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Thursday, July 28, 2005

Take That Shakespeare!

Curses to Shakespeare for writing such crappy plays and sonnets. Curses to the rest of the world for worshipping him as one of the greatest writers of all time. Curses to the Board of Studies for being one of those people. Ever since year seven, I've been doing a Shakespearean play every year as part of trivial studies (a.k.a. the English course). Merchant of Venice, Twelfth Night, Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, Taming of the Shrew.... and now, Antony and Cleopatra. Of the plays, half of them are Shakespearean tragedies. I disagree entirely. I believe they all fit the category. It was a tragedy that any of them were ever written.

Anyway, Sefton decided to pick yet another crappy text for its students to study (i.e. A&C) and decided it would be wonderful fun to make us do a role play as one of the characters. Sure, that's not too bad. You have to bring in a prop that demonstrates powerplay. Alright, I can handle that. You have to talk about an additional text. Don't push it buddy... Oh, and did we mention you'd have to synthesise it with A&C? *Polishes 40 inch blade*

The good news is that I have finished writing the aforementioned speech and it sounds mighty impressive. The bad news is that I have virtually no content. My excuse is that it's too hard to turn text analysis into archaic English. So, the score is now: Alan - 6, Shakespeare - nil. Take that you play-stealing, frilled-neck bastard!

Sunday, July 17, 2005

An Eight Year Old Watches

On the radio, he hears about people
blowing themselves up.
The newsman calls it "jihad".
He asksda ddy "why?"
And daddy tells him
He's too young to understand.

On TV, he watches people
Bouncing on beds together.
They curse and sound in pain.
He asks daddy 'why?"
And daddy tells him
He'll know when he's older.

In the city, he sees people
Squatting on street corners,
Trembling as they ask for money.
He asks daddy "why?"
And daddy tells him
He's not old enough to understand,

Because he is just
Another eight year old
In an R-rated world.

Friday, July 15, 2005

What the HSC means to you...

For the people who are natural geniuses, the HSC is a High Salary Creator.
For the people who are dedicated to their studies, the HSC means a Heinous Social Collapse.
For those who are neither intelligent nor dilligent, the HSC is a Huge String of C's
For the people who don't mind living off other people's tax money, the HSC is a Huge SCrewup.
For cynics, the HSC spells Howard's Suicide Conspiracy.

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

Unleashed On The City

I was unaware that sitting inside the house for an entire week could drive you insane. And I'm not just talking about not going out with friends either. I'm talking about not setting foot outside at all. Add the insanity to the fact that whatever work ethics I had was all but dissipated (insanity and 4u maths don't mix) and I had a damn good excuse to make a visit to the city.

The city isn't much fun without good company so out the invites went. All eight of them. Unfortunately, only four people (including myself) could be bothered turning up: Grace, Ansel, Lawrence and your's truly.

We arrived at the city before 10 which was apparently too damn early for everyone even though nobody bothered complaining BEFORE the day. After a good twenty minutes debating over what movie to watch, we decided on 'Mr and Mrs Smith'. Movie started at 1:20 which gave us quite a bit of time to kill. Galaxy World for a few games of pool and then off to the highlight of the day: yum-cha!

Yum-cha in itself is hardly a thrilling experience. What made it interesting was Grace and myself talking/bribing Ansel into trying out some new foods. It did take some persuasion to get him to try some of the stranger stuff (e.g. chicken feet) but he did have a bit of everything and I do believe he is indeed still alive. Lost count of how many pots of tea we ended up drinking, but I assure you, it was a considerable amount.

Post lunch, we had a quick walk around Market City before heading back to the cinema. 'Mr and Mrs Smith' is hardly what you'd call a brilliant film but nothing could be much more entertaining (without having to think) than gun fights and some questionable humour. That movie will work wonders on the divorce rate. Instead of filing lawsuits upon getting totally sick of each other, married couples can now grab some guns, blow their house to pieces and then make up. And everybody says that violence doesn't solve anything...

Post-movie involved a visit to Kinokuniya (my favourite shop) just for the hell of it. Let's face it, everything in that shop is overpriced. Having said that, we did end up buying something; a pack of coloured staples for one dollar.

In conclusion, four hapless fools in the city makes for a surprisingly fun day!

p.s. Damn anybody invitees who didn't turn up.

Saturday, July 09, 2005

Remind you of someone?

Judiciously applying oneself to the HSC - the latest urban myth

By Richard Glover
SMH, July 9, 2005

For the HSC, Batboy is studying English, history, German and a practical unit called procrastination. It's a hands-on course, with students required to show they can come up with endless excuses for not studying their other subjects. Batboy is already showing an excellent grasp of the basic principles.

He's brewing beer, playing squash, walking the dog, and talking intensely to friends. He's suddenly got a thousand activities. He'll do anything as long as it's not studying.
He's not the only one. Our once-sleepy neighbourhood is ablaze with activity. The closer we get to the HSC, the more we are witnessing a cultural and sporting renaissance. One student has discovered a love of swimming - he walks to the pool, swims 20 laps, and then walks back home. He's fitter than he's ever been. If he takes the long way home, he can draw out the process to last most of the morning.

One girl, according to her mother, has discovered the joys of cleaning her own bedroom. So keen is she to avoid extension English, she's repacked all her clothes, wiped down all the shelves and vacuumed the blinds. After 17 years of slovenly behaviour, she now has the neatest room in the house.

A group of the boys has formed a vegetable growing club, specialising in the competitive farming of chillies. No, really: chillies. When the aim is avoiding HSC study, no activity is too bizarre or too obscure.

Batboy has his beer-brewing and his chilli-farming, but there is still a risk that a few hours might be available for study, especially during the morning. That's why he's developed a sudden interest in reading The Sydney Morning Herald.

For years, I've tried to push him towards the newspaper, hoping he might develop an interest in current affairs. For years, he's rolled his eyes, and mouthed the word "boring". Now, suddenly, under the gun of the HSC, he can't get enough of it. One morning this week, he read it for two hours straight - even enduring several pieces about Australian politics.

Maybe this is the real power of the HSC: it promises to create the citizens of the future, and indeed it does - out of their very desperation to avoid the official curriculum. They'll do anything to get out of paying proper attention to their HSC, even becoming well-rounded, sociable citizens.

For the first time in living memory, they debate politics, play tennis and go jogging. No longer do they shrug and mumble when asked about their day. When their only alternative is study, they can think of nothing more delightful than leaning against the kitchen bench, chatting endlessly to their parents.

One boy last week even offered to cook dinner for the family. His mother, as you might imagine, is still being treated for traumatic shock.

Yet even the most practised procrastinators will finally run out of excuses. Midway through this week, Batboy and friends discovered that this time had come. They had ridden the boundaries of their chilli-farms, chatted endlessly to their parents, and tidied their bedrooms. Their beer-brews were happily fermenting. They had read the Herald, even unto the arts pages.
With a jolt of panic, they realised that ahead stretched two or three hours during which it was technically possible for them to study.

It was a nasty couple of minutes before one of the crew had the realisation: they had yet to organise their accommodation for schoolies week. Phew. Crisis averted. Organising schoolies week, if done properly, can take days - no, weeks - to achieve. Which town to visit? Where to stay? And how to talk parents into paying over a bond which has so little chance of ever being returned?

Batboy and his friends settled down to the task, while Jocasta nervously eyed the calendar.
"So this is the next few months," said Jocasta, as the boys organised their trip. "He procrastinates with his friends, while I stare at the calendar, getting uptight on his behalf. And what happens at the end of this process? He gets to go off on schoolies, and I get to keep working. How fair is that?"

Jocasta rocked back against the fridge, and looked wistfully into the middle distance. "You know what we need? A schoolies week for the mothers. As a reward for all we've been through. Straight after the exams. Somewhere inland, while all the 18-year-olds are at the coast. Somewhere with plenty of wine. And massages. I think the Hunter Valley would be perfect."

Ever since this moment, the mood has been hectic, as Batboy and friends argue about which town they should subject to their invasion, while Jocasta rings around to see if she can find any other takers for her schoolies week for mums.

That's what I like about the HSC. It leaves everyone so focused.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Epitaph

I have sat on the one treed hill,
Have seen
Too many births,
Too many deaths.
Too few lives.
Yours were not so special.

You trod the earth, knowing
The ocean and western breeze
Would be your resting place.

By rights, you died
In war at twenty,
Of shame at thirty,
Of drink at fifty.
But the devil is good
At looking after his own.

You choked me with ashes,
I will drown you with tears.

Rest in peace.

Monday, July 04, 2005

The End of Love

Frequent tears have run
The colours from my life.

So weeping did I witness
The ethereal figure.
His voice was as cold
As the hand that held me.
“Guess who it is that holds thee!”
“Death, for surely naught else should be
So frozen nor so lonesome”
But there, he did reply,
“Not death… love…”

How I wished it had been death!
Here to bring me swift repose.
But love? Nothing could be
Quite so torturous as a heart
That beats,
Punctured by a hundred thorns.

Betwixt faint cheeks – a smile
Emanated an uncomfortable warmth
Where a fire once burned.
He would spread his wings
But for the burden of my heavy heart.
A flawed view of heaven;
Exchanged for earth

To hear “I love thee” once
And “I love thee” once more.
He has become but another victim
Of my lustful violence.

Like a smote soldier yielding
His sword, so shall I yield
The memory of the end of love.