
crane
wombat
passing tram
Sugar Coated | FULL DOCUMENTARY | MUST SEE
10 things that I can’t stand
1. Women wearing ‘action-wear’ but are NOT going to the gym. This practice caught on a long time ago when several women started the trend. Now it’s everywhere. I’m not talking about any particular type. All women. Even the very attractive ones. I don’t want to see your tuchus hanging out !!!
Tuchus
slang
: buttocks
These wise words recognize the truth about teens: They’re a tremendous pain in the tuchus.—The Lewiston (Idaho) Morning Tribune
The world already has competitions for talent and achievement, irrespective of how one’s tuchus looks in a bikini. These competitions have names like “the Nobel Prizes” and “American Idol,” and the standards are way higher. – Gene Weingarten

2. People using shopping carts/trolleys as walking frames. Once again this started when several people were seen doing this practice. Now lots of people are doing it. They even let people take their shopping carts/trolleys into the library !!!
3. People talking LOUDLY on their mobile phone on public transport. This practice is very intrusive to others. I don’t mind them talking on the phone. Just keep it down a bit.
4. People peeing on the toilet seat in public toilets. This is just repulsive !!!
5. People getting in my face. I avoid all supermarkets that don’t have self-checkouts. Some people enjoy getting right into other people’s faces while checking out your shopping.
6. Any kinds of aggressive behavior. This is self-explanatory. If you are feeling angry, that’s OK. Just don’t dump it on other people.
7. Bad food in cafes and restaurants. Unfortunately, this is extremely common here in Australia. I know a friend who is originally from Belgium and has the same experience here in Oz.
8. Anything to do with Donald Trump. I unplugged my TV so I can avoid him all together.
9. Difficult people. This is more about me… because of my C-PTSD I find difficult people very challenging.
10. Being attacked on social media. This is very common. These days I stop and think before I comment, because just about anything you say can be misinterpreted and people will attack you.
L Ward – Hospital for Criminal Mental Defectives






Designed by Edward John Woods, SA Architect in Chief from 1878 to 1886, the construction of Z Ward for Criminal and Refractory Patients commenced in September 1884 with the contract being let to William Pett & Son, builders. Work preceded smoothly, completion being achieved in the second half of 1885. The polychromatic brickwork technique used by Wood in its design is the most elaborate, sophisticated example of this architectural style in South Australia Additionally, Wood incorporated ventilation flues into each room and cell as he had done in designing Old Parliament House, the Mortlock Library and Martindale Hall. Fresh air being considered an important element in curing mental illness.
Lack of staffing and financial resources prevented the new facility (for 45 inmates) from being opened until 1888, three years after its completion.
Only a minority of patients who were accommodated in Z Ward were Governor’s pleasure patients: those acquitted of their crime on the grounds of their insanity. The majority were people charged and convicted of a minor offence, but exhibiting sufficient signs of psychiatric instability that it was thought more beneficial for them to be placed in an asylum rather than in a gaol to serve their sentence. Another small group of patients were those who were considered to be dangerous to themselves or to others and were placed in there for the protection of the Asylum’s other inmates.
To admit a new inmate, a bell was rung to the right of the front gates. The male attendant in charge would leave his office to the right of the secure entrance way, open the gates; bring the escorted person into this area after locking the gates and the front door. He would then return to his office, locking the door behind him and summon an attendant from inside the ward who would open the internal steel gate with a key that only opened that gate. In this way the new inmate would learn that grabbing an attendant’s keys would not allow passage to the outside gate. Governor’s pleasure inmates were placed at night in the cells to the right on the ground floor with this area closed off by a cyclone screen from the rest of the inmates. The dining area was immediately in front and adjacent to the stairs.
Originally known as “L Ward”, the name was changed to Z Ward following the installation of telephones throughout the hospital in the 1900s. Mishearing the name when the telephone was answered led callers to mistake the ”L” for “Hell”. Adding a line to the “L” to form a “Z” saved in the cost of remarking the ward’s laundry.
Z Ward closed on the 13th December 1973 with the 10 occupants being transferred to the Yatala Security Hospital, only for that facility in turn to be closed in 1988-89 and replaced by James Nash House.
People say the strangest things…
I was having a conversation with someone,
and the topic came up about what we do on the weekends. I said…
“I go to church every Sunday… but I’m not a Christian.”
I got this response….
“You can’t go to church and not be a Christian !!!”
…they said very aggressively.
I was really taken aback by this statement. Took me a while to respond.
Here are some more nonsensical (made up) statements…
You can’t fly to the moon unless you are an astronaut!
You can’t go to Germany unless you are a Nazi!
You can’t eat meat unless you are a meat-eater!
You can’t wear tight clothes unless you are skinny!
You can’t read a book on communism unless you are a communist!
You can’t look at the stars unless you are an astrologist!
You can’t go to heaven in a bake-bean tin…because a bake-bean tin has bake-beans in! 🤣

water tower
what were/are the benefits of the Covid 19 pandemic?
- The really BIG one was: They now put soap in men’s public toilets. This never happened before this (well, only in rare occasions).
- They now have alcohol wipes in libraries, supermarkets and most retail stores. Before this the computers at libraries never got cleaned.
- (most) people cover their coughs and sneezes these days. This really didn’t happen before.
- Mandatory hugging is now a thing of the past. I’m actually grateful for this one. These days we bump elbows.

Do you have of any other benefits?




