I used to write a lot of lists on this blog, and life lessons and stuff like that. Having turned 25 this year, I thought it timely to do another list of things I have picked up so far at this point in my life.
1. Do exercise that doesn't make you hate exercise
2. Listen to your body. Eat what makes you feel good. Sometime this will be chocolate cake after 9pm, sometimes it will be not eating at all. Work out your own set of body rules.
3. The easiest way to feel like you have a sense of control over your life is to make your bed each morning.
4. Have achievable goals and a few unachievable ones, to keep your aspirations high and keep your feet always moving.
5. Sex can be 'just sex' for some people, but almost never for me.
6. Be picky with groceries, so far as you're able to, be a good consumer
7. The establishment you work for won't remember you the week after you leave, so make sure work isn't life, even try to include mindfulness in rushed mornings
8. If you're single, get a pet, or a housemate. Try not to be utterly alone for too long
9. That being said, be utterly ok with being utterly alone. Because life is ultimately your own experience and the people you invite to join in with you are just companions who either either enhance or diminish the experience.
10. Sit with good posture. Wear sunscreen. Stretch more often
11. Pay for your music, and if it give you joy, support artists when you can
12. Never underestimate the power of personalised mail
13. Your most important achievement will never be to do with yourself
14. Invest in a good mattress
15. You don't need to smile and nod all the time to make people like you. Have people like you because they respect you, because you speak your truth clearly and politely, not because you are a yes-man.
16. Call your grandparents more often
17. Be around people who ask questions, and who make you do the same
18. Read from multiple news sources
19. Wear slutty things sometimes
20. Practice positive self talk until you no longer need to remind yourself to practice it
21. Dedicate at least 1 hr a week to sit down and look through your bank accounts...and work out a budget!
22. Be aware of how crazy love makes you
23. Have a day without a phone more often, and hang out in places without reception
24. Life is not a race with other people, and you're not doing anything wrong if you're doing things at a different pace
25. Always have a deso
26. Nobody likes tax time, things to do with car rego and actually hanging the washing out on the line is always the worst part of doing the washing
27. Find a way to indulge your spiritual side. Don't let not going to a church stop you from sitting quietly for an hour and trying to have a conversation with your soul
28. Nobody actually knows what they're doing, and even people in big businesses screw things up
29. Don't forget the weightlessness, how good it feels jumping into a pool after a stressful day, or how good it feels after having gone for a run and you don't have to run any further
30. Be picky about who you let into your inner circle, because with the internet it is too easy to have 'best friends'.
Tales of Attempting...
Previously titled: 'A semester at WCU' & 'Attempting to be a uni student'
Saturday 11 March 2017
Saturday 4 February 2017
No Bogan Pig Hunters
Internet dating is a precarious mine field and often results in more misses than hits at the
best of times. Trying to internet date in Darwin means literally putting 'No bogan pig hunters' on your profile introduction, and hoping for the best.
With this in mind, I'd been talking to a guy for a couple of days and he wanted to meet up.
I've always been pretty happy to go on at least one date with someone so I agreed. He wasn't bad looking and he seemed to know the difference between there, their and they're.
He suggested a pub and I got there first. As I was sitting, waiting, I was scanning other people in the area and trying to see him before he saw me. He walked in and said hi. I said hi back.
What I should have said was: "why the fuck are you wearing a beanie in Darwin?"
He had suggested the pub because it had good food. I was pretty excited about that, but as a waitress walked past with an average looking steak on a plate and he muttered
"mmm, smell those chips!" I began to realise that he didn't actually mean GOOD food.
Ok. Ok. I'm a snob. But he was just being such a bogan.
He walked to and from the bar like he had a helium balloon in his chest and was struggling
to keep it contained. It was weird. The conversation was boring. I don't think he asked me a single question about myself and I was trying to think up reasons to leave. Then he started talking about how he wants to go pig hunting and I was just like.... that's it. I'm out.
Like, come on...I've actually put fucking effort into this date. I have dressed up and come
out and am asking you questions and trying to be funny, and you've rocked up wearing a fucking beanie and are trying to have a conversation with me about pig hunting. WHEN I WAS SO SPECIFIC!!! I LITERALLY COULD NOT HAVE BEEN MORE SPECIFIC.
So I left. And then when I walked outside there was a man lying beside my car, in the gutter with his pants down by his ankles, so drunk that he was frothing at the mouth. So I rolled
him over, called 000 and sat by him until the ambulance arrived.
Ah... Darwin.
best of times. Trying to internet date in Darwin means literally putting 'No bogan pig hunters' on your profile introduction, and hoping for the best.
With this in mind, I'd been talking to a guy for a couple of days and he wanted to meet up.
I've always been pretty happy to go on at least one date with someone so I agreed. He wasn't bad looking and he seemed to know the difference between there, their and they're.
He suggested a pub and I got there first. As I was sitting, waiting, I was scanning other people in the area and trying to see him before he saw me. He walked in and said hi. I said hi back.
What I should have said was: "why the fuck are you wearing a beanie in Darwin?"
He had suggested the pub because it had good food. I was pretty excited about that, but as a waitress walked past with an average looking steak on a plate and he muttered
"mmm, smell those chips!" I began to realise that he didn't actually mean GOOD food.
Ok. Ok. I'm a snob. But he was just being such a bogan.
He walked to and from the bar like he had a helium balloon in his chest and was struggling
to keep it contained. It was weird. The conversation was boring. I don't think he asked me a single question about myself and I was trying to think up reasons to leave. Then he started talking about how he wants to go pig hunting and I was just like.... that's it. I'm out.
Like, come on...I've actually put fucking effort into this date. I have dressed up and come
out and am asking you questions and trying to be funny, and you've rocked up wearing a fucking beanie and are trying to have a conversation with me about pig hunting. WHEN I WAS SO SPECIFIC!!! I LITERALLY COULD NOT HAVE BEEN MORE SPECIFIC.
So I left. And then when I walked outside there was a man lying beside my car, in the gutter with his pants down by his ankles, so drunk that he was frothing at the mouth. So I rolled
him over, called 000 and sat by him until the ambulance arrived.
Ah... Darwin.
Monday 14 March 2016
The time I attempted to give a boy my number
I was out riding my bike one sunny Saturday morning. I was riding into town to pick up the car that I'd left parked there the night before. It was a hot day, but it had literally been years since I'd last ridden a bike and so I was riding fast and enjoying myself. Enjoying my dorky helmet considerably more than I should have been.
When I finally reached my car I dismounted and unlocked the car. I opened the boot, put the seats down and started trying to put my bike in.
'This...'
I realised rather quickly.
'This is why people have bike racks on their cars'.
I must have struggled with the stupid thing for about 15 minutes, pissing off a bunch of cars who were waiting to take my parking space. Finally, I admitted defeat and decided I would have to ride to my friends house and ask him for help.
It was at that moment that I noticed the bike chain had fallen off...and I had no lock to secure the bike in place and drive for help. It was also one of those rare days that I'd decided I wouldn't need a phone either and had left it at home Well great. JUUUUUST GREAT.
I was stuck.
Fortunately for me I noticed I was parked out the front of a surf shop. In my head I was like
'Surfing = skate boarding = bike riding'. Joining dots I figured were obvious, I decided to go in and ask for help. I walked up to the manager and asked,
'Does anyone in here know how to put a bike chain back on?'
'err...I think one of our guys should be able to'
She calls out and a guy walks over. He was like...
This gorgeous, 6'+, muscly, bearded, dark hair and blue blue eyes greek adonis.And of course... I was like...
And in standard fashion this scenario starts playing out in my head; That I'm the main character of a rom com. This is the day before Valentines day and 'oh god! (cue damsel in distress) my bike!'
(cue unrealistically attractive/skilled/kind gentleman) 'Don't fret miss. I'll save you'
It can't be true. And yet... it is. It's happening.
THESE THINGS APPARENTLY HAPPEN IN REAL LIFE PEOPLE.
So anyway, of course, like a gob smacked idiot, I just stand there awkwardly and stare as this gorgeous boy fixes my bike.
He's even smiling up at me an trying to talk to me, and I am just too intimidated and out of my element that I don't answer with anything remotely intelligible. When he's finished I literally just snatch the bike out of his hands and ride away.
Like... I didn't say goodbye. Didn't say thank you.
Ran away.
So I get back to my mates house, and I gush to them,
'The guy! The guy at the store! He was SO CUTE! He fixed my bike! He SAVED ME. SO. CUTE. SO GOSH DARN CUTE. WHY!!??? WHY DID I RUN!!?? Why did I FLEE???'
As I endured their teasing I sat there and thought; what is wrong with me that, as a 24 year old I couldn't even hold a conversation with this guy? and so as Valentines Day rolled around I began to convince myself that I had to go back. That I would forever regret not doing this...and what was the worst he could say? No? I have a girl friend?
Nothing ventured, nothing gained I reasoned.
So, the next day, Valentines Day, I went back.
When I walked in the door I was trembling. So nervous. So very, very nervous.
I glanced around the store and saw him talking to some customers. I could have browsed the store like a normal person might, waiting until he was free. Instead I stood there like this
Just waiting... like a complete creep until he was free. And then finally. FINALLY he was, and trembling, I advanced.
'Hi' I said.
'Hi' He replied.
'You fixed my bike yesterday' I said.
'Yeah' he agreed. 'I did'.
There was a bit of a pause...and in that silence I freaked out. I opened my mouth again to speak and the next thing I said was;
'I was too sweaty yesterday...but I've had a shower since then'
...'too sweaty'...
...'too sweaty'...
...'too sweaty'...
WTF Elyse.
So then...mortified, I mumbled some garbage about buying him a drink to say thank you, threw a piece of paper with my number on it at him and RAN AWAY before getting an answer.
I ran away from him. Again. After telling him I have a sweat problem.
Like a big, sweaty coward.
So... I'm sitting in my car. Recuperating. Trying to understand why I would deliberately commit treason against myself, and my phone buzzed with a text.
It was an unknown number.
It was him.
'Hi Elyse. It's Harrison from the store.
You caught me off guard when you came in earlier.
I'd actually love to take you up on your offer to get a drink later today...
...however I'm still only 17'
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how I made an utter fool of myself over an overdeveloped minor.
Sunday 28 February 2016
People Not To Trust
There's been some debate recently about who, as a Nation, we should and shouldn't trust. Who we should and shouldn't let into the country etc etc...
Well, to help put an end to the conversation I have put together a definitive list of key traits and characteristics of individuals who are inherently untrustworthy.
People not to trust in these times of terror and heightened security measures.
- People who, when slicing cheese and don't cut themselves an extra slice to eat while they're putting the block of cheese back in the fridge
- People who keep tomato sauce in the cupboard
- People who keep Vegemite in the fridge
- Security guards who smile too much
- People who don't perform the perfunctory 'thanks' wave when you let them merge
- Pedestrians who don't perform the perfunctory 'sorry' wave and increase pace when on the crossing
- People who don't consume a hot beverage in the morning
- People who just straight up say 'No' without even considering to put a polite, tentative 'Yeah...' in front of it
- People who maintain too much eye contact
- People who continue conversations while in a public bathroom
- People who poop in public bathrooms
- People who say “remind me to...” without putting an 'ooh!' in front of it
- People who don't like tea
- Car drivers when I'm a pedestrian
- Pedestrians when I'm in a car
- Teachers who smile too little
- People who don't lick the spoon or bowl
- People who drink milk ON the use by date
- People who wear hats indoors
- People who have never eaten nutella or milo straight out of the jar
- People who don't like animals
- People who walk really slowly in the centre of the narrow footpath
- People who leave a bathroom stall without warning you that they've used up the last of the toilet paper
- People who arrive too early
- People who don't like pizza
- People who haven't seen Lord of the Rings
- People who don't know how to put appropriate graphics to their posts
Tuesday 5 January 2016
The Battle of The Monkey Bars
The coursework was stressing me out, the impending
shadow of my first TEWT was coming up fast and the looming threat of going on offensive operations (offops) was going to have to be dealt with sooner rather than later. My main stress however during the first few weeks back at the
college during II class was my fitness. More specifically, my complete and
utter inability to do monkey bars.
You know how when you’re a kid and you’re
freakishly, disproportionately strong and flexible, and there’s practically
nothing in the realm of athletics and gymnastics that you can’t do? Even then,
I’d never been able to do monkey bars…. And this had never disappointed me. I’d
never felt the desire to even try. They hurt my hands and got me nowhere
fast. Why bother even trying? Never in my life did I ever suspect that my
career might be impeded by my utter inability to do monkey bars.
At RMC the monkey bars were my own personal
demon. A source of hindrance, tears and frustration. They were part of a test
every single cadet has to complete in order to prove that they are fit and
mobile enough in order to play sport.
No monkey bars, no sport.
I remember the first time I heard this I just stared and
blinked at the PTI. Stared, blinked heavily and breathed deeply, like some dumb
cow in a field. The logic didn’t, still doesn’t compute. I remember thinking,
Sooo….You’re telling me that because I’ve never been able to do monkey bars my
entire life, my parents should never have let me take to a netball court? Because…not
being able to do monkey bars meant I was obviously so unfit that I was a danger
to myself and those around me? IS THAT WHAT YOU ARE TELLING ME??
These weren’t even regular monkey bars either! Positioned halfway through an exhausting obstacle course, these monkey bars were made of steel, notoriously slippery, and they inclined up.
I strategically dragged out my duties as Orderly Officer the
day that my whole class had to attempt the test. This way I knew I wouldn’t
have to suffer the humiliation of watching each and every one of them swing
past me triumphantly.
I couldn’t escape them forever though. My time to attempt
them came the following Tuesday and the inevitable happened. I grasped the bar,
leaned out as far as my ridiculously long body allowed me, reached out as far
out, to as many rungs as I could possibly reach whilst still having my feet
firmly planted
It always ended the same way. I lifted my feet, dangled for a mortifying, pathetic second,
and then dropped onto the pebbles (what sort of sick person put a pebble bed
underneath monkey bars anyway?)
I had failed, and thus began my long stint in
‘Remedial PT’.
Remedial PT is a funny thing. Every Tuesday and Thursday the
entire college lines up into their chosen sports to hear any messages for the
afternoon before proceeding to go play those sports until dinner. If you’re on
remedial PT you stand in front of
everyone else, like, they literally stand in a horse shoe on either side of
you, staring at you, while you’re dressed in the ugly brown T-shirt and baggy
navy shorts that you lived in whilst on boot camp in III Class.
You stand
there, silently, on show for everyone to judge. And they are judging you,
because if you don’t have a visible injury, you don’t have a valid excuse for
being on remedial. You’re automatically regarded as obviously either not fit
enough, too fat or you’re a (dare I say it?)…a linger. A malingerer, the absolute
worst thing you can be at the College, other than being ‘Jack’.
Being on
remedial PT for the first few weeks after Christmas break was always alright,
because there were always quite a few people who had let themselves go a little
and hadn’t passed either this physical test or that, so you were never alone in
your shame. However, after the weeks passed, the remedial PT numbers dwindled,
and soon there were only about three of us left. Standing in the middle of the
square, twice a week, every week, being judged, all because I couldn’t do the
stupid monkey bars.
Battleblocks came and went, our first ever TEWT experience
traumatised me, and then passed. Still the monkey bars defeated me, week after
week. I ripped the skin off my palms on those monkey bars. Fell flat on my face
in the pebbles whilst attempting those monkey bars. Months, literally months
had passed and I still couldn’t get more than half way.
People were offering
all sorts of suggestions.
“Spin your legs like a bicycle”
“Try swinging from one bar to the next one like an orangutan”
“Here…watch me!”
The amount of people I had to watch successfully and effortlessly navigate the
monkey bars was...more than merely painful, it was a tiny bit soul crushing. I
was beginning to think I had something fundamentally physiologically wrong with
me.
TEWT season came by AGAIN, and this time there were two
assessed TEWTS. It was not a good week. I was still feeling the pressure of my ‘improve, improve, improve’ diagnosis from my previous battleblock and I stressed out again to an inappropriate level over this latest TEWT. I
distinctly remember feel physically ill when presenting, and trembling as I
wrote from the sheer adrenaline.
I passed, but I couldn't allow myself much time to enjoy the victory. Coming up was my regular weekly torture session with the monkey bars and I
was beginning to feel the regular feeling of dread settling into the pit of my
stomach. Something akin to feeling constipated.
This time however, something had
changed. One of the PTIs, a young corporal, had taken some serious time to sit
down with me and talk me through exactly how to do these goddamn things. He helped me pin point some exact failing points in my technique.
Point number one: Try, for the love of god just try to attempt any form of passable
technique. Don’t just hang there and flop your body around helplessly like a hippopotamus
sized, bat.
I ran through all the tips for success over and over in my head
for weeks. Use the momentum of your body, don’t stop moving your hands, if you
don’t have the strength to hold up your swinging giant monolith of a body, try
to hold it as still as possible and just go. Don't be a hippo bat. Go. Go. Go.
I practised on normal,
wooden, flat monkey bars twice a week, every week…and finally, one day, I made
it. My hands were buuuurning and half the skin peeled off again, but I’d done
it. Now I just had to do it again, on the incline one, fast enough to beat the
stopwatch (I don’t think I mentioned before that the bloody test was TIMED).
So that following Tuesday, I stood in front of the entire
College in my remedial PT uniform whilst messages were being read out, and then
when we were dismissed I headed up to the monkey bars with a Sergeant who
looked at me, utterly exasperated and said, “Well? You gonna actually do it
today?”
“Yep” I said.
“Like… actually? Should I even bother timing?” He wasn’t a mean guy, but he was trying not to roll his eyes, I could tell. I don’t even begrudge him for it. He’d been the one who’d been present during my initial test. He knew just how atrocious I was at these.
“No” I told him firmly. “I want you to time me”.
“Yep” I said.
“Like… actually? Should I even bother timing?” He wasn’t a mean guy, but he was trying not to roll his eyes, I could tell. I don’t even begrudge him for it. He’d been the one who’d been present during my initial test. He knew just how atrocious I was at these.
“No” I told him firmly. “I want you to time me”.
I felt like a woman possessed. I went to the starting line and waited.
“Ready, set…GO!”
I ran up to the wall, highhips,bootstoglutes,twofootlanding
Bam
Ran to the fences, ducked and weaved between them like a mad thing,
Bam
Ran to the sand pit, watched the required distance line sail away behind me. Landed.
Bam
Ran to the big metal logs, awkwardly waddled through them
Bam
Ran to the monkey bars, grabbed them, kept my upper body taunt, began shuffling my hands one rung after the other.
GOGOGOGO
I was half way. My hands were burning
GOGOGOGO
I was four rungs from the end. Four.
And I stopped.
I just couldn’t keep going, didn’t have the strength to reach up and out four more times. I was at my stupid, fucking limit. I dangled there, momentum gone, beyond frustrated, waiting for my grip strength to give out on me when the Sergeant yelled out
“Swing your legs!”
In sheer desperation I swung my legs. They are long enough that they reached the platform of the other side.
They reached the goddamn platform.
With my precariously perched heels taking a tiny bit of my body weight, filled with the adrenaline mothers sometimes have to lift cars off their babies, I managed to awkwardly waddle (with my hands) the rest of my body in to the ledge...and in to victory.
BAM
I jumped down from the bars, elated, but I wasn’t done yet.
I ran to the balance beam, had never had an issue with it but today, nearly fell off because of the adrenaline, the utter jubilation. I got to the end, lowered my body and performed the correct safety jump at the end onto the pebbles.
BAM.
Done.
I’d done it.
I turned around and looked at the sergeant. My stomach clenched….ready to be cut down.
“You did it!!” he yelled
“I…I did it!?”
“You did it!”
“What was my time?”
He paused for a second, looked at his watch, grinned and just said… “Never mind! You did it!”
I laughed REALLY UNCOMFORTABLY LOUDLY and then I turned really purple in the face and kind
of awkwardly started crying a little bit.
What had begun as this great
celebration turned into this really awkward moment of him looking away and me
trying to pretend I just had this really rare sinus disease that flared up
suddenly and made me sniff a lot, inappropriately.
Saturday 19 September 2015
TEWTs (Tactically Exhausting Warrior Tests)
Or, more officially known as 'Tactical Exercise Without Troops', they are such a cause of stress and anxiety in the college that I feel compelled to write about them and try to explain them. Maybe now next time we have a conversation and I try to tell you how bad the current TEWT is, you may be able to understand a little better.
So firstly, imagine a game of chess. You've got all your pieces and they all have differing abilities and rules about where they can and can't go, right? This is basically what a TEWT is. You're given a scenario and you're told what assets you have to help solve it.
You're also given an opponent to play against. However imagine that the opponent has about three times the amount of pieces you have, and every single one of those pieces has a different set of rules and abilities to your own pieces. They're stronger, better equipped and on the whole, more powerful.
So now, imagine that you take away the chessboard and you have to now just remember all these variants and rules off the top of your head. You have paper you can write it down on of course, but it's basically like playing chess theoretically. You've just got to remember where everyone is and what they're doing and what they can do. The number of pieces you have, the opponent has, and all their individual abilities.
From this, you've got to come up with a plan that works and then, you have to write it down in a way that PROVES it works. It takes roughly 8 hours to do.
So from there, 8 hours later, exhausted, brain strained and haggard, you hand it into an instructor who, despite the fact that your plan makes sense and you've obviously analysed the situation...they decide that your air assets, while effective, don't necessarily guarantee cut off of the enemy withdrawal. And because of that one tiny differing of opinion of something you wouldn't know unless you've actually been in operations, working with air assets in real life, you fail.
If you fail the wrong TEWT at the wrong time you could find yourself doing an extra 6 months at the college doing 'retraining'.
So... TEWTs. In short. They suck.
So firstly, imagine a game of chess. You've got all your pieces and they all have differing abilities and rules about where they can and can't go, right? This is basically what a TEWT is. You're given a scenario and you're told what assets you have to help solve it.
You're also given an opponent to play against. However imagine that the opponent has about three times the amount of pieces you have, and every single one of those pieces has a different set of rules and abilities to your own pieces. They're stronger, better equipped and on the whole, more powerful.
So now, imagine that you take away the chessboard and you have to now just remember all these variants and rules off the top of your head. You have paper you can write it down on of course, but it's basically like playing chess theoretically. You've just got to remember where everyone is and what they're doing and what they can do. The number of pieces you have, the opponent has, and all their individual abilities.
From this, you've got to come up with a plan that works and then, you have to write it down in a way that PROVES it works. It takes roughly 8 hours to do.
So from there, 8 hours later, exhausted, brain strained and haggard, you hand it into an instructor who, despite the fact that your plan makes sense and you've obviously analysed the situation...they decide that your air assets, while effective, don't necessarily guarantee cut off of the enemy withdrawal. And because of that one tiny differing of opinion of something you wouldn't know unless you've actually been in operations, working with air assets in real life, you fail.
If you fail the wrong TEWT at the wrong time you could find yourself doing an extra 6 months at the college doing 'retraining'.
So... TEWTs. In short. They suck.
Monday 1 June 2015
Neville Howse
There is a house in Duntroon called Neville
House, even though it’s actually Neville Howse.
How to describe Neville House…
It’s a little feared by cadets because not
only is it the place people are sent when they are injured (and who wants to be
injured?) but often it seems like people are sent to Nevs and then
just…disappear. It’s like the black hole of RMC. A black hole full of mish
mashed injured people who have been left behind by their class, some who have
even have seen multiple graduations pass them by. Unfortunately because the
vast majority of the cadets don’t know the names or stories of those in Nevs,
or understand anything which goes on in there, there is a general understanding
that the cadets there are ‘lingers’.
‘What do they even DO all day? Do they do ANYTHING?
Are they allowed pets? I bet they have pets. I bet they all have cats’.
In fact, before I was sent there myself, my
only interaction with the people of Nevs was that I saw them from afar, limping
around, forced to be the creepy, cat loving caretakers of the college (much
like Filch) while the rest of the Corps are out on battleblock.
I had this vague idea in my head that they all looked
a little bit like this.
A few weeks spent with them over May
revealed to me the surprising truth...
...Most of the cadets in Nevs are sexy, genius,
nerd ninjas.
It really is the most bizarre phenomenon.
It’s as if some sick twisted vortex has sucked its way through the college and
injured only one specific type of person. I don’t think you could pluck ten
people from anywhere in the college (or the world) and have them be as uniquely
intelligent, hilarious or as into martial arts as the Nevs cadets.
Being in with the Nevs crowd was a reality
check for me.
I couldn’t really sit there moping about my
ankle for 4 weeks (like I initially wanted to) when there were people around me
displaying such extraordinary resilience and determination. How could I
complain about my stupid temporary injury to the people dealing with the
reality of upcoming surgery? Or their frustration with the system and debating
whether or not to push to try enter the Corps again…to start with a new class
again for the second, or even third time.
Their positivity and strength put me and my whingyness to shame.
Their positivity and strength put me and my whingyness to shame.
To those who are curious, the things I did
in Nevs was a lot more of what I thought Duntroon was going to be like. Gym
twice a day, with lessons all day in between. We did public speaking and
presentation skills, military history lessons, comms and navigation practice.
Every Friday involved some form of ethical debate and a more thorough look at
military law and skills in order to one day manage soldiers and people. It was
less about tanks and destruction and more about thought and interaction.
Becoming a good leader not necessarily through the ‘Alpha male’ style of
leadership, but through your own distinct style.
I loved it.
So this post here is a little tribute to
some of the best people I know and some of my favorite memories of the past 4
weeks:
1)
Being excluded from ‘Boys
night’ with Sully, and then turning ‘Girls night’ into the superior (and
arguably more masculine) evening
2)
Anderson stepping up for the
debate at the last minute and proclaiming that ‘Since the 7 day war there has
been relative peace in Israel’
3)
Being told off by Mocha for
lending a pair of ADF issued runners… chastised for falling short of being like
Jesus
4)
Any time Gash said anything
during that debate
5)
Gains
6)
Ando’s ‘vegan powers’ and the
11 seconds.
7)
“Hey…Ando called. He wants his
string beans back”
8)
Sting Pong
9)
The constant and unapologetic
bus tossing
10) Sleep overs with Sully
11) The Great Chess
Tournament of ‘15
12) Luring in small
children with dinosaurs
13) Progressively removing
Sully’s letters from her room and hiding them around the building
14) Gash’s name badge
mysteriously turning up in a block of ice
15) Conquering Westeros
16) Punning with Newman
17) The Great Escape plans
18) Finally oscillating
with Tyler
19) Being the moonboot crip
parade
20) The frequent
besmirching of Princess Leia’s reputation
21) The extraordinary jaw line of Hall
22) Elrick's argument... because facts can, and always will be debated.
<3 to you all
21) The extraordinary jaw line of Hall
22) Elrick's argument... because facts can, and always will be debated.
<3 to you all
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