The art of dating when you are in your 40’s is a perilous, soul destroying mission. I blame my misfortune with men on the 'fairy tale factor'... That never ending belief that love conquers all and that one day a prince will come. Reality isn't even close to the fairy tale. Especially when the prince doesn’t just come with baggage – he comes with a bitter, money grubbing ex-wife clinging to his back like a hump.
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Can't Blog. Vietnam.
Monday, April 27, 2026
This Is What Happens - Everything Becomes a Spectacle...
A formal dinner filled with politicians, journalists, cameras, and speeches is meant to look like control. It’s meant to project order, importance, and a sense that everything is exactly where it should be. Then someone brings a gun, and all of that collapses instantly. Who are we kidding. They all would be packing a pistol!
At the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, a gunman forced
his way toward one of the most heavily guarded events in the United States,
firing shots and triggering panic as people scrambled for cover and security
rushed officials out.
The target wasn’t random. Authorities believe he was aiming
for Donald Trump (good on him I say).
Within seconds, the entire performance was stripped back to
what it really was - just a room full of people reacting to something they
couldn’t control. This is the part people will miss. They’ll argue politics,
assign blame, pick sides, and push whatever narrative suits them. But this
wasn’t just about one man. It was about the environment that made something
like this feel almost inevitable.
Look at what that event actually is. A room packed with
power, media, ego, and attention, all feeding off each other. Politicians
performing for journalists. Journalists performing for the public. Everyone
pretending it’s about democracy while quietly enjoying the spotlight that comes
with it. It’s theatre, carefully staged and endlessly repeated.
And when everything becomes theatre, reality doesn’t just
interrupt - it tears through it.
That contrast is the story. One moment it’s speeches and
jokes. The next its fear, confusion, people hiding under tables in formal wear.
It’s absurd, but it’s also revealing. It shows how thin the line is between the
image of control and the reality underneath it.
The uncomfortable part is that this doesn’t shock people the
way it should anymore. That’s the real problem. Not just that it happened, but
that it fits so easily into the cycle. Outrage. Coverage. Debate. Repeat.
They’ll talk about security failures, about who is
responsible. But the deeper issue sits underneath that. You cannot keep turning
politics into spectacle, outrage into currency, and attention into the goal,
and expect it to stay contained. Eventually it spills over.
That’s what this was. Not just a crime. A consequence of
something that has been building for a long time.
And the worst part is how predictable the aftermath will be.
Endless discussion, endless analysis, and then a slow drift back into the same
patterns that created the conditions in the first place.
Everyone will talk about it.
No one will learn from it.
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Day of Rest
Today I'm off to Melbourne to do the step Mum thing!
I'm sure I can have a day of rest. If it's good enough for Jesus, I guess it's good enough for me!
Friday, April 24, 2026
Social Media Isn’t Toxic. You Are!
Oh, it's a sad time to be alive as a human. We have information coming at us from every angle, every way it can come at you. And most of it is negative... Why? Because that is the way people keep coming back. It's like looking at an accident - people can't help themselves.
But everyone loves blaming social media. The apps, the
algorithm, the “environment.” It’s always something external, something out of
their control. But at some point, you have to admit what’s actually happening.
It’s not the app dragging your ass back. It’s you opening it again. And again. And
again. Refreshing the same feed 47 times a day and calling it “just checking
something.”
The truth is uncomfortable because it’s simple. Social media
doesn’t force anything on you. It responds. It gives you more of whatever you
react to. You pause on outrage; it gives you more outrage. You compare yourself
to strangers, it lines up more strangers. It’s not random. It’s a mirror that
keeps adjusting to whatever you feed it.
And you keep feeding it.
That’s the part no one wants to sit with. It’s easier to say
the platform is toxic than to admit you keep going back to things that make you
feel worse. You engage with it, you react to it, and then you complain about
how bad it is, like you weren’t part of the process.
You weren’t trapped.
You were involved.
People act like they’ve lost control, but most of the time
it’s just habit dressed up as helplessness. You pick it up without thinking,
scroll without noticing, and then wonder why you feel flat, irritated, or
slightly off. It’s not complicated. You’ve spent the last half hour consuming
things designed to get a reaction out of you.
Of course you feel like that.
And then comes the best part. Closing the app and saying,
“God, that place is toxic,” as if you weren’t just actively participating in it
five seconds ago. Even though you had to scroll at the dining table instead of talking to your partner. How many times have you been to a restaurant and watched people on their phones? Not speaking.
Social media isn’t the problem. It’s just very good at
giving you what you respond to. The more honest question is why you keep
responding to the same things and expecting a different result.
That’s where it gets a bit uncomfortable.
Because at some point, your feed starts to look a lot like
you.
Not who you think you are.
Who you actually engage like.
And that’s harder to blame on an algorithm.
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Authenticity Is the New Lie
“I’m just being real.”
With lighting, editing, and twenty-three takes.
Being “real” used to mean something. It meant unfiltered, unplanned, a bit rough around the edges. Now it means carefully controlled dishonesty, delivered in a way that feels natural but absolutely isn’t. The lighting is right, the angle is tested, and whatever you’re seeing has already been chosen as the version worth showing.
That’s not authenticity. That’s production.
The strange part is how convincing it is. People watch these moments and think they’re seeing something raw, something genuine, when in reality, they’re seeing something shaped just enough to feel real without actually being it. A bad day gets edited. A vulnerable moment gets framed. Even silence gets curated, so it lands the right way.
Nothing is accidental anymore.
And that’s where it flips. Because once “real” becomes something you perform, it stops being real at all. It becomes another version of the same thing - content designed to connect, not because it’s honest, but because it works.
You can feel it if you pay attention. That slight polish underneath everything. The sense that the person talking is aware of how it looks while they’re doing it. It’s not fake in the obvious way. It’s just managed.
And people still buy it. Not because they’re naïve, but because they want to. It’s easier to engage with something that feels authentic than to question whether it actually is. So, the cycle keeps going. More “real” moments, more engagement, more reward for getting the tone exactly right.
Until being authentic becomes a skill set.
Which is probably the clearest sign it isn’t anymore.