Archive for February, 2008

#10 - Walk to the city and back 8 times in one month

Elizabeth February 15th, 2008

Part of my 101 Things in 1001 Days challenge.

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It feels soooooo good to cross this one off my list!

I unintentionally completed this task in a fortnight, rather than a month. I’ve been trying to exercise at least every second day, and walking anywhere other than the city felt like a waste! I’m now looking forward to heading in a different direction and finding some new stuff next time I walk.

Some of the positives to come out of this task:

  • In two weeks, I have walked 100km (or 62 miles). That’s further than Brisbane to Surfers Paradise (80km) or Melbourne to Geelong (73km).
  • Between the exercise and a change in my eating habits, I have lost 5kg
  • I discovered that I can jog without completely sacrificing my capacity to breathe
  • I have discovered a stack of awesome shops and landmarks that I otherwise would not have come across or noticed
  • I’m learning heaps about my local area by navigating on the fly
  • I have been able to spend heaps of quality time with my good friends Ben and Regina



Very happy that this one is out of the way! I know that this is one thing I couldn’t have achieved without my trusty list, so I’m extra proud of myself for working my way through the tasks.

10 down, 91 to go!

#50 - Go to an outdoor movie

Elizabeth February 15th, 2008

Part of my 101 Things in 1001 Days challenge.

Last night I treated Tim to a movie at The Rooftop Cinema for Valentines Day. I managed to keep the whole thing a secret right up until we got to the door, which made it extra fun!

The cinema is on the roof of a 6-storey building, and the view was awesome. It was just high enough to make the passing trams look little, but small enough to give us a great view into surrounding skyscrapers. It was the perfect perspective for two people still getting to know their city.

One leg of the L-shaped venue was a small but well-stocked bar (shown in the photo immediately above), and when we arrived it was full of people having their post-work drinks. Many had sprawled into the cinema area around the corner to take advantage of the sunshine and synthetic grass, and there was awesome chilled-out music playing the whole time.

At around 8pm staff herded people away from the screen so that they could begin setting up deck chairs, and by 8:30pm anyone who hadn’t bought a ticket for the movie was sent back to the bar.

We managed to grab terrific seats, and when we sat down we saw that a menu had been clipped to the chair in front of us! The text read:

Howdy. Left your credit card with the bar? If not, go hand it over so you can run a tab during the film and simply text us the seat number, your surname, colour of your card and what you want. And then we bring it to you.

PS: If it’s a crying moment of the film, we might wait until that scene is over and we’ve wiped our eyes.

The menu contained a great selection of drinks, and four food options from the award-winning restaurant/bar Cookie downstairs. Tim had chicken yakitori skewers, and I tried the tofu burger (as part of my new resolve to “try new things”). The price was very reasonable ($8.50 each), and they warmed us up.

The movie began a little after 9pm. We saw Raising Victor Vargas, a movie that I knew absolutely nothing about but seemed to rate really well on Rotten Tomatoes. We both really enjoyed it, and I think I like it even better today than I did last night. It got some horrible reviews on imdb, but whatever. Worth seeing.

Overall, I had a great time and thoroughly recommend this place. Be warned, the cinema only operates from late November until the end of March each year - so check it out soon if you can!

Location: Level 6, 252 Swanston St
Tickets: $18 + BF

EVOL: Love in a backward world

Elizabeth February 15th, 2008

A massive thankyou to MetroDad for sharing this fantastic short film! I hope everyone can spare 4 minutes to watch it.

Whether you see Valentine’s Day as a chance to shower a loved one in gifts or a good excuse to order an extra-dry gin martini, you’re probably going to think about love at some point today. So watching Chris Vincze’s graceful and very clever short film EVOL is a great way to treat yourself to a lighthearted take on the subject du jour.

To shoot EVOL, Vincze had his two leads, a mopey man and a sweetly bookish woman in the middle of busy London, perform all of their actions backward. Then he reversed the film in postproduction — showing us a couple who find each other because they’re out of sync with everyone else. The technique fits the film’s story perfectly: It’s magical, unashamedly corny, a little disorienting, and constantly surprising. Which, in our experience, is pretty much like falling in love.

via VSL



Tim and I celebrated Valentines Day on an inner-city rooftop, watching a great movie and freezing our butts off. More about that later today.

Meanwhile, check out the pretty roses from Tim ♥

Cat found!

Elizabeth February 13th, 2008

This notice was apparently posted around town by Japanese students.

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EDIT: Ralf has used his google-fu for good this time, and discovered that this is a prank. The number listed on the poster is a $1.05/min “Talking Clock”.

I bet I’d be furious if I’d actually called the number, but aside from that it’s such an awesome idea!

I’m sorry.

Elizabeth February 13th, 2008

For 11 years Howard’s government refused to say sorry for past injustices towards our Indigenous people. Today’s address by our new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is truly historic, and for the first time properly acknowledges the hardships that Aboriginal and Torres Trait Islanders have faced in the past, as well as the divide that still exists in the areas of health, life expectancy, education and opportunities.

This is probably the first time I have felt proud of our leadership in my adult history. I truly hope that this is the beginning of a new era for Australia, and that the healing process can now begin for those who have suffered the atrocities of our past governments.

Source

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Photo by Spud Murphy

Today we honour the Indigenous peoples of this land, the oldest continuing cultures in human history.

We reflect on their past mistreatment.

We reflect in particular on the mistreatment of those who were Stolen Generations – this blemished chapter in our nation’s history.

The time has now come for the nation to turn a new page in Australia’s history by righting the wrongs of the past and so moving forward with confidence to the future.

We apologise for the laws and policies of successive Parliaments and governments that have inflicted profound grief, suffering and loss on these our fellow Australians.

We apologise especially for the removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children from their families, their communities and their country.

For the pain, suffering and hurt of these Stolen Generations, their descendants and for their families left behind, we say sorry.

To the mothers and the fathers, the brothers and the sisters, for the breaking up of families and communities, we say sorry.

And for the indignity and degradation thus inflicted on a proud people and a proud culture, we say sorry.

We the Parliament of Australia respectfully request that this apology be received in the spirit in which it is offered as part of the healing of the nation.

For the future we take heart; resolving that this new page in the history of our great continent can now be written.

We today take this first step by acknowledging the past and laying claim to a future that embraces all Australians.

A future where this Parliament resolves that the injustices of the past must never, never happen again.

A future where we harness the determination of all Australians, Indigenous and non-Indigenous, to close the gap that lies between us in life expectancy, educational achievement and economic opportunity.

A future where we embrace the possibility of new solutions to enduring problems where old approaches have failed.

A future based on mutual respect, mutual resolve and mutual responsibility.

A future where all Australians, whatever their origins, are truly equal partners, with equal opportunities and with an equal stake in shaping the next chapter in the history of this great country, Australia.

I want to share a poem that I came across yesterday, written by Camilla Percy from Public Polity. Follow the link to read about the experiences that led her to write this poem.

I think it serves as a reminder to us all that we can’t simply blame past generations for the damage done to our Indigenous people. We are all complicit in perpetuating the divide that exists between us. We are all responsible for, and capable of, contributing to the healing process.

From the white man to all Indigenous Australians - Why do I do what I do?

I am complicit in the violence of misrepresentation.
I want to be comfortable: my privilege unchallenged.
I say you are equal, ignoring what is institutionalised.
I cover my privilege with “we’re all the same”.

I continue to divide our histories
Because I want to forget the injustices of the past
I want the tragedies to be yours only.
It helps me to deny the injustices of today.

I essentialise you, portray you as one people with one culture
not recognising your many nations.
This gives me the power to make you what I please
while denying you the power to represent yourself.
I don’t want to listen to a story that might shake my foundations.

I call you traditional
and unknowingly denigrate your culture as past.
If it is fossilised, with only a few remaining who truly practise it, you are white when I want you to be and ‘we’re all the same’.

This is why the men who represent all of us say you are not sovereign
that you are citizens of this nation.
They choose to ignore that we are only citizens by your pain.

I have a notion of normal that is everything you are not.
I call you alien, an other, not part of the ‘us’
so I can push you to the edge of my consciousness as ‘too different’
and forget your disadvantage and my obligations to you.

I make you invisible.
I leave you out as though the Mabo decision was never made.
It makes me uncomfortable to acknowledge your place as ‘first’,
To think that I might have to do things differently if I truly embraced equity.

Why can’t I know you?
Because I don’t know myself.
My culture is invisible to me – it is normal, taken-for-granted, unquestioned.

But now that I’m a fish out of water
I can examine that which sustained me.
I can breathe the air of enlightenment.

I think I just found our new car!

Elizabeth February 11th, 2008

Tim and I have been keeping an eye out for cars that we like lately, since we plan to buy something pretty soon. We seem to have similar taste, and we both want something compact.

Today on my walk I think I finally found it!

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Photo from Photo Elise Blog

I think that’d do for starters, and it’s definitely compact…

Tim?
Baby?

;)

#32 - Go to Luna Park

Elizabeth February 10th, 2008

Part of my 101 Things in 1001 Days challenge.

Until today I had never made it to St Kilda, which is sort of ridiculous considering how long I’ve been in Melbourne now. I’ve always loved the photos of the creepy clown entrance at Luna Park, and since it’s such an icon I was really looking forward to checking it out.

Today was Festival Day at the St Kilda Festival, which involved a bunch of stages with 50 bands throughout the day, street performers, markets, kite surfing, beach volleyball, motocross and plenty of rides. The vibe sort of reminded me of Byron Bay’s NYE Festival, although on a much (much) bigger scale. We had a great time, and fell in love with this awesome city all over again.

Part of our day involved checking out Luna Park, which was just as creepy-looking in person as I had hoped! Plenty more photos of the day to follow.

Threaded Comments for Wordpress?

Elizabeth February 9th, 2008

I am pulling my hair out trying to find a plugin that will let me have threaded comments here. Some of them appear to do half the job, but I’m yet to find the solution to my problem.

So far I’ve tried Brian’s Threaded Comments and AJAXed Wordpress. I had some success with the latter, but it stripped away all my styling and I had more trouble modifying the template than I usually do.

(Besides, both of these plugins actually do nested comments rather than threaded… although I’d settle for either right now.)

I am beyond frustrated at this point. Are you using something simple and brilliant at your blog? Tell me how!

#49 - See a Gold Class movie

Elizabeth February 8th, 2008

Part of my 101 Things in 1001 Days challenge.

The other day I got a voucher in the mail for two La Premiere tickets (the Hoyts equivalent of Birch Carroll & Coyle’s Gold Class). It came with an invoice ($0.00 outstanding) and a dispatch note. There were absolutely no clues regarding its origin, so it was a complete mystery.

Mind you, it was the best kind of mystery! There’s nothing better than receiving the “right” present unexpectedly, and I was really excited about going. Especially when I saw the website and realised we were in for a real treat.

I ended up finding the sender of the tickets, after accidentally thanking the wrong person for them! Turns out that Sally sent them as a thankyou for putting her up over the Australia Day weekend, which was completely unnecessary but still greatly appreciated. Turned out there was supposed to be a message with the tickets, it wasn’t supposed to be anonymous at all!

Tim and I agreed that we wanted to see Sweeney Todd in luxury, so on Tuesday night I rang to make a booking. It’s lucky I called when I did, as the last La Premiere screening of that movie was the following night. Getting to Chadstone was a comedy of errors (thanks Public Transport, and your good friend Rain) but we made it there with time to order a drink and check out the lounge area.

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La Premiere gives you sofa seats, free self-serve popcorn and drinks, and you can order food to be delivered to you during the movie. There’s also a private lounge area to hang out, with a well-stocked bar. It’s such a great date spot.

The movie was absolutely fantastic, and although lots of the original material was cut out I thought it was handled brilliantly. The story flowed the way it should, the acting was brilliant and the use of colour and light was absolutely perfect. I thought it a strong movie in its own right, as well as being a true adaptation of the musical.

It was even better than I had hoped. Thanks again to Sally for an awesome night!

If business meetings were like Internet comments

Elizabeth February 8th, 2008

Consider this a free pass to go nuts in the comments of this post. Go on, do your worst!

It’s nerd time

Elizabeth February 8th, 2008

Please excuse the chaos while I tinker with some new plugins for this site. Things will look a bit wonky today while I test-drive some new features, but should be back to normal tomorrow.

While you’re waiting, leave me a comment and tell me something I don’t know!

Discoveries

Elizabeth February 6th, 2008

Just a quick post, to tell you about some of the cool stuff I’ve come across over the past couple of days.

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Samorost 2 - This is a beautifully designed game that even I can play! Requires some brainpower to conquer, but it’s really rewarding. The trial version lets you play 3 levels of the game, which is a complete storyline that doesn’t make you feel like you’ve got to buy it when you’re done. But if you decide to it’s only a few bucks to keep going.

I feel like the last kid invited to the party, since everyone I’ve shown this to so far has already seen it!  Typical.

Mr Picassohead - Unleash your inner cubist. This is really addictive.

Optical Illusions - You know those crappy emails that you get 3 times per year, full of the same optical illusions? This website is a fantastic resource that blows the others out of the water. It’s full of interactive flash-based illustrations that let you “prove” to yourself that you’re not being deceived, and well-written explanations of what you should be experiencing. For those that are interested in knowing how it all works, each example is also accompanied by a detailed summary of the science behind it all.

The 5 Most Horrifying Bugs in the World - This is totally worth reading, even if you’re a bit phobic like me. It’s funny and gross and awesome all at once. Hands up if you’ll be having nightmares about Bot Flies tonight?

Breaking news: Woman loses Jesus

Elizabeth February 5th, 2008

Thanks, Dooce!

Two videos that you have to watch immediately.

Elizabeth February 2nd, 2008

For those who don’t know, Hamish & Andy are comedians and radio personalities, with a regular spot on Rove.

Last year Rove did a Mothers Day special, in which all the mothers of the cast filled in for them during the show with hilarious results. My favourite part of the show was when Hamish & Andy hooked their mothers up to earpieces and concealed microphones, and sent them out into the street to do as they were told…

And since I’m in a Youtube mood, everybody really needs to see this fantastic Sarah Silverman clip from her interview with Jimmy Kimmel this week. Since we don’t get his show here in Australia, here’s a bit of background from Wikipedia:

Comedian Jimmy Kimmel often says: “Our apologies to Matt Damon, we ran out of time” near the end of his ABC television show Jimmy Kimmel Live, a gag lampooning instances where shows cannot feature their last guest due to time constraints. On September 12, 2006, after a segment highlighting the running gag and a lengthy introduction by Kimmel, Damon finally appeared on the show, only for Kimmel to apologetically cut his interview and head to credits, as Damon cursed him.

Got all that? Anyway, Jimmy Kimmel and Sarah Silverman have been together for years, and when she went on his show this week she presented him with this surprise:

101 Things in 1001 Days: January 2008

Elizabeth February 1st, 2008

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This is just a brief overview of my 101 Things in 1001 Days list in January.

I managed to complete 6 items from my list in January, and I started a bunch more. Here’s what I’ve completed so far:

#076 - Rearrange my study
Aside from leaving my desk under the window, I moved each piece of furniture to a new spot in the room.  Now the room feels bigger (it was already big!), everything gets put back in its place, and it’s easier to keep tidy.  I love it.

#056 - Catch up on Lost
I watched my first episode of Lost in November 2007, and the 72nd episode on January 13th 2008!  Thank God I can start watching them weekly soon, because the Lost saturation was giving me really trippy nightmares…

#067 - Buy a BBQ
Not only did we buy a BBQ, but we put it to fantastic use on Australia Day and fed a bunch of people.  It’s awesome.

#069 - Buy a new set of knives
Possibly more exciting than the BBQ, because I no longer fear for the safety of my ten fingers.

#042 - Go on a cruise down the Yarra
Plenty of photos at this post!  We managed to fit in a 2hr boat trip just before my friend had to get on a plane last weekend.  I’m looking forward to checking out the river in the other direction sometime.

#051 - Sleep Under the Stars
Everybody should find a way to do this some time, it’s really good for the soul!


Aside from the items I completed I’ve also started working on some of the others, including:

#005 - Learn 15 new vegetarian recipes (1/15) I’m trying to make this somewhat legitimate by deliberately choosing dishes, rather than just leaving the meat out of a dish I already know.  In January I learned to cook Ratatouille, and ended up turning the leftovers into a seriously yummy pasta dish.

#021 - Keep a movie/dvd list throughout 2008
It’s been a slow month for movie-watching, but I’m doing it.

#030 - Learn to identify 5 new constellations (1/5)
can definitely pick out Orion now (and Mars too, but that doesn’t count).  I already knew how to find the Southern Cross, so I won’t count that.

#036 - Visit 5 different Melbourne markets (1/5)
Tim and I have hit the QV markets several times, including the Night Markets.  Now to find some new ones, maybe a bit closer to home.

#037 - Visit every Melbourne suburb within 7km of the city centre (?/?)
This one is in progress, especially since I live within that radius!  However, I haven’t had any luck tracking down a reliable list of suburbs within that radius, and the maps I own don’t clearly identify suburb borders.  The first step in finishing this task is making that list, so I need to work it out.

I’m really happy with the progress I’ve made so far, although none of the items I completed were really all that challenging.  February will be a big month for my 101 List as well, here’s what I plan to tackle:

#001 - Weight Loss Goal #1 (50%)
Obviously, this one won’t be tackled in a month… but February is the month that I begin to make a conscious effort towards this goal.

#005 - Learn 15 new vegetarian recipes (1/15) February should be a good month to learn a couple more recipes, without derailing #001

#010 - Walk to the city and back 8 times in one month (0/8)
I want to do this before it starts to cool down too much, or it will be harder to get out of bed early in the morning.

#015 - Find permanent fulltime work
Temping sucks.

#061 - Organise my filing cabinet
This is underway, but this month I’ll finish it off completely.

EDIT:

This seemed appropriate, in light of February’s goals.

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