Thursday, 5 July 2012

reply to comment by unknown about whistlecock

hello unknown

without looking back at the article I wrote - my informants in Borroloola in 1970 were

Jack [John actually] Kitson who came to the NT preWW2 from the UK as a teenager & worked most of his life fixing windmills & pumps on stations. "Jack"  had a relaxed relationship with 'the blacks' & periodically paid willing women for sex. I asked him once 'how he did it.' He got up from the flour drum & held on to a rail near the door of his humpie & said that 'she holds on to the rail & spreads & I take her from behind.'

He'd been retired for a few & was on a pension. He'd built his own humpie with poles & corrugated iron & bark lining. Jack also said that there were 'black shooters' operating thru out the top end before & even after WW2. Jack was in Darwin when it was bombed by the Japs.

Jack told me about the cop in the early days who used to keep girls in a cell & rape them until he was satisfied then release them. He was rewarded by the crew of the boat that came up & down the river. Jack walked to the store twice a year to post his order to Brisbane & his supplies were brought up the river by the same family.

The other informant was an aboriginal stockman. He came to have a chat & a cuppa. He told me about being cut traditionally when he was a young boy. He agreed with what Jack said about whistle cock.

Jack & others did say at the time when I mentioned various anthropologists I'd been reading that 'I met so & so.' They were her 3 weeks & went & wrote a book about everything.

Camping near the blacks were several white missionaries & 3 ladies from the Summer Institute of Linguistics. Two were learning Yanula & the other Garawa. I discussed wqhat they were doing there with Dinny, the school gardener - who'd been a stockman. He had a couple of kids at the school. Nancy Dinny has made a name for herself as a painter.


http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Whistle-Cock&defid=5857242

whistlecock

An Australoid Penis which has undergone Dravidian Penis Incision, whence urination is often accompanied by a whistling sound. 2. Hence, an Australoid male in general.

Two forms of incision are common among Australoids to increase female sexual pleasure. In the 1st, the underside of the shaft is incised lengthwise, so that it spreads the vaginal walls further apart & enhances Vaginal Orgasms. In the 2nd, the glans is incised, so that it opens up like a flower on erection. Due to the length of the Negroid-Australoid Penis, the blood-engorged petals provide frictional stimulation deep in the womb, often provoking a Uterine Orgasm:

"Assuring her that 'a blackfellow has none of our nonsense & would talk about his genitals with the same freedom as he would talk about an ear, a foot, or a finger', he asked if she could throw any light on the origin of the rite of sub-incision.

'One of my correspondents, at my request, has asked a native to let him see the penis during erection & he says
the glans spread out on account of being split . . . the same correspondent gathered from a conversation with a
black woman that the organ when spread out was more gratifying to the female.'"
 ("Daisy Bates: 'The Great White
Queen of the Never Never'". Elizabeth Salter. Sydney: Angus & Robertson, 1971, p.130)

I live in Rocky, 'Beef Capital of Australia' & we recently had the BEEF EXPO here. In the NT most of the stockman that I met were black or mixed, with Chinese & white.
I only saw white folk @ Beef Expo mostly showing stud cattle.
cheers,
lin

Friday, 23 September 2011

eating grandma

When I was teaching in Kimbe, West New Britian,  Papua New Guinea in 1976  anthropologists lived a few houses up the street. The wife was Dutch. She had done her PhD studying the traditional societies in Surinam, Central America. The husband a Hungarian man PhD, MD  had a crook back which gave him trouble when he tried to dance. That didn’t stop him dancing even though he was in pain. One day he showed me his collection of Yoni, large beautifully carved panels of vaginas which were sacred objects of great power to the local people. He gestured dramatically at the panels saying, ‘yoni, yoni!’  Some carvings more than metres in height, were of female figures with Yoni. Some were just Yoni. He was extremely proud of his unique collection & he stroked them as he spoke. He said except for yoni none of us would exist. Surely a subject worthy of adoration & worship.
Earlier that same day I had been talking to my next door neighbour, the local police chief. His number 2 came across the road to join in the conversation. I said that I hadn’t seen them around for a few days. They told me that they’d been over to Bali Vetu, an island just off the coast. On a clear day standing on the beach Bali Vetu was visible to the naked eye. I asked what they were doing over there for so long. They said that they had gone there to arrest the whole island for cannibalism.
The local tribe there about 206 people had buried grandmother. They let her body lie there at rest for 10 days in what was effectively a ground oven. Then they had dug her up in a spiritual ritual & ate her body & talked to her spirit. The men of the community ate the flesh & the women & children ate the entrails. I had gone to have a chat to the anthropologists about this. They knew what had happened locally. They told me that they’d been on the UN team investigating ‘laughing sickness’ that occurred in some areas. The women & kids suffered from laughing hysteria. They ate the viscera.
We talked about the event with the Professor of Anthropology when she was in town visiting her tribal family. She had a connection in the area dating back to when she studied with Margaret Mead. Father Dr Brand when we mentioned the eating of the Bali grandmother at our place over tea said that the custom was dying out. He worked with a community on the other side of the island several days walk away. He told us that in the area where he was that the older women knew a leaf that prevented conception. If a son brought a girl home to bed they didn’t like they would put the leaf in the food. A girl who didn’t bear a child was rejected by the family.

taiji

http://lindsaysmithtaijiquan.blogspot.com/

Thursday, 22 September 2011

sponge

the chatter of children
  on the morning of Christ’s emergence
& a cat scratching at the door
  seeking the comfort of flames
is the beauty in being
  & to know & see
yellow petals flutter in the sun
  the knobbed pine drop its cones
when bid by the wind
not for the taste of hemlock sweet
  I dream the things that are
that move
that touch me
  as a needle thrust to the bone
Reference to the birth & death of Christ. I wrote this poem about 45 years ago & some people were very upset that I could express such ideas. Shows how indoctrinated & stuck some people really are. [This is the same comment I wrote to ana. The needle is what most people are familiar with at the tatoo parlour, medical clinic. The legend about the crucifixion is that Christ was stabbed in the side with a spear by a Roman soldier & that he was given a soaked sponge which may have had vinegar. Hemlock, a powerful sedative. Poison in a strong dose. Hemlock belongs to the hop family used in making beer. Originally Christmas was to celebrate the birth of the sungod Mazda.

Monday, 19 September 2011

perspective

The Ancient Chinese Classical painters all believed
   that virgins ate peaches & peonies.
Their paintings never made any direct reference to sex.
Love always was delicately couched in allusions.

Chinese lovers never played around with breasts
or bums & such as Indian poets did. 
Kissing was out of the question in both cultures.

In the West while the sun slides down behind the trees
a solo drinker fills in time throwing unsteady shadows
on the clubhouse wall.  
And slender supple teens in fancy rags with flexing weeds
for company preen themselves.  

Love comes in season, is never for ever
& lust usually ends in disgust.

She leaned all over me & said,
‘I married my best friend, & that beats romantic passion.’  

The beautiful wife’s heart is deep like water in an old well. 
She gathers herbs into bundles & ties them high to dry.

jumperlead

David met me at the staffroom door & said, “Tim doesn’t look good. Can you press a few of his points for him?” I nodded. Tim was sitting there looking tired & worried. It was his last day with us. In a couple of days he would be off to do a fellowship for 18 months in Japan developing some sort of language curriculum program. It had been a tough year for staff & students with an incompetent principal & I thought he’ll be happy to get out of this place.
I went up to Tim seated in his chair & placed my hands on top of his shoulders & pressed the points that my wife’s father always used as point of first contact. Apin, my wife’s father had been a masseur for wrestlers in India & had often done my back neck & shoulders over the years so I’d picked up some of the skill from him. I’d also done Shiatsu courses with Gloria, a Malaysia Chinese lady who had lived in India & studied homeopathy there. She was a Reiki Master & did Acupuncture & had various other skills too. And I’d done a course in Chinese Acupressure. Not too different from the Japanese techniques in many ways & based on the same ideas of the human body being a system of interrelated channels where the Qi flowed.
This training overlapped with the tai chi training I had begun with Teo Ah Keng in Singapore in 1971. So there I was pressing my thumbs firmly down on Tim’s shoulders on the bladder points. I did the Shiatsu method using my thumb on the muscles running down both sides of the spine all the way down to the buttocks. I did the points at the back of the neck, temples & on the cheekbones just under the eyes. And I finished with the hand & elbow points. Tim said, “thanks.” I asked him if he had classes. He replied, “not until after morning tea.” So I said, “You’d better go & see a doctor.”  
Tim was over 6’ in height, had good erect posture & red hair. He’d lived in Japan for several years & his Japanese from all accounts was excellent, for a foreigner. He was well versed in correct cultural behaviour which is apparently very important to the Japanese people. He’d told me when he was in public transport & in crowds in Japan he could see above everyone. Tim left & I went to class & didn’t see him all day.
He was in the staffroom waiting for me when I had finished the last lesson. He’d already sold his car & had tenants moving into his house as soon he vacated.
I said, “well, what did the doctor say?” He said that the doctor had a look at him & gave him something that wasn’t doing any good. He asked, “can I come home with you so Matilda can massage me?” I said. ‘OK.”
He’d never met my wife & he’d never been to our place before but that was no problem. My wife wasn’t working that day & as far as I knew she didn’t have any appointments.
My wife is a Masseur, Natural Therapist, Reflexologist. She originally trained as a hairdresser & beautician in Singapore & has done most of her further training here in Australia. She learned some skills from her father such as the neck cracking that Indian barbers do but she knew how to that skill properly by loosening all the muscles up for 15 minutes at least before doing the maneuver.  Now she seldom uses the technique as there are better was to fix wry neck. So I introduced Tim & Matilda & went off into the den to give my regular vocal student a half hour lesson. Then I went & took a Yoga Nidra class for an hour but didn’t stay to drink tea as I wanted to see how Matilda had got on with Tim.
When I got to the door Matilda was waiting for me. I asked, “how’s? Tim.” She said, “Terrible, I’ve never had anyone like this. He seems to be in pain all over his body. The kids can hear him groaning in the kitchen like he’s a woman in labour. We’re thinking you can do something with hypnosis.”  I didn’t have much background in helping with people in chronic pain so I said, “I’ll ask Gloria.” Gloria, my Shiatsu teacher lives in Gladstone just over an hour from Rocky. I told Gloria what the story was & she immediately said, “you do Reiki.” I said, “but I don’t know anything about Reiki.” She said, “yes you do, Qigong.” OK, so I knew vaguely what to do.
Matilda went off the kitchen & I went in to see Tim. He was lying on his back on the bench shivering. I stood at an angle near his right shoulder so that I was in the best position to hold my left palm over the  baihui point on the top of the head & I held my right palm over his right hand& said to Tim, “tell me when you feel something.”
When I was in Singapore in 1988 training with Teo Ah Keng, my ‘taiji father’  I also went to train in Mr Chua Joo Ban’s evening classes at the Henderson Tai Chi Club, Bukit Merah View. Both Ah Keng & Mr Chua were students of Mr Sia Mok Tie, Grandmaster Taijiquan & White Crane. While I was there Mr Sia passed on his lineage sword to Mr Chua his senior student. I even had the privilege of holding that sword briefly.
One evening I arrived early to Mr Chia’s class. He was standing with his back to me when I walked up & said, ”ni hao.” He said, “ here you do.” And he put me where he’d been standing with my left palm behind the lady’s shoulder blade & with my right middle finger just touching her middle finger. I was standing there holding that position & Mr Chua took off without any explanation. The woman who I was with was very large. Not obese, just big & strong like an athlete who does field events. Throws shot put or lifts weights.
I asked her, “what’s happening?” She beamed at me & said, “same as Mr Chua.”  She spoke in Chinese to the small lady she was chatting to & they both smiled at me & the tiny lady said, “hen hao.”  Standing holding my arms in standing qigong postures was quite familiar to me as I’d done that for hours a day for many years but what I was doing that evening puzzled me. The class started & Ah Keng arrived about half way through as he had business commitments.
After class Mr Chua, Ah Keng & I and a few others had a meal & drinks at the nearby stalls as usual. Conversations were interesting as there would be several dialects going most of the time. Cantonese, TeoChew, Hokkien usually. Ah Keng was Hakka, a minority group so he was quite a linguist because he’d had to learn everyone else’s language. When I met Ah Keng in 1971 he was a supervisor on concrete pours & he’d showed up my English conversation class. We became friends. Matilda & I married October 18 & the next year I got the Music job at ANZ High, Changi.
After class Ah Keng always drove me back to Hougang in his truck. I told him about what had happened before class. And I asked about the big lady. He said, “superintendent of Police, Singapore judo champion,” I asked why I was holding my hand in qigong positions close to her he said, “in English we call that ‘jumperlead.’ So I told him that when I asked her what was happening she said, “same as Mr Chua.” Ah Keng was surprised & said “wonderful, so you have very good Qi for healing people.”
I stood waiting for Tim to respond. After a minute or two Tim said, “my hand has gone numb,” so I slowly moved my right hand up his forearm & held it over his elbow. It seemed in a shorter Tim said, “my elbow’s gone numb.” So I moved my palm slowly up to his shoulder & held it there. Soon after Tim said, “my whole arm has gone numb.” Without thinking what I was saying I asked, “which arm?” He said, “the left arm.” I was stunned but thought that acupuncturists put needles on the opposite side of the body sometimes so had to accept his answer.
So I lowered my hands & moved over to do the same technique from his fingers to his shoulder along the left arm. Tim felt my hands as if I was doing his right arm. When both arms were numb I asked “Tim what is happening now. He said, “the numbness is spreading across my chest.” So I went & stood at his feet & held my palms facing the soles of his feet & asked Tim to continue breathing normally & to think of his feet when he was exhaling. I waited a few minutes & noticed that his whole body was calm & very relaxed. I asked him. “what’s happening  now?”  
He said, “ I can hardly keep my eyes open.” So just close your eyes then. Keep breathing to your feet. I’m going to go & have my tea. I’ll be back soon & I left him there to rest in a deep trance on the bench. As I was walking to the kitchen I reflected on what had happened & had a strange feeling that somehow some part of me had known all along how to use the skill as if it had been passed down to me somehow. I felt like I had been a conduit of some sort.
After the Chicken Curry I went to check on Tim. When I spoke to him he didn’t respond at all so I said, “Tim you are in a deep trance but you can still communicate with me.” Your left hand is yes & your right hand is no. Don you want to come out of trance now?” After a few second his left hand moved a little. I said, “OK but before you come out of trance I want you to go through everything we did here so that you can get into this calm relaxed state any time you want to or need to.” I waited for a few minutes.
Then I asked Tim to signal me when he was ready to return to full awareness. After about a minute or so he responded with a spasm in his left hand. I told him to imagine that he was in a pool & to drop to the bottom.  Push off & gently float to the top opening his eyes when he reached the surface. I waited for him do open his eyes. Then I said, “wriggle your fingers & toes, stretch.”  It took Tim a couple of minutes to respond & move off the massage bench.
I asked him he’d like some food. He did so we went to the kitchen. He enjoyed the chicken curry & I had a cuppa. During the conversation I said something that Tim thought was funny & he laughed, then grabbed his abdomen & his face fell. I said, “Pain?”  He nodded I said, “keep very still. Breathe in & focus on the pain, hold. Now as you breathe out think of your feet.” He kept his eyes on me as I spoke. After he’d exhaled he nodded. “OK you know what to do. Now if you have trouble tonight. You know what to do. You can ring me if you’re in trouble.”
Next day before school I rang Tim & asked him if he was OK. He said that he’d had trouble but he’d done the technique & was OK. I asked if anything else had happened. He said he’d rung his father who had gall bladder trouble. His father said that his brother had had an operation for gall bladder.
I sent Tim to see a Chinese doctor, graduate from Dublin who also does Acupuncture to request every sort of test – which was done. Before Tim left for Japan he rang & said the doctor said all his tests were clear & that he had ‘wandering wind,’ which in Traditional Chinese Medicine means that his qi was moving here & there & not flowing smoothly. In western terms something like ‘phantom pain’ I guess.
I have never seen Tim again in person but we have been in contact with Tim over the years since via email. I asked him if he’d ever taken Zen instruction or learned Aikido but he hasn’t. He says that he uses the technique that I taught him whenever he needs manage ‘the problem.’ He was teaching English at the University of Hokkaido & married a Japanese nurse. They have a son called Tucker.
My brother Stuart rang from New Zealand a few days before I was leaving for  Singapore in October 1988. I had planned the trip to train with Ah Keng over my long service leave. He said, “you better go & see your father.” I asked, “How is he?” Stu replied, “John says nobody survives this liver chart.” Our cousin was Head Bacteriologist in Dunedin. I said, “thanks, I’ll ring mum.” So I did & mum answered. I asked what dad looked like & whether he was lying down or sitting up. Mum said, “he looks yellow & he’s walking around.” She put dad on the phone.
I asked dad how he was feeling & I told him about a qigong called ‘standing pole’ that is taught to people in China to help them recover from illness. Dad was interested so I told him to stand erect with his feet shoulder width apart & perfectly parallel. Bend is knees slightly so that he could see his toes in front of his knees if he looked down. I said it’s a bit like sitting high off the saddle & he understood that. Then I said to swing his arms up & hold his palms as if he was holding a party balloon in front of his belly. I said if he got a balloon & blew it half up that would be about the right size.  If he stood in front of a mirror he’d be able to check that he was holding the correct posture.

I also suggested that once he was in position that he should keep absolutely still & breathe normally. Of course his body wasn’t absolutely still because his heart was beating & he was breathing & all of that. He passed the phone to mum & I explained the details to her while dad was trying to work how to stand.  My father always stood well. Mum & dad were Salvation Army officers.
They had already been retired for many years. I asked mum to check dad’s posture & I asked him to stand for as long as he could manage. No more than 5 minutes at a time. If his whole body started to vibrate he was to conclude then  by taking a focused breath & pressing his palms down on the exhale as if in water. I said I send some information including photographs & diagrams about the Qi flow & the meridians. Dad had always been interested in China would have liked to have been a missionary there.  
Left for Singapore a few days later & while I was there I learned a lot more about Qigong. During the 1980s for several years I had been doing a lot of Standing Pole training. The Chinese say it strengthens your root. The idea is that the Qi flows from the ‘bubbling well point’ kidney 1 in the balls of the feet & up to the ming men points in the small of the back & from there throughout the meridians/channels throughout the body. Acupuncturists insert needles at various points to reduce or increase Qi flow. I used to stand at the peak of my training this particular type of Qigong in double horse with the ‘balloon’ at chest height for one & a half hours & slide straight into standing 30 mins or the left leg & 30 minutes on the right leg, a total of two & a half hours. I stood on our timber floor usually in wool sox.

Haneef & Howard

I wrote to John Howard not to support George Bush in the invasion of Iraq. That is the only letter I have ever written to a politician in my life. John Howard is 5 months older than me & he should know better than to take part in an act of pure vengeance. The whole Iraq thing is like a Superman movie where the superhero, a handsome white boy, of course wins out in the end. Racial typecasting that Hollywood has done so well for many years. Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan & Jet Li  changed that when they became Chinese superheros. We haven't seen an Arab superhero in an Anerican movie that I can think of. Maybe in 20 years Osama bin Laden's story will win an Oscar.

Howard's dumb decision to join George Bush's cheer squad has put a terrible blot on Australia.  Everyone knows there were no WMDs. But there is depleted uranium lying around in Iraq. It was dropped in the first gulf war. How do I know that. I have discussed it with an airman who personally loaded up depleted uranium bombs. The airmen who handled DU shells are now very concerned about whether or not their children are normal. It's an open secret now. Of course such information is supposed to be secret & not released until people like John Howard are long gone so that they won't have to face the music.

Three & a half million people died in the Vietnam War & already around 700,000 people, most of them innocent civilians have died in Iraq. Agent orange was sprayed all over the place in Vietnam poisoning the environment & the civilian population. Many people were crippled for life. The US only gave up in Vietnam when the American public protested about their boys coming home in bodybags. The invasion of Iraq has sharpened the teeth of muslim guerrilla fighters. The Iraq War has cost billions of dollars. What a waste! Howard gave $2 billion away to Indonesia, our near neighbours after the Tsunami. Billions could have been spent helping a needy world instead of on this whole 'war on terror' thing. There wasn't a war on terror until George Bush invented it.

To avenge the demolition of the twin towers Bush & his buddies have rained down terror on a sovereign nation. So it was run by a bad guy that they kicked out. But wasn't he the one they US installed in the first place to look after their own interests. The US has supported many right wing dictators since WW2 & have kept saying that it's in America's national interest. It may be good for the CEOs, manufacturers of arms & the quartermasters & politicians but not for the ordinary American citizen.

Katrina showed what the Elite of America are really about. The response to a national disaster was absolutely incompetent. That Washington didn't give a fig for the poor blacks of New Orleans was disgusting. Of course we have the same arrogant attitude in Australia from Howard who was Treasurer for many years under Fraser & ignored the plight of the aboriginal people. Howard was elected unopposed last election because he promised to keep interest rates down & because there was no unified opposition.

He has been PM for 11 years & what have we got? Australia has been invaded by US multinationals. Australia has been invaded by fastfood outlets & Australians are no longer the bronzed surfers. Every time US ships call on R&R they bring an epidemic of STDs. Sailors definitely do deserve a good time & the girls & boys who serve them really appreciate the US dollars. What can I say but God Bless America. One must remember that it is a Holy War that they are fighting after all & that they truly believe that God is on their side.

The military of 'the willing' nations have followed the orders of their political masters & if they survive their deployment they will continue to suffer long after peace is restored. The horrible long term outcome is that Bush, Blair & Howard will expire in their leather arm chairs or in bed without ever having to pay personally for their dumb decisions. They will never be charged for initiating a terrible war that has turn Iraq into a bloody mess. Now Iraq has won a soccer match maybe they'll unite as one nation against the invaders & reclaim their oil wells from the multinationals & their contractors.

Now the latest dumb thing Howard has done is to interfere with due process in the handling of Dr Haneef's case. He can mouth all the platitudes he likes but he's tricky & cunning. His fingers have been up all the puppets.

If Howard had minded his own business as PM of Australia instead of strutting around being the 'man of steel' on the world stage we would all be better off. The 'war on terror ' that he has been so busy advocating is a beat up. More people die in traffic accidents, of AIDS of Malaria, from obesity, smoking, drugs than have died from terrorists bombs, except in Iraq perhaps. But if the US & the willing had kept the hell out of there Iraq wouldn't be a bloody mess now.

Dr Haneef was very unlucky to be swept up in Howard's crusade to justify the lie of his involvement in the invasion of Iraq. At least he wasn't spirited away to some CIA secret prison & tortured in the name of freedom like so many others have. He's back in India with his family & good luck to him. Howard has refused to say sorry. No one in Australia expects Howard to say sorry for anything. If he was ever to say sorry he would probably choke & fall over. He can't say sorry. It's not in his nature. He has never said sorry to the aboriginal people for the neglect of the governments he served in. Soon he'll be dumped by the Australian people. And that will be a relief. As one unionist recently commented, 'Howard will be remembered in history as the skid mark on the bedsheet of Australian politics