Last year and this I come to
Sydney with Liz and Sandy to train teachers and psychs to present the SKIPS
program in North Ryde.
I’ve no idea where I am in
Sydney, whether in Ryde, Chatswood or Parramatta. Trains leave the airport or
Central and rush into tunnels, emerging in unknown locations, before delving
into other dark places. North Ryde Station is deep, deep underground. For food
we trip back to Chatswood and traipse around what could be any metropolis in
China.
On this trip I’m in Parramatta,
a famous place name but otherwise unknown to me. I’m with my Victorian
colleague Sasha, and Cathy, the national MM project officer from Adelaide. We
travel in taxis and live in hotels, something I’ve done lots of in recent
years, but it doesn’t come naturally. Every driver is from somewhere else;
every hotel window looks into a car park.
After today’s training we walk
back to the hotel, this morning’s long taxi ride now a short stroll on foot. We
ditch our gear in our rooms and wander back to a mega-mall. I need new
spectacle frames, shoes, maybe a watch, but everything is designer this,
designer that: nothing here for daggy 60 year-olds. And food-court food is
about obesity, not nutrition.
The dawn from my window on the
sixth level is a riot of orange filtered between high-rise towers and a
multi-level car park. Stained silver trains roll by, yellow doors their only
distinguishing feature. And always the rattle and hum of traffic, the blare of
claxons, whatever the hour, whatever the day.
Sydneysiders seem somehow
different to us from down south. The trainees in Newcastle say they prefer
Melbourne to Sydney: better shopping, more refinement. The Sydney people tell
us they like Melbourne. Few Melbourne people like Sydney.
Last time here I kill time
between gig and airport with a ride on a harbour ferry. The harbour is
beautiful enough and the ferries a charming adjunct to the life of the city,
but I’m not a water person.
Rock on.
1 comment:
I've always disliked Sydney and can't get out quickly enough. the harbours pretty but a bloke I knew lived on a yacht there for a while and spent time underneath it fixing things. He said you wouldn't believe the rubbish in there.
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