Thursday, November 30, 2006

Once More with Feeling


This is the speech I made at the Year Nine Graduation Night tonight. I was the keynote speaker. Often with these things they go for a long time and, while important, can get a bit much for parents. As beliefs and values manager I wanted to do something people weren’t anticipating. The entire speech was done with a Scottish accent. It worked so well the Principal told of an English couple who exclaimed that they hadn’t realized that I was Scottish. He took great pleasure in telling them that I wasn’t. Yep… it was a huge risk but I think we pulled it off. It ends with a Flashdance routine. Seriously.


I’d like to thank Miss O’Leary for the opportunity to speak to everyone, it is a privilege for you to be able to listen to the sound of my voice tonight.

I wanted to do something a bit different to what you’re perhaps used to … so I asked Miss O’Leary: do you think I could dance for them tonight – interpretive dance of 1 Corinthians Chapter 13…. but she thought better of it. Alarms the parents.
And so I thought I’d let you in on a couple of secrets about my self… something of my past, something of where I come from, and how I got here.

A lot of students ask me “Mr. Limb… why did you choose to become a priest?”
Well, for a start there’s a couple of things to clear up. Number One… I’m not a priest, and number two it’s Mrs….

Well, the question gives me pause to think about my time as a young person in Scotland. We didn’t have all the advantages that you have, for example there were no lights in the halls we had to meet in. They were cold and damp and they had tonnes of old people – called teachers – they weren’t the sexy young things that are surrounding you here tonight. And you could see these old folk drifting around in the murky darkness. They used to scare the daylights out of me, you could never pick where they would pop up.
“Limb! What are you doing here?”
“Havin a heart attack… I thought I was being attacked by a giant stick o’ leather or the undead.”
They weren’t particularly fast, but then they didn’t have to be it was dark even in the middle of the day.

And the reigns that we used to have in Scotland… let me tell you about the reigns. From 7.30am till 6 o’clock in the evening we would have to wear reigns like a horse until we were 6 years old. It was terrible, the metal bits they used to put in your mouth would chip your teeth – and all of us had these badly chipped wee milk teeth, it was good for tourism though – we’d bear our teeth at tourists and play village of the damned on Friday nights.

On weekends we would be yoked to ploughs were we would work the fields, for we’d eaten all the horses. But we kept up our spirits, of course the longer we kept up our spirits, the more crooked the lines we ploughed became.

And so when we were old enough we were boxed up and sent to boarding school. It was awful being put in those boxes. There wasn’t much room to move, and then once they started moving us our food would go everywhere. And then, when you need to go to the toilet… well lets just say it got a wee bit confusing as to what was what. It was a bit frightening at first, but once we learnt we could look through the air holes and other such luxuries it gave us the giddy sense of freedom. At one point in the journey some of us ended up in the same post office – that was great. We’d whisper to one another,
“Edwards…. What are you doing?”
“Nothin’ what are you doing…?”
“Nothing (pause) hey Edwards do you want to set fire to something?”
“Yes!” (kind of like a ‘hell yes’)
“Do you have any matches?”
“No…. do you?”
“No”
“Is your cardboard wet?”
And to think, all that combustible material…..

One of my friends, Warren, his parents put the wrong address on his box and he wound up in Switzerland. He told us that there are no old people there, they chased them off the mountains. And he also got a Swiss Army Knife. Let me tell you that came in useful during our school years and we were attacked by bears. We’re the reason why there are no more bears in Scotland.

There was one thing I hated about Boarding school more than anything else. And people talk about boarding school – all the horrors they had to face. But there was one horror more horrible than all the other horrors out together to create the horrible of all horribles.

(whisper) It was the dancing.

After being soundly whipped, so we’d pay attention to the lessons about love and grace, we were taken to this great big hall with wooden floors. It was dark and then something moved off in the gloom. Warren leaned over to me, “It’s an old person”
“Nah,” I said, “it’s moving too quickly… it something else”.
Then we saw this… glow. This tiny red glow getting closer and closer. And then behind the little red glow, a enormous shadow loomed. It was the biggest nun I had ever seen in me life. And I’ll never forget what she said that first time we met her… as she took a drag on her Cigarette.
(Burlesque American accent) “ Life is going to throw some nasty things at ya boys. If you’re to get through life…. You’re going to have to be able to (do a dance move) dance. You see, dancing is the antidote to life’s miseries. Sadness – Happiness. Tears – Smiling, Fear – Courage.”. Well, I fairly filled my pants. AND then she danced like we’d never seen dancing before. And her cigarette lit up the darkness like a neon light – forming words as she moved about.…. Faith… Hope …. Love
I remember Warren looking at me… “ She’s not bad”
“I’ve seen better”
“What? Dancing?”
“Oh… I thought…her teeth… yeah, no she’s really good at dancing”

So the nun, Bertha, along with some other nuns, taught us to dance. Days, turned to weeks, weeks turned into months, and the months became a year. And then we were ready to tour. We were called “Bertha and the Nunettes” It was exciting at first, going to all those exotic places. Glasgow, Edinborough, London, Paris, Phuket. But then, when we got older we saw it for what it was. The mockeries from other school children who were taken to see us perform, as an example of what dancing could mean. far from being impressed they would yell out insults – “dance little nun boys”, “shake ya habit”, and the most savage of all, “hey look, dancing”. Well Warren had a shocking temper and he would just …explode – it was like fight club in tap shoes – but ultimately it was through those children that we saw what we really had become.

The word that began to circulate amongst us was… Exploitation with a distinctive Latino feel. … Soon the strain began to show. The late nights, show after show after show, the only relaxation that was allowed was Peter Allen videos. Peter Allen videos?!?

And then one night it all went horribly wrong. One of the stage managers left his pipe and matches back stage. Edwards got a hold of them. Bertha was out doing her opening routine with the other nuns “Come here all ye faithful or you’ll get yours”. Warren dared Edwards to flick a match onto the stage. The first match went up, a tiny symbol of dissention, of resistance, but Bertha’s tap shoe snuffed that out before anything could happen. One of the other nun’s saw us out of the corner of her eye and rushed across the stage when unfortunately the hem of her garment caught a stage light.

Now these stage lights were so hot that moths would evaporate if they ever danced across that beam of light. One time a circus troop lost all its poodles and ponies because they got too close to those lights. The smell was reported to be terrible. Well, this nun went up in a shrieking pillar of smoke and fire. And nun after nun burst into fire as they came in contact with one another. But as consummate performers they threw themselves into the act. They were like fiery stars in heaven. Dancing fiery nuns. The crowd went nuts, standing, cheering… applauding. And us boys learnt what commitment was.

Warren looked at me and Edwards and said – “You know what this means?” “Yeah”, I said, “the nuns have taken to wearing a polyester nylon mix– if only it were wool…. If only if were wool.”

We were all taken into custody. And we were told that we had a choice. You could either do time, or you could be sent down to Australia. I begged and I pleaded. “Please, please lock me up forever and throw away the key, just don’t send to that terrible, terrible place.”
Father Allen stopped me, sent all the others out of the room and leaned in close.
“Oh no Limb, we’ve got something special for you. You are going to where you won’t be coming back… a place we’ve arranged a rather special job for you so you can atone for all your sins.”

And now here I stand before you looking at your faces. The story finally told… of how it was that I became the Beliefs and Values manager. Each one a little punishment for all the sins of my past.

And sometimes, when I’m weary from another day of working at Carey Baptist College I will close my tired eyes and see Bertha -dancing in the gloom and the words lighting up the darkness. Faith, Hope ….Love.

To close (taking maracas from podium) I would like to do a brief interpretive dance. Flashdance music – “What a feeling” begins to play as I slow raise maracas into the air. I queued Nat (Year Nine Manager) to briskly arrive on stage and escort me off.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Blogging: Fun and exciting new experience may end in tears...and fire


Holy COW!!!!! Thought I'd have to donate an organ to get this entry in tonight.... all that google stuff.

There have been so many moments this last couple of weeks where I have gone – that should go in my blog…. That really needs to go in my blog…. Oh… that has to go in my blog. And so what went in my blog? – Nadda. Zip. Zero. Just this, the ultimate in emptiness; telling no-one about nothing.

Got a bit of an alarm last week when a guy I know who is a youth pastor made a couple of comments in his blog that went down like the Hindenburg. He got absolutely slaughtered by all these ‘anonymous’ entries who actually know him. It was a mess – admittedly I doubt he should have shot his mouth off about as much as he did in a blog attached to the Youth Group Website that he was overseeing. It was like a fight I saw many years ago when this guy couldn’t work out what was going on because people were taking pot shots every time he turned around to confront the coward who had hit him in the back. Once again the guy had asked for it, but nevertheless it was disturbing to see what people will do if they think they won’t be held accountable.

So…. Yes….

It made me wonder about doing this blog because I hold a fairly significant position. A position where, if I shot my mouth off, (which I can tend to) about matters where I really don’t know a lot about (which I tend to) involving people who don’t really need another person throwing in their observations (which I tend to do)… where the heck was I going with that…. Even as I read back over that I can’t remember my point. Something about being nice to the other kids. Everything… I… say… is …. in ….writing…. need …. to…. be….careful….because… it … is …. in …..writing…. can’t… do… much… when… people… have… it… in… writing.

Look, in case you are reading this and it has dawned on you that there was really no point to this – fear not! We simply call it ‘Post Modernist’ and hey presto, there’s a point in not having a point. Brilliant! Conceited and utterly pointless. And by putting the word ‘brilliant’ with an exclamation mark, people will be rushing to agree – too scared to stop and say, “Um… I don’t get what it is that was so brilliant.”
To which we say “Ah…. That’s because you are not educated.”
They will say… “…yes… I ….” And hang their head in uneducated shame. Of course if they are educated they will stalk away to their red wine, and pointlessness. Ah…. Post Modernity. The truly hip will renounce me for even referring to Post Modernity – because it is soooooooo yesteryear.

See…. Things you would never risk putting in print and do…. Blogging.

Hey and if you read this leave a comment. Someone told me they left a comment but it didn't show up. Email if it doesn't show: limbidgit@hotmail.com

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Thecollective hole in the donkey


Made…. It ….. through… another……. Tuesday…..(cough) Staggers through door, reaching for a chair but misses and lands in a shower of dust on the floor. His eyes are open…. Then…. Nothing.

Tuesdays are my ‘I quit’ days. These start innocently enough with my Year Sevens. This morning I was a tad late and they were already in tearing up the place. There were a couple of girls running around the room, another couple were up at the whiteboard trying to write with a bloodied finger (I think) and then a bunch of guys were fighting over the furniture. It was chaos. I yelled at them like a drill sergeant and threw them all out of the room. Except the throwing was relatively short lived because yet another bunch of guys thought it would be hilarious to stop everyone from leaving the room. So, instead of stopping the mass continued to move forward, creating a tangle of humanity that continued to mount up around the door until the little one’s bones began to snap and the screaming began. This is the point at which I want to use expletives – to really let rip and say awful, awful things about people’s mothers and the holes in their donkeys.

This was the first minute and a half of class. I turned to find the deputy principal standing there. This is where you want to point out to her that, “actually this is part of my lesson plan, it’s a community project which allows for individual expression as part of…..
(I reassess)

….Actually, this is the result of a crap classroom which is too narrow and entirely made of metal which I suspect has magnetic properties because the TV ends up with purple in one corner and is almost unwatchable and the whole shebang sounds a lot louder than it actually is, the room, not the TV, and it makes me sound like a crap teacher. Loud classes = useless teacher. I’m not complaining, because I know in some countries these kids would be employed as child soldiers…

3 minutes of class have gone by as I stare at the Deputy as her lips move in slow motion. She wants me to grab a particular student out of the mash of humanity building up behind me.

I get everyone in and they’re seated. Then I threaten to kill them. Like, dead. Someone puts up their hand and asks why the Palestinians and the Israelis can’t just be friends. I explain. The lesson is a success.

Next lesson. Year Eights. Same again, but this time with attitude. We talk about communication skills. I do this particular lesson a total of three times, three different classes. Each class progressively worse as I get more and more worn out.

I stop for lunch then address a Year Nine assembly about why calling each others hoes and other terms of address isn’t really great. I get to say crap and hoe. I finish the day with my last group of eights and we talk about the most horrific accidents we’ve witnessed.

Then we wash the rest of the day away with a staff meeting where the Principal announces that as part of the end of year staff event we will go Lawn Bowling. Lawn …. Bowling. An alarming number of staff turn to see my reaction. I mime blowing my brains out.

Thursday, November 09, 2006



I can't write at the moment except that I am actually writing. I do wonder what the point of all this is. Like who gives a flying fig what I think - really. If I were reading a blog what would I look for?

Well, for a start, a perspective on something I was interested in. Something that had some sort of insight about a matter I cared about. Perspectives on a film. Reflections by an actor. Something a journalist is considering behind the scenes. I am interested in writing, not because I like writing, but I love stories - I try to avoid the stories because it sounds a bit… lame, I prefer to call them narratives. Let’s face it though – it’s a big person’s word for story time.

Narrative lets you encounter a range of things. As I write what comes to mind is that it lets you revisit emotions that you've had in the past, it lets you experience them in a safe environment. I recall that this was the reason why the ancient Greeks loved their tragedies. They wanted to experience the feeling of loss without having to experience actual loss. This was something that the writer of the particular article found deplorable. At the time I agreed, but now days, I think - isn't that a bit judgmental? The tragedies allowed for the viewers to participate in the spectacle, but it wouldn't have been the only thing that they brought away with them.

Tan and I are watching Battlestar Galactica at the moment and loving it. I think it succeeds where Star Wars ended up failing. Well, it doesn't make merchandising a deciding factor in terms of what you put up on the screen. But putting that aside it succeeds because it explores the nature of relationships, the dynamics of our decisions in the many places we occupy in our lives. What it is to be in a position of authority, trusting those in a position of authority, the experience of being a son, a daughter, a friend, a lover - all these things are done so well. It actually uses the genre of Science Fiction well, the main ingredients are there, not least of which is the theme of the human race over-reaching itself. The essentials of being a human – that even in the face of extinction we still fight and betray, that we can be petty and that ultimately the enemy will always be us. A theme explored by having the enemies, the Cylons, actually look like us – imperceptibly different save a synthetic compound in their ‘blood’ that is almost impossible to detect. I could go on… but I need to get onto death.

At the cemetery yesterday I came across an old tombstone shaped like an open book. On the left hand side was the faded insignia of a husband that was loved and missed by his wife - I don't remember if there were children. He died in the 1940s in his early 60s.

The other side was blank.

It looked strange seeing something so old, so faded, waiting like a fresh page forgotten. It was like he had been left at the station. His wife never came. What happened to her? Surely she was dead, there is no way that she is still alive. Did she remarry? Did she return to a home over seas? Did she really not love him? That empty page strikes me, the waiting....

Outside it is raining in the darkness and this seems more appropriate to this memory of a blank tombstone than the sun and warmth of when I encountered this grave stone

I think about that, I think about loss and waiting and expecting. Sometimes the days can seem like a production line, our obligation to stand as the mundane and the ritual of it all pass in succession with each hour. Not sure what it is I expect. I'm not unhappy. But there is an emotion or a feeling that is sitting in my chest - it's a constriction, it doesn't hurt but sometimes it flares and it feels... like if I were to yell it out my voice would be too small.

There are lines all around my life, like fences on properties. There are roads between the fences and the properties and I walk them everyday. I dare not deviate from them. I remember feeling that years ago driving to and from the school where I was a relief teacher. Thinking that I should pull over and go for a walk in a park before I got home.

To stop every so often and savor life.

There was a costal freeway, I remember reading about once, and on it there were signs telling people not to pull over to watch the whales. Sure enough it may cause an accident, but what an opportunity at sunset and that every so often someone out of the thousands that pass by there everyday would stop and risk their safety to experience that sight. Would we enjoy cooking if it didn’t smell so good? We have to eat, but it’s the pleasure involved that makes life worth living.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

The Macabre - It's spelt like a dance


Tomorrow I'm running a seminar for the Year 11s at the school where I teach. Actually, it won't be at school - rather it will be at Karrakatta Cemetary. Why? I hear nobody ask.... Because we don't want our teens to drive into trees, have reckless sex and become accountants as a result of the misconception that they are impervious to death.

Yes... it sounds macabre... but that's not all - then we look at birth. The birth bit is to give them hope. We bring in a Mid Wife who's been in the job for 25 year AND SHE LETS THEM HAVE IT. No, she's very sweet and talks about.... birth.

Look, just read this stuff I've got from Alan De Botton, he puts it into perspective.

The ancient Greek Herodotus writes about an interesting custom practiced by Egyptians at their grandest social gatherings, feasts and picnics. When guests were at their most exuberant, their thoughts focused upon pleasure and power, servants would pass between the tables carrying skeletons on stretchers.

The ritual was to remind party goers vividly of their mortality

It might seem unnecessarily grim to turn our thoughts to death, but doing so might be the fastest way we have of dispelling any worries we have about status.

Nothing helps us sort out our priorities as much in life.

The effect of the thought of death can be to lead us towards what we most value and at the same time to encourage us to pay less attention to the views of other people. Other people will not after all have to do the dying for us.

The prospect of our own extinction may lead us to take more seriously what we most value in our hearts

The contemplation of death has a long history in western art. Vanitas paintings were hugely popular in the 17th century (1600s) Hung in domestic environments – studies or bedrooms

New found wealth resulted in this work – A skull and Hourglass were set in the middle of a bunch of trinkets and fun things and things of values – along with the Latin “Death always wins”

It wasn’t leave the owners depressed about the vanity of all things but rather to make them bold to find fault with specific aspects of their experience, and to urge them to attend more seriously to the virtues of love, goodness, sincerity, humility and kindness