Tag Archives: memories

Reminiscing

Reminiscing is a curious thing.
A scent, a song, a scrap of paper tucked inside a book, and suddenly whole chapters of life come wandering back in. Some of these chapters are easily navigated, whilst others require a whole lot more attention. These may be filled with drama, heartbreak and lessons to learn. Lately I’ve found myself thinking about the many lives we seem to live within one lifetime.

The years teaching Japanese — chalk dust – yes, chalk dust. In a way I missed the way the colours could be blended, the light and heavy texture in writing Japanese characters. All that went as the curriculum leaned into laptop programs.

Hiragana, Katakana and Kanji charts. Some of which I am rediscovering as I unpack the multitude of boxes from the recent move. I thought that I had given away all my teaching materials and resources prior to the move. But here they are, popping up unexpectedly and triggering the reminiscing.

Memories of those delightful moments when a student suddenly got it. Language lessons were never really just about language. They were about curiosity, confidence, culture, and connection. We made year books, Japanese gardens and hopefully created an interest in Japan for young minds to explore. Long before “play-based learning” became fashionable jargon, there was the quiet understanding that children learn best when imagination is invited to the table. I presented to several conferences about creativity in language programs during my teaching career and if so inclined, you can read my  Conference Notes .

Another chapter was the deep dive into Steiner teacher training. Learning was painted, modelled, sung, and stitched. Tuesday evenings for four years, not an indulgence or a chore like traditional university-based courses. Where I created a pentatonic harp slowly carved out of a plank of Oregon wood, where I sang, where stories mattered. Seasons mattered. Wonder mattered. A place where creativity wasn’t an “extra” but the heartbeat of learning itself. This wonder still lingers today.

Looking back, it’s the people who colour the memories most vividly. Friends who arrived unexpectedly and stayed for decades. Friends who drifted gently out of orbit as life changed shape. And some who left far too soon – motorbike accidents or terminal illnesses. Leaving behind unfinished conversations, shared jokes that still echo, and moments that can still catch unexpectedly at the heart.

There’s a tenderness to reminiscing as we get older. Less urgency somehow. More gratitude. Not every chapter lasted forever. Not every plan unfolded neatly. But each season brought its own gifts, lessons, laughter and companions for the road.

And perhaps that’s the quiet magic of memory —
it reminds us that even fleeting connections leave lasting fingerprints on the soul.

Tides, Terminals, and the Turn of a Leaf

I came into the world on a tide—once, twice, the family cast off from familiar shores and sailed halfway across the world, not so much fleeing as following a call no one could name. Dad was always chasing something elusive and the grass always seemed greener elsewhere.

Childhood was a series of ships and tea chests, sometimes packed in haste and unpacked with quiet hope, where the sun felt strange and each place had a characteristic scent.

Where the sky was different. A contrast of pale skies hemmed in with close horizons and wide, open and vibrant skies. The horizon shimmering in the summer sun. Terminals for ships and trains. Both with the smell of big diesel engines getting ready to transport us to the next adventure.

We left village life and suburbia like shedding an old skin. One last tuckshop order wrapped in greaseproof paper before the energy of the bush claimed us.

There, time moved with the rustle of the old peppercorn tree planted at the front gate, and school clothes gathered red dust.

No uniforms here. What a contrast to the genteel atmosphere of the old school house and English gardens surrounding it, that had been left behind.

The few trees became tutors. Their lessons were soft but lasting: patience, stillness, and the sacred art of finding your way in tangled things. The undersides of tree leaves turning skyward in anticipation of rain.

Living in the bush carved another layer into me—a love for wide skies, pockets filled with rocks and feathers, a bicycle basket of Sturt Desert Pea flowers and a tendency to personify trees like old friends. It’s probably why I talk to plants and feel oddly soothed by the smell of eucalyptus and campfire smoke.

Changing schools felt like hopping stones across a river. Some were slick and uncertain; others caught me mid-leap with surprising kindness. I learned early how to read a room—then a country, then a climate.

I carried no accent, but spoke the unspoken dialect of adapting: listen first, laugh second, lay your roots lightly.

It’s no wonder, then, that now I read maps like tea leaves and find kinship in people with weathered stories. I can sense when a place won’t hold me—or when it already has. My bookshelf groans with collections of history books, novels and the metaphysical. My house is half sanctuary, half holder of memories where my own children grew up.

I still find comfort in the smell of books and eucalyptus. I was prone to rearranging the furniture when a storm brews, but when the last dog aged and became blind that practice had to stop.

I keep feathers like promises. I collect things I probably shouldn’t—seeds, old things, oracle cards….

I gravitate toward eclectic conversations and people with unusual earrings. I can’t commit to one tea, Yes, I have a whole cupboard devoted to different teas. And I still have a habit of subconsciously checking for exit signs in cafés, a relic of all those unfamiliar places.

Some call it restlessness. I prefer to think of it as tidal memory—my life still syncing to that first great departure from the warmth of the tropics to a cool English climate and then onto the wide open spaces of Australia..

A life shaped by tides, terminals and the turn of a leaf. Charting constellations both above and within. Sure, the constant moving meant I never had one “hometown,” but I did inherit a deep sense that home isn’t a place—it’s a patchwork quilt of moments, people, and curious habits stitched together with every hello and goodbye.

Gratitude

At the time of writing this, I’m up to Day 21 of a 30 day challenge to show gratitude for a different thing each day.

I found the original idea on LinkedIn and started by entering the questions in my work diary at the top of each page. All well and good, but I don’t take the diary with me to the retreat, so I realized that I would miss a few days here and there.

The solution to this was to post these daily questions and answer them on my Facebook business page. It’s interesting reading what others are grateful for as well.

So yesterday’s day of gratitude (Day 20) question was “Who in your life are you grateful for?” I could think of many and my initial response was my immediate family. Then later in the evening a cousin contacted me to say her father, my mother’s twin, had passed away that morning, just a day short of what would have been their 91st birthday. Mum had always joked and said she was going to live to a 100 like her Granny, but she left this realm just over 17 years ago. Back to gratitude….. I am grateful to my Uncle (and Aunt) for the many holidays I had with them during the six years we spent in the UK. Memories of playing with my cousins and getting up to all sorts of mischief.

Today’s question is “What song are you most grateful for?”

These seem like simple questions, but there are so many responses that can be made, which is why I’m planning on repeating the 30 Day Challenge again, but with the questions in a different order and created a booklet to print out and write in.

What song am I grateful for? Porcelain by Moby. Don’t know why, but it soothes my soul.