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coffee

My Cup of Tea

January 20, 2010 · 13 comments

my cup of tea

“For all of us who are alive, life is the real issue. Yet so often we judge our existence by the things that happen to us—by whether things are going our way or not. Sometimes we feel strong—strong enough to dictate our future. Sometimes we feel that we can make things happen. Then there are times when we feel totally helpless. But through all the dramas and bumps, there is life. [Right there] is the very powerful, very existence of every single human being.” – Prem Rawat

I believe that people come into and go out of our lives for a reason. Just what that reason is… and what it might mean for us into the future… is often so difficult to understand at the time.

I also firmly believe there is a divine purpose to every single human encounter. That nothing is ever for nothing. And every experience happy or sad goes toward the eventual telling of our own unique life story.

Twenty days into 2010… it’s already been quite a year for me!

As the aircraft took off into the clear blue afternoon sky my heart was heavy. So I put on my headphones… looked out of the window and listened to the inflight music as the sad grey cloak of the city dropped away beneath me and the plane turned sharply toward home.  [No Jackie... I promise I won't play the music here. grin]

Wing 1

I had been hoping a week in the city might bring some clearer definition to my life. I was feeling incredibly restless and impatient to get on with things… and felt bogged down and in need of a break.

wing 2

As the plane tracked north over the Great Barrier Reef… the joy of realising that I was returning to [arguably] one of the most beautiful locations on Planet Earth filled me with renewed optimism and hope for the future.

reef (new)

Gazing out over the incredible majesty of the Reef… I felt the fire in my belly return after a protracted period of wondering “Where To Now?” It felt good to be going home… even if “home” for me is still a somewhat abstract ideal. Grin.

wing 4

Maybe the city isn’t for me just yet.

Maybe it never will be.

[Interesting how I took no photos while there - yet here that's all I do]

But it was an interesting week of serendipitous occurrences and bittersweet times that ended all too soon.

On the first day I walked to the Gardens and managed to get myself caged in by workmen erecting fences around its perimeter for an events company. It was something quite hilarious being the only one trapped on the inside trying to get out!

That afternoon I saw a man [decked out in a business suit] row his dinghy across the river to a small yacht moored in the middle [it struck me as something kind of wonderful - here was a man living on a boat in the middle of the concrete jungle - yet so very much on his own terms!]

Throughout the week I caught up with a number of people… and coincidentally bumped into a friend from out of town whom I hadn’t seen in years… not once but twice on different occasions… in the very same spot in the middle of the city. How on earth does that happen?

We celebrated the chances over high tea at the Rose “something or other” in an upstairs arcade… joined by a good friend I [never] knew at boarding school but now know really quite well. It’s complicated.

I rediscovered the toy department through the eyes of a child.

And held a small hand at the shops. How lovely!

I walked for miles in ridiculous shoes and got blisters all over my feet.

I had lunch with my 96 year old aunt [who still paints]… and cousins from all over the place I hadn’t seen in almost forever.

I saw two movies [one with a profound message despite the crazy 3D glasses - the other the story of Keats]

I swam in a freezing cold pool with a wonderful friend… then thawed out in a hot spa. We caught the night ferry… ate out a lot… and talked for hours on end about a number of things.

I met a man in a wheelchair [with the most beautiful smile] who simply GOT life better than most people I know. He had it all figured out better than anyone. There were things he simply just knew.  And although he didn’t know me at all… I knew that he knew I “knew” too. Now go figure that one out! Grin.

I spent time with my daughter who came up for a couple of days from the Coast. We always get on like a house on fire. This time was no different.

Her profound observation of the current doings in my life… was that my Universe [of late] “sure was delivering me lessons at an incredible rate”. I resisted the urge to alert her to the fact that she could have been severely understating it!

Clearly… there are things I am meant to learn… and learn quickly it would seem… [for whatever reason].

So I’ve decided to slow down a bit… and just let things be.  Let the Universe soak in around me.

To this end… back home on Sunday… I drove flat out with the music on full volume along the winding length of the coast road up to Port Douglas [and um… slowing down does not preclude driving fast for medicinal purposes]

road 3

What a glorious sense of freedom!

The sea was a millpond and the reflected light exquisite.

road 4

This winding stretch of road never fails to lift my spirits.

A piece of freshly baked pineapple and banana cake and a cup of aromatic coffee in my favourite bookshop completed the bliss on this sleepy hot and humid Sunday afternoon in Port.  The wet season is just a sultry breath away.

port coffee

I came to the conclusion… I’m just going to get on with my life the best way I know how. Simply by getting on with it. And trying as hard as I can to be true to myself whilst trying not to hurt anyone else or get too hurt myself along the way.

This is the best I can do for now.

In striving to live an authentic life…the life we are meant to live…

there can be no regrets… and no apologies necessary

- Jean Burman 2010

PS Guess what?  Remember the airline commercial? Well I just received an email that they’re using my footage… go figure… could this be the beginning of a whole new career?  (((chuckles)))

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My son Andrew and I were having coffee at our local Coffee Club the other day. Seated comfortably at the table… me with my cappuccino… he with his chai latte… we were discussing his latest web design projects and [as always] the conversation turned to the blog. Ever the talented young web design guru [okay I am his mother ~grin~]… Andrew is always coming up with fan-dangled ideas for me to make improvements and additions to the website to make it more interactive and interesting. When and if I ever get around to making any of these changes is another thing… but I never miss an opportunity to get together with him to cook up ideas and ponder some dreams. Besides… I enjoy his company!

p1000820-1.JPG
“Piece of Cake”

cartoon – pen & watercolour 9″ x 12″

artwork & content Copyright Jean Burman 2008

As we talked… my attention was drawn to a nearby table where two women were deep in conversation. One sat contentedly with her legs crossed… her foot curled around from behind… and the other had her two feet planted firmly on the floor.

Foot placement has always fascinated me… it seems to say so much about a person… and speaks volumes about the emotional/political terrain being covered in the conversation! LOL

With emphatic hand gestures and wide eyed amusement underscoring her words… the woman spoke earnestly to her friend. Between them lay two cafe lattes and a rather large slice of baked New York cheescake piled high with fresh cream… and two spoons!

It struck me what a comfortable scene it was. Warm… inviting… friendly. Convivial. And heart warming too!

An incurable people-watcher… my kids have often chatted me for ‘staring’. Though it never occurs to me that I’m staring (I wouldn’t be so rude! ~grin~) “interested” probably describes it better! Nevertheless… this time I couldn’t help it… and I gave Andrew the nod.

He craned around to sneak a look… as I mused how wonderful I thought it was that these two people could find such comfort… good will… and warm hearted camaraderie over a simple cup of coffee!

“I mean… can a beverage DO that?” I asked not expecting an answer.

As we had been discussing blog topics and how tough it was to come up with a subject of interest to everyone… he turned to me and said… “well there you go Mum… there’s your next topic!” And so it was…

cappuccino.jpg

Coffee. The lifeblood of a nation. The lifeblood of the whole world? It does afterall… speak every language on the planet… in every city… in every country… across the globe. It is as much at home in the trattoria’s of Rome… as it is in the backstreets of Rio… or the casbahs of Morocco… or the cafes of Uzbekistan.

It knows no country.

It has no borders.

It favours no race, creed or colour.

It breeds no contempt…

and it needs no introduction.

It’s delicious wafting aroma can easily pull a crowd from 50 paces! Even those who don’t actually drink the stuff… love the allure of it’s aroma… evoking as it does a sense of the exotic. Far flung places like Africa… Brazil… and the Indian sub continent… the warm countries of the world where the culture is as steeped in mystery… as the air is “fragrant” with the scent of exotic spice.

It occurs to me that coffee has a strange kind of unifying effect on the world. It’s the one thing that we all pretty much have in common. The fact that more than half the world’s population could be indulging in a cup of coffee at any given time… on any given day… seems to me to have strange significance. Then a crazy notion hit me… “could the world’s problems be hashed out over a simple cup of coffee?”

 recipes_cappuccino.jpg

Truth be known… the ritual of coffee drinking has little if anything to do with the actual drinking of COFFEE. It’s just something we do. Having a coffee gives us the excuse we need to sit down and ponder with friends and foe alike… the world and it’s doings. It’s all about communication. Coffee shops, cafes and casbahs across the globe bubble over each and every day with the voices of people sorting stuff out… sharing their problems… catching up on the gossip… hashing out deals… and (hopefully) finding solutions.

What a miracle then if it could be that simple. Imagine for just one moment… the Sunni and the Shia sitting in the dirt of a Baghdad street corner having coffee with the American. Or the Russian and the Chechen hashing things out over a coffee at the back fence. Or the Palestinian and the Israeli settling the dust of a thousand years over the one thing we probably all have in common…a coffee… the international beverage of our times! *wink*

I know it may sound trite… and I am by no means seriously suggesting that something so simple could provide a solution to the problems of “difference” between the peoples of the world!

But don’t you think… if the issues of human conflict were viewed LESS from our differences… and MORE from those human aspects we have in common… the world would be a much kinder, safer and more peaceful place.

“Sit with me awhile… hear my story… and tell me yours… in time I will understand your point of view… see the world as you do… and soon we will be friends”

So “chin chin” everyone… as we do our bit to bring about peace… one cup at a time!

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Addendum: I wrote this before the National Sorry Day… and would just like to add that having listened to (and heard) the Apology and the Reply… (and the subsequent lop-sided fallout in the press)… it appears to me that we Australians still have a very long way to go yet… to reconcile the past and move forward into the future.

What’s missing is tolerance and understanding… on both sides.  Perhaps some sitting in the dirt over a coffee is called for! *wink*  And the words I penned just the-day-before-yesterday never resounded so loudly!

So… for what it’s worth… here they are again…

“Sit with me awhile… hear my story… and tell me yours… in time I will understand your point of view… see the world as you do… and soon we will be friends”

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