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Helen Vann's avatar

When my brother was dying from liver cancer back in 2010 it was such a wake up for not only him, but everyone around. In the process of letting go of his life he became a much better person which was remarkable because he wasn’t a bad person in the first place. But all the arrogance, striving for success and other worldly concerns fell away and he became a truly wonderful person. As his executor who was left to wrap up his life the lesson I took away was that the hearse doesn’t have a tow bar.

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Nalini's avatar

Well said. I've had many skin checks over the years but I'm about a year overdue right now. For people like me - with albinism - annual checks are important. And if you have skin cancer in the family (I do) it's even more important.

Life is a rollercoaster. I love that quote from Parenting (Parenthood? The Steve Martin comedy.)

Two things stand out for me right now, in the middle of this state of flux and in the middle of waiting (waiting, ENDLESS waiting for my house to be finished so I can move out of this claustrophobic house opposite a football club with a nightmare of a landlord and property manager).

One is walking. I enjoy walking. Especially in the bush, surrounded by unspoilt life in the form of flora and fauna. Alternatively, I quite like a stroll along the beach, particularly if I don't have to slog my way through dry sand trying to bog me down or trip me up. (I can't see the holes either!)

The other is my dog. She's awesome. I am her First Human. My husband is the Spare Human. She'll settle for walking with him if I'm not able but she tells me her opinion of this before and afterwards, and she tells him what she thinks of this for the first hundred metres or so after leaving the house. "Wait, YOU FORGOT SOMEONE. WE MUST GO BAAAACK!" She'd make a good sheepdog too, as evidenced by her determination to keep the flock of humans together. Except if I say "Beach? Do you want to go to the beach?" In which case - as happened this week - we abandoned the Spare Human in Brighton and took off at a power walk. (It's ok, he had his car.)

I'm learning to play, not something I really did much as a kid, definitely not by the time I was in the middle of primary school. It was school, chores, reading or watching TV. I think playing was too noisy? Or something. I was allowed if I went outside, away from the house, alone. Which, come to think of it, I did. Then, when I was in high school, when I was allowed and I was visiting Mum and co, I used to take my bicycle up to the forestry with the dogs, literally DRAGGED my bike up a road so steep I'm amazed that cars could drive up it, then I used another better road to coast down with the dogs Tam and Patsy following behind. They were always super happy for those adventures too.

Perhaps I found my happy place back then and now Silkie (also a black dog like Tam and Patsy, just a different breed) has helped me redevelop that happy place (without a bike) in a new location. Sometimes it's the simple things that make life fulfilling.

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