Interesting, but otherwise unclassifiable

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My friend went for his drivers licence test almost a year ago, only to be turned down after the eye test. He didn’t get past the second line. After that, they wouldn’t let him near a car. He told no one.

He thought his eyesight was fine, and they were being too strict with him on the test. Still, he thought it might be a good idea to get an eye test. Eventually. He didn’t want to wear glasses, after all; it would cramp his style.

A few days ago, I got The Call. “Come and see me, I have something to show you”. Okay then.

Turns out that after he finally got his eyes checked, his eyesight was so bad they fast-tracked the process so he could get his glasses as soon as possible. Two days, as opposed to two weeks.

Without glasses, his eyesight is atrocious. We tested it on our way to meet friends. On our way past a petrol station, he read the price as 116. It was actually 123.7. I would read street signs. He couldn’t even see the streets. People would appear as a blur. He couldn’t see any detail.

He had thought his eyesight was like everyone else’s. Among other things, he had driven a car, worked as an accountant (he would sit inches from the screen) and played professional tennis.

With glasses, he told me, “You look younger than I thought you did.” He saw a girl we knew, and exclaimed “She looks like THAT!?”

Everything he sees looks different now, including familiar places, family and friends. I told him, “You’ll get home tonight, and your mum will look different. Your brother will look different. Your house will look different.”

Just like Neo in The Matrix, he has been plunged into the Real World, a world that he never even knew existed.

I already had a list going in the About page, but Pete of Great Circle has just tagged me with a “Best of” meme. This affords me a great opportunity to update the list.

And here it is, with no further ado:

Now I have to tag people. This will be random; so many have been tagged already. Go like the wind, people:

You must play by these Meme Rules (according to our author William):

  • Please try to limit your post to 10 items or less (like I just did *snicker*)
  • Tag 5 of your friends or blogrollers
  • Take your time. Do some digging in the archives and find the perfect ones - it’s to your advantage more than anything else. Just think: if you were to pull out no more than 10 existing posts from your blog which hit the high points of your blog SO FAR, (with the specific intent that your blog will be DEFINED by these posts) and put all your future writings into better context, which posts would they be?
  • Please if possible, link to this post for meme info, and please link to the post that you were tagged in. Memes go on for quite a long time and when trying to follow one backwards to see some of the other posts, it gets quite difficult when only the blog URL is used.. Just a request.
  • The people you tag, please let them know by email, contact form or some other efficient method.

So there you are. Meme accomplished. Whew!

That is, if certain pesky legal issues can be taken care of. Chip MacGregor, a “seasoned pro in the book industry”, was sent this proposal by an aspiring author:

Harry Potter Visits Vedaland, an interesting romp about the boy wizard apparently becoming a Hindu and having merry mixups in India, including jumping in the Ganges with his clothes on.

Legal schmegal. I say publish and be damned.

wtf.JPGOften when I order food at a food court outlet, rather than sitting at a nearby table, I’ll find one out of sight of the outlet I purchased from, so that they can’t see me eating their food.

Am I the only one?

(Graphic shamelessly pinched from EricDSnider.com)

Borrowing Harry Potter at the library: LEGAL

Reading the whole thing at Borders over a cup of coffee: LEGAL

Downloading “Deathly Hallows” via BitTorrent: ILLEGAL

All of the above actions are essentially the same, yet two of them are legal while the other is not. So while the law is split, presumably the ethics of each action are the same. All of them do not involve a purchase on my part. All of them presume that someone else is buying the product, while I get a free ride.

I’m not about to reveal whether or not I did any of the above, but perhaps you can figure it out :D

My question to you: Which, if any, of the above actions are ethical?

POSTSCRIPT: On being told of my reading Harry Potter, a friend of mine exclaimed “You Satan-worshipping freak!”

Horror air travel stories seem to be the latest blog trend. Or perhaps air travel is simply getting worse.

On my recent trip to Sydney, both flights were delayed by an hour. This, however, was a picnic compared to what some people go through.

What Would Dad Say tells of a horror trip to New York. After extensive delays, the plane finally arrived - only to then be told that the baggage handlers had gone home for the night!

And then, from Scobleizer, we have this:

Unbelievable.

(RSS users: click through to view video. Not sure why embedding doesn’t work with the feed. Sorry about that.)

Bangkok market

(This post is my contribution to the latest group writing project at Middle Zone Musings. To participate, simply write a post entitled “What I Learned From …” that has something to do with travel. I wasn’t going to contribute at first since I haven’t travelled much. Guess I just can’t help myself.)

I went to Thailand as part of a group of eight. We spent much of our time teaching English at university campuses in Bangkok. It was my first and only trip overseas since the age of three; definitely an eye-opening experience in many ways. I think I learned as much about myself as I did about the culture!

1. Some people are wimps *

When travelling overseas, you have to deal with things that you are not accustomed to, and this trip was no exception. We had to endure cold showers for the majority of the trip, plus the food was different obviously. Overall though, what we had to put up with was pretty minor, certainly not worth complaining about.

So I was astonished when certain members of the group kept whining about the showers and the food! You would think they had been asked to hike the Kokoda Trail or something. We must have gone to McDonald’s at least a dozen times to get “Australian food” (ha!)

I could understand this if the food was disgusting or very weird, but it was very good on the whole. There were incidents of food poisoning however. Half the team got sick at one point or another. Not me, though, despite eating roadside crab against my sister’s objections.

2. It is possible to wear only one pair of underpants for two weeks

This isn’t as disgusting as you might think. We didn’t have access to a laundry most of the time, so we handwashed our clothes instead, putting them up overnight to dry. This worked pretty well.

Towards the end of my trip, my roommate revealed that he had only worn one pair of underpants for the entire trip. Each night he would handwash them, put them out to dry, then put them back on the next day.

This wasn’t out of necessity either; he had brought 16 pairs with him from Australia.

3. Travelling with a group can bring out personality traits you didn’t know you had

If you are like me (God help you!), you tend to be blind to your own weaknesses at times.

Spending an extended period of time with a small group of people in unfamiliar territory can be a recipe for conflict. Our group was warned before leaving Australia to be aware of this. The eight of us were quite diverse, with several strong-willed personalities. I assumed it would be other members of the group getting aggro with each other while I was on the sidelines. Instead it was me in the thick of it all.

Without going into too much detail, I learned I had abrasive personality traits I didn’t know were abrasive. I didn’t understand at the time why the rest of the team reacted the way they did. Only later did I pick up on it.

Fortunately there wasn’t much damage done. Several rounds of apologies had to be made, but we were able to continue working together as a team.

4. Dealing with a different culture is tricky

While we were only in Thailand for two weeks, we nevertheless experienced a degree of culture shock and homesickness as we attempted to navigate a culture that was alien to us. Everything was different; mannerisms, language, body language, customs, religious beliefs, food, rules and laws, standards of behaviour etc. As Australians, we stuck out like a sore thumb.

Surely there are few things harder than moving to a country with a vastly different culture.

5. People are people everywhere

Despite cultural differences, we have many things in common. The basic needs and desires of people are the same everywhere. For me, to go to a local church and see people in a completely different part of the world worshipping the same God that I do was an emotionally overpowering experience.

That’s it from me. Join the project, or relate your own experiences by leaving a comment.

* Edited so it won’t look like I’m having a go at Robert Hruzek, self-confessed meat-and-potatoes man. He’s from Texas, if that’s relevant. Dare say he wouldn’t like scorpions on a stick.


As previously noted two of my brothers are currently on a four week tour of Mongolia, China and Hong Kong. Going to Mongolia had been a goal of theirs for four years. As for China and Hong Kong, they were in the area.

The following are some highlights of their trip.

Hong Kong:

We have seen lots of cool things, HK is an amazing city especially so at night! I was saying to Pete, it must be one of the greatest after dark cities in the world if not the greatest, I can’t personally imagine any city still pumping like crazy and looking so awesome after night. (Bangkok doesnt even come close)

China:

There’s lots of ads trying to train Beijingers to have good manners in time for the Olympics - like not hocking up heaps of phlegm and spitting it anywhere, standing on one side of the escalator so people can pass and queuing up for things.

That last one has been very interesting indeed. They do not like queuing. They HATE queuing! I was just about to buy tickets for one attraction and this woman literally grabbed me and pulled me back and went ahead and bought a ticket.

Mongolia:

The first thing we did after checking into our hostel was to check out the main square- Sukhbaatar Square. Well it’s a square I can guarantee you that. The city only has 1 million people, but it’s pretty crazy. They drive on the right hand side. most of the time. It’s also not a very pretty city- Soviet architecture mixed with a nice shade of dirt.

On the way we even saw some reindeer! And drank some reindeer milk tea. I’m really adding quite a lot of animals to my list of things eaten/drunk.

Our last ger camp was on the edge of the Gobi desert so we were able to see a bit of different scenery. On the way there though we passed by Khakhorum and a large monastery (Erdene Zuu for those interested) and saw a Buddhist statue in the shape of a penis. Yes, you read that right. Apparently it has spiritual significance.

He Lives tells of a recent incident where a racing driver swore on live television after a crash - when he had been praying on live television a minute before. Both were picked up by an in-car cam.

Of course, there is a YouTube vid of both. But that goes without saying, doesn’t it?

Speaking of inappropriate swearing, the 80s Halloween special “Garfield In Disguise” (or “Garfield’s Halloween Adventure”, depending on where you live) contains what sounds awfully like an F-bomb.

You can (on YouTube, naturally) watch the entire thing in three installments: #1, #2, #3. The disputed swearing is in the third installment almost 3 minutes in.

I have to get this burning issue off my chest, for you see, it concerns the chests of others.

I’m sure you’ve all been in this situation: you go to a conference or something where everyone is wearing name tags. So instead of asking someone’s name, you look at the name tag, which is normally pinned to the chest, correct? And this is true for both men and women, thus creating a dilemma for the men: how to read a woman’s name tag without it looking as though you’re staring at her, erm, chest assets.

How to deal with this dilemma?

Option #1: Look her in the eyes the whole time. I mean, it’s not as though her name is important, right? (Heh.) But hang on here; what if it is? Shouldn’t you be addressing her by name in any case? You will look awfully stupid not knowing her name when she’s wearing a freaking name tag!

Option #2: Make it obvious what you are doing. As in: “Hi there …” *looks down* “Sandra. Nice, er, name you’ve got there.” Not sure I like this option either. Too stupid, too awkward. Not the best first impression.

Option #3: Just look as quickly as possible and hope noone notices. They will notice, though; you know they will.

But then I realise something. I had assumed that this conundrum simply hadn’t occurred to most women. What if that isn’t true? What if this is by design? Do the women concerned want you to learn their name and gain an appreciation for their *cough* figure at the same time?

I want your opinions. All of you. Now.

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