“People accept the kind of love they think they deserve.”

Went to the movies yesterday with ThatChick (from That Blog That Chick Wrote) to see The Perks of Being a Wallflower.  I have to admit to having no idea what the movie was about before grabbing my frozen coke and finding our seats.  Instead of being Ms Organizer, for a change I was just going along for the ride.  I was vaguely expecting another American teen ‘coming of age’ flick, and wasn’t disappointed, but it was also much more.

adapted from book stephen chbosky

While most films about teen angst in American high schools tend to fall back on the cliches of typical overly melodramatic teen angst brought on by what appears to be a never ending popularity contest, Perks brings some new depth to some very familiar themes.  The film was well cast with Charlie (played by some kid named .. hang on a sec while I look this up… Logan Lerman) and his love interest played by Hermione Granger, err I mean Sam (aka Emma Watson).  There was also a fantastic character in the unusually-comfortable-with-my-sexuality token gay guy Patrick (Ezra Miller) who was flamboyant and often dragged the others out of their shell, and along for the ride with his joie de vivre (who reminded me a LOT of Kev, aka Darkman to many of us).

flamboyant homosexual high school drama jock boyfriend

Unlike most teen flicks, nothing is as simple as it seems on the surface and each of our happy trio have their own demons, ranging from a jock in-the-closet boyfriend, bereavement and guilt over loved ones lost to accidents and suicide, as well as the not fully acknowledge but latent theme of child sexual abuse.

As a group of misfits goes though, to me these guys don’t seem as ‘misfitty’ as they should.  For one, Sam is far too pretty not to be one of the cool kids (Emma Watson is all grown up so you guys can stop feeling like such dirty perverts now), Charlie is far too smart to be picked on by the other smartypants in his advanced literature class, and Patrick is far too charismatic to be socially ostracized – especially given his anti-authoritarian antics which delight his fellow classmates.

all grown up dirty perverts okay nowOverall this is not your typical coming of age teen drama and while it has many lighthearted moments it’s not a comedy either.  These teens display a level of maturity far and beyond what one is accustomed to expecting from Hollywood’s typical high school kids and the issues they are dealing with are also hopefully not de rigeur for your average teen.

It’s very emotionally engaging, nostalgic and funny, yet contains several scenes of profound sadness which communicated some heavy duty disheartening realisations for the audience… Seeing this film made me want to go and read the book The Perks of Being a Wallflower‘ by Stephen Chbosky… which in itself is quite the recommendation (Incidentally the book was banned from a number of high school libraries in the US by groups citing promotion of homosexuality, drug use and sexual behaviour… Sigh. Uptight sepos).

movie adaptation emma watson banned books

Go see it if you feel like indulging in some nostalgic melancholia for a few hours, I actually really enjoyed the film and I had an inexplicable desire to go and make mix tapes for the people I love which stayed with me for several hours!  🙂

PS:  If you want a proper informed opinion of the film go here (link to follow) – she actually knows about cinema and stuff  🙂

This year IS going to be THE year.

In our first year of married life, we received about 50 or so Christmas cards from friends and family who had taken the pains to send one – I presume, to wish us and our new little family a Happy Holiday season.  I threw my hands up and went ‘OMG!!!’ and very reactively, quickly obtained some Christmas cards and stamps and promptly sent cards of our own in reply.  Given that people had been thoughtful enough to send one to us, I felt obliged to reply in kind.  :S

After Christmas… every single one of those cards went straight in the bin – admittedly a recycling bin, but staight into a bin nonetheless.  And as I threw them away I thought “What a waste!” and I still think they are a waste.  Time, money, envelopes, postage, paper, printing… all of it ultimately wasted.  TREES!  Millions of trees being destroyed in the Amazon, people!  And all to make card, paper and pulp for Christmas cards with banal greetings in them and never enough writing space.  *muttermutter climate change, global warming, permafrost melting, non sustainable resource usage etc*

In my second year of married life, I received yet again about 50 Christmas cards – and I sent out NONE, choosing instead to email friends that had sent us well wishes to thank them for their cards and their thoughts during the holidays.

In my third year of married life there was noticably fewer cards…. fourth year – even fewer again… fifth year – even fewer again.  I realized the fewer I sent out the fewer I received (thankfully)…. and the numbers continued to dwindle until one year when I received barely three Christmas cards!  I felt elated and felt it to be quite the achievement!   I thought that my small part in not propagating the unnecessary ritual of exchanging expensive and resource hungry Christmas cards every year was considerable indeed.

In an age when we keep in touch with friends and family around the country and also around the world via Facebook, email, Skype, Twitter, MSN and blogs – do Christmas cards serve ANY purpose anymore???  My Mum used to send them out every year.  She had a list that she’d pull out every December of people ‘she HAD to send a card to’ and she always included inside a personalized handwritten letter telling the recipient how the Cross Famliy had been that year.  This quaint method of keeping touch once a year has become completely redundant in this age of technology when we already know quite a lot of what our friends have been up to – with alarming frequency depending on some people’s Facebook habits!!!  🙂

So year after year my attempt to minimize the Christmas cards has been ever so slowly gaining momentum.  In 2009 I thought that I might have finally pulled it off, as the only Christmas card I had received that year was from Caloundra Suzuki wishing me and my family ‘A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year of safe motoring in our new Suzuki!!!’ (I decided that promotional material of this nature doesn’t really count as a Christmas card so I was so far in the clear)…. and at the time I thought “YES!!  I’ve finally done it!!!”

But alas a few more turned up around about December 20-22nd.  Last year, 2011… that was going to be THE year.  I spent half of December carefully watching the mail box, dreading the annual invasion of Christmas cards… and with a bare two days to go I thought I had finally made it with no cards arriving…  But there’s this saying about counting your chickens and I last year I found one.  One lonely chicken in my mailbox. Dammit.

So far we are all in the clear, but it’s only the 10th… maybe this year will be the cardless Christmas I’m aiming for…

By all means, Tweet, email, Facebook a cheerful message, SMS your holiday greetings or use any means you can think of… just please don’t waste your time, money and trees on sending Christmas cards!

Stuff the movies, let’s go to the range!

Being known as I am for impulsivity and acting on whimsy, I decided today to take the Small Child and my nieces, B1 and B2, to the range.  Now, the reason Borys doesn’t normally do things like this without prior planning is because of the inevitable logistics involved…

Shooting Checklist For Taking Newbies to The Range – 
Hearing protection for everyone: check.
Eye protection for everyone: check.
Closed toe shoes all round: check.
Rifles suitable for children: check.
Pistols suitable for children: check.
Ammo for various firearms: check
Hats, water bottles, wet wipes: check, check, check!
Form 33 for unlicensed shooters: check.
Photo ID:  Ah… damn and botheration!  Knew it’d be something.
Quick call their Dad who rides to the rescue on his Harley, like a man on a mission in black leather… and: check. Photo ID obtained. Lastly and very importantly, a partner in crime to help adequately supervise these three so I don’t, well you know, get one of them dead or maimed or something: check (Thank you Yale!)

We get down the range, go through the mountain of paperwork required to sign on two by licensed and membered adults and three by unlicensed juniors – and while this is somewhat tangential, it always annoys me that the kids are asked to sign their own Form 33 in order to legally shoot as unlicensed shooters under Section 53 of the Weapons Licensing Act.  Every time we go down to the range, they ask the Small Child to sign his form himself. At which point, I always bring it to the attention of the people processing this paperwork, that as a minor he is unable to enter into legal contract and is not legally considered to be of mature mind and sound judgement in order to sign ANY legal declaratory document.  No one working there ever thinks it’s odd they are asking a child to sign a legal government declaration?!?!  But I digress…  Fortuitously as we are wrapping up all the legal mumbo jumbo a ceasefire is called and Yale hightails it out to the 50m berm with some targets and a staple gun so we can hit the ground running.  B1… B2… Ears on kiddos, lets go!

eye protection ear protection for pistol shooting

As it turns out, 50m was a bit on the ambitious side, especially considering I had a new CZ455 Super Match .22 rifle which only has iron sights – no scope for the kidlets!  I really want the Small Child to learn to shoot the way I did.. open sights, good posture, good breathing techniques and steady hands before he gets too used to always shooting with scopes. Given it was the first day out of the box for this beautiful rifle (I really love it by the way) the action is pretty stiff and the kids found it a little hard to handle.

.223 target shooting for kids

Additionally not being used to the open sights at all meant they weren’t landing many on their targets… even Yale and myself were shooting a little high with it at 50m while getting used to the sights.  So we moved benches and shifted some targets down to some 25m frames and the kids started to see some results for their efforts.  We gave them a couple of shots with Yale’s .223 Remington 700 so they could feel the difference when shooting a rifle with recoil and the grins of delight were fantastic… you can see the concentration on the Small Child’s face as he lines up his target with the .223.

Taking kids to the range can be really stressful… mistakes can’t just be ‘rubbed out’ like at school, so you have to work hard to get and keep their attention when there is so much exciting and loud stuff going on around them.  I imagine it’s a bit like trying to teach math in the Main St of Disneyland.  You have to frequently reiterate your safety instructions, and I mean, numerous times… ‘broken record’ amounts of times (tedious but very necessary).  You may have to repeatedly demonstrate the mechanical actions of the firearms until it feels natural for them and they gain a bit of confidence.  You have to ensure that boredom doesn’t creep in while they are waiting their turn to shoot, bored kids will play up without fail.  You need to make sure you don’t give a child a gun that is going to be too much for them and potentially scare them off.  And also, very importantly, you have to make sure you don’t allow your charges to interfere with the enjoyment of others using the range (something I wish other parents on the range would pay more attention to their kids from time to time).  Getting and maintaining their attention for the entire duration is key and it’s back to basics all day long until things we take for granted – like keeping the firearm pointed down range at all times, becomes second nature. But it works, look at that trigger awareness while she is listening to instructions.  🙂  Well done, B2!

trigger awareness safe direction use firearms

After we did a bit of bench shooting, we went down to the pistol range and had a go at some rimfire semi-auto .22 pistol shooting using my Beretta 87 Target pistol.  As it turns out a perfect handgun to start kids on as it is ergonomically sound for small hands, is light weight, has little to no recoil so it’s not scary, and it’s ‘Beretta is better’ smoothness of operation made it easy for the kids to handle.  In no time they were changing magazines themselves, working the slide and dropping the slide lock all the while maintaining good muzzle awareness and keeping those little fingers out of the trigger until they had acquired their targets!  I think these kids followed instructions much better than some of the newbie adult shooters I’ve taken around on RAM and RAW (now RASA) days!  They also got to have a few shots with the 9mm Beretta 92 Combat… which B1 and the Small Child really love, but which B2 chose to avoid – I think she felt it was a little on the scary side of powerful after watching B1 shoot it.  All up we had an awesome, if somewhat exhausting, time and I’d happily take the girls back to the range again.

junior safety checklist

 

 

John Cleese – Still Brilliant.

I just love the internet.. It’s the accessibility of the intellectual meanderings of someone such as John Cleese totally make up for accessibility of the banal deliberatings offered by those such as Dita von Teese!   🙂

ALERTS TO THREATS IN 2012 EUROPE

ALERTS TO THREATS IN 2012 EUROPE : BY JOHN CLEESE 

The English are feeling the pinch in relation to recent events in Libya and have, therefore, raised their security level from “Miffed” to “Peeved.” Soon, though, security levels may be raised yet again to “Irritated” or even “A Bit Cross.” The English have not been “A Bit Cross” since the blitz in 1940 when tea supplies nearly ran out. Terrorists have been re-categorised from “Tiresome” to “A Bloody Nuisance.” The last time the British issued a “Bloody Nuisance” warning level was in 1588, when threatened by the Spanish Armada.

The Scots have raised their threat level from “Pissed Off” to “Let’s get the Bastards.” They don’t have any other levels. This is the reason they have been used on the front line of the British army for the last 300 years.

The French Government announced yesterday that it has raised its terror alert level from “Run” to “Hide.” The only two higher levels in France are “Collaborate” and “Surrender.” The rise was precipitated by a recent fire that destroyed France ‘s white flag factory, effectively paralysing the country’s military capability.

Italy has increased the alert level from “Shout Loudly and Excitedly” to “Elaborate Military Posturing.” Two more levels remain: “Ineffective Combat Operations” and “Change Sides.”

The Germans have increased their alert state from “Disdainful Arrogance” to “Dress in Uniform and Sing Marching Songs.” They also have two higher levels: “Invade a Neighbour” and “Lose.”

Belgians, on the other hand, are all on holiday as usual; the only threat they are worried about is NATO pulling out of Brussels .

The Spanish are all excited to see their new submarines ready to deploy. These beautifully designed subs have glass bottoms so the new Spanish navy can get a really good look at the old Spanish navy.

Australia , meanwhile, has raised its security level from “No worries” to “She’ll be alright, Mate.” Two more escalation levels remain: “Crikey! I think we’ll need to cancel the barbie this weekend!” and “The barbie is cancelled.” So far no situation has ever warranted use of the final escalation level.

— John Cleese – British writer, actor and tall person

A final thought -“ Greece is collapsing, the Iranians are getting aggressive and Rome is in disarray. Welcome back to 430 BC”.

‘Find iPhone’ Application? Not Activated!

A couple of weeks ago, I did something I never thought I would.  I gave the Small Child a functioning mobile phone so that I could put him on the bus to school and not be worrying that he made it safely. The problem of course is Translink… they’re notoriously unreliable, with Mr K on occasion storming back into the house half an hour after leaving saying three buses never came, and constantly complaining that they’re late and of course the whole, having to change buses at a busy bus interchange to get to school from here.  Just another one of those things I probably would never have bothered with if he were travelling with a sibling and they could look out for each other… oh, the joys of having an only child.

The Small Child has been in possession of the second hand iPhone since about March, when Mr K upgraded and was using it primarily on the wifi to play computer games and  such, and had demonstrated his capacity to keep it charged, not treat it like a toy and to the best of my knowledge wasn’t surfing for porn on it.  So, it was decided that sufficient levels of maturity and responsibility were being exhibited, and the phone was hooked up to a cheap BYO phone plan which allowed unlimited free calls to Mum and Dad.  So far all good.  But, of course, what happens once the phone is activated?  It got ‘lost’.

misplaced smartphone distress lost phone

Bugger. I had picked him up from BigSal’s after school, as per usual, and he had the phone with him then. We then drove to town to collect Mr K after work, not usual, and potential point of phone loss Number 1 occurs as they switched seats. On the way home, we decided to stop for frozen cokes because it was disgustingly hot and the Small Child took his phone into the store with him – potential point of phone loss Number 2.  Came home and Small Child checked the letterbox – potential point of phone loss Number 3. After that the Child + phone should have been securely inside the domicile… ‘should’ being the operative word in this statement.

Phone was thence reported missing when getting ready to go to school the following morning.  Mr K and the Small Child both asked me first thing in the morning if I had seen it – ‘Negatory Ghost Rider, no sightings of missing communications device’. They left for the day, sans phone, and I went back to attempting to read an article on ‘Demonic Possession and Mental Disorders of the Middle Ages’ and promptly forgot all about the entire incident.

Around midday, Mr K gave me a call to see how I was getting on and enquired if the Small Child’s phone turned up… a brief moment passed while I did a ‘Huh? HeLostHisPhone?WhenDidThatHappen?’ before the early morning conversation came back to me (yay marshmallow brain!).  Bugger. I guess I had better try and track it down.

His school has a policy of all phones at school being signed into and out of the office every day, so I called Bev in the office to see if it was signed out the previous day or had he inadvertently left it behind… no luck. It had definitely gone home with the Small Child.  Mr K had already rung both the building near where we picked him up and the frozen coke dispensary to see if an iPhone in a blue case had been handed in (yeah, as if!) and likewise, no joy there. I tried calling BigSal to see if it turned up at her place but as per usual she wasn’t answering her phone.  So I figured – it had to be in the car.  Three thorough searches, by three people of varying levels of competency later, and we determined it most definitely wasn’t hiding in the car.  We now had one very distraught Small Child who was feeling disappointed, heartbroken and somewhat guilty for losing his prized possession.

Now here is the truly stupid bit… iPhones as we know, have a ‘Find iPhone’ application and it was the ONE THING this particular iPhone didn’t have installed and activated.  I could open the application and find MY iPhone, my Macbook, track Mr K’s iPad and his phone, but for some reason the one device that was mostly likely to have been lost HAD NOT BEEN ACTIVATED WITH THIS FEATURE… sigh.  Stupid rookie mistake – we are use to administering our own gear and not someone else’s, in this case the Small Childs.  Bugger.

smartphone lost find my phone application

So, I signed into our phone provider’s website and was encouraged to find that no calls had been made using the handset or the SIM card.  I was rapidly hitting the point where I was going to have to cancel the account/SIM and disable the IMEI before we copped any bills… when Yale had an lightbulb moment of absolute brilliance.  We had tried calling it and it was ringing, but going to voicemail but at least it had some juice left.  He logged into the house wifi router and could see the phone’s MAC ID!  And, even better, when you called it, the wifi on that device activated, which meant the device was somewhere IN the house and connected quite happily to the wifi!!!  Big sigh of relief… won’t have to blame desire for frozen cokes after all.

how to find lost iphone

We checked everywhere. The Small Child had Drill Sergeant Mom looking over his shoulder as he cleaned his room, but alas, we found nothing but dust bunnies, old Pokemon cards and muesli bar wrappers.  We cleaned and checked the kitchen, the living areas, dusted the bookcases, went through the kitchen cupboards – looked everywhere.  And somewhere in among this hunting for the illusive iPhone, the Small Child told me he had a dream the night before that someone had taken his phone and broken it.  Which ordinarily wouldn’t mean diddly squat… except that, well, his mother had a known propensity for frequent sleep walking around his age and it now seemed very likely that the Small Child had gotten up in the middle of the night to put his precious iPhone in that most dreaded of locations known as ‘somewhere safe’.  Bugger!  The poor child was forced to give up all his secret hiding spots where he keeps his childhood ‘treasures’ as we continued the hunt for the phone. But alas, the curse’d iPhone was no where to be found.

We searched high and low for this thing (well Mr K and Yale searched ‘high’ and the Small Child and myself searched ‘low’).  We even called in backup to try and help locate it thinking that more eyes on the problem would help. We knew it was on the network, we knew it was on silent (school policy), and we knew the battery was probably running low by this point.  Executive decision made to wait until nightfall, turn off every light in the house and call it hoping that the touchscreen lighting up would be enough to give away it’s location.

how to find your phone no finder ap

If you’ve ever been on a long car trip with children then you’ll feel our pain here… instead of ‘Are we there yet?’ being repeated every fifteen minutes, we had a constant rendition from about 4:30pm – 8:00pm of ‘Is it dark enough yet?’  We eventually turned out the lights and took up positions throughout the house and called the damn phone again.  Convinced it was in the Small Child’s room, I vigilantly took up my post there expecting a flash of light… but no.  The plan did however work!  The iPhone that was previously known as ‘Steve’ and shall be henceforth known as ‘My Precioussss’ was located on the bookshelves in the dining room.  The exact same bookshelves I had dusted several hours earlier in our futile hunt for the Too Carefully Stashed iPhone Incident of 2012.  :S  Whoops. My bad.

I think there’s a few morals to this pathetic ‘First World Problem’ saga… firstly, maybe kids don’t need the stress of obsessing about expensive electronics, so we just shouldn’t give them these things, no matter how sound or well intentioned our plans may seem.  Second…hug an IT geek today!  We would have given up on the iPhone and perhaps even stupidly replaced it if we didn’t KNOW for certain it was in the house somewhere.  And finally, I wouldn’t ask me to help with the dusting if I were you… I’m obviously blind as a bat, off with the pixies or stoned out of my gourd.  :S

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