If you like Pina Coladas and getting caught in the rain…

When I was a kid we used to have summer thunderstorms all the time…  maybe it’s the distortion of remembered childhood but it seemed like they rolled in every other afternoon and always right on 3pm just as school was letting out.  I lived two streets away from my school and would walk to and from school every day with my sisters and Catherine – an older kid from across the street who liked to lord it over us with her ‘I’m the boss of you’ attitude… I remember she used to yank on the back of the pixie collars of our school uniforms effectively choking us if we walked too far ahead of her and I recall disliking her a lot.  In a rather immature and uncharitable manner, I remember being secretly pleased once when she was injured while walking a large german shepherd named Prince on a lead that had gotten away from her and dragged her on the road for several metres.  She lost a lot of skin off her elbows and knees and I felt she’d got her comeuppance for being such a bossy know-it-all bitch all the time…. but I digress.


BigSal, Borys and LittleTish (c. 1981)

I always loved the afternoon storms.  I would stare out the windows in last period as the clouds darkened and wait to hear the first fat raindrops hitting the hot concrete in the quad.  We’d stand under the awnings for a few minutes after we got out of class to see if it was going to let up a bit and then inevitably decide to make a run for it.   We’d all be running hell for leather to get home and that nasty little bint Catherine would race on ahead without waiting for us to catch up.

I love the feeling of freedom I always had from running home from school in the rain.  To get home we had to pass through a large empty oval park with hardly any trees which would turn into a shallow lake a couple of inches deep during every big storm before the water drained away (yes… slight lightning hazard there).  Sometimes I used to stop in the park and tilt my head back… just standing there enjoying the feel of the raindrops falling on my face.  Once we were already soaked we knew we were in for a half hearted scolding from my Mum (usually about getting our leather school shoes all ruined) so sometimes we’d just give up and run amok kicking water at each other in the park and floating leaves or paddlepop sticks down the gutters.   When I was a teenager I used to force my Mum, my little sister or my cousin Rochelle who used to live with us to come out and go walking in the pouring rain with me.

Now as an adult I hate being caught in the rain – your shoes get ruined, you have to try and cover your (usually stupidly expensive) handbag and then there’s the dripping mess to clean up in the entry hall when you get in the door…. unless of course I go out to get drenched deliberately  🙂  If I’ve nowhere I need to be and nothing I need to do… I still like to grab an old shirt and go stand out in the pouring rain getting soaked to the bone or take a walk around the streets.  I feel like less of a lunatic if I drag the Small Child out with me (though he doesn’t usually want to come out and get wet) and we’ll jump in puddles and kick water at each other for a while before coming inside and getting warmed up.

The day of my Dad’s funeral was the culmination of a particularly stressful week and I remember being in the backyard at my parent’s home and watching the clouds gathering at around 3pm and it definitely looked like it was going to pour any minute.  At the first sign of rain about 80 people tried to cram into the downstairs of the house to avoid getting wet taking drinks and food tables etc all undercover.  I found myself standing under the patio staring out at the backyard as the rain pelting down.  After several minutes watching the rain…  I walked out into the backyard and just stood there with my face to the sky.  My cousin Rochelle came out too and gave me a hug and we stood there having a bit of a cry until we were saturated.  I rounded up the Small Child and some of his cousins and got them playing tag in the rain laughing and just enjoying the feeling of being alive while the other ‘adults’ looked on from inside the house.

Running around in the pouring rain with the kids that afternoon and laughing as though we hadn’t a care in the world seemed to have a truly cleansing and cathartic effect.  I swear I went home that evening feeling like a massive weight had been lifted.  Getting soaked in the pouring rain still evokes the same carefree feelings it did when I was a kid… and after the draining day I had yesterday I found myself looking out my window this afternoon wishing the sky would darken and send me a therapeutic thunderstorm.
.

The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas

I watched a movie last night called The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas which was about a young boy Bruno (roughly the same age as the Small Child is now) who is the son of a Lt Col who is sent to Auschwitz to be thecommandant of the ‘work camp’.  Bruno is a typical small boy who lives cosseted from the war around him.  He is niaive, has a tutor (who is a one man propaganda machine) and he likes to go exploring, likes adventure books, gets bored, misses his friends… very typical really.  He meets a child his own age who ‘lives at the farm’ that he can see from his bedroom window where everyone ‘wears striped pyjamas all day’. 

The movie was about the budding friendship that grows between himself and a boy in the concentration camp who he is eventually aware is supposed to be his enemy.  It also explores the relationship between the boys parents when his mother realizes what the chimneys are for at the camp.  It was a very poignant, heartfelt and moving film… with such weighty themes running through it that were handled through Bruno’s innocent and niaive eyes.  I have not read the novel on which the film was based but I think I will have to track it down.

Youtube trailer here if it doesn’t appear in your reader.

I don’t remember the day when I learned about World War II, Hitler and the Holocaust etc.  I don’t recall learning about these things nor do I remember any occasion where I experienced the sorts of feelings that suddenly hearing of such horrors would invoke.  I can only assume that my exposure to the unspeakable terrors that occured throughout Nazi occupied Europe during WWII happened in such small doses and at such a young age that I simply do not remember when I first heard of these things – for I don’t remember a time where I wasn’t aware of the atrocities committed by the Germans during the Holocaust.

I have vague recollections of members of my family expressing a quiet sense of shame… a couple of my great uncles wanted to enlist during WWII but they were of German decent (as am I – both my mother’s parents were born in Germany making myself and my sisters effectively half German) and were unable to join the Australian Army because of their heritage.  It wasn’t spoken of much at home, my grandfather fought in the Pacific with ANGAUbut he didn’t speak of that much either when we were young.

Someday in the not too distant future my Small Child will be learning about these (and many other) horrifying episodes throughout history….  part of me wishes he didn’t have to
.

FYI: Gympie has the highest rate of homicide per capita in the country.

Years ago back in Nov 2005 a friend (I think it might have been Ysambart but can’t be sure) sent me some funny internet tests on a website called OkCupid.  I knew it was a dating site but it also sold itself with options for looking for friends, penpals and stuff like that so I created an account so I could take some of the silly tests… some of which were kinda fun and many of which were rather strange.  After that I pretty much forgot about it.  I occasionally got spam from them but seeing that I had used my secondary email address it never bothered me and I mostly ignored them.

A couple of weeks ago another friend was doing tests from this website and I did the ‘I forgot my password thing’ so I could log in and take some quizzes for shits and giggles too.  Well since then I’ve been getting a LOT of emails from people.  Some said they wanted to ‘get to know me better’. or that they thought ‘I sounded interesting’.  One guy asked me out for dinner!  And one guy wanted to know where I lived!  And then there was this errr… very interesting letter that I received two days ago…

Hello there
i am Frank* from Gympie in Queensland i love your profile
well i want a kind,caring,loving women that love me for me
Looking for someone that has a big heart like myself and is affectionet
i am honest,kind,caring,loving,warm hearted & very giving
not what they want to hope me to be & love me for what i do have in life
i do have lot of love to give.Plus i am will give everything to a woman that want to be treated as a womam
& want to be spoil,loved,roses every few days & made to look good as best she can be
i love a woman that into fashion that make her look good & sexy
plus she want to give the same thing back & if she much love sex alot
i do have a high sex drive oh yes Vvvoooommm i would like to have sex
every 3 or 5 times a day anywhere & anytime
& i like camping,swiming,fishing,
movies,B,B,Q.traveling.
i like to go out to wine & dinne out or stay at home,night clubs
going to party & danceing,love the beach,
long walk along the beach under the full moon
going to parks,i do write poetry,plus i race cars too
oh i collect old antique too.Plus i got 2 kids that i get part time
they are a girl is 13 & a boy is 11 if you want to hook up for coffee or you can
call or text me on ( O,***,O,***,five,too,***,sex,
one,ate ) or you can try this one
(O,for,***,one,***,three,O,nine,
***,too,*** )
ok i love hear from you soon
Frank

*not his real name or numbers obviously!

Well I can honestly say I’ve never received a letter like this before and I’m all at sea!  Should I reply or should I go with my fist instinct which is to red pen it and return it for correction?
.