Contradiction is balance. [entries|archive|friends|userinfo]
Axver

[ website | U2gigs.com: for all your U2 setlist needs! (Got a question, suggestion, or addition? Feel free to leave me a comment! I co-maintain the site.) ]
[ userinfo | livejournal userinfo ]
[ archive | journal archive ]

[21 January 2008|09:42 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , , , , ]
[Current Music |'Epidemic' by Blackfield]

I got back from New Zealand this morning.

I've a mass of thoughts swirling in my head on different topics and it really is tremendously difficult to make sense of them or to put them in order. I suppose I shall try. I guess most insistent in the back of my mind is the knowledge that I probably just saw Grandpa alive for the last time. I am trying not to let this come to the front of my mind though, with varying degrees of success. Strangely enough, what bothers me the most is that I didn't say my standard "have a good one" to him when I left ... then I realise that was probably better, as I quite consciously chose to say "see you later". Because damnit, I am going to see him later. He's stubborn; he'll hold on as long as he bloody well can. Apparently he looks good at the moment; to me, he looked much worse than when I saw him in July 2007, but those who've seen him recently think he's improved as a result of his recent radiation treatment. That treatment is for comfort, however.

I got the chance to talk to him about Tangiwai, much more extensively than I expected. I was quite taken aback by the details I did not know, and remarkably enough, almost all of the family stories are true - and omit the most astounding parts! The only part that was significantly wrong was that he ended up in a tree; he in fact ended up on the edge of the river and somehow climbed the bank. He does not know how he did it. Those of you who've looked closely at the photos I have posted will surely agree with me when I say that it looks impossible. I will write up some more at a later stage in some kind of tribute.

I also find that on every trip, I miss New Zealand more - I guess because on every trip, it's even longer since I left, but it has never stopped being thoroughly familiar and entirely my home. I have a similar familiarity with Melbourne today, the Gold Coast unfortunately, and I'm sure if I went back, the University of Queensland's St Lucia campus and immediately surrounding suburbia too. However, it does not feel like home. It doesn't matter how many times I write "Australian" in response to customs forms asking "nationality as shown on passport", and it doesn't matter how much I love Melbourne and think it beats Wellington (or any other city I've visited) hands-down for livability. At the end of the day, it is not my home. I would give up anything, even my sense of independence that Melbourne gives me, to move back to my childhood home in Raumati Beach, have a job at Victoria University in Wellington, and do the looong commute every day. As much as I hate long commutes, I'd love it simply because of the part of the world I would be in. At the very least, I hope one day to have enough wealth to rock up at my childhood home and make the owners an offer they cannot refuse and establish it as a holiday house, somewhere to spend the summers away from Melbourne's heat.

Life moves too fast. It's weird that I'm 21. My father bought three wines in 1987 - well, obviously he bought more, but he specifically bought three, a red (for the life of me, I forget what, a pinot noir?), a late harvest riesling, and a port. We opened them after my birthday dinner and had a good evening drinking them. I seem to have acquired a taste for port. I grew up on wine, but only tried port sparingly and never really liked it, but the last time I had it was many years ago. However, the port actually proved to be my favourite, despite how much I love a good Kiwi late harvest riesling. It also turns out that I really do hold my drink extraordinarily well. I drank enough on both Saturday and Sunday nights to get most people I know fairly sloshed, while I did not even approach tipsy. That was pretty fortunate really, given the travelling on the days that followed both evenings. I incidentally had the longest birthday of my life. With family in New Zealand and Australia, I've had long Christmases and birthdays before, but my 21st managed to stretch from the day itself, the 17th, right through to the 20th when we had a lovely birthday lunch at Grandma and Grandpa's and a good barbecue back at Dad's place. Wow, that was only yesterday. It feels a world away.

I think most bizarrely for me, in the last week, I had a handful of moments - brief moments, but moments all the same - where I actually felt comfortable. I am not comfortable in social situations. My mind is always flying, always analysing. I cannot mentally relax, even if I look at ease to other people. I think I am actually quite good at putting up a kind of appearance of confidence, quite by accident as nothing could be further from the truth. However, being around certain people - both grandfathers and a couple of people in Queensland - actually put me at ease. I thought I would always be too nervous to talk to Grandpa about Tangiwai, but it was actually amazingly good ... I only returned to my standard discomfort when it was over and we went to eat lunch. I remember a time when I didn't find it this hard to relax and when I didn't subject everything to methodical and extensive thought and second-guessing. It was nice, albeit unexpected, to have brief returns to that.

So there's a smattering of thoughts, all very tired as I have been up for 20 hours after only a modicum of sleep. I hope all of you had a good few days. I took shitloads of photos, so I'll make some entries in the coming days that present them and more closely detail where I went and what I did. My photography sucks but it hopefully does the job.
Link34 comments|Leave a comment

[9 April 2006|06:38 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , ]
[Current Music |'I'm But A Wave To ...' by Cynic]

Well, I'm back from New Zealand. Talk about a flying visit. Despite the fact I haven't been there in three years, most things were so incredibly familiar. I felt like I had never left Raumati Beach. Sure, some of the shops had changed, but at the end of the day, most things felt just like they always have. The weather was absolutely wonderful - a nice, strong northerly greeted me, and most of the time, the sun was shining (contrary to all Wellington stereotypes). Wellington is a truly beautiful city when the sun is out. It's a city you both love and hate - it's incredibly beautiful, with its bays and hills (mountains to Australians, I'm sure), but my goodness, it isn't built sensibly at all. The geographical location is not exactly conducive to good city design in the first place, and I'd forgotten just how bloody narrow Wellington's streets really are. Not to mention the maze of one way streets. But it's still such a fantastic city. I drove around the bays with my Grandad and uncle, and that was good fun. I hadn't seen either of them in three years either, so it was great to catch up.

I spent most of the time with my father's side of the family (the aforementioned Grandad and uncle are my only maternal relatives that I saw this time around, though all my other close relatives on Mum's side live in Australia nowadays and the more distant ones don't live around Wellington to my knowledge). It's the first time we've had the entire side of the family together in ... years. Maybe the first time in over a decade? I'm not sure. All of my memories seem to have someone missing. Of course, this time around, Uncle Innes was missing due to divorce, so I don't know if he even counts any more. I always liked him, though. And his kids - my only close relatives from my generation - sure have grown. Last time I saw them was in the late nineties when they were half my size. Now they're both taller than me. Those who know me should get a laugh from knowing that I'm still one of the tallest in my family, though. I think out of the last three generations of my family, only four people (out of fourteen) can claim to be taller than me. I can already hear the laughter of the people who know me/mock my height/call me a hobbit.

I'll probably have more things to say over the coming days, but for now, I think I will go and cook dinner. It was nice not having to worry about cooking for a couple of days. I sure missed my music, though. A discman can only do so much. I'm currently enjoying being re-united with my library of awesome music. When Dad put the radio on in the car, the selection of music was simply appalling. Can I just say that the more I hear of The White Stripes, the more I come to realise people who like them are completely and utterly mad and need their hearing checked? The same applies to fans of rap. Or to fans of anything that Wellington's 91ZM plays, for that matter. Utter rubbish, the whole bloody lot of it.
Link26 comments|Leave a comment

[3 February 2006|03:14 pm]
[Tags|, , ]
[Current Mood | cheerful]
[Current Music |'Cloudy Now' by Blackfield]

The move today went nicely and I'm now established in my new house. It's fantastic! I love how roomy the living area is and the way I filled it with furniture. Some relatives came along and tried to influence things, and as much as I appreciate that they came to help, I made it nice and clear that I'm the one living here and I don't want them going around doing stuff I don't want done yet! But it all wo rked out very nicely in the end. It's a bit of a shame to be stuck on dialup now, but I should have my DSL back on the 6th. Only a couple of days between now and then, and I'm sure I'm going to be busy. There's still some stuff at home to be moved, just little things that it wasn't worth putting in the removalist's truck and wouldn't fit in our already heavily laden car, so I'll have to head back to get those things, and of course, I have a whole new area to discover. I'm glad I don't need to worry about finding a good bookshop - they're almost non-existent in Queensland, even Franklin had better bookstores than the entire Gold Coast city despite their relative sizes, but I of course have access to the university's library! I should find out if I can access it now or if I have to wait until classes commence.

For now, I better go and continue setting stuff up here. I've three bookcases for my books, and I hope that's sufficient. Putting all of those books on their shelves will take forever, especially as I can be quite pedantical and particular in my arrangement. And of course, there's a whole lot of other things to put in their correct places around the home. One final thing, though: it seems everyone but me thinks my bedroom arrangement is not desirable, even though I think it's perfectly logical and practical. Not that I care, though - as I've had to tell multiple relatives and removalists, everyone but me is living here, so as long as it suits me, it can stay this way!

Have a good one, folks.
Link70 comments|Leave a comment

[12 January 2006|10:12 pm]
[Tags|, , , ]
[Current Music |'Candlelight Fantasia' by Symphony X]

Although I haven't booked my trip to New Zealand yet, I'll likely have it booked by the end of this week and I must say that I am delighted with the fact that I will almost certainly be flying via Wellington. The plan should be that I fly into Wellington, spend a night with my father, fly the next day up to Auckland, see the two concerts there, and then I fly back to Brisbane and Dad goes back to Wellington. Remarkably, this works out cheaper than flying directly to Auckland, mainly because I don't have to pay for another night in Auckland (all the flights on the actual day of the concert arrive too late).

Oh, how I have missed Wellington! It will be good to be back, even if it's only for a brief length of time. I wonder if I will have the opportunity to travel up to the Kapiti Coast. I'm going to have to try. That place is so much a part of who I am, and come April, I won't have seen it for a whole three years! I don't know when I'll next be in New Zealand besides this March trip, either. In all likelihood, it'll be another couple of years unless Dad wants to give me a major present. So I must make my way up to the Kapiti Coast, even if it is just for an hour or two.

Honestly, I fear it may have changed beyond recognition. My father tells me major roadworks are being undertaken at MacKay's Crossing to build an overpass to replace the level crossing with the railway. Back in 2003, I found my old primary school to be changed so drastically that it was no longer the school I attended - everything I loved and cherished was gone. If there is one thing I want more than almost anything but know I could never have, it is to happily live out my days on the Kapiti Coast, circa 1992-94. To live happily in the house I grew up in, raising a family, spending the weekends operating the trains at Marine Gardens, working at the local university that exists only in my imagination ... nothing could really top that for me. I fear I will live the rest of my life outside of New Zealand, and that truly pains me. But as I keep telling myself, you never know what the future will bring.
Link19 comments|Leave a comment

The Rugby World Cup, New Zealand, railways, and fun stuff like that. [18 November 2005|09:13 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , , , , ]
[Current Mood |rambling]
[Current Music |'Come Home' by The Chills]

Well, well, well. New Zealand has won the rights to host Rugby World Cup 2011. I am thrilled, as you would expect, and I suppose I better start saving already because World Cup tickets surely will not come cheap and I'm not the wealthiest man on earth. The finals may be out of my league price-wise (indeed, I believe 2003 was by a clear margin and I doubt things will get any cheaper in 2011), but I'm already wondering what more obscure locations will score games during the early rounds. OK, so we're not about to see games in Eketahuna and Hokitika and Waikanae, but I imagine somewhere like Invercargill may score a game and it's not exactly a typical sight to see top level international rugby there, though whether a game between, say, Romania and the Cook Islands is 'top level' by virtue of being a World Cup fixture is extremely debatable. I'll be looking forward to a schedule that will give me an excuse to tour the country, as I haven't seriously travelled around much of NZ since about 1999 and I don't see myself having the time or finances to do that in the next few years either.

Add onto this the reports that U2's 2006 tour dates of Australia will be announced in this Sunday's papers and the future's looking bright. 2011's quite a way down the line, but it's nice to think of something cool to come after university (at least the undergraduate part), and anything that gives me an excuse to spend time in the homeland is a bloody good thing alright.

Goodness, I miss my country. You better believe that I'm flying over the Auckland U2 gig (or gigs), and that I'm praying for a Wellington show. I haven't seen Wellington since April 2003. I'm kind of nervous as to how much Raumati Beach has grown since I last visited, but I'm not so fiercely attached to Wellington that I want it to remain just like it was in 1997, and walking around the harbour, visiting the Museum of NZ and the Basin Reserve, and riding the cable car would be good. I'm sure by the time I'm next in Wellington, whoever owns New Zealand Rail will have repainted the commuter units again. Maybe this time some Mongol cattle herders will be the owners. Selling off the trains to private enterprise was the stupidest decision ever, as far as NZR goes. Now, they made some dumb decisions in the past, but relinquishing government ownership really did top the lot. Of course, now they've had to re-nationalise the network, but it's a bit too late for the Southerner, isn't it? Yes, let's cancel the passenger train that used to be the flagship of the network, that's a really brilliant move.

Actually, now that I think about it, I'm not sure which was more daft, privatising the railways or the preceding deregulation of the land transport industry. If you can't tell, I'm rather keen on government ownership and all that good stuff. So I'm a wee bit biased, but I'm one of these people who will tell you that what's good for rail is therefore good for the country. It seems to be a rare viewpoint in this day and age of aeroplanes and multiple cars per household, but I am a rail enthusiast, so what do you expect?

This has been quite the rambling, mundane entry full of tangents, hasn't it?
Link28 comments|Leave a comment

navigation
[ viewing | most recent entries ]