Friday, November 14, 2003

Fighting Black and Blue Thursday: 13 November
Who, living in the Sutherland municipality, would disagree with the young character, a Lady to be, Mary Wein, whose parents migrated to Australia from Poland in 1920s. In her memoirs Lady Fairfax wrote, ‘I came home to my father one day. I was the youngest, at 22, single, female, wage-earner in NSW. Dad I’ve found out about money. It’s lovely stuff, it makes you free.
My really Black Thrusday experience started with a bad family news at 7.15 am. Then on the train I read the local news about Bob Carr, NSW Premier, reacting with that categoric denial to the threat against the Lucas Heights nuclear reactor while Willie Brigitte admits to French authorities that he was planning a terrorist attack on ANSTO. My meeting with the legal eagle from the Red Dragon was also very nuclear. As you think things just cannot get worse they turn almost lethal. So my day ended with me running against time and finding myself in a company of a gorgeous policewoman who escorted me for the 8:40 pm train. My brother in law, a former chief of the Kiama police station, has introduced me to a number of beautiful women in the uniform, but there is some kind of amazing chemistry when you get the destiny of life introduce you to the blue colours of jazzy life in exile. The street is dark and empty but stormless: just you and this smile stretching all the way to the corners of her blue eyes as those red lips fill with the promise: I will czech you out... I like women that give me a sense of powerlessness, and (Kerrie?) was certainly one that pulled that off with real success.
· Uniformed Women
· Copyright Laws: My Number Plate says IMRICH:=}( [Ananova]