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Avatar and that tree

Tue, 19 Jan 2010, 05:41 pm
John Grim11 posts in thread
And so it was that I took my son to see the most talked about film in ages, and yes, he loved it, and yes, we both marvelled at the special effects which very cleverly masked the most routine of Hollywood scripts...and lo and behold, when the sacred tree was brutally felled by the bad guys, I found my mind a wandering to a man perched up a tree in suburban Gosnells. Here it was, the most expensive movie ever made, with the bad guys, (the Gosnells council, who make no mistake, will have their way in the end), and the good guy, our lone man in his very own sacred gum tree. Avatar raised my awareness of this man's courage, ridiculed by some, he has proved himself a hero in real life. I doubt he'll get his just reward, and the tree will go, for let's face it, this gum tree will only spoil the streetscape, and we can't have non-uniformity now can we? Sadly, real life is far less colourful and infinitely more predictable than fantasy. So to the man in the tree, who like the warriors of Avatar is fighting a powerful army with nought but a bow and arrow, I offer a salute to your courage. Hopefully, there's more lesson in your real life action, than in the fantasy world that is Avatar.

Thread (11 posts)

John GrimTue, 19 Jan 2010, 05:41 pm
And so it was that I took my son to see the most talked about film in ages, and yes, he loved it, and yes, we both marvelled at the special effects which very cleverly masked the most routine of Hollywood scripts...and lo and behold, when the sacred tree was brutally felled by the bad guys, I found my mind a wandering to a man perched up a tree in suburban Gosnells. Here it was, the most expensive movie ever made, with the bad guys, (the Gosnells council, who make no mistake, will have their way in the end), and the good guy, our lone man in his very own sacred gum tree. Avatar raised my awareness of this man's courage, ridiculed by some, he has proved himself a hero in real life. I doubt he'll get his just reward, and the tree will go, for let's face it, this gum tree will only spoil the streetscape, and we can't have non-uniformity now can we? Sadly, real life is far less colourful and infinitely more predictable than fantasy. So to the man in the tree, who like the warriors of Avatar is fighting a powerful army with nought but a bow and arrow, I offer a salute to your courage. Hopefully, there's more lesson in your real life action, than in the fantasy world that is Avatar.
Tim ProsserTue, 19 Jan 2010, 10:16 pm

Actually, that man in his

Actually, that man in his gum tree is not situated in suburban Gosnells, but Hume Road in Thornlie. I can remember back to before the High School was built down there, when there were no houses at all...just lots and LOTS of gum trees and kangaroos and bandicoots and goannas and...but what's the use of recalling all of this? Suburbia is there now, well established and irremovable, and my memories, sad though they are, are worthless.

Still, I, too, salute this man for trying to save the last of the gum trees that I remember so fondly. That area was once unspoiled bushland. It was my playground.

 

Per Ardua Ad Astra

Tim ProsserWed, 20 Jan 2010, 01:36 am

What the hell...'flagged as

What the hell...'flagged as potential spam'?

 

Per Ardua Ad Astra

Tim ProsserWed, 20 Jan 2010, 02:14 am

John, and all others who

John, and all others who may read this, your post about the man in the tree has triggered thought processes in me that I cannot get rid of unless I write them down. I apologise for hi-jacking the thread, but the thought has occurred to me in recent weeks that I really should travel out to Hume Road in Thornlie and offer my support to this principled man and his cause, even if it only takes the form of words of encouragement.

However, there are personal reasons for why I have not done so. I'm now going to make those reasons public in an effort to garner some courage of my own...and, again, I apologise for the convoluted nature of my story's telling.

In 1966 our little family had outgrown the weatherboard house in Monger Street, Perth (the area that the 1980s trend-setters decided should now be called 'Northbridge'), and my young parents put a downpayment on a block of land out in the bush...at Lennox Road in Thornlie. My father had served a building apprenticeship and took it upon himself to design our new house in red clinker brick, well back from the street and retaining as many of the gums, banksias, sheoaks and kangaroo-paws as possible. The builders cursed him for making their job so difficult...damned trees everywhere, in the way of their trucks! There was to be a large, open fireplace...and the builders hated that too. "You're mad, mate!" they said, 'Oil heating's the way of the future!"

But Dad...and Mum, were adamant. They didn't WANT everybody else's idea of the perfect modern home. They got their open fireplace...and their antique back door salvaged from one of the offices in the now demolished Perth Barracks. "Bloody old junk!" said the builders, "These people are crack-pots! Why can't they have aluminium doors like everyone else?"

Eventually the house was finished and we moved in early in '67. For us kids it was a wonderland. Surrounded by bush and with no fences, kangaroos bounded about in absolute freedom and if you didn't watch out you'd be knocked over by them. Curious bandicoots came to the back door, where we fed them on food scraps and so they kept on coming. I took it upon myself to rid the local goanna population of ticks...doing my bit to help, while not realising that they'd simply scurry away into the bush and immediately collect more of the nasty little parasites. I roamed far and wide through the surrounding bush...and I loved it.

And then, only about three months later, my Dad was promoted and transferred to Sydney with his job. We packed up, rented out our new house and went there for three years.

When we came back to Thornlie early in 1970, we were horrified at the transformation of our bush wonderland. All the trees and bush were gone all along the street, replaced by featureless lawns and soulless cream-brick store-bought houses, all in perfect alignment like naval officers on parade in their pristine whites. Our dark red house, set further back on the block, was like a missing tooth in Donny Osmond's otherwise perfect smile. We were shunned as 'Johnny-come-lateleys', the odd ones out.

My mother died in that house on Thursday the 11th of November, 1971, at the pitifully young age of thirty-one. I walked home from Thornlie High School that afternoon, from Ovens Road, along Hume Road and left into Lennox road...and found her there, gazing up at the ceiling through half-closed eyelids and her mouth open with her last, desperate gasp. It was the worst day of my life.

I escaped from Thornlie and its awful memories in 1975 when I joined the RAAF. My poor, struggling father eventually lost the house in 1980. Now...he's dead too, just three years ago. I've since stood in front of that house, that somebody else owns now, and I'm not ashamed to admit that I shed a few tears on the long walk back to the new railway station. I decided then that I would NEVER set foot in Thornlie again. The place that my beautiful young parents thought would provide such a healthy and happy future for us all...only brought sorrow instead. Now it's altered out of all recognition. The bush that we loved so much...is gone.

But now, there is a man trying to save one last vestige of it, and he's doing so against powerful odds. It may not be one of the original gum trees...indeed it may even have been planted there after his house was built on Hume Road...but it's still a gum tree and it belongs there. Can I now put aside my fear of returning to Thornlie, to go there, climb that tree and shake that man's hand?

Can I enlist an army of supporters, perhaps from this website, to come with me?

Thanks for reading this far.

Tim.

 

 

Per Ardua Ad Astra

LabrugWed, 20 Jan 2010, 08:59 am

Key Words

I got it for you. When a post is flagged as potential spam, it is because there is something within which has been associated with Spam Previously. They are held until someone like myself comes along to review them. I will then remove or republish as required. I also mark/unmark posts as Spam which helps develop our SPAM trapping tool.

As for your specific post, the first post was picked through a keyword search based upon a list generated by an ongoing catalogue of SPAM trapping. The repeated posts were flagged as ... repeated posts.

Absit invidia (and DFT :nono:)

Jeff Watkins
SN Profile
Photographer

Tim ProsserFri, 29 Jan 2010, 11:05 pm

Am I imagining things? I

Am I imagining things? I could have sworn somebody posted a reply to this today, which brought it back up to the top of RECENT POSTS. I intended to come back to it later, which I've just done...and lo and behold, it's back where it has languished for nine days, unwanted and buried under a great many other posts, and the reply that I read this afternoon has vanished!

Please, somebody tell me I'm not seeing pink elephants...!

 

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LabrugFri, 29 Jan 2010, 11:14 pm

Bad Meat

It was SPAM and was removed.

Absit invidia (and DFT :nono:)

Jeff Watkins
SN Profile
Photographer
Community Spirit

Tim ProsserFri, 29 Jan 2010, 11:23 pm

Oh...okay, thank you Jeff.

Oh...okay, thank you Jeff. I suppose this can be safely buried again, then.

 

Per Ardua Ad Astra

LogosSat, 30 Jan 2010, 04:59 am

sorry tim

your story moved me deeply. if i was able to come to wa and join you i would. i have voted this thread as excellent amd made this comment in part to help keep the thread alive Is that all there is? Well if that's all there is my friend, then let's keep dancing. www.tonymoore.id.au
JoeMcSat, 30 Jan 2010, 10:02 am

I'll oil my mobile zimmer

I'll oil my mobile zimmer frame & shuffle along in 'Albion' style as well tim.

That is if he still there?

After the City Clerk Jerk'd about with the H&S yellow card of an 'unaproved structure'.

At the very least he should have awarded some regonision locally on Australia Day as a true blue ocker!

Tim ProsserSat, 30 Jan 2010, 11:21 am

Thanks Tony...and Joe, I'd

Thanks Tony...and Joe, I'd be pleased to have you along with me, even if it's only the two of us, as seems quite likely, I'm afraid.

 

Per Ardua Ad Astra

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