Words, By George!

Mundane Musings ­­║ Mindful Mutterings ║ Madcap Mischief

  • Welcome!
  • Main
    • PHOTO GALLERY
      • Avoca, Co. Wicklow
      • Bitola, Macedonia
      • Coventry, Warwickshire
      • Devizes, Wiltshire
      • Fishguard, South Wales
      • Liverpool, UK
      • Pontsycyllte Aqueduct
      • Prilep, Macedonia
      • Standedge Tunnels
  • Liked Links
  • About the Author
    • Contact the Author
    • Inspirations
  • Books I’ve Read
  • My Stories
    • 1%
    • A Meeting With Death
    • Rachel
    • The Holiday

You Haven’t “Lived” as a Man Unless…..

Posted by George Brown on 21/04/2013
Posted in: Education, Humour, Uncategorized, Views. Tagged: Life, love. Leave a comment
  • You’ve been slapped in public by a beautiful woman.
  • You’ve raced an expensive European sports car.
  • You’ve been in grave danger and made it out alive.
  • You’ve used your “power” as a man to help others for no other reason than you can and it was the right thing to do.
  • You’ve defended someone who couldn’t defend themselves.
  • Your wife swooned as she looked you in the eyes and told you how much she respects and admires you.
  • You’ve felt the “drape” of a fine handmade suit.
  • You’ve smoked a rich Cuban cigar.
  • You’ve had a professional shoe shine.
  • You’ve known the loyalty and companionship of a good dog.
  • You’ve been a dad (not just fathered a child).
  • You stayed faithful to one good woman your entire life.

Oh yes, and:

  • You’ve worn a kilt without worrying about what people think!

Source: Rick Johnson

 

On Marriage…..

Posted by George Brown on 21/04/2013
Posted in: Education, Uncategorized. Tagged: communication, conflict, love, Marriage. Leave a comment

I found this article on marriage which I found inciteful so I thought I’d share it here:

One of the greatest fallacies we buy into is that there is the “perfect” person out there just waiting to make us happy for the rest of our lives if we can only find them. Many of us spend our entire lives, including our marriages, dreaming of a person who would complete our life and make us happy and content. I’m convinced that person doesn’t exist and that our marriage is more about what we make it than any predestined or preordained match made in heaven. The myth of the “soul mate” has been foisted upon men and women like bad cake at a wedding.

Another error that people buy into is the illusion that love means the absence of conflict. Just as people want to believe that pain and sadness should be avoided at all costs, they believe that love means no conflict.

If you believe that the right person will come along and make you happy, you are deluded. You, not other people, are responsible for your own happiness. Every relationship, especially one of love, is painful and often difficult. That’s why it is worthwhile. With the beauty and fragrance of a rose come the thorns that scratch and sometimes draw blood. Going through the struggles of life together brings you closer and bonds you deeper. Those relationships without conflict and pain are dead, cold, and passionless. I say rejoice in your conflicts because it means your marriage is alive and growing!

Our daughter recently mentioned to my wife that she wanted a love like we have, that we still acted like we were on our honeymoon. I don’t know whose house she’s been living in for the past twenty-some years, but I don’t often feel like we’re still honeymooners. But in hindsight, perhaps because my wife and I still frequently hold hands, hug and kiss, and even dance together in the living room, our daughter feels we have a great love. We like to travel together, and we enjoy each other’s company. We speak respectfully to each other and try to be cheerleaders for one another. Our actions and words not only direct our feelings but also signify to others our love and passion for one another. In short, we are good friends. That friendship fuels our love for one another and carries us through those rough spots when one of us is feeling disagreeable or fed up with the other.

Many young couples today are frustrated with each other and their marriage because neither partner knows how to relate to and communicate with the other. No one has ever taught them the fundamentals of building an intimate relationship, so they are starting from scratch, guessing at how a marriage works. This confusion causes arguments and disagreements. This lack of taught communication skills (which were often never modeled for them in their parents’ marriages) creates tension and prevents intimacy in a relationship.

But perhaps of more importance than even communication in a marriage is love—love that is not a feeling or an emotion, but one that is a verb, an action word. If we take loving actions in our relationships, the feelings of love will follow. There’s an old adage that thoughts become actions and actions become feelings. Your attitude is everything.

Perhaps it is unrealistic to expect this kind of selflessness in a culture that demands total fulfillment and self-satisfaction out of every relationship, or quickly abandons a relationship for one more attractive. Of course, the same problems follow and nag the subsequent relationship as well, because it is not about having your needs met but about meeting the needs of your spouse. Love is about giving, not receiving.

Having a successful marriage is not about finding the perfect person to marry, although that is what many people believe. It is about loving someone in a forgiving, Christlike manner. The Bible illustrates this agape-type love in many stories, ranging from Hosea, who continued to love and take back his adulterous wife; to Joseph, who forgave his brothers for selling him into slavery. In my experience, love requires nearly constant forgiveness.

Love is a choice. If we choose to love, we will be loved in return. God chooses to love us despite our imperfections. This in turn should inspire us to extend the same grace to the person we have chosen to spend our lives with and to be the mother or father of our children. If that is not possible, perhaps we should have made a better choice to begin with.

Remember, love isn’t about you—it’s about the one you love.

Source: Rick Johnson, Becoming Your Spouse’s Better Half: Why Differences Make a Marriage Great.

What’s in a name?

Posted by George Brown on 21/03/2013
Posted in: History, News, Religion, Views. Tagged: Holy See; BIshop of Rome, Pope Francis. Leave a comment

I saw this video on Youtube, and was moved by the message. Watch it yourself and see what you think.

As I’ve said before, I’m not Catholic but Orthodox, but I truly believe Francis will be a pope for all people.

His actions in the following video left me with a tear in my eye!

A true act of compassion, love, and charity.

Watch this space!

Conclave Capers

Posted by George Brown on 11/03/2013
Posted in: Humour, Religion. Tagged: Conclave. Leave a comment

I noted this on the blog of my good friend Andrew Doohan at http:www.doohan.id.au

I couldn’t stop laughing!

I hope he doesn’t mind me replicating it here.

Conclave Tip: Black smoke: No Pope. White smoke: Pope. Gray smoke: The College of Cardinals can’t figure out how to use the @#$%&%* stove.

Source: James Martin SJ; Andrew Doohan.

Posted by George Brown on 08/03/2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

There is still a section of society that feel it’s OK to assault paramedics. The problem is that they too often get away with it. See my post below.

Posted by George Brown on 06/02/2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

It’s a pity that Mundine is a better orator than a boxer.

I don’t follow boxing as I dont think that two men beating themselves to a pulp constitutes sport.

Racist plot? I dont think he can use that one either! In my limited knowledge of boxing, most of the “great champions” have been black!

Shipwreck lifeboat washes up in Australia

Posted by George Brown on 06/02/2013
Posted in: Media, News, Safety, Uncategorized. Tagged: lifeboat, Oliva, shipping, shipwreck. Leave a comment

A lifeboat has washed ashore in Australia from a ship that ran aground in the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean almost two years ago.

Oliva crew rescued but the lifeboat drifted unmanned

The lifeboat from the bulk carrier Oliva floated about 8,000 kilometres from Nightingale Island to a beach at the Coorong wetlands near the mouth of the Murray in South Australia.

The ship’s crew of more than 20 was rescued after the maritime accident in March 2011, which caused a big oil spill.

The Oliva had been sailing from Brazil to China.

It broke up two days after the accident, the forward section drifting off.

The aft section of the bulk carrier capsized and sank.

Nick Balmer, from Victor Harbor, just west of the Coorong, spotted the lifeboat when he went fishing and said it was in good condition considering its long journey.

“The seats inside are torn up so, you know, the chances are it’s probably been sitting on other beaches around the world maybe, you know, and people have sort of trashed it inside a bit,” he said.

“The lifejacket was out on the beach down the Coorong there so we’re not the first person to find it.”
Lifeboat is close to seven metres long and could hold 20 people Photo: Lifeboat is close to seven metres long and could hold 20 people (Nick Balmer)

Long journey

The South Australian Transport Department said it was unsure what to do with the 6.8-metre lifeboat.

Official Joe Rositano said departmental staff were travelling to the beach near Salt Creek and planned to ensure the boat could not wash back out to sea.

“What we’re going to make sure is that it actually doesn’t become a navigation hazard again,” he said.

“What we’re going to look at doing is perhaps anchoring it initially because the thing weighs, without the water in it it’s a couple of tonnes, so it’s not an easy thing to move.”

Source: ABC News 24

Posted by George Brown on 06/02/2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a comment

Well said, Bill!
I believe there will be tough times ahead for the Church, but It will survive, and undoubtedly be a stronger, safer place.

The Cost of Technical “Debt”

Posted by George Brown on 27/01/2013
Posted in: Finance, Software, Technology. Tagged: beta testing, Software, Technical Debt. Leave a comment

I found this interesting article at zdnet.com and thought I’d like to share it here:

How costly is ‘technical debt’ — the amount of work that still has to go into software after it has been released? For too many companies, this is unfortunately too common a way of doing business. 

The challenge for many developers is their organizations put tremendous pressure on them to get things out the door as fast as possible — to deliver releases quickly, allowing precious little time for bug reporting and fixing. In many cases, upper management seems to be more willing to assume long-term technical debt than pay a little more up-front to get things right, with better testing and quality measures.  

Ward Cunningham and Capers Jones, the two most respected leading voices on software quality, recently renewed their calls for better management of technical debt in a recentQ&A hosted by Carolyn Seaman and reported by Alexandra Szynkarski at OnTechnicalDebt.com

As Jones put it: “If you skimp on quality before you deliver software, you end up paying heavy interest downstream after the software is released for things you could have gotten rid of earlier, had you been more careful.” Cunningham adds that applications themselves have a way of taking on a life of their own — turning into “its own little bureaucracy where you can’t actually on a daily basis create value.” The result is technical debt that “has piled up and you’re paying that interest.”

As Jones describes it, most companies still carry high levels of technical debt, but there are some shining examples of “debt-free” companies as well:

“Most companies don’t have a clue on how to get rid of bugs before release. So they’re not making conscious choices; they’re acting out of ignorance because they don’t know what they’re doing. If you look at the companies that do know what they’re doing, they don’t have much technical debt and they don’t have to pay very much up front either because they’re using a synergistic combination of defect-prevention, pretest removal, static analysis and inspections, and really good testing. So they have minimum upfront cost and they have minimum technical debt because they know what they’re doing.”

Jones puts the average cost of technical debt — resulting from botched projects — at $1,200 per function point in the development stage, $600 per function point for fixing bugs, and $300 per function point after release fixing bugs. This costs escalates after five years as well — to about $350.

By contrast, a well-executed development process can deliver software at about $1,000 a function point for development, $500 for fixing bugs, and $200 for post-release bug fixes. In a well-managed quality organization, the cost should drop to $50 a function point after five years, he states.

For measuring technical debt, Jones points to a tried-and-true metric called “defect removal efficiency,” which encompasses keeping track of the bugs found during development, and keeping track of customer reports up to 90 days after release. The number of customer reports is calculated against the number of internal bug findings. “For example, if you found 90 bugs inside and the customers reported 10 bugs, you were 90% efficient in removing defects,” he illustrates.

Companies with notable software quality efforts “achieve something like 99% defect removal efficiency, so only 1% of the bugs get released into the field.” The U.S. average is only 85% defect removal efficiency, he adds. “For a software organization to release 15% of all defects to an excited public, to my mind, is hovering near malpractice.” In other words, don’t rely on end-users to serve as beta sites, he says.

Authors: Capers Jones and Ward Cunningham.

Happy New Year!!

Posted by George Brown on 01/01/2013
Posted in: Media, News, Photography, Uncategorized, Views. Tagged: House fire, Photography. Leave a comment

I was driving home from work at 0700 and I thought that I noticed some flames in the distance. No, I thought, I’m seeing things, as I had been on night shift and I was very tired.

As I turned onto the main road near to where I lived, to my surprise, this is what I found:

House Fire

And:

House Fire – Lambton

As I always carry a camera with me, (Nikon S9300) I took these (and other) photos.

What was very bizarre about this occurrence was that it was so quiet, not even a bird chirping, and the house was well alight, as you can see. There were no fire brigades on scene. In fact, they did not arrive for at least another 5 minutes after these photos were taken. The fire was attended by three brigades but the house was totally destroyed by the fire.

I was advised (off the record) by a fire brigade contact, that arson may have been involved.

The first photo appearred in the local newspaper. See the link here.

NOT a good way to start a New Year!!

Posts navigation

← Older Entries
Newer Entries →
  • Calender

    January 2026
    S M T W T F S
     123
    45678910
    11121314151617
    18192021222324
    25262728293031
    « Nov    
  • Visitors

    • 29,745 hits
  • Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 167 other subscribers
  • Currently Reading

  • My Flickr

    VH-JQG
    More Photos
  • George’s Tweets

    Tweets by georgebrown99
  • Blogs I Follow

    • Ambulance Visibility Blog
    • ryanbreeding's Blog
    • As My Camera Sees It
    • Writings of a Mrs
    • Australian Emergency Law
    • Emerging
    • World Of Alexander The Great
    • Psyche's Circuitry
    • European Scientist
    • Macedonian Orthodox Church Property Trust Bill 2010
    • philosoffer
    • Permalife: an FPS
    • Fortyteen Candles
    • Jeyna Grace
    • About Film
    • onethousandsingledays.wordpress.com/
    • SimplePolitiks
    • retireediary
    • Semper Quaerens
  • This Is Me

    George Brown is a decorated soldier and health professional and 40 year veteran in the field of emergency nursing and paramedical practice, both military and civilian areas. He has senior management positions in the delivery of paramedical services. Opinions expressed in these columns are solely those of the author and should not be construed as being those of any organization to which he may be connected.

    He was born in the UK of Scottish ancestry from Aberdeen and a member of the Clan MacDougall. He is a member of the Macedonian community in Newcastle, and speaks fluent Macedonian. While this may seem a contradiction, it is his wife who is Macedonian, and as a result he embraced the Macedonian language and the Orthodox faith.

    His interests include aviation and digital photography, and he always enjoys the opportunity to combine the two. Navigate to his Flickr site to see recent additions to his photo library.

    Me

    Џорџ Браун е украсени војник и професионално здравствено лице и 40 годишен ветеран во областа на за итни случаи старечки и парамедицински пракса, двете воени и цивилни области. Тој има високи менаџерски позиции во испораката на парамедицински услуги. Мислењата изразени во овие колумни се исклучиво на авторот и не треба да се толкува како оние на било која организација тој може да биде поврзан.

    Тој е роден во Велика Британија на шкотскиот потекло од Абердин и член на Kланот MacDougall. Тој е член на македонската заедница во Њукасл, и зборува течно македонски. Иако ова можеби изгледа контрадикција, тоа е неговата сопруга кој е македонски, и како резултат научил македонскиот јазик и ја примија православната вера.

    Неговите интереси вклучуваат авијација и дигитална фотографија, и тој секогаш ужива во можност да се комбинираат двете. Отиди до неговиот Фликр сајт да видите последните дополнувања на неговата слика библиотека.

  • My Community

    • Beejai's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Harley's avatar
    • texaslawstudent's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Arnold's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • theearthofbrain's avatar
    • Micah's avatar
    • kamalathompson's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Gerard's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • MovieBabble's avatar
    • Gem Kalaw's avatar
    • Andrea Giang | Cooking with a Wallflower's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Kunal Rane's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • fatgirleatsout's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • PHOTO KING's avatar
    • Cait's avatar
    • five experts's avatar
    • mathias sager's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • sandraleehr's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • legalandimportant's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • A Wealth's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • Unknown's avatar
    • The MIND of RD REVILO's avatar
    • eustat's avatar
Blog at WordPress.com.
Ambulance Visibility Blog

Emergency vehicle visibility and conspicuity research & comments for the Police, Fire, EMS and Ambulance: The AV Blog is written by John Killeen

ryanbreeding's Blog

Smile! You’re at the best WordPress.com site ever

As My Camera Sees It

Focus, Fun, and Creativity

Writings of a Mrs

I write, blog, vlog and poet...I wander, I ponder and I recollect ...DIGITAL NOMAD & PHILOSOPHER

Australian Emergency Law

Discussion on the law that applies to or affects Australia's emergency services and emergency management, by Michael Eburn, PhD, Australian Lawyer. Email: meburn@australianemergencylaw.com

Emerging

The Butterfly counts not months but moments, and has time enough.

World Of Alexander The Great

"Everything is possible to him who will try"

Psyche's Circuitry

Thoughts on growing up and growing old in the digital age

European Scientist

Blog with Journalistic and Historical articles

Macedonian Orthodox Church Property Trust Bill 2010

Macedonian Orthodox communities in Australia

philosoffer

EVERYTHING AND ANYTHING

Permalife: an FPS

a Feminist Phenomenology (or something)

Fortyteen Candles

Oh, let's see...distinguished Gen-X'er, frustrated writer and mom living in the confines of a small town that thinks it's a big deal. And have I mentioned Walmart yet?

Jeyna Grace

A Story Begins

About Film

Film, Life and Culture

onethousandsingledays.wordpress.com/

SimplePolitiks

retireediary

The Diary of a Retiree

Semper Quaerens

Words, By George!
Blog at WordPress.com.
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Words, By George!
    • Join 167 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Words, By George!
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...