be careful what you wish for

27 02 2010

I reached a momentous point in my life this week, and I wanted to document it. For the first time in my 17 year work life – and roughly equal number of workplaces (an average of one per year, it’s true) – I received a promotion. The job itself is not important, for this piece. What I wanted to record was my emotional and mental state at this time.

As I left the house yesterday morning, the words that came to mind were “neurotic”, “anxious” and yes indeed, “febrile” (as in, “nervous energy”). I could not help noticing that iTunes Genius selected The Killing Moon, by Echo and The Bunnymen as I walked down our street to the station in the dark. As I passed one house, the sensor lights automatically switched on, and I flinched the same way I do every morning. It’s a reflex.

“Fate, up against your will”

Ian McCulloch intoned, and I found myself gravely concerned about the end of life. I saw myself as a lonesome traveller in the dark; I had to leave Littlest Miss H alone on the couch, first watching Cinderella; then Finding Nemo. She had wrapped her arms around my arm as I sat next to her to eat my WeetBix, and each time I wanted to take a mouthful I had to extricate myself from her embrace.

I was stepping forward, my teeth were gritted, I was grimly determined. I already feel overwhelmed with the enquiries I receive in my current role, and I’m about to expand my knowledge base and responsibilities. I reflected on the wisdom of those who advise to be careful what you wish for.

As the City Loop train passed from Flinders St station to Southern Cross, I looked out the window at the lights on King St, next to The Grand Hotel and from the carriage I felt like a ghost observer, already dead, and I thought about my previous job, working as Night Manager just up the block on King St, and I thought about my dreams as yet unlived, and unfulfilled. The dream of filmmaking, my experience and knowledge of Melbourne by night, that is not dead. That dream will not die.

I emerged from the underground Flagstaff station to Sugar’s The Act We Act, and I was walking like a zombie, in slow motion, my feet heavy in my Colorado boots. The same boots I wore on location in South Africa all those years ago, working as Second Assistant Director on a German telemovie. The time I had sunk a lot of our money into trying to reclaim my happy childhood life in Africa, and merge it with my desire to work in film. I was fired from the crew, because – in the words of Paul Westerberg – “they said I had an attitude”.

Magnapop’s Slowly Slowly blistered on afterward as I walked through Flagstaff Gardens, and it brought to mind again nights on King St working at the short-lived XS nightclub; oh yeah, I was thinking of all my failures past, it was a gloomy retrospective late late show, all the low points of my life flashing before my eyes on my deathbed. And all this, because I had secured a job that I wanted!


There was a ghost tree dividing the path before me. As I walked on, a pile of vomit was splattered in front of a park bench on the path. I could imagine the reveller or junkie sitting in that seat, leaning forward to hurl his or her guts out. A silhouette passed me by with a small orange spot glowing before his bent head, and I smelled cigarette.

Up on the seventh floor, the lights weren’t on yet. It was not yet 6:30AM. I was first in the building. I was ready for the change. Training starts on Monday.






the big wet

11 02 2010

In the ten to fifteen minute walk from work to catch my tram home tonight I was trapped in the deluge that flooded Melbourne from around 3:50PM. In the space of just over one kilometre, and four city blocks, I left the building in steamy humidity, and ended up drenched.

I couldn’t pass up the chance to capture some of what I saw. I was glad the iPhone survived the rain. It remains to be seen whether my shoes make it through…






here’s some I took earlier (my week in pictures)

6 02 2010

I’ve already apologised for the lack of updates this week, so you know the reasons for my absence. Though it certainly had its rollercoaster elements, in the end, the week turned out to be more up than down. To commemorate it, here’s a gallery of images I captured which I haven’t yet had a chance to upload. I hope you enjoy them!





Southern Cross station, 6:30AM

2 02 2010








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