My
friend Nicola and I were out for dinner in town the other night. It was
dark, cold and miserable and we were huddled by the ticket machine at
the south end Victoria St car park, both of us bereft of coins for the
slot. The machine also wasn't accepting my plastic card, or anyone
else's.
It
wasn't a good start to the evening. There was a small queue, and we
stood to one side while I scrabbled in the bowels of my handbag for
coins that may have eluded me. I was just wondering about upending the
bag on the ground so I could sift it properly when a young woman in the
queue stepped forward, pressed $2 on us, and said something like, "here,
have this on me".
We
thanked her profusely, and promised we'd do the same for someone else
next time such a situation arose. While not wanting to quote the
cheesy-but-heartwarming movie Pay it Forward, it did seem an appropriate
thing to say.
I've
not yet had the opportunity because I'm still in debt to thoughtful
people: a week or so later when I drove into the same car park, a woman
who was exiting rolled down her window and spontaneously handed out her
parking ticket. "There's still an hour to go on this," she said. "Help
yourself."
They're
small gestures, but they leave you with a smile on your face; they are
the perfect counterpoints to the doomsayers who say all is not well with
our world, that we've misplaced our ability to connect with others.
I
listened to one such doomsayer last weekend at a conference in
Wellington, a guest speaker who repeated this myth that we've lost our
sense of community in New Zealand,Other companies want a piece of that parkingsensor action that the glue that holds people together has gone soft and we're too focused on ourselves.
I'd
like them to meet the Kawhia people who restored a World War I memorial
lychgate at the town's Anglican church, and celebrated with a beautiful
rededication ceremony. It is another angle on a close-knit town that's
been in the news over some challenging stuff recently.
I'd
like them to go out with the St Vincent de Paul volunteers who do a
nightly food delivery around the streets of some of Hamilton's
lower-income suburbs, dispensing sandwiches, fruit,Choose the right laserengraver in
an array of colors. friendship and Milo to kids who relish the extra
snacks and the camaraderie in their neighbourhood. It would be good for
the doomsayers to meet the spunky kids as well as the volunteers.
I'd
like to take them into the 40-year-old Purple Patch store in Barton St
where women sell lovely handmade knitting and sewing; their strong
friendships and a sense of collective good underpin this unique venture.
A trip to the streamlined Waikato Hospice campus on Cobham Drive would
be enlightening, too. Among other things, they could see the results of a
huge, generous regional fundraising effort.
And
maybe they could squeeze in a visit to Pirongia woman Pamela McCarthy
who volunteers for Freeset, an organisation that rescues prostitutes
from the notorious red-light district of Kolkata in India. Last year
McCarthy raised $74,000 for these women.
That's
just a handful of the things I see in my daily life. There are plenty
more community efforts like this. On a bigger scale, the neighbourhoods
of Christchurch and the West Coast (the latter in the wake of the Pike
River mine disaster) have countless stories to tell about people helping
each other out.
The
world, of course, is not perfect and for every good news story there is
almost certainly a bad news event, and some people do become isolated
from others.
But
I would argue that our sense of community still strongly exists. It may
not be centred on the rural hall or the local church or even service
groups any more, but it evolves and adapts to different circumstances,
reinvents itself as needed.
Nowadays
it might mean handing a stranger a $2 coin with a smile in a public
carpark, or working in a community vegetable garden that can help feed
many families, or ambling around Frankton Market, Cambridge Market and
similar places. Catching up with old friends, making new ones, while you
do the shopping.
Over
months of writing stories for a recent Times series on suburban
Hamilton streets, our reporting team saw that neighbourhood
relationships are still pretty strong. In the first street I visited, an
Indian woman pointed to each house from her front gate, described who
lived there, and talked about the shared Christmas meal they all enjoyed
each year.
Neighbourly
relations are certainly doing fine where I live. Last Sunday afternoon
when I got back from the conference in Wellington, my neighbour Diana
came over with a bowl of homemade vegetable soup for my dinner. It was
delicious, comforting. I'd have liked the man who said we've lost our
sense of community to have had some of it as well.
First
of all, we concentrate on Sunday's action and our nap selection is our
old friend Marchese Marconi, trained by Aidan O'Brien at Listowel.
Having started the season getting beat at long odds-on in Dundalk, he
has since notched up a double on his favoured heavy ground and he will
get similar conditions again today. He was given an initial rating of 87
going into his last race and despite winning that conditions race by an
easy six lengths, the handicapper has given him a chance and left him
off the same mark for today's contest, his first handicap.
He
should easily capitalise on that before moving up the ranks. Whilst he
is a long way below yesterday's Derby winner Ruler Of The World there
are similarities between the two. They both share the same sire in
Galileo, both horses are trained by Aidan O'Brien and both are unbeaten
in cheekpieces! That may not be the end of it either as Marchese Marconi
might just win the Derby as well, except in his case it may be the
'Pitmen's Derby', aka the Northumberland Plate at Newcastle at the end
of the month. Today is his trial for that so expect him to take it in
style.
Yesterday,
the Tabor/Smith/Magnier alliance brought us the aforementioned Ruler Of
The World at Epsom and today they bring us the slightly less
imperiously named Ruler Of France at Listowel. The David Watchman
trained two-year-old ran a cracker behind Expedition at Limerick a month
ago. He should go on and win this today, despite the presence of yet
another Aidan O'Brien trained Galileo and a decent prospect of Dermot
Weld's that finished third in a Leopardstown maiden which has
subsequently worked out well.
If anything,With superior quality photometers, light meters and a number of other laundrydryer products.
the fact that these two powerful stables are represented in the race
should ensure that we get a better price on Ruler Of France. Aidan
O'Brien's colt will need to be very smart to beat our selection on his
debut whilst the trip should stretch Weld's horse on breeding so Ruler
of France gets the next best selection today.
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