Archive for the ‘diary’ Category

Christmas wrap up

Friday, January 25th, 2008

Was Christmas really a month ago today? Yup.

As I said earlier, we had a nice one. Full of friends and family. We had ten adults and five kids staying over from Christmas eve to the day after boxing day, as well. That includes us. We fully filled up the house and then some.

It was great. Everybody took a turn in the kitchen cooking, and everybody jumped in to help clean up and somehow it all fell together beautifully.

Christmas day worked really well. After a fantastic pancake brekky, we assaulted the tree and opened presents. That went on for hours. Then after a long morning at it and a lot of milling around, we finally sat down the Christmas dinner about 4pm I think it was. And you know, all the toddlers and babies chose that time to be asleep, so it was a lovely sit down meal around the big table in the conservatory.

There are some photos about somewhere. We keep trying to get them up on flickr. One day soon.

It stopped raining on Boxing day and the clouds cleared, so we all set out for Cuckmere Haven for a walk. The sun shined a lot and we all got a lot of sky and air, which was a good thing after the insideness of Christmas day.

What else to say? It was a lot of fun, and pretty exhausting all around. Whose house are we going to next year? :-)

Latest Effort for News - Today

Monday, March 19th, 2007

(By now you will realise (depending on which post you started at) that I am repeating myself here. Remixing my own life. Think Run Lola Run (which they are doing a live-soundtrack performance of in the Brighton Festival soon.. wwoo).
…..

I think I need to try (yet again) to put some words down. Here goes version 4!

When people used to say? “Gosh you are brave, moving country like that.” I kind of smiled blythely and thought “Ooo, yes, aren’t we.” I thought we had a pretty good idea of what was involved, physically, emotionally, financially. And I guess we did have a fairly good idea - in theory. The reality has been rather more difficult, and it aint over yet.

Basically, it has been a huge thing. The first three months Gra was job hunting. Ouch. Loads of fun stuff too though.. getting to know Brighton, the Laines, the villages, the people.. we got over to Lake Como (Rob’s pad right on the lake and Lisa’s family), France (Jack & Penny’s house near Toulouse) for our wedding anniversary, seeing Slava’s Snowshow for the first time, some mad stuff during the BRighton Festival (eg. Japanese sit-down puppet show comedy).

Continuing to focus on the positives (I’ll save the moaning for later), the countryside around here is so so beautiful. Like a dream. Like a movie. We were out yesterday for UK Mother’s Day visiting Wakehurst Place (Kew of the South). A dream. The older I get, there more I feel it in my bones, in my waters, that I am born to pray at the alter of Gaia. There are particular landscapes, particularly with vista and dimension and water, that reeeeally do it for me. I’m remembering driving through Arnhem Land with Mum & Dad (just before he died). River snaking through sub-tropical desert. And here in the South Downs - something else again. Telly-tubby hills, incredibly beautiful, old villages, winding roads, Cat in the Hat or Nick Cave blaring, endless conversations about this and that, a million questions. Yes indeedy, nothing like a Sunday drive.

I could write forever about the countryside, about the joys of a fire in the garden on a brisk night, about Buddhafields camping, about the excitement around us looking for our first camper van - anticipating the first flush of spring adventures. Easter just around the corner, with a trip to the West well on the cards. Eden Project maybe.

I felt like a cartoon Mum going to a National Trust garden on Mothers Day, after a nice lie-in and breakfast in the bath. Wiv me box a chocs in hand and a quick stroll through the plant section of the massive gift shop on entry, the picture was complete. Found a rose Bea and I used to walk past on our walk to school back in South Fremantle. Abraham Darby. Been looking for one for ages. We made a geocache treasure hunt, which the locals can try out, and it snowed!! As it it did again last night.

So there I was at the end of a long drive through Sussex and a lovely day out, wandering back up the path with my rose in hand, thanking Gra and Bea for a very special Mother’s Day, chuckling at the wholesome Englishness of the picture… despite the hangover from drinking and dialling to Oz and USA until 3am after a night out in Brighton with Gra.

So Brighton suits us well. Primarily for the countryside and the fairly eclectic mix of people you find in such a place. It has great potential for Gra to work from here, considered by many as the new media / internet hub of the UK. That mad virtual world Second Life has just opened their second office here - the other one’s in San Fransisco.

So I guess we have probably found the right place to live a far as the UK goes. We still love going up to London to see the mates there - to get an Aussie fix, as we haven’t found any in Brighton yet. And let’s face it London is amazing. If Gra wasn’t still having to work there in the boring bank job, we would probably go more often. It’s only 45 mins away on the train - but 1.45 door to door for his morning commute. Madness!

It’s been a rude shock to go from Daddy being around, working part-time and flexible the rest of it - to some weeks feeling like we are only seeing him at bedtime M-F. Weekends become a sacred and intense time to make it all up. At least we have developed a new insight to how so many people live, and Friday’s mean more than ever before. We loved going off on our first paid holiday together ever though, and are making the most of the annual leave. Salary sacrificed to get an extra two weeks, thank fuck.

In many ways perhaps Gra’s new job has had the biggest impact on us all, bless him. He really is a hero for going out there 5 days a week to bring home to bacon. I think what keeps him sane is that Scouta.com is going really well. This is the social, creative, connected, humane internet venture he has been wanted to create for years. It’s still got a long way to go, but thanks to a great idea and an inspiring match between Gra and the awesome CEO Richard Giles, they have a lot to work with. It’s got real potential to help people get the most out of the internet and connect with like-minded people. Right up our alley! We’ve already attracted the first round of development funding from an excellent investor who is letting us maintain creative control. The next round, all going well, should secure Gra a fulltime position where he can work from home again or get a little office with a gang of similar sorts down the hill in the Laines. We shall see… Workwise, England definitely seems to be Gra’s kind of place. It has been hard not falling straight into the kind of money and freedom he had before (not by a long shot), but we are managing to pay the bills.

He is such a talented, beautiful man. I so hope this works out for him (and us) because we miss him. And he has so much to give the world with his vision of interconnectedness and making computers friendly, useful and fun.

Now what about me, you might ask. Being fairly new to the job of School Mum, I had thought, naively, that when they got to school you had all the freedom in the world. Which I guess you do, relatively speaking. Other than needing to find work that, ideally, finishes by 2.45pm and gives you 12 weeks holiday a year plus let’s you take time off whenever you or your child is sick. And let’s face it, it’s been rather a long time since I held down a job job hasn’t it. Anita Roddick has not managed to find me yet for the offer of a part-time dream job, so I am back into what I do best. Coming up with ideas on how to make the world a better place and attempting to manifest too many of them.

The year started with a personal confidence boost on the £ front with me earning my target for the year by negotiating the sale of freo.com, which we have had for nearly 10 years. That meant we could get through Christmas, get to Australia for Mum’s 70th birthday and now - get into the market for a wee campervan. So that made me feel a lot better about where most of my time has been going lately… have finally summoned up the courage to go back to study formally - at the University of Sussex. Began a brand new MA in Person-Centred Education. Education for human becoming, not just concrete learning. Part-time over 2 years. It’s a profound experience and begins with the process of reflecting and writing a learning biography. How have you learnt? What have you learnt? With only 5,000 words to contain it, there is a real job to do in focussing it. I’m decided to look through the lens of curiosity.

Have been documenting the journey on my blog at www.barkingowl.com/learning which in itself has been a reflective and creative process. We have been really lucky to get the support of the Guerrand-Hermes Foundation for Peace to co-create the MA. They have given the three of us in the first intake a grant towards fees and a great deal of extra involvement. It’s feeling a little more like the ideal of an Oxbridge programme and is actually a very open thing. No filling of empty vessels around here. I think the hardest thing is not knowing where it is is going, plus the work itself and opportunity cost. I am not likely to embark on a traditional teaching career, as tempting as that sometimes seems, so I have to keep trusting my instincts on what will come from it all. If you are interested, do check out the blog. It is a fascinating course. To give myself the chance to really think deeply about a subject I am so passionate about is a joy. There is a meditative space I get to that flows and flows.

Plus I am… helping on Scouta (PLEASE join up, spread the word, interact, give feedback and play!), doing some business coaching, planning some practical classroom experiences (teaching blogging for personal and work life, forming conversations with yourself and your customers, friends, constituents, stakeholders etc, writing for human becoming!), and facilitating the creation of a learning community of alternative schools in the Brighton/Lewes area (a grant in the pipeline from Guerrand Hermes for this).

Not to mention what all us super mums do, with the day-to-day organisation of a family, Bea’s activities, social life etc. All takes a lot longer in a new place. So much to find out! The simplest thing can take twice as long just because you are having to find your way around a new place, new systems, new relationships.

It’s been 10 months. We arrived mid-May 2006.

This is getting a bit long now, so I’m going to summarise things a bit. You can also check out the blog Gra has been maintaining called www.gravyland.net which Bea and I are hoping to get to if I can keep her off Barbie.com when we sit down to it!

Basically, we love it here, but it is expensive, tough making new friends and contacts all over again (think Fremantle, Margaret River, back to Fremantle, now here), and all the the other paperwork stuff that comes with moving. Knowing where and when to buy a house does our head in, but we have decided to take a break from thinking about it while the weird market does whatever it’s going to do and we get a better feel for how long we want to be here. At this stage we are saying three years minimum, which make a lot of sense. Then we shall see. Conversations about secondary schools also does my head in, and makes me think of Oz as a much better option. But one step at a time please!

We have met some brilliant people, there’s no doubt about it. But we gave up a lot too. Bea misses Jasmine so much of course, and we all miss our family and friends. But in some ways these relationships have deepened through a change of dynamic. I feel closer to Mum now than ever before. Her 70th was such a lovely occasion to celebrate a wonderful woman. My MA has forced me to reflect on a lot, one part of which has been my inheritance through Mum - books, curiosity, music, etc.

This summer we aim to take the camper to Northern Spain for a jaunt around Bilbao (Guggenheim), San Sebastian and the Pyrenees. I would love to do a weekend or two somewhere exotic with girlfriends, when weekends stop seeming so bloody precious en famille.. like any day now! And we will of course be going back to the Buddhafields for camping. The Bunters are coming out to stay, the Brighton Festival goes mad in May, the van will be calling for all sorts of jaunts as the weather improves and yum yum.. many other plans besides. Really need to make the most of being in Europe as this was one of the major reasons for moving here. Loving the connection with all things European.

The Bea Bopper is beautiful. Very alive, bright, reading like mad (just starting to tackle chapter books on her own), still film crazy .. loves Mirazaki (Totoro, Spirited Away) and has a sweet friend at school who does too. We started working on a fantastic film script together on the weekend that came out of a conversation with Lisa about when go and kidnap her to get her back. Lisa has been living with us for 6 months and comes from Northern Italy, near Lake Como. She is a total darling. HAs brought so much into our lives, but is going home soon (6 month aupair position). We will have a German girl called Karen living with us from August for even longer, and she is also a very special young woman. Oh, also need to to tell you about Max the Cat. Wow. Super affectionate. Feel much more complete as a family with him. But still hoping for another child this year. The house we found is superb. Big, old, full of character, great garden, great area.

But back to Bea. She is a handful, no doubt about it. Yes yes, just like her parents. But we don’t need to hear it. She has made a new friend recently who is even more spirited and strong-willed and passionate than she is, which was a laugh and relief to see. But there is still an inner stillness that see finds, and so much love and sweetness. Her enquiring mind gets a great deal of stimulation through the lives we lead and school itself, but she does spend quite time on her own and is not at school to chill out on her own in the book corner whenever she gets the chance. As Donny would have said, “she’s a real unit”. Such an imagination!

So much has happened in a year!

Much love, as always

Libbles

xxx

Dear, dear people (January 2006 version)

Monday, March 19th, 2007

Well here we are, living in Brighton. Where can I start.

I’m sitting here in the dining room / office. French doors look out onto a wet, green garden. Over summer, we had many happy times out there. Breakfasting, lunching and even sleeping in it’s verdant lovliness.

So many visitors! We barely had time to unpack. So blessed to be able to arrive in a new country, new life already knowing some special folk and soon some brand new friends too. Then being able to introduce them to our Mums having followed us over just a few months after arrival!

The first three months, Gra was on the job hunt and there is no denying, it was a gruelling and scary time for us. I’ll say it once, and then I won’t go on about it. This is a REALLY expensive country. Three months with rent, school fees, living expenses and no income. Ouch. But he come through with the goods and got into, bizarelly it seemed, a bank job. Gra’s going to write too, so he will fill you in on all of that.

From my perspective, we went from the sublime to the ridiculous. We had no idea how easy we had it with self-employment all those years of early parenting. Now Daddy wasn’t getting home until 7.30 most nights and we very rarely see him in the morning. Wow. Not a plan for the long term. Fortunately there are other possibilities in the pipeline.

We are in awe of Gra as he gets up and rides that train to a healthier bank balance and more marketable CV. Even though he is far more capable of doing it than I ever would be, the novelty is certainly starting to wear off. On the bright side, weekends and holidays have become ritualised packets of familial abundance in a way we have never really experienced before. The first week he took off was shortly after starting (heck, it was summer! And as all Northern folk now, you just gotta make the most of it.) As we drove off again to The Buddhafields (family-friendly camping retreat in Somerset countryside), we chuckled knowing we were still being paid - rather than hoping the invoices had gone out on time.

So, big changes all around.

(ends there…)

Love - Libs xxx

The Big Move North

Monday, March 19th, 2007

Helloooo.. I have started several letters to friends and family since moving to the UK, most unfinished. So here’s a bit of remix culture. I will start with the oldest version I can find, then just add them one after another, unedited. Different takes on the same event, Different flavours. Love to hear from you. Bea coming soon, and more photos, but check out Flickr for a start - I am MsLiberty on there, funnily enough.

downsizing the car

Thursday, December 23rd, 2004

We just downsized the car, replacing the old 1997 3.8l Commodore Wagon with a 2001 1.6l VW Golf. Why? Petrol seems to only go up (see my energy links), and maybe soon it will go up a lot. Also, seems really silly to be dragging the heavy and large Commodore around the place on short errands when there are only one or two of us in the car most of the time.

I guess there are normally two ways to change the car: just go to the dealer and do a trade-in on a car the dealer sells you, or go private and do all the work yourself. But there is another way. We engaged Auto Angels to arrange to buy us a new car and sell the old one. They focus on sustainable car ownership incorporating a finding, buying and selling service.

Here’s how it worked: Mark at Auto Angels spent some time with Libby working out what the new car was going to be. We worked out it was going to be a used Golf, low kms and specified three possible colours. Then Mark spent some weeks looking for the right vehicle, checking them out mechanically and so forth. When he found the right one to buy, he immediately placed a deposit on it for us. He called us to say he’d found the car. We were on holiday at Rottnest. When we got back, we did the paperwork, handed over the Commodore, and drove off in the new car.

Now, we got the new one for a good price, and got a good resale on the Commodore. And the whole process was zero hassle. Zero hassle. Zero hassle. You’ve got to love that. And there was none of that awful feeling I get at the car dealers where I feel like I’m being ripped off.

Quiet times and sunshine

Sunday, September 12th, 2004

We are just back from a nice quiet week in Margaret River staying in a peaceful place in the bush near Redgate Beach and catching up with good friends from the three years that we spent living there. Ahhhhh. For a week we had a slow modem dialup connection to the net. I didn’t get to read the hundred or so feeds I normally do and didn’t browse the news sites daily as I normally do. That was a nice break in itself.

It has been a long time between holidays. More needed, I think. When you are working on some new venture, like we are with the early learning centre for South Fremantle, it is hard to find time to get away…

Our return to Fremantle came with two days of beautiful spring weather. I’ve been positioning myself in sunny spots all weekend.

Ahhhhh.

I’m in Adelaide this week

Monday, February 9th, 2004

I’m in Adelaide this week working with clients, and the Adelaide Festival is starting in a couple of weeks. Bad timing :-(

However, I can’t complain, because it is festival time in Perth at the moment anyway. I can catch that when I get back.

Happy New Year

Wednesday, December 31st, 2003

Have a great new year everybody.

I hope you all find something special in the new year.

I’m hoping for a year of big changes, and for all of us to leap into a real, compassionate, fair future. Let’s leave the fear and uncertainty and doubt behind and start loving each other. That feels like too much to ask for, but why?

Ocean Grove

Monday, December 22nd, 2003

We are staying in Ocean Grove over Christmas. Lots of ocean and fresh air.

The local “Carols by Candlelight” was washed out last night as a storm came through blowing strongly and dumping lots of rain on us. It is, however, looking a bit better this morning.

moving to categories — more structure

Thursday, November 20th, 2003

I’m a little over 100 entries into this blog and loving it. I’m not posting as frequently as I’d like to, but that seems to be something that goes in bursts. From time to time I post a lot, then take a break, do something else, and then come back fresh. That kind of cycle feels good.

At entry 100+, though, I’m having a blog content crisis. It all seems a bit of a random mess, so I want to start putting some structure in the postings here. I’m going to start using categories for entries, and then have recent entries listed by category, so you can see and read the different streams here. The categories will help me keep a track of what I am up to, as well.

All this stuff will emerge over the next few days. A lot of existing entries to put into categories.

A moving week

Saturday, November 15th, 2003

We’ve spend this week moving house, from a nice house on a busy street to a smaller, more friendly place on a quiet street full of kids close to the beach. Note - the new house is significantly smaller than the last one. The new one does make up for it a bit by having good under-cover outdoor space, but hey, it really is smaller.

Now, one of the great things about moving house is they way you actually get to touch most of your possessions. It is a great time to really decide what you want to keep and what you want to let go. And for once, packing boxes and carrying them around, you start to feel the weight of possessions and the responsibility and effort that comes with having things.

I’m quite ready to get rid of a bunch of . Stay tuned. We are going to have a monster garage sale in a few weeks. There will be lots of good things you can buy to add to your stuff. Going cheap. You really need this stuff :-)

And many apologies for the long gaps between posts here. Moving got the better of me for a bit there ;-)

Coming up this week

Sunday, September 21st, 2003

Here is what is on for me this week:

- The car is finally going in to the panel beater, fixing the bump on the front right side caused by a kangaroo that waltzed into the car back in January. By the way, the kangaroo was fine. It just rolled off the bonnet and hopped away.

- Neal Stevenson’s Quicksilver is being released on Tuesday. I have a copy ordered at New Editions and I hope it gets here this week, maybe even early this week. I’ve no idea whether a September 23 release date means September 23rd in Australia as well as the U.S.

- I have a good solid amount of software development to get through this week, all in Java. Technolgies for this week include JSSE (Java Secure Sockets) and SSL stuff, along with some basic access control stuff, proerties management, and some bugfixes. Sustained but a practical amount to get through in a week.

- Wednesday night Libby and I are heading out to see Billy Bragg in concert.

- I’ll spend some evening time getting the camping gear ready for the annual Boy’s weekend down south this coming weekend. We’ll be camping in the Boranup Forest and walking bits of the Cape to Cape Track.