’Pong reflects on 2007 (and himself)

A self-portrait by Pong

’Pong has combined his penchant for photographs of reflections with a self-portrait to head his latest post, Moments in 2007.

For him, 2007 was a year where he overcame some of the pressures of depression to achieve highlights such as a prize-winning image.

As I’ve said before in a post about privacy, depression hits 800,000 Australians every year and yet we try to pretend this epidemic and its effects don’t exist. Just pop another SSRI.

Small-minded politicians introduce legislation like WorkChoices in the name of “productivity”. Yet by disrupting routine family time and increasing individual stress they produce a shell-shocked workforce that’s less productive.

’Pong has the good fortune to have a day-job employer who has a more sophisticated worldview. When WorkChoices was introduced he told me “Why would I want to treat my staff so badly? I want to keep the good people!”

If a workplace produced physical illness as debilitating as depression, the proprietors would be paying compensation for decades — if they weren’t jailed for criminal negligence. But somehow it’s OK to destroy people’s minds. This has to end.

Depression is a normal human reaction to abnormal conditions. We’ve produced an abnormal society where in any given year nearly 1 in 20 of us suffers from its effects just in this way, let alone what others. Yes, this has to end.

Fortunately organisations like Beyond Blue help. And I’ll post my own, generally more positive thoughts later today.

Unreliable Bangkok 7: East

Photograph of the beach near Rayong, Thailand

For just one day in Thailand, we got out of the 10-million-person wonder that is Bangkok and headed East to Rayong. We had lunch with ’Pong’s parents. Over a mountain of ultra-fresh seafood and a bottle of rum, we watched this view. Need I say more?

This post is part of my series “Unreliable Bangkok”. Why not explore the others?

Unreliable Bangkok 6: Haircut

Photograph of Stilgherrian having a haircut in Bangkok

In the Old City of Bangkok, on the afternoon of Wednesday 28 November 2007, this barber (pictured) gave me the best haircut I’ve ever had.

It wasn’t because I looked particularly handsome afterwards, though it was an improvement. It was the meticulous care and attention shown.

’Pong took the photo with a proper camera, not a telephone. He’s got a better eye than me, too, and he’s certainly captured the mood.

Continue reading “Unreliable Bangkok 6: Haircut”

This year’s Crikey articles

Crikey logo

I’ve just noticed that Crikey makes its subscriber-only articles freely available after a while. So here’s links to what I’ve written for them this year — though the last one isn’t “free” yet. I’ll do a longer version for you soon anyway. Fret not.

Howard should be au fait with this internet thingy by now (20 June)
Blackle: a “green computing” furphy? (31 July)
Why MySpace for grown-ups won’t fly (13 August)
Failing the Citizenship Test (27 August)
Wikipedia and the PM — the trail is still hot (4 September)
Kirribilli house: yours for $15 (15 September)
Sputnik 2: The space age Australia never had (3 October)
Coonan kicks own goals over ICT strategies (5 October)
2007: The (second) last TV election (29 October)
Social media goes mainstream (except for business and politics) (17 December)