No wind, no waves.

I might care more about this if I knowingly relied on wave powered turbines. But I don’t, or am at least unaware of it if I do. I hate the wind, it rarely brings anything good to a day. The wind does very strange things to people and their brains. Also animals.

I live in Melbourne, a hugely populated city and generally rather windy. This of course means that I’m faced with the prospect of sudden onset of craziness in my fellow citizens at any given moment of the day or night. You might say I’m faced with waves of odd stirrings, frankly I could live without it. No, shut up, I don’t dislike it so much that I want to move away from Melbourne.

Bursts of chaos in busy streets. Pedestrians losing directional and spatial awareness, being assaulted by falling autumn leaves, or the occasional loose rubbish. Being unable to remain calmly upright in the big gusts. And knowing that, depending on the direction of the wind, it could take a lot longer or no time at all to get where you need to be. This is human life quite literally at the mercy of an element. And it drives people a little insane! It’s actually a pretty interesting thing to observe.

We have no control over the wind. It’s driving for us, and it can be fierce in a tense situation. That’s road rage no one wants to witness. The wind distracts our senses. Drives us to thirst. Deafens us with howls and window shaking. Spits dust in our eyes. Attacks olfaction with any number of environmental sources. Cold wind hurts and hot wind sticks.

It decides how we look, it changes our hair and ruffles our clothes. It decides how we feel, stifled by heat, or frozen stiff. It dries us out and it chases us around corners, down alleys and up stairs. And we can’t escape it, we can’t bargain with it, we can do nothing to stop the wind achieving it’s will.

I try to avoid crowds in windy weather because I’m not the greatest at dealing with masses of people who subconsciously know the only steady thing happening to them is a heartbeat and even that’s out of their control. However, this coming weekend brings the first ever Oz Comic Con in Melbourne.

As a regular to Supanova events, saddened by the fact I get a feast of comic book shop love under one roof only once a year, I’m really excited to get a second hit this Saturday! And the weather is going to be crap-tacular! Luckily no gale is on the forecast, but 20-35 km/hr winds are enough to get a crowd half way to loony. That’s a glass half empty true, but it the full half that worries me.

Hey, come on now it’s not so bad. It’s entirely indoors, even the line up to get in will be behind the floor to ceiling windows of Jeff’s Shed. And besides, I like … nay,love … the patrons of such events. This is a wave of potential wind driven madness I’m looking forward to!

Wind, I can’t stop you creating all the waves of merciless torment you want – but I’m buying comics this weekend and you can’t stop me!

Lucky Numbers: 9, 16, 21, 26, 30, 33

16: dollars (each, give or take) for another couple of Unwritten or Transmetropolitan TPB’s

21: one dollar more that the Oz Comic Con ticket price

33: other dollars I’ll spend on stuff no one needs, but damn it’s cool how could I not need that!

 

 

 

On the whole, human beings want to be good, but not too good, and not quite all the time.

I have a fortune cookie almost every night for dessert. I have three pay off’s from this habit; insulin spike before bedtime, lucky numbers, and a usually insightful message. It fascinates me how the paper messages Kong Foo Sing stuff into their addictive biscuits can sum up something from my day, every day.

How does it know? All I can put it down to is that something wonderful happens in the Universe when I crack the little cookie beak.

Tonight I got this lengthy sentence presumably about the duplicity of humans, or maybe the best intentions, etc. I interpreted the message as one that can be tied back to a book I finished reading today which was a treacherous waste of time, The Lonely Polygamist by Brady Udall. Don’t bother reading it, it’s 599 pages of nothingness and I’m sad that I even spent $5.00 on it.

The three protagonists each wants to be good, may play with the idea of being not so good or at least not all the time, like the cookie suggests. I know I wanted the book to be good. I carried the damn thing with me on the tram too and from work everyday for a few weeks.

My compulsion to finish was based on my want for this story to become, well, a story. To be in some way linear, or purposeful. Something I could smile about on reflection in a weeks time or so. Instead it lead me to the second half of my cookie fortune … to be not too good, and not quite all of the time. I wrote a terrible review, or, as some might say, an attack and posted it on Goodreads…

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/315513862

So all in all it was not a really insightful paper message, but I did feel the cartoon think bubble pop when the cookie went snap.

Lucky Numbers: 32, 25, 11, 9, 6, 26

25; today’s date

11; legs eleven!

9; is one of my lucky numbers