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Life KPIs

I’ve recently realised that I’m not the most ambitious of people.

Sure, I want to have a good life, but I don’t really have any clear goals in mind. I mean, I’d like to get to the end of my life feeling like I wasn’t a totally shit person, that I had a reasonably good time and that I’d done enough cool stuff to justify the amount of resources that went into keeping me alive. I want to have formed some incredible bonds with people and, hopefully, not completely hate myself by the end of it.

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And that’s all great – and apparently the best way to approach life so you don’t set yourself up for failure.

But I felt the need for some tangible goals; some concrete criteria against which to measure whether my life was a failure or a raging success. I recently told my psychologist that my goal is simply to have goals – like, that wanted to be ambitious, but there wasn’t really anything I cared about all that much. So I’ve come up with a list of stuff that makes me go “yeah, that’d be pretty cool” or “I wouldn’t mind that”. Of course, some of these goals are loftier than others, but at the moment this is the best I have to work with. And I suppose if I’m going to all the effort to dream, I may as well dream big.

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So here are a few things I wouldn’t mind ticking off my life to-do list:

To keep all my teeth for as long as possible: This requires me to brush regularly, floss daily and to avoid chewing on toxic corrosive waste. I’ve also got to keep out of street fights and not find myself in such a sad state after losing my job at the workhouse that I have to sell my molars to send money to feed my illegitimate daughter, who I foolishly left in the care of Borat and the woman who played Bellatrix LeStrange.

To win an Oscar: As a youngster I thought it would be for my acting, which I assumed I would excel at career-wise because I have a loud, booming voice, I was often picked to do the lengthier church readings or meatier, zanier parts in the over my like 24 schoolmate (that’s across about four year levels, mind you) and when we did an appallingly bad Harry Potter musical in Year 9, I got the only passing grade while the rest of my group failed. However, I’ve not yet landed any major roles. You could say that’s because I’m simply not good enough, but I prefer to look at it from the angle that I’ve not yet tried. I seem to couch a lot of my lack on success based on the fact that I’ve not tested my potential and so it still remains in tact; I can still fantasise about one day being great and say, “I probably could if I wanted to”. It’s a nice safe way of maintaining your baseless sense of self-importance.

But, yet, I’m getting to the point where, if I want a magazine article to say “and she did it all before she turned 30…” I’d best get a wriggle on.

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And because I’m already fairly invested in writing, I might set my sights on winning an Oscar for screenwriting. And I shan’t be one of those names Australian broadcasters would cling to because Cate Blanchett took a year off and Nicole Kidman was focusing  on television. I will not be the name that makes people say “who?!” to their spouses in the living room when my name is read out on news. I’ll be a star in my own right, wearing bold yet tasteful choices – many involving capes – to red carpet events. I’ll be fabulous, deep thinking, very well connected and tastefully dressed 82 percent of the time. I’ll be involved in human rights advocacy, become close mates with David Attenborough and become well known for my flattering neckline choices.

And when Vogue finally comes over to do 73 Questions with Dannielle Maguire, I’ll nonchalantly motion to my Oscar statue, which will be displayed with my Hungry Jacks Crew Member of the Month certificate and my first pottery piece.

To have a set of signature jewellery with a matching dagger: I saw this in a museum in London once and was inspired. It was exactly the kind of ancient empress style of extra I often yearn for. I’d like a breastplate style of necklace, with bold matching earring and a dagger for me to fondle while I laze about in my luxurious chamber, plotting my next move. At this stage, I’m thinking I want the pieces to be cast in bronze and to involve a milky opaque stone. Nothing overly sparkly, but classic and tasteful.

To have a house complete with a luxurious chamber: This requires me to remain employed, invest my money wisely and not waste my pennies on frivolous knick knacks and do-dads. Of course, a custom-forged dagger and jewellery set is important, but should probably aim to have a palace to call my own before I go out commissioning blacksmiths. For a while there I dreamt of having a room that was essentially the inside of Genie’s lamp from I Dream of Genie, but now I’m moving more towards the aesthetic  of the house from Practical Magic. So I have a bit of thinking to do about the overall vibe of the place, which is great, because I reckon I’ll need to gather a few more pennies together before I can own property and that’s going to take a bit of time.

To have my own cook book: Now, this is one I could easily do myself. I’ve already got a handful of recipes I could print out, staple together and claim victory. However, I’m going to try to aim higher than a cook booklet, because I really just want to have one of those photoshoots with classy aprons and fancy cookware – because I might just be able to take some of the props home for my own kitchen. Plus, I really want an outtake reel to show just how zany and approachable of a person I am – you know, poking my tongue out at the camera, offering the lighting expert a lick of the bowl, that kind of thing.

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To appear on Sesame StreetI would not be the woman I am today without Sesame Street. That show is so funny and wholesome. I bloody loved the letter of the day and the sassy pig girl group and that orange ball with lips called Cecile. Can’t say for sure how the plasticine sass ball shaped my soul, but I know it was profound.

Of course, this goal requires me to achieve something in my own right first so we can have a gag to pin my appearance one, like when Nora Jones was on there singing “don’t know why, Y didn’t come” or when Feist sang “1, 2, 3, 4 monsters walking cross the floor” So this is a big motivator for me to actually do something with my life, purely so I can alliterate with furry monsters.

To have a Barbie doll fashioned after me: I have to start off by saying that my sister already made a Dannielle Barbie. Well, that is to say, she found a brown-haired Barbie, put her in a pinky pink blazer and swapped her for the blonde Barbie in the Journalism Barbie box. It was a very, very thoughtful gift that sits on my official home office desk. So I kind of already have this one.

But I would like it if the people at Mattel actually produced a Dannielle Barbie, like they did with Ita Buttrose. I mean, Ita has a lot to put on her resume, but imagine being able to put “Is a Barbie doll” on a job application form. Just imagine.

And while my career path has so far been somewhat less impressive than Ita’s, it’s encouraging to know that a career in journalism, writing and publishing could maybe one day lead to this goal. Again, this is something that would require me to not only achieve greatness, but to do so with class and sass. And this is a yuuuuge motivator for me career wise.

Instead of thinking small and being the sometimes petty and stroppy person I am, I need to think bigger; grander. I need to think about what would Barbie doll Dannielle Maguire do. Would she send a passive aggressive email, or would she approach the situation with pragmatic compassion and solve the problem face to face? Would she take a rejection letter as a sign to give up or use it to fan the flame of ambition? Would she settle for a quiet life of blandness or speed off into the sunset in a hot pink convertible, chasing down adventure?

If I think this way, not only will I have a sweet obituary, but I could one day be immortalised in plastic form.

Sure, she’d be a little chunkier than her predecessors and they’d have to work out a way to fit thongs on Barbie’s feet, but I like to think it’s possible.

So far, I’m thinking my accessories would be a laptop with a CD rom slit, a teapot and a scented candle.

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To be parodied on either Family Guy, The Simpsons or South Park without authorisation: This would preferably happen while I was in a career lull, possibly after I’ve done something stupid, but hopefully not unforgivably offensive. I would use this platform as a springboard to get back up at ‘em, taking the cartoon roasting with good humour, making a T-shirt out of my caricature and showing the world that I was not done yet. Years later, while giving an interview about my life, I will speak about this woke me up and sparked a decades-long friendship with the show’s creators, who went on to become godparents to my delightful, well-adjusted children.

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Mint is shit

Originally published by The Clifton Courier, March 10, 2019

I wrote this piece after being told the paper was a little fuller than usual and I had been allocated a little less room for my column. So I quickly whipped up something that had been simmering on the stovetop of my mind for decades. 

I could pad this one out today, given I have the limitless confines of the internet with which to broadcast my very important opinion, but I’m getting a cold so I don’t have a lot of energy and I want to have a cup of tea before I leave for work, which seems a rather pressing priority for me. 

This week the space I have less room than usual.

Because I may or may not have been a little late getting my rant in, the space filled up too darn quickly, and I’m left with a slot about half the size as I’m usually afforded.

I pondered what exactly to do with this space, given I would have less room to flesh out whatever point I was getting to in my lengthy, but always necessary, roundabout kind of way. I had the opportunity to make a short, punchy statement. I could use my brevity to be bold.

So I think now is the time to drop one of my trivial but extremely controversial opinions with no context.

And because I’ve already said what I have to say about hot cross buns being available all year long (#freethebun) I’m taking aim at something everyone seems to love: mint flavouring.

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I’m sorry, but manufactured peppermint and spearmint or any other white gunk that dares to masquerade as mint is garbage.

I love fresh mint – just a sprig of the stuff can transform a $3 basic spirit served in a plastic cup into a refreshing cocktail – but fake mint is repulsive to me.

It’s the kind of smell that reeks of someone with something to hide. Did you just have a tactical vom? Mint mouthwash. Wanting to make people think you haven’t been chain-smoking all night? Pop in a breath mint. Are you a fourteen-year-old boy at a high school social wanting to appear fresh and alluring to the opposite sex but ate salami for lunch and, in general, have rather poor hygiene? Mint chewing gum is the answer!

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Mint is basically the flavour of distraction and deceit.

I get that menthol is a reasonable flavour choice for toothpaste, but I think it’s grossly unfair that all decent toothpaste is mint flavoured. I endure it now, but as an unsupervised child, I loathed brushing my teeth. So, unbeknownst to my parents, I started omitting the toothpaste from my dental hygiene routine, substituting it with the ineffectual combination of water and optimism.

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Of course this resulted in a lot of fillings and now every time I drop into the dentist, it’s like visiting a bunch of hygiene-obsessed relatives because I spent so much time with them in my formative years. Which is really quite nice. But, as much as I love a bit of dental chair banter and staring at the beautiful detail in the pressed metal ceiling at that quaint old building, I would have preferred less fillings. And I chose to blame mint flavouring.

Sorry mint, but you’re not my mate.

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A whole lot of nothing

Originally published by The Clifton Courier, March 6, 2019

“Nothing” is a word that means so much more than just “no single thing”.

For example, if you were to ask me what I did on Saturday night, I’d probably say “nothing”.

I didn’t plan anything for the night, which is supposed to be the pinnacle of excitement for a working adult. I realised this when I walked in the door on Saturday afternoon with some new pots, a stylish watering can and a second-hand school desk I plan on restoring (if anyone has a power sander I could borrow, please let me know – I’ll pay you in non-award-winning gingerbread).

I had nothing planned, but “nothing” was not what I did.

I mean, no one is ever doing nothing. If you’re lying in bed, your body is still respiring, at the very least. Even if you’re dead, you’re not really doing nothing; technically, you’re disintegrating. That’s not a particularly active pursuit, but something is still happening.

“Nothing” is just shorthand for “not a single thing of interest”. But it’s unfair for me to decide what is of interest to you, so I’m going to list what I actually did on Saturday night and let you decide for yourself:

Planned a social media post about a custard apple I bought that day: I’ve always wanted to try a custard apple. Growing up, apples were staples, bananas showed up occasionally and strawberries were a treat. Heck, even a pear was exotic – I didn’t have my first pear until I was well into adulthood. So I wanted to announce to the world that I had brought a custard apple into my home and, let’s be honest, I was craving the dopamine hit of online validation from people I barely know.

Researched custard apples: Once I had the custard apple in my custody (sorry, couldn’t help myself), I didn’t know what my next step was, so I did a bit of digging online. I learned from the leading custard apple body of Australia that you’re supposed to wait for it to soften, like an avocado. So I had to let it sit.

Contemplated the custard apple: It cut quite a striking figure on my desk and I have a tendency to stare off into space and lose all concept of time and place. Who knows how long I was lost in the bright green abyss?

Invented a new afternoon tea treat: I’ve done it again. I’ve taken a baked item that tastes delightful as it is and bastardised it with healthy intentions, a food processor and a craptonne of oats. This time my victim was the humble pumpkin scone, which I defiled by using ground oats instead of flour. Naturally, you’ll be forced to endure the “recipe” in the near future.

Attempting to lure friends over with these pumpkiny abominations: I put a fresh-out-of-the-oven picture of them on Instagram thinking my mates would take up my offer and pop around for a very late afternoon tea. I had no takers.

Loaded the dishwasher: I was home alone and could load that bad boy the way I’ve always wanted. It was bliss.

Questioned who I’ve become: This wasn’t a Saturday specific-activity, it’s now part of my regular bedtime routine.

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Reheat of a reheat

I’m a busy person. 

But for anyone who knows me personally (I feel like if you’re reading this, you probably do), they’d now that I don’t reeeeeeally have a lot going on.

I have a job with flexible hours that means a quicker, less crammed commute and a allows me to go to the gym when every man and his dog isn’t using the damn treadmills. I’ve literally ever had to wait for a treadmill. It’s so liberating. Honestly, I just walk right in there and get jogging on my spot to nowhere. I love my life.

But yeah, not a lot going on. I don’t have any dependants. I don’t have a dog to walk. I don’t have a a multinational side business to manage. In short, I have a fair bit of spare time and very few responsibilities beyond keeping myself showered, fed and out of trouble with the law.

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What I do have are friends to tag in memes so they know I still care about them, a growing nursery of plants to water and a blog full of personal anecdotes no one asked for to maintain (that could be the most millennial sentence I’ve written so far).

And sometimes I get tired. I get stressy. I get depressy. I and you better believe I get anxious-essy. I know, anxious and depressed? Me? The deeply cynical overthinker? That’s un-possible! 

Anyway, I have times when pulling something funny out of my arse (figuratively speaking, of course) is that little bit harder than other times. And I had a bit of a time last week, when I just really couldn’t think of anything funny or clever or even coherent to write about for my column of the paper. 

So I rehashed an old recipe I posted on my blog at the beginning of the year. It’s generally pretty safe to assume that most of the people who read the paper don’t read my blog, because they get a regular dose of my dribble each week and could probably live without the booster shot that comes of a Sunday. 

I had originally planned to write something fresh for you today, rather than reposting a repost, but I’ve got to run off to the gym before work and there’s a load of washing I need to whack on the line and I really wouldn’t mind listening to a podcast while I have a leisurely breakfast this morning sooo… you understand. I’ve got a bit on. 

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Plus, I feel like I jazzed it up sufficiently with the riblet and potato scollop sandwich bit (inspired by a genius bloke my mate works with) and the addition of a handful of roasted chook to make this a whole new recipe. Even though, I must admit, I’ve not yet eaten it myself. But I may just splurge on a roasted chook for dinner tonight, because you gotta love yourself, right? 

Lunch is not something to be neglected.

It’s more than just a midday meal, it’s a carrot, dangling in front you to get you through the workday when you could easily be sitting on the couch in your pyjamas, flipping aimlessly through the channels and wondering just what the heck Huey from Huey’s Cooking Adventures is up to these days.

No, lunch is something to be cherished.

The other day I disrespected lunch. My “meal” consisted of the leftovers stashed in my handbag from when I went to the movies over the weekend. I had about five clear gummy bears, two lollies shaped to look like the feet of chicken who had wondered around in nuclear waste, a half-eaten orange snake and about seven slightly withered green beans.

I didn’t prepare anything ahead of time. And I suffered the consequences. I’m ashamed of myself and I am still hungry.

The annoying thing is that I already had an easy, apathy-proof and somewhat healthish recipe I could have used to prevent this disaster. I’ve written about it on my blog – religiously read by an average audience of 2.3 people – but thought I’d share it here because I’ve made a new inspired addition to it recently: store-bought chicken.

It’s not the most satisfying lunch you’ll ever have but it’s nowhere near as depressing as handbag crud, it tastes pretty good if you find the right pesto and it makes you feel like you’re at least trying to take care of yourself.

And it doesn’t take much. You’ll need two decent-sized zucchini. But you could use three less-than-decent-sized zucchini. You could also use 12 tiny zucchinis. In fact, you could probably use one eighth of a comically oversized zucchini. Whatever.

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You’ll also need pesto, a vegetable peeler, a microwave, a fistful of leftover barbecue chicken you salvaged before someone else got to it and a microwaveable container full of good intentions.

Step 1: Whittle your zucchini down into thin, nourishing ribbons of health using a veggie peeler. I would recommend a veggie peeler instead of a zucchini spiralizer because A) I don’t have one and B) then the dish won’t technically be called “zoodles”, thus freeing you from using the term and deluding yourself into thinking these strips are going to taste anything like something made of wheat. In fact, the first step for this recipe should be “lower your expectations” because this will not trick your mind into thinking you’re eating pasta.

Step 2: Dump your shaved zucchini into a microwavable container, making sure you can find the lid that goes with it before dirtying a lidless container you’ll then have to rinse.

Step 3: Dollop two heaped teaspoons of pesto in. I have no idea how high the salt content or the fat content or the general sin content is, but considering you’re going to be eating mostly zucchini for lunch instead of making a pork riblet sandwich using two potato scallops in place of the bread (it sounds like I’m judging, but I’m not – I’m totally behind the odd hot box sandwich between cholesterol tests), you’re probably allowed to feel good about this choice.

Step 4: You may not think you’ll need a handful of shaved chicken/fistful of turkey/hand-sized portion of mystery meat, but you’ll be glad it’s there come lunchtime. I have eaten and enjoyed this pesto pasta imposter meatless many a time, but I do find myself needing an extra cup of tea with aggressive urgency of an afternoon.

Chuck a handful of meaty something into the container to stop yourself from bingeing on stale fruitcake when you get home.

Step 5: Put on the lid, carefully place this container in your bag/satchel/human pouch and skip on off to start your day, knowing you have a vaguely nutritious lunch waiting for you.

Step 6: As soon as lunchtime hits, microwave the container with the lid on for about two minutes. Because you’ve peeled that zucc so thin, it doesn’t take much to cook. The high water content of zucchini (I say this with absolutely no knowledge about the actual water content of zucchini) means you don’t need to add any water to the container to get the steam treatment happening.

Step 7: Try to find a fork in the staff kitchenette.

Step 8: Wash the gunk off the only fork you could find in the staff kitchenette. Try not to think who last used it.

Step 9: Enjoy your dish while sitting in a bubble of your own smugness, doing you best to conceal your overwhelming desire to eat a sandwich using potato scallops as bread, forcing a smile if you have to.

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Is it urgent?

Today I was having a lovely morning. I woke up to the sound of rain, fixed myself a cup of tea and was generally just taking it easy. I was sitting there at one point, having just finished a healthy breakfast while listening to a podcast, thinking that I was relaxed.

Too relaxed.

And then it hit me, like a sack of premium potting mix to the face. I had misread my diary. I was supposed to start work two-a-half-hours earlier than I thought I did.uber urgency 3

So, rather than leisurely strolling down to the bus stop and maybe having a wander about in the park before swanning into work ten minutes early with a chai in hand, I had to haul some serious flat-bottomed arse.

I did not muck around. I power brushed my teeth. I threw on whatever clean, vaguely professional clothing I could find. I mean, I had a full cup of tea that I hadn’t even sipped yet and left it – nay, abandoned it – it on my dresser. It was a tense time.

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I ordered myself an Uber and hoped that ride sharing would be the answer to my self-inflicted problem.

But Uber drivers never seem to have the same panicked sense of urgency I want them to have.

I mean, it’s not that I want them to slow down, open the door and shout “I’m not coming to a complete stop so you gotta run and juuuuuump” at pickups, but I would like a little bit of a “follow that car” kind of vibe.

I mean, the ones I’ve had lately take corners at the recommend second gear. They keep a safe distance between cars. They approach traffic lights expecting to have to stop.

And, sure, that makes them safe drivers. I love safety. Safety is my favourite. But I just get ancy when people don’t have the same sense of urgency as I do.

I also tend to be a bit of a backseat driver, which is actually a nightmare I repeatedly have. I’m literally sitting in the backseat, trying to operate a moving automobile. It’s essentially that scene from Mr Bean where he’s trying to take an armchair home in his tiny car and ends up rigging up a shonky system that allows him to drive from the chair, which has been strapped to his roof. It’s so fucking stressful and terrifies me. It’s also super unnecessary. I already know I’m a control freak who is unable to control her own life. I’m aware. I don’t need an anxiety-inducing dream to tell me that.

Anyway. What I mean to say is that this overwhelming craving for control and flurry of urgency fluttering in my chest makes me an uncomfortable passenger.

Like today, for example, I’d mentioned my dilemma to the driver who made the appropriate “that’s awkward for you, you silly bloody sausage” throat noise people make when they want to politely acknowledge your discomfort but communicate that you’re the person at fault. He knew what a hurry I was in. And that super 90s Tina Cousins song Pray was on the radio, for a reason I can’t quite explain. That preachy dance floor belter is the perfect chase song. The chorus is so intense. I mean, it’s electric gospel, that’s a powerful fucker of a stout.

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I was in a hurry. The soundtrack was on point. The sky was grey and dramatic. How could you not get swept up in all that?

There should have been pigeons scattering and people diving into fountains to clear our path.

But this bloke was in classic Sunday morning drive mode, abiding by all the road rules like a maniac.

I mean, call me a melodramatic, self-obsessed millennial, but I was stunned that a complete stranger wasn’t willing to put life, limb and license on the line to get me to work three-and-a-half minutes faster by taking a few uncalculated risks.

Unbelievable.

 

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Participatory high

Originally published by The Clifton Courier, February 20, 2019

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Sometimes all you need to do to win is to participate.

My sister and I found ourselves back at the old Maguire Manor on Friday morning, after spending a wild Valentine’s Day night playing cards with Mum and Grandma while listening to Wings at a moderate volume.

I was doing my morning scroll through Facebook when I saw a post from the Clifton Show Society informing me (well, not just me specifically, but it did feel somewhat targeted at me in a cosmic kind of way) that pavilion entries closed at midday.

My work roster meant I wasn’t able to trot on down to the rec grounds for the big day on Saturday and a friend’s engagement party (well, more specifically, the pig on the spit being served at said engagement party) kept me from my favourite spot within the fenced off area outside the Wattles clubhouse* that night.

* For the uninitiated, this refers to the outdoor area where you’re legally allowed to smash tinnies. It’s the happiest place on earth. 

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But I still wanted to feel involved, somehow.

And while I haven’t got the ability to grow a tomato, don’t have the technique required to craft a sufficiently scandalous example of adult needlework* and my hat looks far too pristine to compete in the Old Battered Hat section, I do know how to turn flour, eggs and butter into biscuits.

* By next year, I hope to have mastered the needle and thread so I will finally be able to fulfil my five-year-long dream of entering tastefully pornographic needlework in the show. 

I could enter the cookery section.

It was about 9am; that left me with a three-hour window to claim culinary victory. It cutting it close, but it was doable.

I made a comment to my sister that we still had time to enter and two minutes later, thought turned into scrambled, frantic action.

Perhaps it was the extra honey in our morning cups of tea or a hangover from our intergenerational card battle the night before, but we suddenly had a burning desire to compete – an urge that usually lies dormant within me.

We’ve never been particularly competitive girls.

I mean, we play special rules of Monopoly where you didn’t need to buy a whole street of properties before buying hotels and we let heavily indebted players take interest-free loans from the bank. We never, ever actually finished a game – we generally kept playing out our sisterly socialist alternative to the capitalist system until we got sick of sitting around and started packing up*. The first time I played the ruthless, by-the-book Monopoly, I was horrified.

* I mean, I’m not saying I should be in charge for the whole economy, but I would be interested to see how this played out in real life. 

And, hey, I’m not saying that winning isn’t great.

I mean, I had a prize-winning scratchie that I cashed in to cover our entry costs. I won a whole $2 and joyfully accepted each of the four 50 cent pieces the honourable newsagent ceremoniously counted into my hand. Without those winnings, we would have had to raid Mum’s spare coin collection.

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Yes, winning is fun and there are practical advantages to it.

But, I will say this; the thrill of entering a plate of baked goods in the Show far exceeded my elation over my scratchie winnings.

The vibe in the kitchen was electric. We are always excited about food, but that morning we kicked it up a notch.

I took pride each individual ball of gingerbread I carefully placed on the baking tray. My sister, in a moment of inspiration, added a “secret ingredient” to half her scone dough. Flour was actually sifted. Standard measures were mostly respected. The timer was methodically set. We even went up to the op shop to source fancy plates to give our baked offerings a competitive edge (of course, we now know that the stewards level the playing field by putting all entries on generic paper plates).

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Rolling into the pavilion, we were practically buzzing. Sure, a certificate with our names on it would have been fantastic. Being able to call my ginger bickies “blue ribbon gingerbread” would have been a thrill. And the prize money would have been a welcome addition to our wallets.

But we were all ready winners. We had ourselves an incredibly wholesome natural high and we rode it out for the rest of the day.

I didn’t care about the result; I’d got what I wanted. A sense of satisfaction and belonging. Kitchen banter. Spare gingerbread bickies to eat as breakfast dessert. What else could you want?

As long as you have a go, you don’t need a prize, because you’ve already won. Winning doesn’t matter in the end, as long as you had fun participating. Accolades and certificates be damned, I say.

(You might think that I’m only saying this because my sister won a prize and I did not, but you’d be way out of line…)

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Messages from the universe

Originally published by The Clifton Courier February 13, 2019

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How do you know if the universe is sending you a message or if you’re just overthinking?

We’ve all heard the saying “everything happens for a reason”. It’s advice most often dealt out in the fallout of the heavy, but not devastating, blows that come with life. Breakups. Failed job hunts. An adorable illegitimate child turning up on your doorstep unexpectedly.

Of course, I’m speaking through the prism of movies and television. Because in the world of film, literally everything happens for a reason. Besides the occasional extra accidentally breaking continuity with a changing pony tail or dangling boom mic, pretty much everything is meticulously planned. The emotionally-charged misplaced letter doesn’t fall out of a forgotten book until the right moment. A bus that speeds by at the exact moment someone steps on to a road without looking. A certain song that comes on the radio during a cab ride to the airport.

Everything happens for a reason.

Whether it’s a signal something dark is coming or an opportunity for an emotionally-stunted hero to grow as a person, neither the occurrences of events and the symbolism surrounding them are accidental.

And when you nourish yourself on a diet of Hollywood sap like me, it’s easy to believe the same laws apply to life. You begin to a see a pattern in the universe*.

* And you see mundane, innocuous events as signs that you should do something. It can be as big as leaving your old life behind and taking on a new career, or something equally as big as deciding what kind of takeaway will best satisfy your incredibly complex needs.

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Which is why, when my teacup devastatingly cracked all the way through the other day, I was extremely concerned.

Not just because this meant the soup-bowl-sized mug I’d loved was now useless, but because such a dramatic event clearly meant something more.

I mean, the cup didn’t just crack, it split. The once-full mug was empty in two seconds, with tea spilling everywhere. And the noise was more than the fracturing of mass-produced ceramics; it was the unmistakable splintering of earthbound objects touched by mysterious forces transcending the realms*.

* For whatever reason, these mysterious forces don’t seem to have voices. And that’s great, because a creepy voice telling my not to drink a cup of tea would leave my on the edge of a nervous breakdown. Nope, it’s better that they deal out vague signs instead. Although, you could argue that these mysterious forces might actually have a way to clearly communicate exactly the message they’re trying to get through, but like to mess with us. I mean, it would keep things interesting. I don’t know if mysterious forces have Netflix subscriptions, so they have to do something for entertainment. 

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Of course, my mind went straight to an interventionist cosmic power or a spirit who might be trying to tell me something by splitting that cup.

I considered whether it was a sign from the universe that I should not drink that cup of tea and instead drink water. Or perhaps it meant that I wasn’t supposed to drink anything at all because I could get stuck in a lift for an hour and really, really need to wee. Like, the universe could have been acting on my behalf, telling me not to fill my bladder so that I don’t have to substitute a water bottle for a toilet or emerge from a high-profile rescue situation dripping with my own urine.

Or it could have been warning me to take caution that day. Perhaps it was an omen telling me that bigger, more disturbing cracks were in my future.

I couldn’t tell.*

* I mean, you can never tell exactly what these special cosmic messages mean. It’s always open to interpretation. It’s never a direct “oi, you’re going to spill spaghetti on yourself today, take preventative measures”. It’s more cryptic.  Like, instead of coming out and warning you, it might force a fleck of toothpaste to fall on your pyjama shirt as a minty omen of things to come. 

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Of course, another thought crossed my mind. It was the thought echoing an old, wry woman who always has a martini in her hand and rattles off the cutting insults you need to hear (she’s wearing a Channel suit, because if I’m going to have an imaginary sassy grandma, she’s going to be well dressed and look like Jane Fonda).

That thought: are you really that special?

And Grandma Jane has a point: the idea that the universe is taking a vested interest in me, just me, when there’s millions of other people on the planet is a little egocentric. And the whole notion that whatever all-knowing force responsible for everything around us would have time in its busy schedule of keeping the planet spinning and coaxing seedlings out of the dirt and sprinkling enough drama into the lives of the women of the Real Housewives – you know, keeping the world in order for the greater good – to meddle with my meaningless existence is, admittedly, mildly deluded. The existence of a helpful spirit who cares enough to leave guiding hints to keep me on the path of comfortable middle-classness is probably wishful thinking.

* And hey, you cold say that all this thinking that bad things happen purely to direct you to the right path takes away a lot of responsibility of life. Like, you can’t go blaming your burnt toast or totally-preventable infection on the universe, when it was your actions that lead to these things happening. I can’t imagine abandoning your own personal responsibility and letting the universe take the wheel is a good way to live life. It can’t end well. 

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So I simply tossed the mug, whipped out another and poured myself a new cup of tea.

The only real effect of the cosmic crack was a distinctive mug-shaped hole in the kitchen cabinet.

But here’s the kicker: last weekend I was given a novelty teacup for FebMas, which would not have fit in the cupboard if the other mug were still there. Read into that what you will.

 

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This one made it to print

The true meaning of FebMas

Originally published by The Clifton Courier, February 7, 2019

If you were to venture into my parents’ house at the moment, you’d be forgiven for thinking they were a little bit slack.

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Now, well and truly into February, the Christmas decorations are still up. All of them. The tinsel is still wrapped around the exercise bike that never gets used. The paper Nativity scene my oldest sister made more than 20 years ago sits on the fireplace. The overzealously bejewelled rocking horse ornament an extremely extra preschool-aged Dannielle still demands your attention from a prominent branch of our fake plastic tree.

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It’s all still there.

My parents used to leave the decorations up until after my birthday in January, but this year they’ve been left up for an even bigger event (well, depends on who you’re asking, some would argue the anniversary of my birth is a pretty big deal).

They’ve been left up for our family Christmas, which is being held this weekend… just a smidgeon later than the actual Christmas.

We have many different names for it. FebMas. PretendMas. FakeMas. Basically just any word before the festive suffix “mas” that isn’t “Christ”*.

* I mean, not like “SatanMas” or anything like that. We’re slack, not devil worshippers. 

Because, in a time when you can celebrate the New Year with a hot cross bun (honestly, if a heavily-marketed bun being available for longer than a limited time of the year is the only thing that gets you fired up about the state of the consumerist-driven nation we live in, perhaps it’s time to re-examine a few things) and you can get Valentine’s Day cards for dogs*, why the heck can’t you have a second Christmas?

* I mean, I don’t know if these exist in the commercial world yet, but if they don’t, that’s a business idea you’re more than welcome to run with so long as you send me a scented candle every financial new year for gifting you with this gimmicky scheme. 

What’s stopping you from glazing a ham, baking some gingerbread and forcing the people you love to spend more than 24 hours under one roof? Does it really matter that date is on the calendar when the vibe – eating too much food, wearing stupid hats, regressing back to your younger self – is the same?

It’s not that we’re replacing Christmas; we’re just going in for a second round. I mean, we did do Christmas at the time in our own separate ways. I may have spent the day at work, but I was still wearing a T-Shirt with a Home Alone quote on it. One sister’s Christmas Dinner may have been a Thai curry, but she kept the Yuletide tradition of eating an unnecessarily large lunch alive. And Dad still had to pretend he knew what was inside the package marked “from Mum and Dad”, he just did so at a different time than he usually would.

We’re all getting older and our lives are pulling us in different directions. This means that, sometimes, we’re going to be in different places at times we wish we weren’t. We’re not always going to be able to wake each other up at 5am for “breakfast chockies”.

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We have to face it; we’re not always going to be around. Things are going to change, and they already have. Significantly.

But that doesn’t mean we can’t keep a bit of the magic alive.

And if that means gathering under the same mutually accepted delusion, than that’s just the way it’s going to have to be.

So we’re going to give that Shrek The Halls CD another couple of spins. We’re going to wear festive pyjamas at the wrong time of year. And we’re going to treat gingerbread as a breakfast food* when it is completely devoid of the nutrients and fibre punch you need to kick your gut into gear.

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* Well, actually, we ended up have hot cross buns instead. I added bacon to mine!

Because it’s more than eating prawns or trying to save wrapping paper so it can be used next year (although, if you can do that, you’re winning at life). It’s about time, not a date. In fact, the true meaning of Christmas might not even be about Christmas at all.

Merry FebMas, everyone.

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This one did not, Three things

Three things to look forward to…

Well, if you have been getting my Snapchats (and I’m going to assume that, if you’re reading this, you’re either an immediate family member or someone in my top tier of close friends and therefore am on my direct Snapchat mailing list) you’ll know that FebMas has been and gone.

FebMas as a concept will be explained in my following post, as I wrote a column in last Wednesday’s paper about it in the hope Cliftonites would wish us a merry FebMas and maybe inspire the firies to go around town with their captain dressed as Santa handing out lollies to the kids. My general rule is not post a paper-printed column until the following week and I’m not just going to go breaking that rule because I’m too full of ham to bash out an actual blog post. Although, I am very, very full of ham, so do bear that in mind as you read on. The levels of salt and brine in my blood may impact my ability to talk about anything other than dead pig.

Long story short, FebMas is our family’s sliiiiightly later celebration of Christmas.

And we’ve just had it.

Which means there are few things to look forward to. When real Christmas is over, there’s New Year and my birthday and Hottest 100 countdown parties dangling ahead of you like a carrot – they’re enough to drag your softer, pumper, hammier body though the stinkin’ hot days. They’re just ahead on the horizon, assuring you that there’s something to live for after the festive odyssey is stuffed into an over-filled wheelie bin.

But with Febmas long after all those occasions, there’s not as many things to immediately look forward to. And when all you have a head of you for the coming weeks is a heck of a lot of back sweat, it’s easy to get disheartened. So I’m choosing to do something I rarely do: be positive.

I’m going to concentrate on the good things that lay ahead of me rather than sitting in a porky funk.

So here are three things I’m excited about for this week:

Kerbside collection pick up: This weekend is the weekend people can put out all their bulky, unwanted crap on the street for free collection by the Brisbane City Council. And people start early. So for the next few days, piles of assorted goods are going to grow on the streets, just waiting to be picked at.

I love free healthcare and I reckon super’s a pretty good idea, but I think my favourite perk of my civil membership is the kerbside collection pick up.

Aside from FebMas, it’s the most wonderful time of the year. It’s excellent for residents without access to a ute or the motivation to go to the dump. But it’s also excellent for huge stickybeaks who like to rifle through other people’s discarded belongings and hoard them for themselves. People like me.

You find some really cool stuff at kerbside collection time. A few years ago, a friend and I drove around in my Camry picking up items to furnish her new share house and we found these odd geometric foam items we could only assume were from a sex therapist’s office. Of course we loaded them in my bulky sedan and put them under my mate’s new place, where they remained until her disgusted sister eventually got rid of them.

I love really cool stuff, especially when it’s free. And I’ve currently got a set of wheels that could transport some of the bulkier examples of really cool stuff.

But what I really love – maybe even more than really cool stuff – is going through other people’s  really cool stuff and try to work out what kind of life they lead. What kind of person they are, and what kind of person they want to become by throwing parts of themselves away. Just a quick glance at a pile of miscellaneous items can tell you so much.  But you have to look at the whole picture. A discarded ping pong table? That could be a miffed mother, clearing out all the crap her adult children left cluttering up what should be her craft room. A ping pong table and a collection of free merch from pubs? That’s a fellow who decided his frat boy days were behind him and it’s time to be a chino-wearing man.

Not only do you get to know intimate details about your neighbours, but you also score a free beer pong table out of their quarter-life crises.

Valentines Day: As someone whose only significant other is a piece of headgear made out of dead rabbit, you could assume that this day would be a sad time. But what it has essentially morphed into is an indulgent self-care day where you do nice things for yourself because you love yourself. We now live in an age where apparently telling yourself over and over that “you’re enough” is enough, and that means that you can reframe having no one to love as an empowering decision to commit to yourself.

As a millennial, Valentines Day means I get to spend the whole day thinking about myself (which is slightly different to every other day, when you think about the planet… but purely because you’re thinking of the way you’re going to be personally impacted by climate change and how much of a good person you look like by recycling).

I’m probably going to buy some indoor plants, light a scented candle and send uplifting, supportive text messages to my friends.

Junior cattle judging: So, The Clifton Show is on this weekend, but not only do I have to work both days, I also have a very important engagement party to attend (I mean, they’re top tier people, but the pig on the spit was what really sold it to me).

So, for another year in a row, I’m going to miss The Show.

However, I am lucky enough to have Friday off, meaning I have the morning to go down and watch the junior cattle judging at my leisure.

And this is a real treat. For those who have not witnessed this fantastic spectacle, it’s a competition where grown ups judge kids on their judging skills.

The contestants are faced with four potty calves and have to rank them from first to last, justifying their answers. It’s extremely entertaining.

I’m going to wear my hat. I’m going to stand around with my hands on my hips. I’m going to ask people how much rain they got the other day. It’s going to be brilliant.

Plus, the dagwood dog guy will have probably set up by that time, so I’ll be able to eat a deep fried hotdog for breakfast.

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This one made it to print

Self burn

Originally published by The Clifton Courier, January 30, 2019

There’s a certain sting to sunburn that cannot be salved with aloe vera.

No matter what you slather on your neon-pink skin – cold tomato slices, refrigerated tea bags, the tears of your nemesis dispensed from a vial of polished amber – nothing takes away the pain of knowing you’re the only one to blame.

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You begin cursing yourself in an internal Shakespearean monologue, condemning your own foolishness. I, a woman who has inhabited this earth for nearly three decades clothed in pale Irish skin, allowed myself to be cooked like a steakette on Dad’s barbecue. I know the power of the sun. I know the vulnerability of humanity. I am the slatherer of sunscreen and I am the wearer of long-sleeved, collared shirts.

And yet, here I sit of a Monday night, glowing with red like I was born with the same skin condition that afflicted Rudolf. Strap me to the front of a sleigh and I’d be able to guide it through the thickest of polar fogs.

My shoulders are erratically pulsating warmth like a cheap, dodgy heater you wouldn’t feel comfortable leaving on while you left the room to make a cup of tea. My arms feel as if they are dotted with permanent goose bumps. And my upper thigh skin is so angry it looks like I’ve been stung by multiple bees.  It makes the prospect of wearing pants impossible and even the passive act of sitting feel like an act of self-flagellation.

I’m currently in bed, curled up with a mug of chicken chippies*, reflecting on how the heck I let myself get like this.

* More specifically, a mug the shape of a Persian cat’s face. It was my second cup of chicken chippie tea that day, if that gives you any indication as to where I was at that point of my life.

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I heartily recommend consuming chicken chippies out of mugs. First off, the long, cylindrical nature of the mug keeps the chicken chippies warmer for longer than they’d be if they were unceremoniously dumped on a plate where the cool, cruel air can get to them. It makes it easier to curl up with a mug bed this way. Secondly, there’s the handle aspect. You can be a gal on the go, nugg mug in one hand, smartphone in the other ready to share your ideas with the world through the democratising, disruptive power of social media. Of course, your smartphone hand will be Instagramming your nugg mug, so the world will know how adorably irreverent you are. Fuck conventional plates, you’re not going to conform to the norms laid out in front of you. You’re a disruptor. You’re authentic. You’re just a girl who loves chicken nuggets trying to fill a whistling void in your soul with validation on social media for being an empowered mess of a human being. 

It was a combination of things, really.

It was me forgetting to bring shorts on an overnight trip, opting to get about pantless. It was me running late, deciding to put on sunscreen when I was already at the beach instead of doing so beforehand. And I suspect it had a little something to do with my decision* to fall asleep** in the sun at about 2pm.

* It wasn’t an active decision

** Pass out

I could blame the person who brought the five-layer Mexican dip for distracting me with food when I should have been reapplying sunscreen. I could blame my long-sleeved shirt for lying in a crumpled heap on the sand instead of shielding me from the sun. I could blame my friends, for failing to properly supervise a 27-year-old spontaneous outdoor napper.

But I only have myself to blame. The fault lies with me.

And I know that I should be doing things to at least attempt to make amends with my singed self.

I’m acting as if doing nothing will undo all the damage, but I know I should have spent the day marinating myself in aloe vera instead of laying in my bed watching Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin live out the retirement of my dreams on Netflix (well, actually, my retirement plan is for me and my best friend to wait until our husbands die – of totally unsuspicious, natural causes, of course – before taking ownership the olive grove house, where we live out our days drinking margaritas, blasting Fleetwood Mac and hosting bonfire parties, however, I’d happily settle for the Grace and Frankie scenario).

And, hey, the passive treatment has already worked for me in some way – I got burnt on Sunday afternoon and much of the redness had dulled by Monday morning. So I am hoping that another good night’s sleep will be enough to combat the power of the Sun and completely liberate me from its wrath. I mean, sure, it’s the burning orb of energy around which our planetary system revolves, but you should never underestimate the power of a decent rest.

But by doing nothing, I’m hoping that I’m taking serious preventative action. I’m hoping this discomfort lingers in my mind, so next time I go out in the sun, I’m reminded to wear a hat. I hope I recall how difficult it currently is to wear undies when I next toy with the idea of going to the beach without a sun shirt.  And I hope the flecks of dead skin that will inevitably flake off in my sheets and stick to office furniture will traumatise me* into coating my body in sunscreen.

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* It’s working. Yesterday I took off a dark green, long-sleeved dress after work, turning it inside out. I saw all these flecks of skin peel stuck to the inside, leaving the surface looking like a dark green lammington (my skin being the desiccated coconut in this simile).

I sincerely hope it works. Because if I want to outlive my husband and go on to have at least 10 good margarita-drinking years in the olive grove, I’m going to avoid skin cancer as much as possible.

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