Season's greetings, one and all. Well, I tell you: the last few weeks, matter of fact my whole time in Calgary (and Canada), has been magical. I've had the best of luck imaginable. Working hard, I've been, too. Two jobs, some long hours and money coming back in. My car, the mighty goose is now registered and insured and on the road; still not paid-for entirely, as yet, though that day will come. She's a bloody ripper, too.
I was living under the roof for a while of Isaac Hill and Yazid, awesome people and good times. Really good base camp. Then the landlady found out about me and I had to get out of there. Then, as by chance I met some people, who's first words to me were "Hello friend, do you happen to like organic vegetables?" I said, "Sure," Then we all went and pillaged the bins out the back of a greengrocer's store caleed Planet Organic. Found so much fresh stuff: mangoes, tomatoes, yams and avocados, etc., etc. A rainbow of stuff mad to waste. Then we went to their place, just up the street from Isaac & Yazid's, and had a big cookoff and drank some wine and mead. It was the day after I finished up my sewers-work with BB Services.
It just so turned out that they had a room available, and, after I had gone back to Edmonton and picked up the goose, I moved on in. It's been an awesome time with these guys, too. Kindred spirits and good people. They eat well and even made up their own batch of cider, which we bottled and partook of the other night. I guess you could say we're all on the hippy side of things. It's been good to tap back into this way of life -- especially before I go up and get into the oilfields in the newyear.
All kinds of other craziness has been happening as well, like winning a $250 flight voucher to anywhere at my work christmas party at the Best Western. It's just been ridiculous and ever-humbling. I must be doing something right, I tell you. Going for a weekend away at the mountain of Revelstoke for New Years. By the name of the place alone, it's going to be wild. Yes there vill be revelry, (revelations?), and stokededness. Huzzah! Also just so happens that Isaac and Yazid AND my new housemates had been planning to go there for ages. Just meant to be, I guess. It's all just meant to be. Magic in the air, my friends.
Christmas was really nice as well. Bit of wine, cider, mana and Mother Nature with Nick whom I live with. Good to catch up with people back home and across the world and Mum called, too. She's looking well, rosy cheeked as always, haha what a go-getter! To all of you, season's best greetings. May you feast, love, drink, be merry and watch cricket. Just go out and spread the love; Feliz Navidad!
Monday, December 26, 2011
Monday, November 28, 2011
Base Camp
Why hello there, ladies and gentiles.
Well I'm still in Calgary, and I have two jobs now. By day, I am working with a small company, playing sewer/stormwater cleaner's assistant. Basically I drive around in a truck, inspect manholes and walk/stand around. It's a pretty cruisy job and I don't mind it at all.
By nights and on the weekends, I'm working at a Best Western doing some catering and bartending and whatnot for minimum wage. The pay is pretty lousy, but the hours are reasonable and the work pretty easy. Late nights though, considering I have to get out of bed at 5 every day. But it's money for jam, and as soon as I start getting these fortnightly pay cheques, I'll be on the way up good and proper. Plus I get to wear a bow-tie to work. Ridiculous how dapper I look at minimum wage.
I have been through a pretty hectic period: breaking laptops, losing (and finding, thank Christ) passports, driver's license and banking fuckarounds, being broke, lounge-sleeping and worrying too much; but I have been killing it. Taking care of business and getting shit done. Constantly on the move, constantly busy. It's taking a bit of a toll no doubt, seeing as I'm always tired and cannot stop thinking, thinking, but I am taking some pretty good form into the Christmas period.
The general plan I have right now is that I stay in Calgary until Christmas, stick it out with these jobs and pay off my car's rego and insurance and get it on the road. Still waiting on a license from QLD Transport, but I can't afford it yet, anyway -- I spent way too much money in Edmonton and BC. I should start getting decent cheques in a week's time, but until then I am still pretty skint. All the money in my Commonwealth account is now gone! Haha pretty standard Jimbo, but at least it has gotten me to the point where I am now making financial plans and budgeting myself and actually learning to watch my money. Valuable lessons here.
After the New Year ticks over, I'm going back to Edmonton; I'm going to run around in a frenzy until I get an oil rig job and stick to that until April. This is where the big money is, and I'm really banking on it to work out if I'm to be a shot at the drive down south. Consequentially, it'll do me a bit of good to learn about the oil industry. There's some pretty tight parallels to the industry up here and coal in Queensland. All good knowledge for a journalist, eh.
Back in Oz, Mikie is working like a bastard and looks like having a solid amount of money in the bank when he gets here at the end of february, so things are looking up for this trip. We are both going through all that unpleasant hard-working real-life shit that we have to to climb that metaphorical mountain and make this trip happen. We're going to make it. No doubt.
Also I'm trying to fit in some snowboarding and San Francisco, but who knows when that will happen. Not before Christmas, but as far as I'm concerned still both definite. As far as the weather goes, it has been snowing from time to time, but it is an unusually warm start to winter. Minus 21 has come around a couple of times though (plus a bonus windchill to take it down to -28). Not really that fun. I don't mind the could though... acclimatising. So many layers and thermal pants. Huzzah. Snow is awesome.
Well I'm still in Calgary, and I have two jobs now. By day, I am working with a small company, playing sewer/stormwater cleaner's assistant. Basically I drive around in a truck, inspect manholes and walk/stand around. It's a pretty cruisy job and I don't mind it at all.
By nights and on the weekends, I'm working at a Best Western doing some catering and bartending and whatnot for minimum wage. The pay is pretty lousy, but the hours are reasonable and the work pretty easy. Late nights though, considering I have to get out of bed at 5 every day. But it's money for jam, and as soon as I start getting these fortnightly pay cheques, I'll be on the way up good and proper. Plus I get to wear a bow-tie to work. Ridiculous how dapper I look at minimum wage.
I have been through a pretty hectic period: breaking laptops, losing (and finding, thank Christ) passports, driver's license and banking fuckarounds, being broke, lounge-sleeping and worrying too much; but I have been killing it. Taking care of business and getting shit done. Constantly on the move, constantly busy. It's taking a bit of a toll no doubt, seeing as I'm always tired and cannot stop thinking, thinking, but I am taking some pretty good form into the Christmas period.
The general plan I have right now is that I stay in Calgary until Christmas, stick it out with these jobs and pay off my car's rego and insurance and get it on the road. Still waiting on a license from QLD Transport, but I can't afford it yet, anyway -- I spent way too much money in Edmonton and BC. I should start getting decent cheques in a week's time, but until then I am still pretty skint. All the money in my Commonwealth account is now gone! Haha pretty standard Jimbo, but at least it has gotten me to the point where I am now making financial plans and budgeting myself and actually learning to watch my money. Valuable lessons here.
After the New Year ticks over, I'm going back to Edmonton; I'm going to run around in a frenzy until I get an oil rig job and stick to that until April. This is where the big money is, and I'm really banking on it to work out if I'm to be a shot at the drive down south. Consequentially, it'll do me a bit of good to learn about the oil industry. There's some pretty tight parallels to the industry up here and coal in Queensland. All good knowledge for a journalist, eh.
Back in Oz, Mikie is working like a bastard and looks like having a solid amount of money in the bank when he gets here at the end of february, so things are looking up for this trip. We are both going through all that unpleasant hard-working real-life shit that we have to to climb that metaphorical mountain and make this trip happen. We're going to make it. No doubt.
Also I'm trying to fit in some snowboarding and San Francisco, but who knows when that will happen. Not before Christmas, but as far as I'm concerned still both definite. As far as the weather goes, it has been snowing from time to time, but it is an unusually warm start to winter. Minus 21 has come around a couple of times though (plus a bonus windchill to take it down to -28). Not really that fun. I don't mind the could though... acclimatising. So many layers and thermal pants. Huzzah. Snow is awesome.
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Stairway to Heaven...
Bizarre times, the last few weeks. No doubt about it. Sad times, scared times, standard batshit-crazy times. On the same day that Zain gave me that van, now dubbed "The Grey Goose", Kylen went missing. She worked at the hostel in Edmonton, and over the two weeks or so prior, we had become pretty close. She was beautiful, smart, free and loved. An amazing artist. A bright spark burning at both ends. She told no-one of her sadness, hid it well. Not even those closest to her could tell. Many are those who will never forget her, but now she wanders free. I know that she will be looked after, and I wish her better luck in the next.
In the week or so that has passed since that time, this ol' life o' mine's been a pretty mixed bag. Some really good times, three really awesome Halloween nights, some moments of real motivation and inspiration. Times of reflection, introspection. Depression, Faith and Fear. Always, always good, good friends. The constant stream of incredible people that is my life seems to have no end in sight, thank God, touch wood.
I had to get out of Edmonton, escape the craziness and Armidale-meets-Hotel-California vibrations in the walls there. So, I said goodbye to all the remaining people and the Goose for a while for a shot at Calgary. The plan being to stay with my mate Isaac for a couple of weeks, get a couple of jobs and make some cash to get the car on the road by Christmas, before returning to Edmonton most likely in January to get into some of that oil rig big money dolla dolla bill to finance the impending spirit quest towards a Texan-style Independence Day, Ecuadorian Yage ceremonies 12/12, jungles beaches and fat cigars and all the rest.
Problem is, as most of you know, for all of my Fidiculous/Rantastic ideas and, seemingly, blind fucking faith... I am more often than not the unknowing architect of my own demise. As I sat here tonight coughing up the phlegm and snot I earned through my stubborn refusal to let my thongs go until the day before the snow, it slowly dawned on me. Every little bit of "bad luck", every frustration and stick in the mud that seem to plague me half the time like a curse or a plague of annoying bees is, and pretty well has always been, MY OWN FAULT, the direct consequence of my own dumb actions. Particularly now, as I sit here jobless (though with two interviews pending, I have been flat out lately, mind), and dipping fingers into my last thousand dollars. I've been pointing fingers and getting all down and dejected and pulling my hair out and wondering "why, why, why". Now I know why.
Ahhhh... The first step is Acceptance, right? ...Ah-Hem.. I now hereby Accept that it is My Fault that I am in this rather absurd position right now, 5 months left in Canada with the following Mountain to ascend: as follows;
* Driver's License/Commbank seemingly endless bullshit, * Paying for, Registering, Insuring and fixing The Grey Goose, * Securing at least three (3) jobs * Visiting San Francisco * Snowboard trips and Benjamin Jeffree * ....Annnnd saving a cheeky 12 grand or so to get me down to South America.
5 months to become a man. A man Takes Care of Business. I have some serious Resposibilities now. To Zain, to The Mayor, hell, to fucking Everybody who has gotten me this far. I do happen have a good plan though, and I'm sticking to it. All I gotta do is get in amongst it, get to work and make it happen. I've got this, people. No doubt.
In the week or so that has passed since that time, this ol' life o' mine's been a pretty mixed bag. Some really good times, three really awesome Halloween nights, some moments of real motivation and inspiration. Times of reflection, introspection. Depression, Faith and Fear. Always, always good, good friends. The constant stream of incredible people that is my life seems to have no end in sight, thank God, touch wood.
I had to get out of Edmonton, escape the craziness and Armidale-meets-Hotel-California vibrations in the walls there. So, I said goodbye to all the remaining people and the Goose for a while for a shot at Calgary. The plan being to stay with my mate Isaac for a couple of weeks, get a couple of jobs and make some cash to get the car on the road by Christmas, before returning to Edmonton most likely in January to get into some of that oil rig big money dolla dolla bill to finance the impending spirit quest towards a Texan-style Independence Day, Ecuadorian Yage ceremonies 12/12, jungles beaches and fat cigars and all the rest.
Problem is, as most of you know, for all of my Fidiculous/Rantastic ideas and, seemingly, blind fucking faith... I am more often than not the unknowing architect of my own demise. As I sat here tonight coughing up the phlegm and snot I earned through my stubborn refusal to let my thongs go until the day before the snow, it slowly dawned on me. Every little bit of "bad luck", every frustration and stick in the mud that seem to plague me half the time like a curse or a plague of annoying bees is, and pretty well has always been, MY OWN FAULT, the direct consequence of my own dumb actions. Particularly now, as I sit here jobless (though with two interviews pending, I have been flat out lately, mind), and dipping fingers into my last thousand dollars. I've been pointing fingers and getting all down and dejected and pulling my hair out and wondering "why, why, why". Now I know why.
Ahhhh... The first step is Acceptance, right? ...Ah-Hem.. I now hereby Accept that it is My Fault that I am in this rather absurd position right now, 5 months left in Canada with the following Mountain to ascend: as follows;
* Driver's License/Commbank seemingly endless bullshit, * Paying for, Registering, Insuring and fixing The Grey Goose, * Securing at least three (3) jobs * Visiting San Francisco * Snowboard trips and Benjamin Jeffree * ....Annnnd saving a cheeky 12 grand or so to get me down to South America.
5 months to become a man. A man Takes Care of Business. I have some serious Resposibilities now. To Zain, to The Mayor, hell, to fucking Everybody who has gotten me this far. I do happen have a good plan though, and I'm sticking to it. All I gotta do is get in amongst it, get to work and make it happen. I've got this, people. No doubt.
Kylen Groenveld
1991 - 2011
R.I.P.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Van!
It's ridiculous. I just got given a car. No bullshit. My good friend Zain Mirza just gave me a van on the faith that I will pay him back after I work hard and earn it. He didn't even want any money, but I've got to pay back this solid. It's amazing.
Although I did get a bit stuck in Edmonton, it was all good and actually a lot of fun. I met a ridiculous amount of good people here. Some really good happenings and good conversations. Good Karma. It's a really great hostel, the HI in Edmonton. Great staff, nice home. It's a pretty nice town, too. The people are friendly here. Most of my friends have been Canadians too, which is a pretty cool bonus. Lots of walking and talking with a new bro called Takhar. Lots of good parties. Unforgettable times, no doubt.
But, it's time to get serious now. Now I have a Resposibility, and a big one at that. I've gotta make it happen, no chance for excuses. No more clowning about. No more waiting.
I've been waiting around alot for one company to arrange a drug test so I can go out on the oil rigs, but it just hasn't been happening. I've honestly not been so productive, but at first it did seem a guaranteed job. I've got my First Aid and Hydrogen Sulphide tickets now, though, so I should be good to go whenever the time is right.
The problem at the moment, though, is that everybody up here, or at least a good majority, are stuck in the very same boat right now. The oilfields haven't frozen yet and they can't drill until the ground is frozen and firm enough to work on. It must be costing the industry a fair bit of money. No doubt.
So... the time's not right to join the queue here at the oilfields, not yet anyway. It will just be more waiting, regardless. I'm going to head down to Calgary. I've got a mate named Isaac who is going to show me the ropes down there, and I really want to hit the ground running and get amongst some work -- the savings have taken a pounding. I've got a good feeling about this, It feels like fate again. I mean the signs are ridiculous. A car? Seriously? Zain! Just like Muz, a champion bloke -- No worries. How does this shit keep happening? All of you people in my life are amazing. Thank You.
My new ride is a Chevvy Venture. It's a people mover with room to sleep at the back. It's cozy, runs like an a dream and has all the bells and whistles. It's the perfect vehicle for this strange and long adventure. All I have to do now is sort my license out, fix the brakes, register and insure it and Save money, not to mention get a good job, or two. No worries though, I got this. It's just the kick in the arse that I needed. Some Responsibility; it's not just my arse on the line here anymore, it's Simpkin's as well.
South America – Here we come! Sometimes I don't think I'm worthy, but man. The power of positive energy. People helping people, we live in amazing times. 99%. Occupy Edmonton was nice, too. Power to the people, right on.
Listo!
Friday, October 14, 2011
Crossing the Rockies
On the last Thursday of September I packed up my bags, caught the skytrain to Surrey and a bus to the edge of the suburbs and Highway 1, the Trans-Canada. I walked up the road a K or two until I decent spot to wait. Long straight, wide shoulder before a bend -- plenty of room to stop. The general plan was to hitch rides from one side of the Rocky Mountains to the other, where I had reason to believe a pretty good job interview awaited me in the beaut little mountain town of Fernie.
I had to wait a little while for my first ride, probably an hour or so, before a black ute pulled up, driven by a paint-spattered construction worker named John, about my age. We talked snowboarding and got all frothed on that. Eventually I was dropped off at Abbotsford, a good 30km ride. From my drop-off point I could see Baker Mountain in the US, covered with snow and looking all majestic. Froth. I walked to a long stretch of highway and put the thumb to work again. Within minutes a blue hatchback pulled into a parking bay up ahead. I wasn't sure if it was for me or not at first, so I went to the window to see what was up. I looked in to see a lady, probably around thirty odd, in the process of chopping up a leafy mix. She offered me a ride, and a joint to boot. Things were definitely looking up.
We smoked our little jingo and had a good conversation. Anne had been living on Vancouver Island with her husband, but work had dried up there, so they decided to move to Chilliwack, as they had some friends there. Good lady, I hope she does well, and know she will. We exchanged nice words as she dropped me off the exit on the western outskirts of Chilliwack, a bit of a walk from the highway, but another 30km to the east. It was mid afternoon by now, probably some time close to two-two-thirty. No phone or watch, though, so I just had to pull the ol' Croc Dundee.
On my way back to the highway it finally began to dawn on me that this was going to be a truly epic mission, and I started getting pretty psyched for it. I could see the Rockies now to the East, South and North. I was within kilometers of entering the fabled mountains. I stopped by the side of the road to have a look at my map, have a rest and get some food and water. I still had a thousand or so kilometers to cover to Fernie, but my outlook was buoyed by my two good rides – feeling positive. I found a fresh food market not far off the road and bought a selection of the freshest fruit, a couple of litres of water and some juice. Out the front were these two rusty old wagons, filled with pumpkins of all shapes and sizes – green ones, red ones, orange and stripey ones. It was nice.
I went back to the highway. Ahead as far as the eye could see were barns and farmlands, cornfields and such nestled in a wide flat valley formed by some humungous glacier, millions of years ago. The sun was shining, life was sublime. I took a good spot and waited. I could see another hitchhiker up ahead. He got a ride in a white ute and that was that. I decided to get moving. The highway was straight and long, wide shouldered and seemingly ideal for rides. Plenty of traffic though, and moving fast at 100mph. Trucks and trucks booming to wherever. I would tramp along a km or so, stop, sit on my bag and stick out the thumb and have a drink and a rest and then go again.
I went back to the highway. Ahead as far as the eye could see were barns and farmlands, cornfields and such nestled in a wide flat valley formed by some humungous glacier, millions of years ago. The sun was shining, life was sublime. I took a good spot and waited. I could see another hitchhiker up ahead. He got a ride in a white ute and that was that. I decided to get moving. The highway was straight and long, wide shouldered and seemingly ideal for rides. Plenty of traffic though, and moving fast at 100mph. Trucks and trucks booming to wherever. I would tramp along a km or so, stop, sit on my bag and stick out the thumb and have a drink and a rest and then go again.
A few hours of this, and I started to get a bit worried. Nobody had even looked like stopping for ages. I began looking along the side of the road for places to sleep. Another hour and a half of tramping and stopping along the road. Nothing but fast traffic and the occasional beep or abuse from passing idiots. The sun was setting, so I gave up for the night. I spied a good place to kip down right behind me in the ditch beside the road, but I stayed put for the meantime, just chilling on my bag eating an apple, to watch the sun go down behind the mountains. A police car swooped in to have a look at me but didn't hassle me, instead pulling a car over for speeding a little further up the road.
And so, as dusk turned into night, I retreated to my little ditch, fashioned myself a surprisingly cozy little bed amongst the long wheatgrass at the bottom. I rolled out my sleeping bag and planned my route to Fernie by torchlight. I was fairly tired, but feeling pretty good about the mission. I lay awake for ages, blowing smoke at the stars. Endless trucks thundered past. Eventually I got some sleep, and slept well, before waking up somewhat cold and damp in the pre-dawn light. I stretched out my weary bones, pissed in the bush and brushed my teeth, packed up my gear and made my way back to the roadside. Lollies, an apple and a cigarette for breakfast; thumb out in anticipation of an early ride to Hope, where I planned to get off the Trans-Canada and hopefully escape the intense, fast-paced bombing traffic of the highway for some country roads on Highway 3.
I did not get an early lift. I did not get a lift for a long, long time. I ended up walking probably 15 kilometers that day, slogging it out along the long straight road. Walk a K, take a break. Walk a K, take a break. It wasn't until mid-afternoon that I got a ride from right at the base of the Rockies with an Edmonton oil rigger named Luc. He was on his way home, traveling Northwest across the mountains towards and through Jasper. I was just glad to be in a car, moving fast agin. We had a few real good laughs. I ended up deviating from my planned path, from Hope to Kamloops, thinking it could well be a better way through the mountains. It wasn't. It was a good ride. I also got some clues to where the big bucks were to be made up on the oil fields of North Alberta.
I checked into a cheap hotel, nice for the price, actually, and mulled it all over. I was starting to get a nagging feeling that a change in plan was necessary; and that if I kept trying to hitch straight on to Fernie things would start to go wrong. I could just feel it. I didn't even have a knife in my bag, for chrissakes. Too many schoolboy errors and little signs saying "Don't do it". I sensed impending doom, somehow. So I spent a few days in Kamloops -- max chillin' and reorganising my flightpath. I needed the rest, too. TV in bed, what luxury! I prepared myself for a bus ride to Edmonton. It was time to get serious and get some work. The bus ride was beautiful, the Rockies (especially around Jasper) were spectacular. I mean, maybe not as spectacular as Jindabyne, but still pretty good. Night fell and we came into Alberta and the oil fields. Fires like torches in the darkness. Time to learn a thing or two about oil, I thought.
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Dime con quién andas y te diré quién eres...
My first few nights in Vancouver were spent in the far-flung outskirts of East Hastings. My first walk into the city was an eye-opener, to say the least -- Wild junkies, lost homeless, vacant stares; beggars and the lost; living life at the bitter and unforgiving End of the Line. A sad place, a scary place. On my first night, past midnight some time, still wide awake and at the mercies of obscene jetlag, my curiosity got the better of me. As I sat there sipping at a scotch and thinking about the things I'd seen already in the daylight hours -- the people talking to themselves or yelling out at nobody and everybody, the main-vein side-alley self abuse, those wrapped up in their sleeping bags, dead to the world and covered in spew -- I wondered what happened when the lights went out and the clock passed midnight. The imagination recoiled in horror, but I had to see, or at least have a peek...
So I went down. In the end I made it only 2 blocks down the road. Within a matter of minutes I was offered the body of a short, vacant stared woman and some crack cocaine. I gave her a smoke and tried to spark up a conversation with this lady, to gain a little perspective form her life out here, but she quickly lost interest when I refused her offers. I pulled my hood tight and pressed a little deeper. I could sense the stares, but I couldn't bring myself to make eye contact with any of them, mostly sitting in small groups, talking quietly, searching bins, scouring the gutters for decent butts. With every step I could feel the fear creeping in. I stopped on a brightly lit corner and sparked up a cigarette. I could hear a man behind me talking on a phone, talking wildly to somebody about somebody who "Killed all of those women, Fucking Killed all those fucking women... And a white guy, too". Shit was getting a bit real for me, no shit, so I spun on my heels and retreated to the safety of the Patricia Hotel. On my way back I accidentally looked at the wrong dude, who seemed to be a dropout from the skater crowd, wild haired and jumpy. As I passed him by he got up and started yelling at me, kicked a plastic cup towards me. He followed me not so far behind, a string of abuse I could not understand. I was shitting myself. The last thing I heard him say was "You got no place walking around here at this hour of the morning, man!" Indeed.
They do it fucking tough out there. As Vancouver's nicer center slowly pushes into their district, times and space are getting harder. A lot of the cheap hotels that some of them have fought so hard to get themselves into are being repossessed to make way for nicer hotels and business places, meaning more people on the streets. A hard situation, both at ground level and for government. I mean once you get so far down the line, you become difficult to help. There are a lot of homeless in this city. A lot of people who need help.
So I went down. In the end I made it only 2 blocks down the road. Within a matter of minutes I was offered the body of a short, vacant stared woman and some crack cocaine. I gave her a smoke and tried to spark up a conversation with this lady, to gain a little perspective form her life out here, but she quickly lost interest when I refused her offers. I pulled my hood tight and pressed a little deeper. I could sense the stares, but I couldn't bring myself to make eye contact with any of them, mostly sitting in small groups, talking quietly, searching bins, scouring the gutters for decent butts. With every step I could feel the fear creeping in. I stopped on a brightly lit corner and sparked up a cigarette. I could hear a man behind me talking on a phone, talking wildly to somebody about somebody who "Killed all of those women, Fucking Killed all those fucking women... And a white guy, too". Shit was getting a bit real for me, no shit, so I spun on my heels and retreated to the safety of the Patricia Hotel. On my way back I accidentally looked at the wrong dude, who seemed to be a dropout from the skater crowd, wild haired and jumpy. As I passed him by he got up and started yelling at me, kicked a plastic cup towards me. He followed me not so far behind, a string of abuse I could not understand. I was shitting myself. The last thing I heard him say was "You got no place walking around here at this hour of the morning, man!" Indeed.
They do it fucking tough out there. As Vancouver's nicer center slowly pushes into their district, times and space are getting harder. A lot of the cheap hotels that some of them have fought so hard to get themselves into are being repossessed to make way for nicer hotels and business places, meaning more people on the streets. A hard situation, both at ground level and for government. I mean once you get so far down the line, you become difficult to help. There are a lot of homeless in this city. A lot of people who need help.
* * *
I spent the next couple of days going about my business, setting up a bank account and social security number; just getting acclimatised and my feet on the ground and a feel for the city. My perspective of VC was kind of a bit negative still, due to having to walk down Skid row and back every day, but I was having a good time, productive. I booked in early for a weekend at the Youth Hostel downtown, with the idea of meeting a few people, having a good time, and swapping a few stories with and copping some advice from people who were actually out there amongst Canada already doing it.
And so, on friday I checked in to the hostel. From there on out until today, the good times just rolled on. Friday night was Pub Night, Captains and Budweisers and rowdiness with a good good crowd at the Bourbon Bar, an American styled Country & Western Saloon bar. Loose moralled behavior. Saturday night: Drinks at the hostel with all and any comers. Aussies, French, Brazilians, Czech, and a fateful encounter with a group of ladies from San Fransisco. BC bud was discovered. Very good conversations, smoke haze and alcoblur. Soul Talk. Good Times. The power of saying G'day and offering a beer. Met at least 20 awesome awesome people over the course of the weekend.
Sunday was awesome. Burger breakfast with my buddy Shafiqur and the ladies from SF. Larissa, Amanda, Michelle and Cristina. Shafiq and I caught up with the first 3 of the ladies (The Weed Fairies) later on that afternoon, just as they were about to go on a mission to see the Jimi Hendrix shrine on the other side of town -- via an "Amsterdam" style (BYO) cafe, where we were introduced to the VAPOURISER. Freshly baked goods, indeed. We paid our respects to the King. Jimi Hendrix's grandma owned a chicken shop there, way back when, and Jimi would visit her there. It was pretty cool. One or two of his guitars, some of his handwritten lyrics and heaps of other stuff. After that we walked back and had a memorable microwaved family meal and some ice cream. Those SF girls are really something. Awesome people on awesome paths. Good vibrations all round. A little while after that, Larissa and I kind of got all smitten and head over heels and finally got to know each other a little bit. Perfect moment in a park. Then she left the next day. I already miss her. Smitten.
Another bender on the monday with a couple of the Aussie lads who left today (tuesday), and a day of chilling today. A hobo drew my portrait. I love Vancouver. Off the Wall in Van City. Everybody is awesome. 11/10 start to my new amazing adventure. And tomorrow, it's time to move again. East to West across the Rockies to Fernie, by way of thumb. Whisperings of a job in a hotel, only one way to find out. I'm going to the mountains now! Fuck Yeah!
Sunday, September 18, 2011
2.0
A weekend in Brisbane. It’s close. I almost can’t believe that I'm going to make it. It’s been some kind of weekend. I am so unbelievably thankful to all my friends and family, all those that pulled me through my life over the last 12 months --27 years; I really couldn’t live without you. I’m a bit of a freeloader and lately I’ve been taking a lot more than I’ve been giving back. I can be a burden, the human tax. I really don’t deserve the friends I’ve got. I fucking love all of you. I can't give you much but me and some friendship, so thanks for being there for me, even when I've sometimes been a fuck wit. I’ve had the best time, though. My friends are the most awesome people in world. I mean that so much.
And now that you’ve all dragged my over the line this time, I am soon to find myself alone for a while. Time to learn how to stand up for myself, a jump in the deep end. I’m scared as shit, but so keen. I am embarking on an incredible journey. From my big brown land of Oz to the mountains and snow of Canada, hitchhiking through the US at election time with the Mayor, the remains of Ché and Fidel’s revolution, to the lands of Mayan and Inca, mystical Ayahuasca and so much more, all wrapped up in 2012, the year everyone thinks the World’s going to end. So bear with me. This is going to be something, no doubt about it; so keep posted for DANGER! EXCITEMENT! INEXPLICABLE FUCKUPS! .... Romance?; Growing, learning and picking up a little wisdom on the long path to enlightenment and being a man. So I present to you; Jim's Journey 2.0
Extra Super Mega-Thanks to Reannyn and Muz, Smitty and Nicole, Benny and Dave, Eddy, Jjimmy and my MUM!
I owe it all to you.
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