Six things I can tell you to do that will maybe make your life easier and if they don’t I’m sorry but really I’m just one person, man.

6. IF you live in a mansion
You should air out the spare rooms all the time, or have more visitors. I don’t understand why you have so few visitors. You’re a nice person, you just have to open up a bit more in social circumstances. Let me help you help yourself.

5. IF you live in a share house

If you go to the hall of shame, or ‘toilet’ as some of you call it, and someone has left skid marks in the bowl – DON’T FREAK OUT. Just suck it up, grow a pair and pee right on them. If you’ve drunk enough Coke this shouldn’t be a problem. It’s like Easy Off Bam, but totally ORGANIC.

4. IF you live in a squat
You need to make clear definitions like which rooms it’s ok to poop in and which rooms it’s just totally not ok to poop in and then once this is established I see no problems whatsoever, except for the day you find a corpse in your back garden.

3. IF your kids start taking drugs
You should find out if they’re taking bad drugs or fun drugs, make up your own personal scale, determined by your neuroses and values and past experience, and wherever their drug use falls on this self-determined scale, you can hurt them physically to that exact degree. But absolutely no more than that degree because that’s actually a bit uncool.

2. IF you find you’re getting colds all the time
You just need to stop being so weak and stupid like a newborn calf who can’t stand up on its spindly legs; I recommend eating a bulb of garlic every day and sleeping an extra two hours every night until your neck actually starts calcifying.

1. IF you hang out with an autistic kid a lot

Contextualise all your interactions with the child through two stuffed animals. One of the animals is the cool one and one is the nerd. You can teach them about ‘the harshness of the schoolyard for the child who dares to be different’ while also having a shitload of roleplay fun.

TOTALLY GOOD LUCK.

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A Bunch of Pretty Powerful and Emotive Odes to Westfield Bondi Junction

ODE NUMBER ONE: On Entering Your Mirrored, Shiny Halls
Oh, WBJ
I’m the only one of my friends who knows your many secrets
The intimate cavernous logic of levels P4 to R3.
You span so many levels
But not too many, Westfield, just enough
Direct me to your many palatial caves, Westfield.
I have to spend $740, stat.

ODE NUMBER TWO: On Driving Up to Your Rooftop Car-Park
If I was getting my car washed, or in a wheelchair
I’d be parked in an awesome spot right now.
And I wouldn’t be fifteen minutes late for meeting my friend Stacey outside Coffee Club even though we’re not getting coffee.
We’re only meeting there because on the ad, they always spout the same tired phrase; “meet ya at the coffee club” and obviously it furrowed right into our brain, right in like a blood-red worm, just noshing away at our collective cerebral cortex.
But I’m not getting my car washed. And…(sigh) I’m not in a wheelchair.
Which I know is good news in the long term, but it kinda sucks a bit right now.

ODE NUMBER 3: Upon Seeing Ex-Classmates in Your Mirrored, Shiny Halls
Oh, WBJ, You’re full of religious people from my school who are married now.
One is even pregnant. Super-pregnant.
Like she’s hiding one of those ultra-big pro-bowling balls under her cotton-blend Maggie T pinafore with elasticised straps.
I duck and weave to avoid these people, but then find myself thrust upon them in the control brief section of Myer
I only bought them to wear under a silky kinda dress
But now it looks like I wear them all the time
That’ll be her post-school memory of me
High-waist, hideous, yet flattering, beige stocking-pants.
We smile and say things like “blast from the past”
And despite the fact that I want to look at the Crabtree and Evelyn Goat’s Milk range on sale, I shrug past to make my hasty escape.

ODE NUMBER 4: Upon Entering the Level 5 foodcourt
Oh, humanity
Dribbling mouths and emptied wallets.
Soggy sandwiches and suspect seafood and mediocre curry and Korean food that gave me a stomach ache that one time.
At least there are the hot guys who work in the CD shop next door to the Turkish place.
And the super-fast photo developing store.

FINAL SHORT ODE NUMBER 5:
Oh WBJ
I’m so glad I shop in your hallowed halls, and not in Newtown like everyone else
You make me feel special and valued
Except that I’m always under-dressed
And my credit card is a tacky yellow colour, hinting at the fact that YES it IS one of those low-rate Commonwealth Bank cards that poor people get,
That I don’t have a platinum glittering AMEX like the others here.
You’re a bit hard to love sometimes, Westfield.
Loving you is a bit like trying to make out with a cactus.
Prickly and super-painful.

THE END.

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Barometer #8

Welcome to a special global edition of Bellamy’s Barometer where we celebrate all that is great about world superpowers. After all, we wouldn’t call them ’super’ if they weren’t kind, loving and generous big brothers, the sheriffs of the global community, gleaming like the sun with incredibly bright sunlight that blinds us in a really, really awesome way. This column celebrates our superior brothers, who teach piddly little Australia about things like electronics, why abortion sucks, and that canola oil is for Obama-lovers because real men drink lard.

Please join me on this exploration, sit right down and roll down your metaphoric window, just remember that seatbelts are for cheese-eatin’ surrender monkeys who would choke on a freedom fry even if it was the soggiest thing in the world, so you should just give up and stop calling yourself a patriot, because patriots are fighting right now for your right to LIVE and PROSPER, they’re in Iraq and Afghanistan and Dubai, just sweating their little butts off for you, you stupid leftie scum.

HOT:
Buying major purchases in a flippant way.

The other day I decided the time had finally come to purchase an iPod; after all I’m a saavy, hip laydey, about to travel the world by myself at the end of the year, about to be accosted by architecture and museums and friendly fellow backpackers in hostels, so I need a way to BLOCK THESE THINGS OUT and remain my USUAL ANTI-SOCIAL SELF. This is where the iPod comes in. I did a lot of research about which kind I should buy. I knew I needed an iPod and not some other crap MP3 player because one day when the Apple company swallows the rest of the world and replaces all ruling leaders and my favourite reality TV stars with a blow-up figure of Steve Jobs, I want to be sitting firmly in the Apple camp, texting from my iPhone, blogging furiously about Apple-sanctioned matters on my MacBook and shivering tremulously to the strains of Delta Goodrem’s Innocent Eyes on my 80G brick’a’love.
My research also let me decide exactly what I was going to buy: I knew it was going to be black, and a classic model, and this meant I could do my favourite thing ever when I went to the shop: buy something fairly expensive in a really flippant way. It went like this:

David Jones electronics salesperson: Hello, can I help you?
Me: One iPod please.
DJES: Alright. Which kind?
Me: (points at glass cabinet) That one.
DJES: (looks in) The 80G classic?
Me: It needs to be black.
Uncomfortable pause.
DJES: Let me ring that up for you.

LIGHTS DOWN.

I heartily recommend that you all try and make a major purchase in a flippant manner this week. It doesn’t have to be expensive; it can be a tattoo or an adoption, just little things that you can get rid of one day if you change your mind. We can change the world, readers! One credit card at a time!

NOT
Being shit at a language

If you were keen readers who read my first paragraph in full instead of just skipping down to the NOT paragraph, also known as ‘the MONEY SECTION!!1!’, you would notice that I am going on a trip at the end of the year. I will be travelling to countries where people speak Mandarin, Gaelic, Greek, Italian, Spanish, Cantonese and Hungarian (which, for bonus sensitivity points that could maybe help you pick up one day, is also known as ‘Magyar’).

Of these languages, I know how to say ‘you’re welcome’ in Italian, and how to order my favourite carbohydrate-rich cuisine. There are many other things I need to learn before I go away though, like how to ask for vegetarian food, where the nearest toilet is, or in which part of town I might find the most authentic reproduction of classic Commedia Dell Arte, in order to satisfy my need for Il Dottore’s sanguine advice to a hot-headed Arlecchino; just regular shit that all tourists need to ask for.

What I’m saying here is that I’m going to be wandering around Spain just repeating ‘Eva Longoria’ and ‘Carlos Santana’ in baffled distress, because I am an uneducated slob who can only speak my birth tongue. And this, dear readers, is where I link in to my slightly inflammatory opening to today’s Barometer: if globalisation was more widespread, I wouldn’t feel the urge to travel and subsequently embarrass myself by making sage comments on the site-specific outdoor performance of contemporary youth in Belfast when what I’m really watching is a bunch of dudes trying to blow up a bus. Instead, I would stay at home and enjoy all the wonderful worldly products of international culture just sitting at my fingertips, I’d watch Living Lohan and So NoTORIous, I’d get the Jonas Brothers CD as soon as the boys released it, and I would be one happy, worldly customer.

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The more things change…

So, I’ve been going through some old files and just found an old Yr 11 assignment which proves that no matter what happens in six years, some things stay pretty much exactly the same:

REALITY TV RESPONSE
If I could be involved in any reality television show it would be, without a doubt, Big Brother. I think it is because I love being in the centre of attention, watched by everyone, and where better than on television?
The difference between the publicity that evolves from Big Brother and that, which is the result of other shows, such as Survivor or The Mole, is that on Big Brother I could fulfil my ambition of doing absolutely nothing for approximately two months.
The other reality television shows all involve some form of physical tests or workouts, whereas only your sense of dignity is stretched on Big Brother.
This show is ideal for someone who is happy to be publicly embarrassed, as long as no exercise is involved, and I am more than happy to be one of those people.

This would probably have been submitted without a sense of irony too.

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Barometer #7

Ahh, nostalgia. I’m a big fan of nostalgia, of sitting in a dark room rocking back and forth, drowning in tear-stained photos of better days; days which will never be re-lived, days which stand out in stark tri-colour brilliance next to the grey, yellowing cardboard of tomorrow.

TOTALLY JUST JOKING!

I love nostalgia because it reminds me of how awesome my life is RIGHT NOW, and all the stupid shit that I used to do when I was young and lame and nowhere near as sophisticated, worldly and good-looking as I am today!

So let’s talk nostalgia.

HOT

Things for Sale
As a child, I used to hang out a lot with my sister and our friend Yaz, who was our neighbour, and she had a crazy dog called Coco who was huge and would push people over and nose them in the crotch, so usually when we hung out and didn’t want to be invaded in our Valleys of Shame, we would hang out at our house.

We would sit in our rooms and eat tubes of Chapstick, or rollerblade around our streets clinging onto telegraph poles and giving ourselves splinters. However, once every few months we would take part in a little ritual we liked to call ‘Things for Sale’. It was fairly self-explanatory – we’d find something to sell, set up a table outside our house with it, and when cars drove past, we’d chirp out, in unison-singsong, “Things for saaaa-ale!”. Sometimes their windows would be rolled up so we’d just sing it a bit louder, enunciating ’sale’ just the way Yaz had been taught to in Junior Vocals.

Once every hour or so, a car would stop for us out of pity, imagining that we were selling delicious fudge filled with beetle wings and hair, like most childrens’ cooking. They were mistaken however, since we were not really what you’d call ‘talented’ children who bake, but rather ‘enterprising children, but only in a stupid way’. Our sale table consisted of bald dolls, costume jewellery and PEELED TWIGS. In an hour of self-delusion we had decided that there was definitely a market for peeled twigs – after all, they’re pretty difficult (yet fun) to peel – and we were willing to cut out the middle man.

Usually our customers didn’t actually have any money, or remembered they totally had to go home immediately for some urgent reason, so we didn’t really sell much at all. I always thought it strange that people driving their Mercedes’ through Bellevue Hill didn’t have any money on them. But now that I’m old and mature and better-looking, I’ve realised that rich people pay for stuff in other ways, like eye-brow gestures and under-table hand shakes and throwing other peoples’ enemies off The Gap.

NOT

Being a shy child
OK, I’m about to share something with you that may choke me up a little. It’s vested with a rich tapestry of childhood emotions, and it meant a lot to me at the time, so I kinda wish you’d just show me a bit of respect for once.

I want to talk about the time that I swapped one half of my supersonic yo-yo with my friend’s other half of her supersonic yo-yo.

If you went to school when I did, (back when there were dinosaurs, right? *Old-person high-five*!), you’d remember when something called Yo-yos with Brains came out. They were intricately detailed and it was always the fucking losers who knew everything about their makeup. How the little black bands inside the yo-yo could be added or removed to create a more satisfyingly bouncy effect. Or you could be like the other kids who just threw them around the classroom to piss off Mr Cobbin.

Anyway, I was playing at my friend’s house with our yo-yos. For the sake of anonymity (SHE TOTALLY GOES HERE!) let’s call her Gertrude. I had a shiny sharp red yo-yo that my Dad had bought me that weekend, a present for being good or having remembered to feed the dog that month or something. Gertrude had a blue brain yo-yo, and I imagine it would have been just as shiny and sharp as mine was when she had bought it TEN MILLION YEARS BEFORE ME because I was always the last kid to jump onto any bandwagon of cool toys, unless the toy required some physical co-ordination, in which case I’d never jump on that bandwagon; I’d just trip over it and break my coccyx.

So Gertrude proposed something, which was rare in itself, as she was a quiet and sober child, a bit like me except I was constantly drunk. She said that if we were indeed BFFE, as we were a little bit, (even though at that time of our lives it was cool to have at least three BFFEs), that we should swap a side of our yo-yo with each other’s.

Reluctantly, I unscrewed half of my shiny red sharp pristine yo-yo and thrust it into Gertrude’s hand, and we made the swap. And I have regretted that decision TO THIS PRESENT DAY, because never again was I able to properly ‘walk the dog’ or ‘rock the cradle’ or ‘just roll it up and down’, the only trick I could actually do, and purely because my yo-yo had an inbuilt brain which did it for me.

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Barometer #6

Welcome to the first Session 2 edition of the Barometer. This is the Foundations issue, and it’s all about foundation day, about newness and beginnings and possibilities and naked college students.

However the Barometer has its own personal little twist on the idea of ‘new things’ which is ‘new things that I personally am excited and/or bothered about’. Because anyone who doesn’t realise how much of an ego-stroking exercise my own personal hot or not column is needs to know right now. TOTALLY GET WITH THE TIMES, MAN.

Anyway.

HOT

Proposed railway strikes during World Youth Day
First of all I want to apologise for the potential non-topicality of this point. I’m writing this column a few weeks before World Youth Day, when it has very recently been announced that rail workers are threatening a strike for the busiest day of the whole Catholic bonanza. Already, hysteric Facebook groups are popping up, one of which has its own logo to deal with the issue (the transport union picture with a big red cross through it). Obviously this strike is a big deal, and will inconvenience a lot of people, and not just the pilgrims, who will be smiley and happy no matter how long they have to traipse through the traffic-clogged streets, because they have Jesus’s love to push them along, and that’s even stronger a gravitational impetus than a Woolies trolley at the top of Basser Steps. But no, this transport strike will inconvenience normal, immoral people like you and me just trying to get to work. Except of course it won’t disadvantage me in particular because I work at a place about 5 minutes drive from my house, because if it was any further away I’d probably refuse to work there. So the moral of this story is: stop whingeing, let the rail workers fight for conditions they deserve, and take the day off work to join the pilgrimage and crack onto some of the hot pilgrims from South America.

NOT

Peripheral vision

So I just got these new glasses and they have these thick dark sides. So thick and dark that they actually block out things in my peripheral vision. This is AWESOME AND SOOTHINGLY MYOPIC. It means if someone is gesturing at me to help them, or watching YouTube videos of dogs who don’t have eyes, or digging into a weeping bloody steak full of sinew and veins and fat then I don’t have to see it. It makes me think of a new-age quote my Dad directed at me once, I’m pretty sure the Dalai Lama coined it, something along the lines of ‘if you look at the floor all the time you won’t step in dog shit, but you won’t see the sky either’. This is the exact case here: the sky is boring and potentially filled with blind dogs and disgusting steak, whereas not stepping in dog shit is really quite invaluable.

Falling asleep at your own party
So our house had a party the other night and it was awesome. It was American themed and I dressed as Myrtle Wilson, the hussy from The Great Gatsby who has an affair with Tom Buchanan and gets run over by Daisy and Gatsby and her left boob is severed from the impact, it just sits there, a bloodied puddle of flesh on the bitumen, as her husband shakes and pukes in his garage. So anyway I decided a big part of being a drunk hussy character was drinking LOTS and LOTS of different types of champagne, ranging from Jacobs Creek to Chandon to Veuve Cliquot (the crest of the evening) down to Passion Pop (trough of the evening) and even a little conconction someone had invention called rumshmellows. Now I’m all for the Jack Keruoac philosophy of “Try never get drunk outside your own house”, and I think that’s an AWESOME IDEA, but it also means that when your Sydney Uni friends are googling gay porn on your computer and changing your facebook status to ‘Jess is naked all the time’, all while you doze lightly on your bed, you’ll get so relaxed and dreamy and tired that you’ll find yourself SLEEPING THROUGH THE REST OF YOUR PARTY, and waking up when it’s 2am and only the losers playing Guitar Hero are still partying.

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Barometer #5

Women’s Edition of Tharunka:

HOT

People in Gender Studies tutes

I did a subject once called Women, Gender and World History. It was great. It was full of sexy historical romps, and P.C. terms for for vaginas, and ‘women’ was spelt the normal way, which left a LOT of people feeling a bit iffy. Especially me, because I don’t think ‘y’ is used NEARLY ENOUGH for vowel-like purposes.

But anyway, one of my favourite parts of this subject were the tutorials. We’d all file in wearing our token grey t-shirts, smelly hats and grim expressions. “Subjugation of womyn is not cool”, our tight faces would silently scream, “and we’re taking this class, really earnestly, and we’ll say stuff in tutes about how hard-core we are, and we’ll think about going to a protest or two and shaving our heads except we probably won’t because Christie’s having that party on the weekend and I hate being The Ugly One at Christie’s parties.”

So all this would whirr around our angry heads as we pulled out our unread study kits and opened our notebooks, untouched except for the words “Gender is oppression at birth” scrawled in bubble letters on the first page. And then once it became clear to the tutor that we weren’t exactly experts on the Kristeva article we’d been given to read that week (“Why write with breast milk if you can get a pen for, like, sixty cents?”), we started the inevitable decline into “talking about our personal lives”.

And as a writer, it was AWESOME to hear. I’m not going to share those stories in this article, because there was a solid foundation of trust, support and womyn’s liberation that swore me to secrecy, and also I have a really shit memory. Suffice to say, I learnt a whole lot about my fellow classmates, a lot more graphic detail about them and their partners and their Friday nights out than they would probably have shared during “Imagining the City” or “Introduction to Film”, though on second thought, probably a lot less graphic than some of the things I’ve seen in “Performance Making”.

NOT

Lindsay Lohan’s Choice of Same-Sex Partner
Those who are fans of my column, or my blog, or just me as a person (SHUCKS, you guys!) will know that I am a BIG BIG FAN of Ms Lindsay Lohan. Ever since I saw her first movie, The Parent Trap, while sitting in a guest room in Suburban New York with (useless trivia) the very friendly Scheer family, not knowing that later that week I was going to eat something that made me go vegetarian – well I knew from that moment that Lindsay was someone special. Perhaps the fact that she was playing twins in this cheesy movie set in all my favourite locations – summer camp, posh estates, five star hotels and England – led me to realise that one Lindsay was never enough: the more Lohan the better.

So I have been quite distressed to see Lindsay’s progressive slide into a drug-addled puddle of piss and sweat and cocaine. Don’t get me wrong: I’m totally excited about the fact that she’s dating a girl, I mean WAY TO SUBVERT THE HOLLYWOOD HEROINE HETERONORMATIVE STEREOTYPE, LINDS! But it shouldn’t have to be with your drug-dealing DJ bestie Samantha Ronson who parades you around Rodeo Drive with her smeared eyeliner and too many severe bracelets and bags of nose-powder which end up in your car for the fuzz to find.

Lindsay, you can find a much nicer girl, one of those well-adjusted ones who get photographed for the cover of In Style, like Rachel Bilson or that one who plays Veronica Mars. Or you could just go back to your jewel of an ex-boyfriend Wilder Valderrama and maybe make him shut the hell up about how big his Tool of Oppression is, because frankly, Lindsay? I don’t want to know.

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Barometer #4

This week I display the Barometer’s findings away from my usual musty den of share-house living. You might find it’s a little fresher, a little cleaner, or maybe just fatter.

HOT

Earnest hippies
So, I stumbled onto a Buddhist workshop today. I’m in Byron Bay at the moment, so that kind of thing is just part of the everyday routine. Get to town, eat some sourdough bread, drink rainwater, and find which area of Tibet this week’s monks hail from.

The ones we had this week were pretty cool, a bunch of guys who looked a lot like my favourite Russian relative, Uncle Kolya, a guy who stops children in the street and gives them chocolates until Auntie Luba told him it just wasn’t cool in this day and age to do that sort of thing anymore.

So anyway, my parents and I creaked noisily into a room of cross-legged hippies; their eyes were closed even though the meditation hadn’t started yet because they were JUST THAT EARNEST. Well we started meditating, and there was this awesome monk who spoke in Tibetan, his words rolling over us like a bubbling brook or a desert wind, and another guy with an ‘I Heart Tibet’ t-shirt who translated for him. We were sitting in impossibly uncomfortable chairs, it felt like they were made of bags of coins or rosettes of silver foil, because every time we stretched or sighed or meditated too hard, there’d be this awful spine-chilling crunching sound that just bit into everybody’s sense of chi.

But we got through the meditation a-ok, and the session prattled to the only reasonable close that exists when you’re in Byron Bay: ‘Lengthy and Irrelevant Question’ Time. A woman with severe cerebral palsy asked what to do when anger rises up in your heart during meditation, and we all felt sad for her for a while and then proud of ourselves for our compassion. Then a guy asked the following question: “I found myself also getting angry during meditation. As soon as I dealt with that anger and moved into a state of peace, I got a pain in my back. Do you think it’s related to this healing?”

There was a pause while the guy who Hearts Tibet translated the question to the monk with the Tom Waits voice. The monk’s awesome answer was, “Maybe you should see a chiropractor”. Consider yourself PWNED, Earnest Hippie, and by a pithy Buddhist monk of all people.

Buying unhealthy food under a mask of quirky childishness

All you need is to look really wacky and faux-guilty while hiding a box of ice-cream sandwiches behind a carton of Skim Milk and you will be MORE THAN ABLE to incorporate a bit of Maxibon into your regular family shopping trip. Let’s just say, as soon as your favourite humour columnist finishes typing this column, she’s about to dig her choppers into 10cm of biscuity goodness.


NOT

Everyone’s obsession with Australian swimmers and their stupid violent ways
I actually had the following conversation with my Mum this evening:

Mum: So what do you think about this Nick D’Arcy getting kicked out of the swim team?
Jess: Don’t care. Don’t know anything about it. Don’t care.
Mum: Oh. It’s all over the news.
Jess: DON’T CARE!
Mum: Ok. Chill. I mean, it’s a bit interesting with the Olympics coming up, though…
Jess: WHY DOES EVERYONE CARE SO MUCH? I DON’T CARE. I DON’T CARE. I DON’T KNOW WHO HE IS. I DON’T CARE WHO HE IS. THERE ARE CHILDREN STARVING IN COUNTRIES WHOSE NAMES I CAN’T PRONOUNCE OR DEIGN TO REMEMBER. BUT I DON’T CARE ABOUT NICK D’ARCY. I DON’T DON’T DON’T CARE.

Obviously I’m a really fun house-guest. But seriously, readers. I don’t know what it is about this whole situation that makes me so angry but I think it’s something like this: to play competitive sport you have to be a bit of a dickhead. You don’t see artists and actors and authors beating each other up unless it’s ironically. And when artists and actors and authors drink a lot they don’t king-hit people, they just make bitchy comments or have sex with the wrong people, or write crappy beat poetry, which is the way it should be.

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Barometer #3

HOT

Relish
I am one of those people who just freaking loves cheese. I was at a party the other night hosted by a certain 2008 Tharunka editor; I’m not going to give out names but let’s just say he likes Kevin Rudd and cycling and aesthetically-displeasing artwork and also his name is Chris Moore.
Anyway, this certain editor was having a housewarming party for his new house, so I rocked up excitedly with a bottle of cleanskin in my hand and a party-spirit in my heart. The party was going well – there were plenty of trendies to talk to who were sitting on the parquetry talking Derrida and lighting scented candles.
But suddenly, the party stepped up a notch, because there was an exciting introduction to the table where I was sitting – and this introduction was a cheese platter. It was made up of crunchy pita and soft crumbly cheese and AMAZINGLY DELICIOUS zesty eggplant relish. So my night was now stretching before me, a night of grabbing and licking and moaning, and not in a sexy way, not even a little bit.
So to all those people who’ve never amped up a cheese plate with a lil something extra, I say, “get to it, dickhead”. Start off small: a little bit of fig paste with a creamy camembert on a water cracker. A salty olive tapenade on jatz with some gooey Havarti. And before you know it, you’ll be having marinated goat’s fetta on a bed of human placenta and the whole world will be your delicious (whipped) oyster.

NOT

People who dislike reality TV
Listen, naysayer, I’m probably a bit smarter than you are, OK? After all, I have a degree in Theatre and Performance Studies, which fully equips me for a well-paid job in the temping and secretarial industry, and what do you do? Commerce? Yes. You do Commerce.
So, Commerce, I already have to put up with your shining job prospects and designer bags and inappropriate-for-the-Basser steps little pointed shoes and your inane comments in Gen Eds like “Isn’t sex and gender, like, the same thing?”. I do NOT need to hear your opinion on why “these shows and like totally trash; when I watch TV I want something scripted like Home and Away or maybe All Saints”.
Listen, Commerce, to a few pieces of wisdom:
1. So You Think You Can Dance is freaking awesome; I think even you probably like it. That judge Jason just melts my heart with his stern lovingness. He won’t coddle them, but when he gives a compliment, you know he means it. He’s like a modern-day Mr Darcy, but probably a bit more of a flamer.
2. Australian Idol has given me goose bumps on about 3 occasions, and I don’t care if you or my housemates mock me for it. Also I love the homosocial rapport between James and Andrew. One day they are going to do it in the green room when all the contestants have gone home.
3. Big Brother is my favourite of the lot because it is just a perfect display of why people like my Uncle Nol will say things like “I just don’t understand young people”. Correct, Uncle Nol, but isn’t it just perversely fascinating to watch these people weasel their way into hell? Because that’s where they’re going, Nol. Right down to Lucifer’s Lounge-room, and they will scream and burn and repent for the time they dry-humped Glenn in the communal sauna, but it will be just too too late.

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Barometer #2

HOT

Cheesy Puns
The other day someone knocked on my office door and said “Knockadoodledoo”. I can’t add any pithy commentary to that. Just let it live.

Family sized salads for one
I have this Monday ritual at work…well it may be less of a ritual and more of ‘yet another bit of boring shit that I do’. Since I do my grocery shopping on Sundays, and I always seem to go to Coles because I have this weak-spot for multi-national corporations who are taking petrol out of the hands of small-business owners, I often find myself perusing their salad section. And what a salad section, right? There’s something about the mixture of processed cheese and croutons with shredded iceberg lettuce and errant pieces of cabbage that makes me lose my shit, and I find myself buying an inappropriately huge salad and taking it to lunch on Mondays. The healthiness just cancels out the sheer volume of what you’re eating. Except for those croutons, they are just EMPTY CARBS.

NOT

People who say things like “It just never stops” or “TGIF” or “If only there were more hours in the day” non-ironically.
I might just have to put on my Big Fat Hippie Hat for a second. Just wait, just wait, just…OK, done. It’s easier to put on because I recently had a really major haircut which some of my co-workers like and the others make vague anti-compliments about like, “You look like some sort of doll”. But anyway, here we go. BEING BUSY IS NOT A STATUS SYMBOL. It is not something to flaunt gaily around your ‘hood, an ammunition against your neighbours and co-workers. You know what I think when I’m told that you’re really busy? I think that you have BAD MANAGEMENT OF TIME and THAT IS NOT A COOL THING, THEY HAVE CLASSES AND BOOKS AND TV SHOWS ABOUT DEALING WITH THAT KIND OF PROBLEM.

Cane furniture

OK, so you’ve been sitting outside all day, the breeze puffing up your linen shirt, your hair dancing about your unlined forehead, sipping on a icy mint julep and just wishing, wishing so valiantly, that the Summertime would last forever. I respect that; in fact, I also envy it, but this isn’t about me for once. So, when you leave your delicious outdoors summer sojourn and re-enter the Real World, it is quite clear from your glazed, exultant expression that: YES, you have been sitting outside in the dancing breeze, loving life and maybe starting to believe in God again. I DON’T NEED YOU TO PROVE IT TO ME BY SHOWCASING ALL THE CHECKS AND LINES FROM THE CANE FURNITURE RUNNING UP THE BACK OF YOUR THIGHS, ESPECIALLY WHEN IT ONLY SERVES TO MAKE THE FAT THERE BULGE A LITTLE BIT; IT JUST DOES NOTHING FOR YOU, OK? And I’m only telling you this because I really love you.
Here, have a piece of rose quartz.

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