Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 March 2010

How Twilight Saved My Mind


Early last week, the declaration was made that I feel I have reached 60% healing on the way to recovery and victory over the depression that has held on to me for so long. When I hit 50%, I owned it and it just bugged me unlike before that when I was at it's beck and call.

It probably proves my insanity is ripe in that I regularly declare out loud that this depression is my b*tch. It damn well is now and thank goodness for that.

So why the title? How did a teenage love story about sparkling vampires written badly by a mormon 30 something save my mind? Good question. As with most of my answers, you won't see this one coming.

The first thing that goes when you are depressed is your mind. "Well obviously", I hear you proclaim. To be more specific is that your ability to concentrate disappears right near the beginning of your depression. All that consumes your mind is a series of negative thoughts that run through your head so fast that you can't catch them long enough to think your way out of them. It's one good mental kicking after another until you are left too tired to think, sleep or concentrate.

Literature on depression says that it will usually pass within 3-5 years of starting. That is assuming that you are not one of the unlucky ones who suffers life long depression. I still don't know if I'm lucky or not. The progress I am making at least leaves me relaxed in the knowledge that I will be making my own mind up from now on and not some behavioural triggered chemical reaction.

Before I realised I was suffering from any mental illness (ouch! It hurts to use that term on myself but I should own it to own it), it frustrated me to no end that concentrating on anything that required higher level brain function was almost impossible. A workmate (Phil Calcado) once commented on how short an attention span I had when he'd shared a link to a blog post on some topic and he saw me take an entire day to get through reading it. That isn't the normal me by the way.

When my mind was like this and sometimes still is, I don't give up. I persist in reading; doing mind puzzles like crosswords and playing scrabble; writing code outside of work; and painting or being creative in a tangible way. It can take me up to ten times as long to finish a task as I would pre-depression. For me, it was the finishing that made it worth while. That was the point to celebrate and feel triumphant over the fatigue.

My library before the divorce contained many classic books and great works of fiction and non-fiction in every genre you can imagine. It was both my ex-husband and I who loved collecting and reading books. We spent more of our disposable income on books than anything else I can think of, when we were together. Yes, even my shoe collection.

Towards the end of my marriage and the beginning of the depression that almost took me down, I couldn't read anything much at all. My feed reader was always at 1000+ items and the pile of books to read was growing rather than shrinking. That was when I changed tack.

The new feeds I subscribed to were short reads from comics and picture blogs with lolcats to one paragraph updates from comedians and teenage girls circumnavigating the world. Stuff that didn't strain my brain but still allowed me to read. At that time, my book club decided to read the first book of the Twilight series. If you have been living under a rock then it's about a teenage girl in a small American country town who has a chaste relationship with a vegetarian vampire. It's been described as a man falling in love with his food in a New Zealander kind of way :)

The writing is simple and aimed at teenage girls and housewives. Oprah wouldn't touch it on her book club and most book geeks will deny ever having even touched the books. There are four in the series and I read them all. They were a breeze to read and took me around three to four weeks to work my way through them. The achievement I felt at the end of finishing the series was brilliant. I'd managed to absorb the simple plot and get to know the characters without much effort. Yes, they will not win the Pulitzer or Nobel in Literature but they made reading accessible to me.

My ex put them down at any chance he got and made sure I knew he thought them to be for pathetic women with no lives or brain cells. For me, that did not matter. I started them and read them all the way through. Like the lolcats and 140 character tweets that kept me entertained in those days, they also helped me keep my brain in use. That was valuable.

Now, I read a lot more feeds with a lot more words. My books are becoming more complex and challenging intellectually but I keep the fluff around and still roll in it like a dog who has found a dead fruit bat in the tropics.

What matters is not what you read but that you do read. Elitism is a way of excluding people and only makes the insecure feel superior long enough until the self-doubt kicks in and makes them find fault in something else.

Read whatever you want. Play Scrabble or Upwords. Giggle at pictures of badly spelled cakes or comic books with excessive violence. It doesn't matter what does it for you at the time, just keep doing it. Yes, therapy + medication + environment will help you but so will keeping the brain going.

Thank you sparkly vampires and teenage angst. Thank you cheezeburger cats and the Watchmen. Thanks for keeping me ticking. I appreciate you.

Thursday, 5 March 2009

Bogan Bingo


A couple of weeks ago, I ended up spending a fun Friday evening hanging out with friends and playing Bogan Bingo. No, that's not a judgement. That was the name they called it.

The two hosts had beer guts and mullets (fake apparently) and played bad 80's music while making crass jokes. The food was awful and the table next to us was very drunk but despite this, it was a fun-filled night :) Kelly won a meat tray and we played about 50 games between the 4 of us over 2 hours.

It was enjoyable so I do recommend doing it once but never again for me. Deepest apologies to our Iranian friend who smiled and took it in her stride. Too bad we couldn't tell her that anywhere else in Australia, that would just be normal :)

Saturday, 7 February 2009

Sunday, 15 June 2008

We Saw Edward Again

Photo by @nai used under a Creative Commons license

Months ago, I impulse bought tickets to a modern dance performance of one of my favourite romantic movies of all time - Edward Scissorhands. As a teenager, I went to see the movie because Johnny Depp was in it but then became a massive fan of all things Tim Burton. To be honest, my first Burton movie was Beetle Juice and that rocked my world too.

With the same concerns that I have heard voiced by others, I went along to the performance at the Sydney Opera House hoping that it would still work without Johnny Depp, Winona Ryder and Tim Burton.

The story had been changed slightly but did not ruin the flow in any way. It stayed true to the original telling in spirit. Don't worry, the changes were tiny and surely had a lot of do with the medium of dance and everything happening on one stage.

There was dancing and a really damn good score along with amazing props, costumes and performers. Only one slow moment brought me back to reality. It was the ice skating on rollerblades which I blame Eurovision for. Ice skating just does not work in story telling or European pop contests, even if they do win. The rest was very very very entertaining and heartbreaking.

I don't recommend seeing any other live performance - dance, music, opera, bands, whatever - until you see this. It is the best show I have seen in a long time and didn't disappoint in any way.

Go see Edward. We did. He's going well.

Monday, 14 April 2008

Tuesday, 4 March 2008

The Beautitul People!

There is no bigger Surry Hills party than the annual Sydney Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras!

This was my first year to attend and I can tell you that it was worth enduring the freezing 17 degree C evening, the crazy bag-wielding Japanese tourists and the fence of people on egg crates and $2 plastic stools (bought at $10 from a guy with a trailer) to see the fabulous parade. TV can not do it justice. The vibe is amazing. The crowd is happy. It's the most fantastic celebration I've seen in a long long time.

Here is what I caught on bits...

The Mounties were represented

It was musical

There were angels in white

Clover has a float - yay!

Every man and his dog got prepared in Hyde Park before the parade

There were people on patrol

There were people on buildings

The view from business class

Flying the flag

Wednesday, 30 January 2008

My New Album

Follow the rules as stated and make your own album cover.






I'm not going to dream about running away with the circus anymore

Two guys running around a cage with no walls while it spins very fast

A couple of Fridays ago, I saw Le Grande Cirque at the Concert Hall in Opera House. It was the most amazing and dangerous show I have ever seen. Similar to the circus shows out there that don't use animals, it consisted mainly of acrobats and contortionists.

The ticket sellers classified the show as a family event for children but it was lots of fun for the many adults who used their children as an excuse to go. There was plenty of audience participation with the ring master (of sorts) stealing an audience members wife, crowd surfing giant beach balls and a dance off.

One tip - avoid the glasses of champagne before hand because they can cause a little extra freak-out when elastic people are flying around the stage with flashing lights. Otherwise, it is a fantastic event for all.

Mothers don't let your babies grow up to be acrobats. I wanted to join a circus as an acrobat when I was a little girl but I take that all back. Give me a safe ground-level job and let me walk stiffly to my seat and watch much braver and more talented people entertain so thoroughly.

Saturday, 20 October 2007

Herding A Cat

The game Chat Noir (black cat) is not as easy as it looks. It is very much how real life works though.

Thursday, 11 October 2007

The Waifs @ The Enmore Theatre

On Thursday night, Giles, Karen U and I saw The Waifs perform at The Enmore Theatre. This is the best live music performance that I have seen all year. They were energetic, happy and totally polished. It is ridiculous that this is the first time I have seen them live.


A shot of the back of strangers heads + The Waifs on stage




The Waifs performing Lighthouse

Stardust

Some people have vague moments or even a day once in a while but I like to commit to a whole week. This week and last week have been technically difficult weeks for me. At the end of the day my brain tends to do that shutting-down-to-sleep thing that laptops do.

The reason I'm prefacing my story with this _excuse_ is because my vagueness shone through last night when I dragged Giles to the latest Jodie Foster flick. The movie hasn't had great reviews but I am kinda in a JF mood since reading recently about Hinckley's reason for shooting Reagan. Plus I think she should get the chance to do some killin' and The Brave One let's her do that apparently. The other reason to see the movie is to show that we don't agree with the head of WB who said "we are no longer doing movies with women in the lead".

Gold Class cinema tickets were purchased and after a yummy dinner at South African restaurant Kelly's Bar (who specialise in delicious pork ribs), we made our way up to watch the movie. The guy who served us managed to hold back a smile when he informed me that we were 1 week early. The Brave One doesn't open until next week. That explains why I got such good seats on a Wednesday night at Gold Class. Oops.

Giles + I are agile.
We recovered.
I was a little embarrassed but we've moved on.
Don't sweat it. Blog it.


We saw Stardust instead. It's based on a book by Neil Gaiman who we are huge fans of. It's soppy in parts but overall it's an awesome fantasy movie. I'd liken it to The Princess Bride. It has an awesome cast with
Robert De Niro, Claire Danes, Nathaniel Parker, Peter O'Toole, Michelle Pfeiffer and Sienna Miller (who gets drop on her head lol). Go see it at the cinema so you get the full effect. I'll buy it as soon as it's out on DVD.

Monday, 8 October 2007

Scrabble Etiquette (or How I Stopped Worrying and Love the Bomb)


Two player Scrabble is big on the net at the moment and Facebook holds my tables. Through the Scrabulous application, you can play multiple two player games against other enthusiasts from across the Interblag. Like any fb application, there are people trying it out every day, there are those who play once in a while and of course there are the serious ones who only think in two letter words or bingos. During the last few weeks, I have played all types and apart from the basic rules of Scrabble, there should be a certain etiquette encouraged. My suggestions are...

  1. If you start a game, you should finish it. Even if you only want to try it out, you should complete a started game and not just wander off part way through it;
  2. Don't cheat. It defeats the point of playing the game. If I wanted to play a word lookup website then I'd implement a computer opponent who does the same lookup but is more efficient and has a better personality. Even the experts will play no more than four bingos in one game. It's obvious that you are cheating;
  3. Try not to act like a baby. This happens in two ways - the opponent is losing by a large margin and decides to concede rather than continue; and the opponent puts down swear words in order to show their dislike of losing;
  4. Play the game you accepted. Don't accept a Moderate game (played over 2-3 days) if you want your opponent to play it all in one sitting. A fast game of Scrabble online will easily take 2 hours if played in one sitting. Not everyone wants that and hosting a Moderate table indicates that. Sending insulting messages about turns taking too long or the person wandering away after 5 moves is not good form. Try to hide your sociopathic me-me-me tendencies;
  5. Have fun. It's just a game. If you wouldn't pick up a board and smash it over your grandmother's head then don't do that to a complete stranger. It's just a game. Learn to lose with grace or at least suck it up and cry to your dog.

Sunday, 30 September 2007

Art And About

My Dad and I were walking through Hyde Park yesterday and came across Art And About which is running through October. The enlarged photos of life in Sydney are worth the visit.

The Sydney Life show explained. I thought it would be longer :o)

Dad near " Elvis Goes to the Races"

All the photos hanging in Hyde Park


Monday, 17 September 2007

Emos explained

This picture explained emos to me in a split second. A picture really is worth a thousand words.

Emos are great - the best people to giggle at.

Emo Emus are the saddest!

Friday, 14 September 2007

Mars Lounge with da girlies

Friday night was spent sipping cocktails and eating nibblies at a funky bar in my block tagged the Mars Lounge. This was another fb organised event and I have to say there is no better way to keep track of your life than through facebook.

Beware of the cocktails at this bar that are basically alcoholic slushies. They are a little tacky. Just cos you put a drink in a martini glass doesn't mean it's classy.

The new bar girl was also a little slow. 3 cocktails and 1 beer took 15 mins but it was a Friday night and busy-ish. Both drinks and food are worth the wait. The prawn and mushroom wontons are worth returning for plus this place is less than 2 mins from my place so it will happen.


Wednesday, 29 August 2007

Sunday, 26 August 2007

Malaysia Fest

Today, I continued my quest to find the perfect chicken satay like the ones I use to get at the Palmerston Markets when I lived Darwin. In search of the grail, I made my way down to Darling Harbour to Malaysia Fest.

Malaysia Fest is organised by Malaysian students in Sydney. The main stage was being run by two very enthusiastic students (a guy and girl) who presented a Malay wedding ceremony, a formal thank you march and a competition that involved members of the audience attempting to tie a traditional Malay male costume (like a sarong). It was fun and entertaining and luckily I avoided being plucked from the crowd when I pleaded that I was still eating my "chicken sticks"TM.

Malay "chicken sticks" - quest rating 1/10

Formal thank you ceremony after the Malay wedding

Not too crowded so there was lots of space to sit and relax in the lovely Sydney sun

Don't let me fool you with my references to non-food stuffs. I was there for the food and I tried most of the stalls except the crazy looking drink stall that sold drinks containing coffee, guarana and a lot of other stimulants all in one brightly coloured can. I chose to avoid the sugar coma today. These were food stalls offering Malaysian cuisine like satay, Chinese yum cha, laksa, noodles, fish ball sticks ($3 per stick), crab balls (4 for $6) and a big bunch of other stuff that I am not able to identify. It was all great quality and very cheap. Reminded me of the $5 dinners at the markets in Darwin but minus the sandflies.


An interesting sticky rice with soy sauce and gigantic pork bun

I love pork buns!

The Ayam show bag for $6. Reminded me of what we ate in PNG