About Me

Things that come out of my mind. Whether inspired or insipid. I'm not in my native country, this is a good thing.

Sunday, September 12

another one...

I was watching a movie when I heard some banging noises outside, these were different from the incessant thuds of the builders next door, so I had a look out my back door. Here is what I found:






There was more of them, but i still have not figured out how to take photo's at night. You'll have to make do with these. Also i think my trial period for this pay proxy site runs out shortly, so you may have to wait a while to find out more. At least until I sort out how the hell to use a proxy.

Monday, September 6

The Fifteenth

I've arrived in China now, had a week long introduction course in how to teach people English as a foreign language. Was kinda interesting. The town that it was in was a touristy part of China, a very beautiful part of China, and easy way to get eased into Chinese styles. Here are some photo's. they also include where I'm living. Backwards again.




Yangshuo

Yangshuo

Not where I'm teaching...




Yangshuo during the day



Friday, August 6

The Fourteenth


Yea, so I'm incredibly bad at this...


I've decided that rather than have this as solely my writing I'm gonna add pictures of places I've been. Here ya go then: Oh, and they're all backwards because thats how they upload here and i got really pissed off with the putting things in wrong places and not being able to do things... so start at the bottom....
























On the way to Pulau Ubin.

 









Arriving



Sunday, June 6

The Thirteenth

Yea, i'm still not that good with this.... but here's some thoughts on nudity.

There are many things I like about nudity; this thought first struck me when I was standing on a balcony in the sun. It was a gloriously sunny day in a tropical country, there was a slight breeze that rippled through my chest hair and teased my nipple. The tingle that travelled into my body from this gentle touch was amazing. I could feel the wind playing with my hair, lifting and teasing. I could feel the sun, warmer than the air around, laying its hands onto my skin. Reaching deep within and stoking my soul into a state of massive contentedness. In a hotel, in a foreign country, fast running outta money and I was happy. I was happy because I was as I was born, all but a little bit cleaner, in the sun and with a breeze playing across my skin.

You might be forgiven for thinking this is only time you can enjoy being naked, but no. There are other times when I have found being naked extremely entertaining. One time in particular springs to mind; I was a little bit intoxicated and that may have helped a little bit, it only made it all the more enjoyable though. This particular ‘time of nakedness’ is what I like to call the surprise nakedness. When you walk into an environment or place where nakedness is not normal. It’s really entertaining to watch the shock travel through people’s faces when they realise exactly what is different about you. It works really well if alot of other people are drunk as well. However you need some people sober to get the full entertainment out of the proceedings. That way you get the whole spectrum of reactions. From the slightly amused ‘you strange little man’ to ‘you disgusting prick! What the hell are you doing?!’ (This last one was the reaction of my girlfriend at the time). Semi- public nudity can be extremely entertaining, not only that, it can be acceptable at certain times.

It can also be enjoyable to be naked around others. From these experiences we find it easier to be happy and comfortable in our own bodies. Seeing that others aren’t perfect gives us a better understanding of what is actually a true and real body image and from this we end being more comfortable and complete people. If we could all get more comfortable in ourselves then there would be less hatred in the world. Comfort and contentness in our self breeds peace and happiness in the areas around ourselves. In closing I would like to say that I believe everyone should be naked more often, I certainly intend to be.

Wednesday, May 12

The Twelfth

I take a drag on my cigarette and look out into the rain. I’m searching through the downpour for the metal beast of Singapore; common and friendly. Under this shelter that protects your head but not your ankles, cigarette in my mouth, I wait for this metal beast. With its cold breath, and turning legs it’s my transport to its father. The bigger stronger metal beast that is stuck to the lines, forever going in circles. I wait patiently, along with the others. There’s a young Chinese couple, an Indian guy and an older Chinese gentleman. I’m the only white face in this part of this foreign land. We’re all dressed for the tropical heat, and the coolness the rain brings with it is welcomed. I finish the last drag of my cigarette and take the two steps to the rubbish bin and back quickly, yet still managing to get soaked in gods piss, raining down from the heavens. The Indian guy has got impatient and called on one of the metal beast’s baby cousins. They float by regularly, their eye green or red depending on if they’re hungry. He’s too eager this Indian fellow, for before he can swim from the shelter and into the back of baby cousin the great white metal beast rolls up behind. The little guy takes off in a hurry, as if big cousin is going to get angry. Then big cousin pulls up to the curb, opening his three mouths he spills forth a gaggle of Chinese school children chattering away as we that were left step into his cool belly.

I push my wallet past one of his inside eyes, and hear his beep of thanks. He’s taken a dollar, a small token to pay for a ride out of the rain and in his cool continuous breath. We aren’t the only ones in the belly of the beast. Most of the seats, his ribs perhaps, are taken. So I stand in his tail joint, his tail is the same size and shape as his body. It’s as if they have taken the head off one and connected it to the arse of this one. And with ribs of its own, packed with people. I’m standing opposite a girl, Indian and pretty, if not for her skin. Pocked and marked by acne, she still has the light inside that makes her pretty to those not so plastic. Flashing me a shy smile she looks away and starts studying the pattern of the rain on the beast’s clear skin. I do the same. The beast lumbers on through the rain, turning every so often. The joint rotating, bringing me closer to the girl, then away again as the corner is completed. I study the others in the belly. Just a short journey, everyone with the same intentions, on their way to different destinations. The beast stops occasionally, to allow more people in and more people out, until it makes a final stop on this circular journey. Outside another of the shelters braves the rain, waiting for the inevitable vomiting of the beasts that stop. And this one does, everyone leaving their rib-seats and making their way to one of the beasts mouths. Sicking up people onto the footpath outside, the rain making rivers that run through the feet of the shelter and then join in the gutter; perhaps running off to join the clouds once more. I step out and lose myself in the people. Still the only pale face in a sea of Asiatic influences. The last time I ride one of those great metal beasts today I stride of in search of his father.

Tuesday, May 11

The Eleventh

That day, on that hill, by that bay, a lot of things went wrong. That’s how I ended up here, in this little room with the fan blowing the hot air around. I was lying on the bed, watching the ceiling fan make its lazy circles, it didn’t achieve much. Just wafted the smoke into larger circles, it had been two years since that hill. Willy and I had sat at the top and smoked a cigarette each, silently. Just looking down into that bay, staring at the tents. There was about four of them, arranged in a circle around the still smoking fire. How they had that fire still going was a mystery to me, it had rained pretty heavily not more than an hour ago. At least it meant they had no idea we were here. I took the binoculars from Willy and focused them on the man standing by the fire. He was talking to a couple of the others, his lips moving silently. I knew what he would be saying; I had sat through enough of his pep talks to know what was passing from his lips. Perhaps not word for word, but the ideas at least. This man was a problem, he had almost single handedly plunged this small nation into a vicious civil war. Granted he didn’t do it alone, but this was the man who had started it all. A vicious killer, and he looked it too. With his shaggy beard, rough and unkempt. Always with a cheroot dangling from the corner of his mouth and a harsh word passing those thin lips. This was going to be his last day alive, in some ways it was the last day I lived as well. Miguel Santiago. I had known him since I was a boy. We shared the same birthday, as well as the same room on the dusty streets of Luz de Guìa. A little nowhere town where the road crossed Rio de los Condenados, originally a ferry town it was now a bustling little shit hole. Four taverns and three streets of death. If you were lucky enough to be born there, you generally stayed there. Not Miguel though, nor I. He’d taken me for a rough ride that one.

I was rudely jerked back from those hazy memories by a knock at the door; I lifted Seguridad, my sawn off shotgun, from the bedside table and made my way over to the door. Opening it as far as the chain would allow I found myself staring down the muzzle of a .45 so I put both barrels through the door; shoot first, questions later. There’s something the Americans got right I thought as I dropped Seguridad and dived for Los Luminoso, my .50 cal desert eagle. Part of a pair that had been given to me years ago, her other half was El Sombrìo. El Sombrìo was long gone, lost that day on that hill. With Los Luminoso in my hand I leapt out the second story window, my fall broken by the shadow cloth of the fruit market below. As I struggled to untangle myself from the thick canvas, whoever had been at my door opened fire from above. I was lucky to get out alive. But I managed it, somehow, and was swiftly around the corner to my motorbike. I heard yelling coming from the room I had spent the last couple of nights in. I couldn’t make out what was being said but it was angry. Sitting astride my bike in the alleyway I jumped on the kick-start and she didn’t make a noise. No thundering roar, nothing. That’s when he spoke up ‘going somewhere?’ he said from the shadows. I didn’t recognise the voice at first; it had been so long since I heard it. Then he stepped out from the doorway, the first thing I saw was the pistol. It’s muzzle strong and familiar though the wrong end to be staring at, the shine of the metal had not been lost even though it was now scuffed and scratched. I had seen this weapon before; it matched the one that was in my own hand. We stood like this for perhaps a minute, Los Luminoso facing down El Sombrìo. I couldn’t understand how this had come to be.

Two years earlier on that hill, by that bay, two figures lost in the tangle of bush and jungle finish their cigarettes. One of them raises a rifle to his shoulder, the other a set of binoculars to his face. The one with the binoculars starts mumbling directions, wind speed, distance and the like, to the other; who’s only response is to change his aim slightly. The mumbling changes, it’s now just one word that’s said softly three times. ‘Fire, fire, fire.’ After the third call a single shots booms out over the bay and the man with the beard clutches his shoulder trying to pull the hurt out of him as he falls. Lost in a splash the man disappears from the scope of the rifle. There’s alot more movement from the camp now as the one with the binoculars says ‘hit’ and then the bolt is worked on the rifle and that word repeated again. ‘Fire, fire, fire.’ Followed by another crack as another man falls. Then there’s another shot, from another team on another hill. The rifles keep barking, as if they’re speaking to one another. And soon the small camp in the bay is still, the rifles having finished their macabre work. Then the men stand and start to make their way down the hill, the rain starting to fall again. When they get to the camp bodies are counted, faces examined. Their primary target is not amongst them. The man from Rio de los Condenados is missing, presumed dead.

‘How much did they pay you?’ the man not even hours older than I asked, his eyes showing his disgust with me. ‘It makes no difference, whether you answer or not.’ He spat after I didn’t reply, and then he shot me. A bang followed by the thump of my body as I hit the dirt. Pain leapt from my shoulder, lightning radiated out from where the bullet entered. I grunted as I tried to raise myself up, Los Luminoso heavy in my hand; El Sombrìo biting at my forehead. ‘You betrayed your country for a little gold? a promise of amnesty? what?’ Miguel was still talking. ‘You betrayed me, and look where it took you? You broke my heart’ those were the last words I heard, for El Sombrìo spat once more and took with it the back of my head. The last thing I saw was Miguel’s face, tears running down each cheek. That must have been what I looked like, tears rolling through the dust on my own face as I saw what I had killed, as I realised what exactly went wrong that day, on that hill, by that bay.

Saturday, May 8

The Tenth

I found her alone on the beach, just sitting there staring off into space. Literally. She was sitting on a slight raise and smoking. I was walking alone up the beach and had seen her from quite a way back. I had been watching her. She was pretty, not your insanely hot plastic Hollywood pretty, but an earthly beauty that seemed to come from within. She had long blonde dreads that had all sorts of beads and shells attached to them. As I got closer I could see she was smoking and she turned her head towards me, offering me a smile then some of her smoke. In return I gave her one of my smiles, I hoped it said thank you, and sat down next to her taking the lit smoke from her long gentle fingers. I took a puff and closed my eyes, ‘hi’ I said as I exhaled. A plume of grey blue smoke lifting into the air, it seemed to hang around, joining the smoke in that still evening air; as she passed back her own greeting in a light easy voice that seemed to settle into the cloud of wafting smoke. I took another drag and passed the smoke back to her and leaning back I asked her why she was sitting on her own at the end of a beach. In her soft gentle voice she explained that she was often to be found sitting alone, usually on a beach, but if there was no beach then in a park, under a tree. Somewhere she could have something earthly beneath her as she contemplated.

Staring into the sky and getting more relaxed as time ticked over I thought this through. It made sense, to have that connection to something earthly while you consider everything around you. Grounding your thoughts with the knowledge that you are where you are and would rather be nowhere else. So I asked her what she had been contemplating. She smiled, lay back beside me and passed the smoke before she begun. ‘Life, the cosmos. Why we’re here, underneath this empty expanse, locked in among these trees, buildings, people. Even why I’m in this place at this time.’ Then she turned and looked at me ‘why you run into who you run into, where you do. There are many things, and they don’t really fit together, but at the same time there is no other way that they could fit.’ ‘Ah, the mysteries of life.’ I let it slide out of me, gently slipping down until it settled in the hollow between us, staking it’s claim as an unknown.

We sat for a while and just watched the stars starting to show through, lost in our own thoughts. There were only a few at first, random scatters of silvery brightness in a fast darkening sky. Some clung to the edges of a sky that was red with the setting sun. Whisps of cloud showed up the red of the setting sun and the sky darkened as it stretched out from the horizon. I don’t know about her thoughts, but mine followed the sky. We lay like this for a long time. As the darkness grew so did the shining points of light. Little diamonds sparkling in the night sky, with the soft breeze coming off the sea we were content. At that point in time it didn’t matter what was going on outside our little sphere; everything was fine, and we lost ourselves together and alone in that one moment.