While everyone in the Northern Hemisphere is busy building snowmen,
snuggling up with layers of blankets or jumpers and generally doing
their best to keep warm during the next few months, we here in Darwin
are as usual sweltering under a hot and sticky sun. At least we can
celebrate the season on the beach with a sandman instead. :)
The humidity this time of year is at its worst as the wet season is
just beginning. I sit here and watch the storms roll in over the bay,
thunder rumbles all around while sheets of lightning flash across the
horizon. As the storm approaches the sky darkens and the monsoonal rain
begins to pelt down. I find myself wanting to hide under the table or
better yet under the covers of the safety of my bed. I am home alone and
feel somewhat vulnerable. Memories of our years in Thailand during
monsoons come flooding back.
My babies were only one, four and seven years old when we first
experienced the frightening effects of a tropical storm. The electricity
in the house we lived in was not grounded and every time a storm came
through not only did the power go out, we had a build up of water pool
in the light shade over the dining room table.Doesn’t sound so bad? But
the table was on the bottom floor of a two storey house, I could never
figure out where all the water was coming from? I asked the resident
Thai maintenance man if he could please fix the problem. His
solution…..”Mai pen lai madame” (not a problem madame) and he promptly
deposited a bucket onto the middle of my dining room table, problem
solved! He smiled and left.
My dear husband resolved to fix the problem and had a fellow from
work arrive to install a circuit breaker on our wall just inside our
front door. Problem solved? Ah no! The next storm that came through the
circuit breaker blew up and flames flew up my wall. Hubby arrived home
late from work to find the house pitch black, a burnt smell as he
entered and myself and three little boys sitting upstairs in the middle
of our bed reading by torchlight.
So now when I experience the storms here in Darwin some twenty years
later, all alone while hubby is at work, the boys all grown up and no
longer at home with me to give mum support, I can’t help but wonder what
will go wrong here?
So far so good. But I have heard some people say we are due for
another big wet season and even another big cyclone. It has been 40
years this Christmas Eve since Santa didn’t make it into Darwin when
Cyclone Tracey struck and to top it off I believe Tracey crossed the
coast right here at Cullen Bay where I am living! Fills one with a lot
of confidence!
So I’ll trim the tree and cook the traditional roast. I’ll wrap all
the presents and send out all my Christmas cards and I’ll look forward
to spending Christmas with all my wonderful family and friends down
south and say a silent prayer for everyone here in Darwin that they stay
safe while I am away. Last but not least I’ll pray that a cyclone
doesn’t hit and devastate families anywhere in Australia this season,
Queensland, Western Australia or the Northern Territory. Then I’ll
return early in the New Year to watch the storms build up across the bay
once more.
As a Christmas special i am offering a two for one deal on
Gingerbread Aliens. So while you cook gingerbread this festive season
you can read with the family a different kind of gingerbread story. What
better gift at Christmas than sharing the gift of time, laughter and
imagination with your kids and being able to give that gift to another
family as well.
https://sandrabennettauthor.com/gingerbread-aliens/