Child of the Tides…….
I have often wondered how I have become a solitary person
in my old age, happy in my own company. But, as I think about my early life,
say between the ages of 9 and 12, I recall that my family lived in a little
backwater suburb of Brisbane, called Shorncliffe. It really was the end of the
line.
However, its main charm was Moreton Bay, with Moreton
Island strung out in the background of the bay.
When I first stood at the top of the cliff, over the road from the
shabby, wooden house my parents had just rented, I couldn’t believe my eyes. My
only view of water in my entire young life had ever been the muddy Brisbane River. I had never seen the
sea.
Just across the road from our house and down the face of
the cliff was a little track leading down to the
ocean. Not the hurling, curling surf of
the Gold Coast, but sandbanks, which stretched for miles when the tide was out.
A sea of shimmering blue satin when the tide was in.
My life was, for ever after, ruled by the tides. Who cared
about school. Just a little break of 4
or 5 hours to learn your ABC’s and then
I rushed home to the Bay, and went crabbing, fishing, beach combing , and
swimming. These were the happiest days of my life. It didn’t matter if the tide
was in or out, rough or calm, there I was, alone
.
So now, when the going gets rough, my mind takes me back to
stand in the warm salt waters of the sand pools and look into the eyes of the sea
anemones, clinging onto rocks, or catch a glare from an annoyed prawn, waving
its whiskers, at my presumptuous invasion of its territory.
Those were the days, my friends…..

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