Monday, October 8, 2007

Four of Seven Things

My sister tagged me for this ‘Seven Things’ activity where you tell 7 things about you then tag seven people who then do seven things themselves and pass it on and so on. I am going to do seven things, albeit in two installations, but then spare the further tagging. I have 5.5 friends, and if you are one of them, you will appreciate that I did not want to jeopardize that standing with a tag. But if you feel so inclined – please complete your own and let me know. So here is the first 4 of my seven things.

1. I’m Colour Blind. But have got through life quite well I feel.
In my young life it meant leaving all the red pegs on the lawn and ridiculed for having finished of my finest work of Grade 5 cartography with meticulous colouring and shading work for the ocean in purple and the land in orange. Oh, and when I was sent to school by my mother in a new matching shorts and t-shirt outfit (Grade 6! Who makes their child wear a matching outfit at ANY age??), my teacher commented “My aren’t we pretty in pink today?!”. It was news to me. My mother is not colourblind – she is mean.

As I grew up it meant that after studying and training to fulfil my dream to become a cab driver – I failed the fitness test. Colourblind = Unfit. I went to a speacialist who put me through a series of tests – which I nailed… but at the end he told me that I was as colourblind as colourblind gets. I still don’t believe him.
It also meant that I had to bluff my way through two years of my tenure as a self-employed graphic designer. I did find myself in a few interesting binds. One of the notable ones was a turf grower who asked of the logo that I had just designed for him and emailed for approval, “Why is the grass baby turd brown?”. He is now aware that when you convert a vector files to an jpeg image, it sometimes plays with the colours.

What it has ALWAYS meant that when folk find out you are colourblind you are subjected to a 5 minutes of “So what colour is this to you? What colour is this? So what colour do you think the sky is? And what colour is this? And this?
Truth is, I am actually pretty good at this, because I can see colour. I really can. And get most of them right. So my G’ma tells me that I am actually just “Colourmistaken”.

2. I can’t stand Marcia Hindes. “Darl’n. Darl’n. Darl’n. Darl’n. Bless y’ ,Darl’n. You like a sweet, sweet angel. And I love that song, it’s so very dear to me. And Sweet Child, you touched my heart. You go girlfriend! Uh-uh.” How could you dislike that woman??? Let me count the ways. In fact, I would rather spend a day locked in a room wallpapered entirely with Family Circus cartoons with Rosanne Arnold, than have a lunch with Marcia.

3. I am a devout advocate for Tea Tree Oil – primarily as a never-fail cure and prevent sore throats an other mouth infections*. I have not had a sore throat for over 5 years. It’s antiseptic AND anesthetic! Cure AND Instant Relief!
Put five drops of Tea Tree Oil in a cup – add 10 parts water. Gargle – don’t swallow or you will die. If symptoms persist, do it again in an hour. And again. Forget your doctor.

And now that you know, don’t complain to me about your sore throat. Not only do I not care – I think you are an IDIOT. And never say, ‘it tastes nasty’. Grrrrrrrrrrrr.

4. My first car, a Citroen GS, green, with panels told the story of 16 individual traffic incidents from days past, cost me $450 with 6 months of rego included ($250 worth). Replaced a lower control arm ($30) and an oil pump o-ring ($5). Drove it for 18 months – flatout – then wrote it off in spectacular fashion (priceless). Removed the engine and gearbox and sold them to dad ($500), who sold them both within a fortnight ($1100).

More to come. 5,6 and 7 to be precise.

12 comments:

Sweet Olive Press | Helen said...

Marvellous!

And I never realised how well the destruction of the Citroen worked out for you...

Anonymous said...

No way! That teacher must have been taking advantage of your disability. I would NEVER send you to school pink on pink ....... Either that or they were on an amazing red light special......
I remain anonymous.

Anonymous said...

Heh heh.

It WAS pink on pink. I remember it clearly. A little pink t-shirt with some hawaiian beach scene and these pink "trendy" shorts that were very creased/balloony at the front after a day at school. There is a picture of it somewhere.

Your 4th point failed to mention that your father went and stepped out the length of the tyre skid left by your write-off accident to disprove your claim that you were traveling "just" over the speed limit.

Aaron Lewis said...

Describing those shorts as 'Balloony' is an understatement. They were three sizes too big piltchers. Ruggers to be precise... who would have thought they would make PINK ruggers.

I trusted too much.

awkward egg said...

And the award for best dressed goes to...

I remember trundling off to Mapleton music camp in grade 6 dressed in light-blue jeans, denim jacket and Akubra hat. It was summer. I felt as weighed-down as a fat kid. The defining moment came when I was knocking round with the lads outside, and some random shouts out to me, "Struggling to keep up, big fella?" I wanted to melt into the ground like the Wicked Witch.

You can't beat pink though.

Anonymous said...

Fluroescent bike pants anybody???

Michelle Crowther said...

Did you guys have 'side-levers' - where your parents shave the hair from temples to ears, and leave the rest long?
Kind of like being an orthodox jew, but in reverse.
And then when it starts growing out it's like pom-poms on the side of your head?

I did.

Not for a day. For a year.

Sweet Olive Press | Helen said...

At each comment I want to write, "Oh! You win!" but then I read the next one... and oh, head pom-poms are pretty hard to beat. You can't take those off with a sigh of relief when you go to bed.

But Jules, I'll see your Mapleton Music Camp and raise you a Grade 7 Binna-Burra Camp. Mum sent me off in old maroon corduroy jeans that she'd got from Lifeline and had "let down" the hems because for once something was too short for me. Trouble was, the let-down showed how terribly faded the top part of the jeans were... She paired that with AARON'S black bikey-style parka. That's right, she made me wear a boys-only parka borrowed from my four-years-younger brother. It ended somewhere around my armpits.

Every single day, I wanted to die.

Sweet Olive Press | Helen said...

Also Shelley -- don't complain about the fluoro bike pants because I'm sure when you wore them, they were actually in style.

It doesn't count as embarrassing if *everyone else* was wearing them at the time.

It *does* count as embarrassing if even the caravan-park-kids from Capalaba Primary were laughing and pointing.

Sorry, you're out of the competition.

Anonymous said...

In first year university I wore a little white singlet with a pair of blousey navy tartan short overalls.

Noticing that the sides gaped a little at the waist so that you could see my belly button and undies, I added a pair of fluorescent peach bike pants underneath. I was also wearing white reeboks with bobby socks, as always.

I dressed myself!

I count it among my achievements that the boy I sat next to that day went out with me for some months a couple of years later, notwithstanding the outfit.

Sweet Olive Press | Helen said...

Oh, "anonymous", at first I thought I'd written that comment in my sleep! In first-year uni, *I* wore a white singlet top and a pair of blousy navy long shorts -- a "skort" really (heaven help us). Only difference: a floral print, and no fluoro bike pants.

Oh yeah, and apparently you could see my bra through my shirt. I know this because my boyfriend at the time (you know who I mean) told me the shirt was "of the devil".

Sigh.

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