow. The shelves need repainting – I’m going to paint them red.

All in all, it has a good feeling. I haven’t moved in yet, so this is all just speculation really. But I think I am going to be happy there.

What else? I bought a laptop! A Toshiba M30. I’m really damn happy about it. It’s got a cd burner and plays DVDs. Bloody excellent!

And…as you can see, I’ve changed the design of this page again. Plus I went through and re-wrote the HTML for the whole page. I’d used Front Page just to tweak and doctor things before, and what with all the weird little inserts you get, and formatting tags everywhere, it was really looking like a mess in there! This one feels nice and clean. I really do like it.

Anyway, it’s just a little update, but I guess that seems to be the theme of things these days…

Being busy – and The Premiere!

3 Dec

Well, things have been pretty disjointed lately. Plus it’s really hard to believe that it’s December already. How did that happen? The first few weeks in December have a funny vibe to them. You’re looking forward to Christmas (and my birthday!) and everything just seems like a great big build up towards holidays and spending time with family, etc. It’s like you’re heading down a long slope, starting in January, and once you hit December you really feel as if you’re picking up speed. The end of December and the start of January are going to be really busy.

If you haven’t gathered already, I’ve got a visitor from Holland, plus christmas, my birthday, my mom’s birthday (plus grandma, countles cousins/aunts, etc.). Then there’s my sister’s wedding in early Jan, and my grandfather’s funeral a few weeks ago.

No wonder I couldn’t finish my NaNoWriMo. Did I mention that earlier? For all my going on about it, I couldn’t finish the damn thing this year either. I think events are conspiring against me – both this year and last year – to make sure I never finish one. Last year I was leaving Ireland, and had to pack, send stuff off, AND do my RELSA course. This year, well, you’ve already heard all about that. I still can’t believe he’s gone.

I’m also starting to get a bit panicky about the course I applied for. I’m due to hear if I get in “before christmas”. If I do get in, well, that’s that. If I don’t get in, though, I do need some kind of a plan. I guess the christmas/new year’s period is as good as any for making a plan for the new year.

Will I continue to live in Wellington? The course is really what I came here for. Will I go overseas again? Move somewhere else in New Zealand? Study something else at university? Do some kind of other study? Those are a lot of unanswered questions.

When I think about it, what I’d like is a part time job somewhere and a place of my own. Unfortunately, the two things don’t usually go hand-in-hand. At least not in large, interesting cities. Living in a large, interesting city usually requires full time work, just to support living there – unfortunately. I just feel that a part time job would provide the best balance for me between work and mental stimuation! Then again, I hate not having money. Such a dilemma!

****

Just back from town where I bought the latest Pavement mag (Viggo on cover) and also got the Flaming Lips’ “Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots”, which I have been meaning to get for a while now. Lovely! I went to the Asian Kitchen and had a Roti Chenai for lunch. Ate while reading Margaret Atwood’s “The Blind Assassin”, while “The Breeze”, the crappy Wellington easy listening radio station, played in the background. Now I’m stuffed. Also payed my cellphone bill and sent off letters/postcards at the postoffice. Put money into my credit card account. Now I’m broke again. That was my fun for the next two weeks!

Did I even mention the Lord of the Rings Premiere? It was really weird. Strange to be joining in a crowd of strangers to salute and cheer on a whole lot of other strangers. I’m excited about the movie, how even though it’s a major film by world standards, it still has a home-grown quality about it. But it was weird to see 100,000 people screaming and trying to get a glimpse and an autograph of people who were once just wandering around the city like everyone else. Put out a red carpet and some barriers and people will come running! It’s completely bizarre…

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