We mingle in a semi-swish
reception rooms in a leafier part of Caulfield. Two refuseniks, the former
school captain and his vice-captain, me, dress casually to spite the
gilt-embossed invitation’s request that we appear in suits and ties. I’ve not
possessed a suit or tie since the school dance of 1969. I never bother to ask
Will where he left his suit.
The old boys are older,
stouter, smugger. Privilege sits on every sleeve. Here be doctors, lawyers, and
men of commerce, men who run things. None ascends from the bottom; we all begin
halfway up the ladder. A very few have fallen off and a couple may have jumped.
I think my former Greta Football Club team-mate Gunna might have climbed down
while no one was looking.
Here’s most of his latest blog post.
It
has been a confusing couple of weeks. There's so much to deal with every day.
I'll not dwell on my workload or current affairs or politics or business
anxieties. They mean nothing, amount to nothing; here today, different
tomorrow.
What
moves me is what lifts and prevents me drowning. My dog resting her chin on her
front paws as she waits my every movement. The two grey fantails flitting about
in the garden. The dead eastern spinebill I pick up from the road. The fresh
blackberries I eat while reclaiming sections of the farm from rampant weeds.
The dead chestnut tree I'm cutting up for firewood which succumbed after 35
years of good health and growth. The fresh eggs from Lib's chooks. Watching
bees belting the blossom on a lilly pilly hedge. The warmth and resilience of
my friends who give their time at Nobelius Park as volunteers.
These
things in this last week give me a spiritual connection to the earth and my
human tribe.
Gunna’s what southern Yanks
might call a good ol’ boy. I wonder how many of the school’s old boys know a
spinebill from a hundred dollar bill, a fresh egg from a tidy nest egg, or feel
much for their tribe.
Misanthropic me doesn’t feel
much for his tribe. Gunna and his blog remind me why I should.
Rock on.
1 comment:
Yeah. CGS. A different world. Fancy you being school VC. It seems like a dream. Was it real? It was a screwed up place, I suspect it's still just as weird. Most of those blokes have never heard the magic sound of parrots chattering away as they feed in the tree tops.
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