Tag: ideas
Life is being too good,
Carcasses – 8th October 2023
Held together with string
These bones are grey
No more gifts to bring
And just empty words to say
Thrown onto the pile
Then deleted
A last goodbye smile
Broken and defeated
Whilst wheels are turning
They often roll on clear
And all the bridges burning
No longer bring the fear
Not meant to thrive
And natural to decay
Barely kept alive
Forever felt this way
inspired by this post at Spinning Visions about the changing relationships of friendship over time.
Today I’m feeling:
A bit more lively at first but after an hour or two there’s some aching eye muscles. Again, tired but not sleepy. I have things I want to get done this morning though so I’ll push on through.
Today I’m grateful for:
Aing to come from Bangkok and take care of our cats for a couple of weeks whilst I go to Australia. Amy and I both appreciate that a lot.
The best thing about today was:
Chatting with Boss and Noey over coffee this morning.
Playing guitar for an hour again.
Dinner at Mana Mala with Aing.
All equal and taking up a majority of the day.
What was out of your control today and how did you handle it?
Time feels like it is flying out of control at the moment and I’m wondering what I will have to drop in the future as I don’t think I can keep going like this! Just stay flexible and ride the wave wherever it takes you.
Something I learned today?
Both Noey and Boss (at Utopia) broke up with their partners recently. Boss seemed a little down today so maybe he’s still dealing with it but Noey said she was over it a couple of days after the breakup. She also says she’s not that interested in finding another boyfriend and that most boys here are too short for her!
What is my deepest hope?
Ridiculous I know but I vote for the old-fashioned world peace. I mean that is my ‘deepest’ hope.
Other hopes are for personal health, happiness and satisfaction. Likewise for my friends and family and then outwards from there to the rest of the world.
I have a minor hope that Amy will be happy back here in Thailand for a while at least.
Hope both our cats can stay healthy for another ten years.
I can control some of these things to a small degree and won’t be disappointed if something out of my control sees these hopes dashed.
Did you have any bad ideas this year?
I reckon I have bad ideas every five minutes but now I’m smart enough not to act on them.
There’s not been anything that stands out on initial thought. I also haven’t really been attempting anything unusual or challenging that I might regret.
Maybe some ideas could have been executed better; I’m thinking about the record label mostly here. As I’m a little bit out of the loop with things going on around the Asian music scene it’s getting tougher for me to know who to promote to.
As I’m writing I’m getting a crazy idea to do a 7” for my friends in Stacked State as they are just about to release a new CD. That may be a bad idea financially but it’s not about the money.

Not My Business – 11th January 2023
A choice is made
And has to be lived with
It’s not my body
It’s not my business
I have an opinion
But it doesn’t count
I don’t need to care
What you’re thinking about
Your choices have no effect
If I’m not involved
No need to push an agenda
That is so simply solved
If I was the father
The body still isn’t mine
Doing the right thing
Will reveal itself in time
My opinion on abortion – I don’t like it (hopefully there is no one that does) and I do (kind of) believe that it is taking a life, no matter how old the fetus. However, as a male, I feel I have no right at all to decide if someone should have an abortion or not, even if I was the father. It’s not my body, it’s not my business. The problem of unwanted pregnancy is far better solved with education and better contraceptive options rather than denial of termination.
22 Sep 2024 – Submitted to What’s Going On – choices
Today I’m feeling:
Happy and a little inspired. Sometimes on long work days, I feel more energetic such as I’m feeling now. But I’m expecting to wind down very quickly once I’m home. I know underneath this bravado is a weary brain and body.
Today I’m grateful for:
The salad greens that Nut and Bruno grew themselves and gave to me. I mixed it with salad from the market and sprinkled on some chilli cheese flavour chips and zinged my taste buds. Awesome.
The best thing about today was:
Watching a Malcolm Gladwell talk. I like his ideas and the way he presents them really connects. I like that he often doesn’t have solutions too but just presents coherent ideas as real possibilities. Watching this also reminded me I have some of his books to read too so as soon as I finished watching I read a nice quick Chekov story. I want to read more. Still.
What was out of your control today and how did you handle it?
From today’s picture and a little below, I didn’t go home after school as I needed to get a letter from a clinic (stating I don’t have syphilis!) and would have to wait til 5 when they opened. When they didn’t open at five I wasn’t that bothered but messaged Nancy who told me they don’t open til 6.30.
I was already hungry and not prepared to hang around for another hour and a bit. Nancy said to send her a picture of my blood test and she will get the letter from the clinic prepared but said for me to pick it up when ready, which would mean hanging around for several hours just waiting to collect it.
I told Nancy that I’m not ever around the city at that time and would it be possible for someone else to collect it for me and she said she could arrange that to which I sent my appreciation.
A couple of years ago this kind of thing would have frustrated me immediately and I probably would have made matters worse with my reaction. Now I’m more attuned to the way things work here.
Something I learned today?
As I had to wait until 5 pm to go to the clinic I thought it would be easy enough to go and wait at House only to learn that they shut at 4 pm now. Luckily they let me stay a while and I chatted with Gui and Nay a little.
What are the most important things in your life?
Amy, music, books, cats. Next!
Amy is important because we share our lives together even if we are apart. She has become my soulmate more than the soulmates I thought I had in the past.
Music has been an important part of my life since my pre-teens and grew in importance until recently. Books are replacing music a little now if only for the fact that I don’t often read whilst listening to music.
Cats have been comforting friends at various stages of my life. I find their attitude compatible with mine.

A Deer With No Eyes – 19th December 2022
It was in the trees, in the air
Its meaning was never clear
Both here and over there
Sometimes hidden in fear
It was simple, it was strong
It would never disappear
Sometimes right and other times wrong
Especially after having a beer
Often spoken, sometimes just thought
It influences its sphere
Sometimes learned, sometimes taught
Or born right now and here
Never met a deer with no eyes
They always seem to appear
Born in imagination, in surprise
Boom! – an idea!
The universe is what it is, not what I choose that it should be.
Bertrand Russell
Today I’m feeling:
Content, relaxed
Today I’m grateful for:
The staff at the hospital that administered (paperwork and execution) Amy’s second rabies shot. Hopefully her wounds heal well and there are no repercussions.
The best thing about today was:
Today has been consistent and modestly good, from a bit of exercise, listening to an interesting podcast about the Slits, good coffees, a fun first class, taking Amy to the hospital, then lunch at Oasis, more good coffee, a fun second class, then to the movies to watch the second Avatar movie which, whilst not a great movie was better than I expected.
What was out of your control today and how did you handle it?
I had to run around for, and with, Amy a lot today and couldn’t spend my usual time writing and reading at House which I look forward to. Rather than feeling grudgful I tried to savour and did end up enjoying the whole day.
Something I learned today?
I mostly learned this last week whilst listening to Jello Biafra interview Dominic Davi on his Renegade Roundtable podcast, though I finished listening this morning. Dominic had had a stroke fairly recently and described the experience and aftereffects of it. I’d been thinking about it on and off over the weekend especially as I am now in the age demographic more likely to experience this. This morning I was reminded again about the BE FAST acronym. Balance, Eyes, Face and then the other things I forget but I reckon you’d recognise it with those at least. This is all well and good to assist someone else but I’d be worried if it was happening to me and I was by myself or unable to communicate with others around me as Dominic described. He was helped quickly be others recognising the signs. Well, this is useful knowledge at least though I hope it is knowledge that will go unused.
Describe something you learned from your mother.
I’ve written about this before but I think I learned patience, hard work, solitude and don’t-give-a-fuck-what-others-think attitude from my mum.

The Balance – 25th July 2021
The less ideas you get, the more friends you’ll have
But the more friends you have, the more ideas you’ll get
This is a strange dilemma for me to deal with
And I haven’t found the best way to balance it yet
The first line is lifted from the ‘Abe – Wrong for the Right Reasons’ by Glenn Dakin
Gratitude Journal
I am so happy and grateful that I didn’t fall off the roof of the garage yesterday as I tried to repair our leaky drain. It was ok on the roof but a little dicey getting on and off the step ladder.
Lazy dull grey-skyed Sunday, morning spent with coffee and book, blogging this week’s poems and continuing the DVD ripping. After pizza lunch it’s Netflix time, watching The Lost Kingdom, which reminds me of the foolishness of belief in god, king and country. I seem to be a proud heathen though with, hopefully, a better moral compass than the Vikings.
Catch my eye a new slogan – 18th November 2019
I had a nice though busy weekend and managed to cross a few things off my to-do list.
Time does seem to go too fast though and I often try to recall that feeling of being bored and struggling to think of things to do – but then using my creative mind to start something. I still have some remnants of this and now never struggle to find new ideas and activities to pursue.
We have so many more options now – not just for entertainment and relaxation but for everything. Everything is at your fingertips – when life has no struggle it can be difficult to give it meaning.
Gratitude Journal
I’m so happy and grateful to have the chance to travel around South East Asia whilst helping other people with their music. If all goes to plan I’ll be able to again in April and finally make it to Kota Kinabalu and Yogyakarta. I’m really excited and looking forward to new adventures.
14th Apr 2021 – Covid 19 pandemic spoiled these plans.
Born annoyed – 10th January 2018
Gah! As I was dozing off after night shift this morning I came up with a good narrative to write about. I was struggling to remember it but then realised it was based on something I’d written already, so with knowing I could just reference that as a reminder I drifted off to sleep contentedly. Now I’m here and ready to write I can neither remember it nor find reference to it – whatever ‘it’ was! I’ll have another go in a minute.
My brain is always vomiting up mad ideas, some of which I get to pursue and often fail at but mostly they get dispensed to lost parts of my memory – possibly for the best. This is particularly amplified by the constant grogginess of shift work hours. Right now I don’t need any more ideas.
One day I may indulge myself in the pursuit of meditative silence but it’s never really been my style. Give me speed and LSD over a spliff and valium any day. I do wish I could sometimes turn off the noise when I’m trying to sleep though. I also wish I could’ve turned off all the negative content that plagued me when I was younger. But here I am now, some wisdom intact but with the body nearer decay.
Just got off the phone with Amy, our first catchup on her day’s news. As I’ve been asleep and pretty much just come straight to work I don’t have much to say. Amy is a good talker though and I provide input where I can.
Our house is all walled and sealed now and a new set of workers are coming in to start working on the finishing details. These workers are transient homeless Burmese cheap labour. Tough willing youngsters going wherever the money is. They build a mini slum for themselves to live in onsite and drink cheap whiskey when their day is finished.
This has brought up Amy’s safety as an issue though. She has been travelling to the house before sunrise to water plants and trees before the day gets too hot. The location of our house is a little out of sight from the road and it’s basically just a small village anyway, so never many people around.
Now that the workers will be living onsite there is potential for trouble and something we need to consider to avoid. Amy will need to be there at certain times to advise on specifics for the workers so we’re not sure how we’ll go about this yet. Her mum and dad are both busy with other things during the day so not really available to come act as security guards either.
Note that we both doubt that anything bad may happen but in this circumstance, we want to be extra cautious. If something were to occur it would be everlastingly associated with this house. It also makes me think more about security ongoing. We are planning on security lights and maybe a camera or two. I also want to get a dog at some point too but that will have to wait until I am settled in too.
The community around is already curious about this strange house being built. Only strange by Thai standards, it’s fairly basic by western standards. But anything new is great for village gossip and rumour. We will want to make friends with everyone around but also don’t want people up in our business. I think it’s more likely for me to end up closer to those around if I can help or assist with things in any way. I’m actually quite looking forward to that aspect of this new life. It doesn’t matter if the locals think I’m strange, I’ll just be a crazy foreigner. For Amy though they are likely to be more judgemental.
As I alluded to yesterday, there are certain traditions and customs that we won’t be adhering to such as a big housewarming for family, friends and neighbours. No spirit house at the entrance. This has already been an issue of discussion with Amy’s parents. Whilst I think these are just a quaint custom and don’t really have an objection to them as they have no other meaning for me, for many traditional Thais they are seen as a necessity to provide spiritual protection and prayers are said as you drive or walk past, supposedly. Of course, I don’t buy into that and Amy completely rejects it. I think her rejection is a show to other Thai people that you can’t depend on luck and fate and other forms of woo to bring you what you want. She sees it in her friends, the friends who say how lucky Amy is to be able to have done the things she has done and is doing in her life. Amy knows full work that she has worked her ass off to do these things and it has nothing to do with luck.
Perhaps some of her friends also think I am some kind of rich sugar daddy, as foreigners are often seen but again both Amy and I know that this is not the case and we are doing what we have to do to get where we want.
This was another thing we discussed tonight as we talk about her friends who are constantly disappointed with their lives. How their lives are in debt and loveless, their exes having gone on to brighter things with other partners. These are beautiful looking women who find the quick and empty highs of expensive purchases and credit card holidays. Their online personas at odds with their inner turmoil. We have tried advising them on better approaches from time to time and almost everyone comes to talk with ‘Auntie’ Amy for advice but she gets tired of watching people make the same mistakes over and over again. Why come for advice if don’t accept it. Obviously, it is more complicated than that but perhaps obviously, it isn’t.
We don’t sit around thinking we are better than everyone else but we can see that we are happier and I think one of the reasons is that when we met we were both at points in our lives where we were happy with ourselves. Even now, if anything happened to break up our relationship, we both know that we would be able to carry on, maintaining the happiness in ourselves. We love each other, we want each other but we don’t need each other. I think some people want and expect too much from themselves, their partners and their lives. When I was younger, I did too. It’s a course set for unhappiness and an unfulfilling life.
Our second call of the night, before Amy goes to sleep, revolved around our cats – our default topic when there isn’t much left to talk about.
Soon after Amy moved in we decided to get a cat. Amy left several of her cats at her mother’s house but they were reluctantly looked after. Unfortunately, they all passed away by the time Amy moved back. I hadn’t had a pet since leaving home, more than 20 years previous.
We lived next to a shopping centre that had a pet store and we were smitten with a kitten on display there. This was before discovering much about pet shop animals and pet farming practices, something soon to be highlighted by how sick our new pet was in the first 3 or 4 years of his life.
Our new resident happily adjusted himself as we did too, to have this other thing living in our space. A purebred rag doll, as a coffee fan, I crowned him Cappuccino. He has been a beautiful pain in the ass ever since.

About a year later, a little concerned that one cat might be lonely on its own we thought what fun it would be to get another little bastard. This time we went to the RSPCA and found a little tiny handful of fluff Amy named Tigger. It soon became apparent that these two boys were not going to be great friends. Like chalk and cheese, Cappuccino is an expensive and fussy prince whilst Tigger is a doesn’t-give-a-shit street cat. Tigger soon became the fat cat, hoovering up any food left lying around, often times just pushing Cappuccino out of the way to get to his food too. Capp would wander about graciously, always complaining he was hungry so we had to devise ways to stop Tigger from being renamed the Vacuum Cleaner. He would often eat so fast, without chewing and biting anything that he would throw it all back up again 5 minutes later. Which of course, meant he was hungry again.
Tigger was adventurous enough to take a plunge off our first-floor balcony one day and we desperately searched our whole block for him but he must’ve hidden himself away somewhere. The following evening, as we sat in our apartment, we could hear little pathetic cat cries from outside. We dashed outside and a scared little Tigger was hiding in the bushes and took some coaxing to come out again. The first thing he did when we got inside was the dash to the litter tray and dump a great big shit in there for us. He must’ve been holding it the whole time waiting until he found a litter tray again. I think Capp secretly enjoyed the house to himself again briefly and maybe even encouraged the original jump or perhaps providing a little push himself.
Tigger took another jump into the unknown a few months later as a bird flew past him but luckily Amy was there watching whilst it happened. She ran out and quickly retrieved him. As he became fatter and lazier I think he decided he was getting fed well enough not to go chasing after more food.
Cappuccino became a favourite visitor at the vets, where we handed over piles of dollars on a regular basis to try and fix his urinary issues. Finally, we eunuched him and he is pretty much a girl now. But this wouldn’t be his last time to get to travel in the car to various places, him screaming himself hoarse in displeasure.
Cappuccino had been recommended to get his teeth cleaned as they were getting a bit mucky so we had to drop him to the vet in the morning where he would be sedated, teeth cleaned, and awake for us to pick up later in the afternoon. All was well until later that evening. We’d heard a bit of growling and hissing from the other room and a while later Capp sauntered into the kitchen and gave his usual cry to be fed. I noticed his mouth was red though and forced his jaws open to reveal a mouth full of blood and half his tongue flapping loose. It was too late for the vet so it was off to emergency. As Capp didn’t seem too bothered by his new multiple tongues, the vet there advised to wait and take him to the normal vet in the morning, giving him a quick shot of painkillers in the meantime.
So back in the car again, the vet surprised to see her favourite customer and us sad walking wallets again. And lucky boy, he gets to stay overnight again – his favourite thing in the world. We had the choice to just leave his tongue as it was as it would probably heal up but just remain flapping around. This didn’t seem like a great idea as it could easily get bitten again whilst he was eating. So with a stitch or two, he was fixed again. But not for long.
Capp would often try to exert his authority in the house but without realising that he probably wasn’t the boss, and Tigger would stand for none of it. He would take a swipe at Tigger who would then swipe back, a chase might occur and then two rolling balls of fur would explode for a few seconds before they retreated to their corners of safety. This happened about once a week and it was common to come home to patch of carpets covered in big chunks of Capps white hair, Tigger often with telltale signs of white hair around his lips. So we didn’t think much one night when it happened again.
This time though Capp was squinting with one eye and which was weeping down his face. When we looked closer we could see a big white area on his eye and a little bit of blood. We usually err on the side of caution but his regular visits to emergency vets were meaning we might have to take up second jobs. We gave it the night to see how it would be in the morning and of course, it was worse. Out came the carrier again which quickly sees him disappear and then the screaming starts.
The vet had a look and poked around a bit and we could see that the white area was a deep cut across his eye. She stuck some antibiotic and painkilling liquid in there and advised to come back in a couple of days. Oh great – we have to go through all this again in a couple of days. Here, just take my debit card and pin number.
That couple of days later, with no real sign of improvement, we were recommended an animal eye specialist about an hour away. Our first visit there the next day and the doctor offered a couple of solutions, one expensive and another very expensive. Or, he said, we could just leave it and see what happens but that might mean losing the eye if things go badly quickly. The doctor could see that was reluctant to make a decision there and then and so advised to come back a week later. He did the antibiotic and painkilling liquid too as well as some other more specialised checks that saw us well out of pocket.
Back we came, Capp still no more happy and used to travelling in a car. The doctor said the eye was looking ok but he would like to do a graft on it – it would cost some outrageous amount but would likely fix it up properly. Again, he could see my hesitation and he asked me to think about it whilst he had another look and poke around. He lifted up the flap of skin over Capps’ eye and said it was possible to cut this flap off and see how the healing process goes and that a graft would still be possible after that if it didn’t go well. I don’t know how or why but Cappuccino was completely tolerant of us holding him steady as the doctor took a pair of tiny scissors to the tiny flap on his eyeball and snip, snip, it was off. Thank you very much and come back in a week.
Thankfully his eye rapidly improved and I rang the doctor up and said thank you very much but I don’t think we need to come back for a final check and another couple of hundred bucks.
So with all that stress of these bastard cats, we decided to stick them on a plane – see how they like that!?
We chose a good company and again, threw an open wallet at them and despite some concern when we initially received the boys in Thailand they made it through intact. They even seemed to enjoy being loose in the van that we picked them up in at the airport.
Safe to say, we love those little furry fuckers.




