It had to happen eventually. Sooner or later. Ready or not. Not what I signed up for, but it happened anyway.
IT RAINED!!!
It rained! In paradise! With its picture perfect azure blue skies and endless sunshine, breathtaking sunrises and heartbreaking sunsets. Where winter means bring a sweater along and every day greets you with the happiness of dancing sunbeams and brilliant light.
It rained! Not a light drizzle or a quick shower. We have had before. No – it rained like it meant it! Torrential downpours, floods like Noah’s Arch, winds and storms. Pelting, pouring, attacking me. And it just wouldn’t stop! Even the snails in my backyard were seeking refuge on my covered porch. I know that because I stepped on one- barefoot! But that’s a whole different story.
It rained. And rained. And rained. Rained when catching my bus in the morning. Rained when trying to get to my fancy container classroom. Rained during bus duty after school. Rained on my way home. No gum boots, no play, no fun today!
What was left of the day was spent on my cozy couch in my cozy house with my cozy blanket. Coincidentally, it happened to be Australian Reading Hour, encouraging all Australians to pick up a book and read for an hour, and I was only too happy to comply – all week long!
I love books. A lot! In fact, I might be addicted to them. Made a huge circle around the beautiful local bookstore for the first month or so, until I broke down and entered the heavenly world of Australian literature. Asking everyone I met, what their favourite Australian read was, I purchased several titles that were now forming a brand new pile of books on my Australian night table, putting its Canadian counterpart to shame. Travel guides and nature books, classics and new releases, an autobiography by a local author. And on top of the pile Margarate Atwood’s new novel. Not because she is Australian (because she is not), but because I like it.
Other great sources of reading material: local charity book sales, the library and the second hand book box at my school!
Every Thursday morning, pretending hard to be on duty, I go through this treasure box of discarded gems, only to find immense literary riches: The ALDI Cookbook (very useful!), The Thorn Birds (a classic!), The Tobacconist (one of my favourite novels) and my latest find… The Little Book of Morality (even more useful than the ALDI Cookbook)! Paired with The BON JOVI biography, it would make for an interesting read on yet another rainy day.
Back to the pile of books on my nightstand. On my couch, with the rain hammering and howling outside, I was rereading The Handmaid’s Tale to get ready for its sequel. The dark and somber mood of this story seemed to go well with the weather outside. A quote kept resurfacing from the ocean of beautiful words:
“Nothing changes instantaneously: in a gradually heating bathtub you’d be boiled to death before you knew it.” (Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale)
Climate Change Strikes were happening all over the world and it was amazing to receive live testament of people I knew, taking action around the globe.
Sydney first, with over 80.000 people attending the demonstrations at The Domain in Sydney’s central business district, 50 families from our school among them.
Germany next, with pictures of people gathering on Munich’s Koenigsplatz, calling for action. (No rain there, by the way!)
And last, but not least Canada. People were standing up for change and I should have been one of them.
The other day, somebody asked me about Australia’s stand on the environment. Write only about what you know, I didn’t feel I knew enough to answer. I know there are heaps of mines, that there is a drought in large areas of the country (silly thought: send some of our rain there!), the slow dying of the Great Barrier Reef, and the call for more renewable energy.
Don’t write about what you don’t know, write about what you feel. I feel that the people around me care a lot about the environment. Reusable coffee cups, wooden spoons, bamboo straws, litterless lunches, mug libraries at cafes and ice cream in palm leaves. Small steps, maybe, but steps in the right direction.
And an immense love for this country with its animals and plants, flowers and nature surrounding us everywhere. It is paradise after all! Even when it rains!
And so, just like it started, the rain stopped. The sun reappearing from behind clouds on brilliant blue skies. Time to get off that couch and make my way to the beach. Book in hand.
When it rains lemons, make lemonade. And when it stops, enjoy it! Cheers!













