Kindness

Posted by on Jan 21, 2019 in Blog | 0 comments

The quality of being friendly, generous, and considerate.”

Desmond Tutu said,

“Do your little bit of good where you are; it’s those little bits of good put together that overwhelm the world.”

and  Mark Twain:

“Kindness is a language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see.” —

When I first came to Australia, – I went as a stranger to a new church, met some very friendly, kind people – and came out with somewhere to live!

& they helped me learn all those unwritten rules here – there are loads, believe it or not – like how to park your car – and how not to!

Adelaide                               the rest of the world…!

adilaide-wbmtherest2therest

I had an old MG when I lived in Hackham, and the engine stalled when at a T junction, and it had a flat battery. Before I could blink, 4 young people kindly ran up to push start it. A young lady amongst them laughed when she realised how small it was and said “Shall we pick it up?”
I was amazed by the kindness of Australians when I first came here.
And even came across a garage that kindly helped me convert my current car, nearly a third of a century old to biofuel so it could run carbon neutral on used frying oil.
whitecar

He’s Jon in Mitcham, 10 mins walk from us, who also found and fitted a second hand gearbox when the old one died, and welded up the exhaust when the silencer fell off, so she no longer sounded like a motor boat! – not many mechanics in UK can weld.

10mins

Australians are famous for being friendly, easy going and helpful. Helped perhaps by speaking a language similar to English and having a very similar sense of humour often directed at themselves!

And being led by an on-going comedy show in Canberra…

canbera

But tough too..

- the Australian army was the first to break through the German line in WW1

- and the first to beat the Japanese army in 1943. In New Guinea, at  the defeat of the Japanese at Wau.

And a distinctly unfair ratio of Olympic medals/ per capita…

And that she needed 3 layers of government – because she was so Huge

As I was to discover driving back from Perth when I came across the 90 mile straight! Salisbury near where I came from is 88 miles from London…and that road is far from straight..

discover

 

And when you arrive at the far end, there is a sign which in true Aussie form says… “Turn”!

Demonstrations of kindness

Big sisters at the beach – mine ten foot tall and far older than me never let me drown or get eaten by a shark!

demonstration

Parent to child.. (given!)

parent-child

Runner stopping to help an old man cross the road

runner

Simple things..

  • Like saying good-morning to folk who obviously slept in the street, and even entering into a conversation with them.
  • Likewise check-out operators in supermarkets driving themselves mentally numb punching buttons..
  • Visiting old folk in old peoples homes – actually it’s a 2-way thing. You get just as much as you give. Many a wonderful story there, Keith Lowe who I visit, used to play as a lad in a barn in an old car… He learned years later it was the FIRST car made in Australia!
  • Same fellow when very young, – with his cousin used to plough with a dozen Draft horses, 6 at a time, the spare 6 sheltering under a tree. Any problems?  – none as long as you put them in the right order – then they’d pull all day!
  • Kindness is known to return more to the giver than the receiver.

But there is a far bigger test on our kindness now emerging

At the beginning of WW1, there was no defence against the then new fangled submarines and their torpedoes – 2,500 ships were lost. Until the invention of the depth charge and the use of convoys contained the problem.

At the beginning of WW2 the atom bomb that finally forced  Japan to surrender did not exist. And the Spitfire was just  entering service, which helped stop Hitler getting access to  the British sky, and invading, with 4 times as many aircraft.

Today, world emissions continue to grow and the sea level rises, the big difference now is we know exactly what to do to counter the problem – STOP EMITTING.

World emissions of CO2    sea level rise

ww1emissionsealevel

But don’t be despondent.. My Dad was a Gunner Major – and got booted out of France with the rest at Dunkirk. He left on the Southsea ferry from Cherbourg, having left all his guns behind.

He later went to Burma, where again we were booted out by the Japanese.

We all know, the allies returned to both

and beat them both

at the same time.

mydad

 

WW1 lasted 4 years, WW2 6 years. The UN have now warned we have 12 long years to sort climate change out, so we have time, as long as we get going.

Already, on some Pacific islands, spring tides are flooding their houses,and most importantly their fresh water wells.

In only 31years time, dozens of cities  worldwide and millions of people will be  flooded and have to seek higher ground.

ww2

Global warming could create 150 million ‘climate refugees’ by 2050

Environmental Justice Foundation report says 10% of the global population is at risk of forced displacement due to climate change

Over a hundred coastal cities are threatened.

That is when our being “Friendly, generous and considerate” will score.

South Australia is already punching above her weight, with 50% renewables and on the way to 100%.

And its not just the big boys like Gupta and Musk – welcome though they are, its everyone. Domestic rooftop solar PV uptake is among the best in the land.

They did it,

And so can we, in our case… offering KINDNESS to our planet and our fellow man.

Today, 74 years after fighting each other fiercely, we must all link arms and turn to face the common enemy approaching faster now, with ALL that drive and tenacity – Climate Change.

earth

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