lördag, september 30, 2006

07 de kalla mig, "källare pojken"

I spose I should give you an update! I've been to see the doc(s) twice more - different ones each visit - and they've taken yet more x-rays and poked and prodded my hand and finger and they all tell me it's healing well. They can see that new bone is forming and even though there's hardly any knuckle and my finger will forever be shorter (well, as long as I reside in this earthly body anyway) they say my hand and finger will work fine (yeh, we'll see…) They took off my cast on Thursday (yes! free! at last!!!) and my hand and finger have been a bit stiff and sore but seem ok, just weak after not being used for the last month now. Here's the most recent x-rays taken with my palm facing up.


I've also just moved from where I've been living for the past few months at Sollentuna, into a new place at Enskede. Remember the bloke who's motorbike I crashed? (are you sure about this…?) Yeh well Fredrik was kind enough to offer for me to rent a room at his place for the time being. He also happens to have a 10 Mbit broadband connection which is how I'm able to write this to you! I should really tell you all about where I've been living and some of the stuff I've been doing during the summer so stay tuned below!

Thanks to everyone who emailed me well wishes, kind remarks (I promise I'll reply to all your emails asaic!) and also to my mate Singo who sent me a vivid reminder of what happens to you when your motorbike collides with a pole… hmmm yeh thanks for that mate, really, I think… A big thanks to mum and dad for the package of my stuff they sent me a while back (I've used just about everything from in there so it's been great ta!) which also happened to include 2 tubes of Vegemite. hoo-ya! I'm still not convinced that it's possible to live a completely satisfied, happy and fulfilled life without Vegemite. Both tubes are all gone now and I've had to purchase some more of the delicious black goo from the English shop here in Stockholm. It costs a bloody fortune (over $6 bucks for the really small glass jar!!! what's that? did I hear someone say highway robbery???) but sometimes you just gotta cough up. I mean, I was even eating the stuff straight from the tube! Talk about deprived!

While we're on the subject there's something very wrong with the chocolate situation here. Once again the English shop to the rescue! There's nothing like the taste of that glass and a half of full cream dairy milk to cheer you up when you need it. mmmmmmm Cadbury… Flake… Caramello chocolate covered goodness… (drooling noises) Ok I'm back with you now. After such long periods without hearing the very distinctive, much loved, missed and ever so joyous sound of an Aussie accent, I can tell you that you recognize it immediately when you hear it and my oath does it sound bloody sensational!!! I happened to be flicking channels one night a few weeks' back there somewhere and happened across an episode of "Love My Way" - I really couldn't care less what was happening in the show, but I just sat there the entire time, completely fixated, listening to that unmistakably beautiful sound… Believe it or not I also happened across the end of an episode of "The Flying Doctors" from way, way, way back there somewhere in the Grundy annals (yeh they love it here apparently!) Regular free Swedish TV (all three channels of it) leaves much to be desired - for much of the day there's a screen telling you what's going to be on later(!) - so it's a good thing I'm not here to watch telly =P


About 3 months ago I had the opportunity to house-sit (well, appartment-sit really) for a lady named Gudrun (remember that name do we? and what she's capable of?) while she was overseas on holiday for 3½ weeks. So I moved from Tumba to Sollentuna, which is located north west of Stockholm approx. 12 minutes by pendeltåg. Her apartment was like living in a boutique hotel! Complete with broadband internet, Sony wide screen LCD telly, DVD, cable, soffa (couch), fåtölj (armchair - one just like I've always wanted! complete with footstool!) and her bed is a Tempur - easily the most comfortable thing you will ever, ever sleep on, ever. You lie on it and just sink into it a little as it conforms to your body shape. I gotta get me one of those! Living alone again was a nice change too as it's what I'm used to, and gave me the chance to get back into some training (I had been jogging 5-10kms down by Edsviken regularly - some pics below - haven't been doing so much jogging lately due to my injuries, 'cept for running down to Helenelund Pendeltågstation to catch the train because I'm running late of course! but will get back into it again soon...) and also to think about some stuff (maybe a little too much...) and just generally chill which was great.

I didn't manage to find anywhere else to live be the end of the 3½ weeks so I decided to implememt my contingency plans and scoped out a couple of good sites in the forest to pitch my tent (yes, I have a tent). I figured I could live like this for a number of weeks until I found some work and a 'decent' place to live. Anyway the lady downstairs - Christina - who owns the apartment complex (I was looking after Gudrun's apartment upstairs) found out I was planning to live in the forest and thought this was a terrible idea (hey but I liked it!) and offered for me to pitch my tent in her yard and so then I could use her kitchen and bathroom etc. Her son Joel was supposed to be staying with her but then wasn't so she offered me his room and I accepted.

Instead of paying rent I fixed things around the place; door locks, holes in the wall etc and spent a lot of time cleaning up downstairs in the basement, garage and workshop. I also cleaned the most disgustingly filthy oven range hood the other week for the other lady upstairs - Gunda - they thought that there was no way to clean inside it but undo 2 screws (hmmmm it's not rocket science ladies…) and whoa-la I discovered years of built up fat and goodness knows what else to spend hours of entertaining fun removing (yeh good work Ty, must you be SO resourceful at times like this…?) Well it's now cleaner than the day it was bought… ok maybe not quite that clean but you get the idea. Am really looking forward to never doing that again… ever ...

So I've just had about 3 months of the best summer weather you could want anywhere in the world! Everyone keeps saying that summers in Sweden aren't normally like this, but I think it's all just part of a conspiracy to keep ppl away! Some days reminded me a lot of Adelaide and others so much like Brisbane it was almost making me homesick! It wouldn't get dark until 2300 (that's 11pm for your civvies) and it would be bright as day again at 0300!!! Totally freaky!!! Right in the middle of summer (midsommar - strangely enough...) it wouldn't even get that dark when it did get dark if you know what I dark… I mean mean, you know what I dark? ok I'm losing it = ) again…

Christina has had her sister + husband from South America come to stay so I've been moved to the basement… Hence the title for this blog entry; they call me, "the basement boy". It's really not that great down there, is really cold and the air is bad and I'm sure it's why I've been a bit crook lately… Cough! Cough! But I guess it's better than nothing and many other ppl live in much worse conditions so I am grateful. Really I am… Cough! Cough!

I'm now pleased to report that I'm out of the bloody basement and am on the mend… Cough! Cough! Enjoy the pics!

The front door to the apartment complex where I was living at Sollentuna

Gudrun's bil (car) which I was allowed to drive while looking after her apartment. It's an old bomb but hey it has 4 wheels
and a gearstick and steering wheel (and brakes...)
and that's all I need to get a driving fix!

Some Sollentuna wildlife. Taken just outside where I was living.
These huge bunnies (actually I think they are Hares...)
were there most afternoons and yes,
I chased them around trying to get some good pics!

All the following pics were taken down by Edsviken
both near the water and in the forest where I loved to go jogging!




















Is that a moose I see? Walking on water???



Mållgan strikes again!!!

A poster put up around the place in Sollentuna. It reads:
NAZI PIGS ARE NOT WELCOME IN THIS AREA!
Here live proper workers who don't allow themselves to divide!
Sollentuna against racism and nazism

Graffiti from Stockholms Södra Pendeltågstation

And finally some really stunning pics from
3 separate Sollentuna sunsets.
They were also taken just outside where I was living.






torsdag, september 14, 2006

06 nyheter

Time for some latest news! I've barely had any internet access of late, and have found this very frustrating to say the least. After all it's the main way I have of communicating with friends and family both back home and around the world. I've tried to setup some broadband access with Telia (the equivalent of Telstra back home and with pretty much the same level of customer service…) but after some confusion they wouldn't let me sign up as I don't have a 'real' personnummer. Do they want my hard earned cash or not?! Go figure… So I'm investigating other options which it would appear there aren't many of considering my situation. I have a couple of blog updates almost ready to go but with no broadband am unable to upload any pics (am currently on dial-up, in Sweden… can you believe it!) So unfortunately you'll just have to wait a bit longer!!! = (

Anyway, much has happened lately and I want to tell everyone about it! I got a job!!! Yes!!! I got a job!!! It's with a company called Power Play AB at Stockholmsmässan (the Stockholm convention centre) as a sound and lighting technician. I usually work from 0700-1600 M-F with occasional overtime and weekend work. The job involves assembling large aluminium trusses in all manner of shapes, then arranging various lighting setups on them and raising the whole rig to a specified height. After the exhibitors have setup their booths the lights then need to be focused correctly and finally after the convention is finished the rig is taken down and dismantled. Then it starts all over again! Also for conferences sound and stage lighting needs to be setup and later the control booth manned to alter lighting conditions and sound levels, roving mics, laptop setups etc etc. The former is at times pretty physical work and good for keeping fit!

I also get to drive a number of different vehicles ranging from electric buggies (kinda like golf buggies but they are much harder and have tray backs, open tops and silicone filled tyres so they never go flat no matter how many nails and screws they have in them!) to Sky Jacks that are very, very manoeuvrable and go really, really, really high and last but not least the ol' Scissor Lifter (Snorkel). In some ways it takes me back to the ol' Brisbane Hilton days… Totally different jobs but there are some similarities (is more like houseman stuff and staging connections). I'm working with some great ppl; Ben, Görgen and Kicki, Cissi, Göte, Marcus, Tuomas, Tim, Joakim (and some others I haven't met yet). Thanks for the job Allan! Also a big thankyou to John for his help!

It turns out Ben is a member of the Potatoes motorcycle club here in Stockholm. Check out their website, those guys 'n' gals are crazy!!! He invited me to go for a ride with him after work one fine sunny day and I accepted. He organized a bike for me to ride (an older Yamaha 750 roadie) owned by a friend of his who agreed to let me ride his bike even though he'd never met me (yeh I hear you ask yourself, is this guy crazy?!) and also lent me a set of his old leathers to wear and even offered me his own back guard which I turned down saying, "I'm not planning to crash today." So we geared up and I wanted to ride around the block once to remember where everything is (as it had been ages since I'd last ridden a bike...) and noted that the bike is very difficult to start and requires many attempts to get it going, also when you turn the handlebars almost fully to the left or right the revs increase dramatically without you moving the throttle (hmmmmmmm) which is only an embarrassing issue when you are manoeuvring the bike while standing still. We then headed out onto the open road. Let me say at this point that there's absolutely no feeling like riding a bike fast, but it really is so easy to die. I should know, I've had two very good mates die in motorbike accidents - Damo and Ilijash - may they rest in peace. Still when you get on the bloody thing you just can't help but to go fast, that's what they're for afterall…

We rode for hours on freeways, backroads and through some really stunning windy forest roads, and I was having an absolutely amazing time, not that there was much opportunity to take in the beautiful scenery as riding a bike demands total concentration and your complete attention. At one point we passed an accident between a motorbike and a car - the police were there and the car didn't look too good but everyone appeared to be ok. It wasn't long after this we stopped for some gas and a drink. Back to it again through yet more fantastic windy forest road, the journey continued. I had just passed two cars and was negotiating a long slow corner that turned more sharply into a reverse S bend (but nothing severe or out of the ordinary) and for some reason I noticed the grass and a big ditch on the other side of the road and I remember saying to myself, "you don't want to end up in there." The next second I was breaking sharply before entering that very same grass! I managed to keep the bike upright through the rough uneven ground however things quickly became less controlled when the bike hit the log lying in the ditch… I remember briefly becoming airborne and duing this time two thoughts raced through my mind, "so this is what it's like to crash a motorbike" and "this is really gonna hurt" before I violently hit the earth (Ouch!) and rolled and tumbled several times.

I stood up immediately and instantly noted the sharp pain in my right hip and left hand which I instinctively gripped. It was very painful to move my fingers and a couple weren't working properly so I massaged my hand and felt some things crunch back into place inside and then it seemed to be working ok again if not still a bit sore. I did this as I was walking back over to the bike which I noted now had some 'grass accessories', no windscreen, no side mirrors or front indicators and some scratches that I'm pretty sure weren't there before. I tried once to pick it up but the pain in my hip got the better of me. I began to remove the numerous 'grass accessories' whilst muttering various obscenities to myself and thinking how it had been going so bloody well up to this point but now everything was royally f***ed. Both drivers of the cars I had just passed pulled over and Ben, who had been riding slightly further ahead returned to see what had happened to me and make sure I was ok. Another bike rider also stopped to help out. I tried to pick up the bike again and this time succeeded and then Ben checked over it and we connected a rubber hose that had come off, it also seemed to be leaking a bit of oil and there was some fuel around. We managed to start it ok and then turned it off and pushed it back up to the road, but now it wouldn't start…

Ben checked the oil and decided we would need some more for the trip home. I knew working the clutch with my left hand was going to be hard but thought I could manage ok. I helped Ben bump start it and then we were on our way home - I rode extra carefully as the tyres may have had oil and/or fuel on them. We stopped at a servo for some oil and had to bump start it again… I noticed a big difference in wind resistance on the freeway with no windscreen (?!) and it was pretty painful every single time I had to operate the clutch but somehow I managed. Finally we made it back to Ben's place and I then had to break the terrible news to Fredrik - the poor bloke who's bike I had borrowed and smashed - who actually lives across the hall from Ben! I knocked on his door and he eventually answered and I introduced myself, "G'day, I'm Ty from Australia, you lent me your bike and I'm really, really sorry but I crashed it" ( yeh I felt like a million bucks right about now…) He didn't believe me!!! Seriously!!! Because it turns out Ben has played a similar trick on him before. DOH! Anyway I got him to come down and survey the damage and then he sure believed me - all he could say was, "ok…, ok..." and he asked it I was ok. Ben had just told me prior to this that Fredrik had spent the last 2 months doing up the bike himself (oh yeh that made me feel like about 5 million dollars…) and although it wasn't finished yet it was well on the way. He took it pretty bloody well and didn't even take me up on my offer to let him slog me one! I let him know I'd pay for the damage but he didn't even want any money but that's ok, he'll be getting some whether he likes it or not! He even said that he'd lend the bike to me again! Nice bloke.

We all hung out at Ben and Hannah's (his wife) for a while and ate some grub. The lads decided they would call me "ditch" from now on… Well enough deserved I guess! Ben offered to take me to hospital but I thought if you come off a motorbike you're gonna be sore… which I definitely was… (ok, so I should have gone). So I took the Tunnelbana and Pendeltåg home and literally a few hours later (I have to get up at 0515) I was back at work, my left hand had swelled quite a bit but I could move all my fingers ok (though the last two had little strength) so I didn't think anything was broken (think about it again Ty… denial is a powerful thing...) I had the weekend off and somehow managed to work the entire following week as well but my hand and hip were still bloody sore last weekend and I was looking at it and noticing I couldn't see one of my knuckles properly now that the swelling had gone down some and I decided something was wrong and I needed to do something about it, NOW!

So I asked a guy I know who's training to be a doc and he had a look and thought one of the bones in my hand was broken and I should go to the ER (Akutvård in Swedish). So I got on the bus to Karolinska Sjukhuset (hospital) and arrived about 1500 and didn't end up leaving until 2330 but I must say a big THANKS to all the great doctors and nurses who looked after me; Dr Caroline and Undersköterska Lotta to name just a couple. The doc checked out all my injured bits; my right hip, left knee, elbow and hand which she took some x-rays of and as you can see below the second finger in from the pinky has a spiral fracture along most of it's length (Ouch!) Also note that the knuckles should form an arc (you'll have to tilt your head a bit) but the knuckle attached to the broken bone is about 1cm lower than it should be (Nooo! I'm deformed!) so the bottom half of the broken bone has slipped slightly underneath the top half which is what's causing this.



Because I left it 11 days before going to hospital (on ya Ty) the bones have started to heal and so the doc didn't want to try and reduce the fracture (put it back in place). She said that it's in a good position (I did that remember!) and should heal fine. I was concerned that I couldn't see my knuckle properly and am unable to touch-type (my two last fingers don't work properly - I'm really not enjoying this one finger typing crap I can tell you! However, I am getting faster at it!) and since I normally work in IT I really need to be able to touch-type. She checked all this with a specialist and they decided that I should go to another hospital in the morning to see if my hand needed to be operated on, mainly due to the 1cm knuckle drop. The nurse did a great job of putting my hand and wrist in a half-cast to keep the finger in the correct place for the next 3-4 weeks (!) while it heals properly, or until they operate on it in the morning…




So I got the bus home and managed to scoff some food and drink before midnight (yes I was starving!) as I had to fast for 8 hours before my 0830 appointment at Södersjukhuset (south hospital) to determine whether I needed surgery or not. I put my head down for a few hours before getting up at 0600 to put my cast in plastic and shower with this special antiseptic the hospital gave me (once again incase of an operation). I called Görgen at work to give him the awful news that he was going to have to hang 300 lamps on his own...!!! I told him that he knows I'd be there if I could, but am not sure he believed me… No brekky for me and I was on my way to the train. I managed to find the hospital ok and believe it or not I was actually early! Yeh! Not long after I had paid my dues (SEK260 which is around 50 aussie bucks) a nurse came up to me and explained that they had made a mistake and I would actually have to pay SEK2000 which is like 400 aussie bucks! I swallowed and calmly explained that Australia and Sweden have a reciprocal healthcare agreement (which means I get treated like a Swede would) and that there was no problem at the other hospital (yeh) - I had only paid SEK260 there. She went to check this out further but came back with the same response.

I queried this with her again - there's a big bloody difference between 50 and 400 bucks and money is a bit tight at the moment until I get my first pay (btw Swedes get paid monthly but not for the month you've just worked, for the previous one!!! don't we have laws against that in Australia??? so I won't get my first full pay until the end of next month! crazy!) So she went to check it out with her boss. After some more to-ing and fro-ing they finally got a response from their head office and I was only supposed to pay the SEK260. Phew! So eventually I got to see Dr Gerber (what a hard name!) and she removed my cast (Nooo! All Lotta's hard work!) and checked out my hand and the x-rays and told me I've got one of 2 choices; to leave it how it is and it will heal fine with no loss of functionality, though I won't have a proper looking knuckle, or to have it operated on and put back in it's rightful place which would involve an incision on the top of my hand and pins, screws, plates or some combination of them (hmmmmmm I've always wanted metal hands… (mechanical breathing sounds) hisssssss Vader voice, "Luke, I am your father. Search your feelings, you know it to be true." I let her know that I'm concerned that it won't work properly when healed and I need it to and would prefer to have it operated on.

She thought about this momentarily and provided a third option; to inject some local anaesthetic and try to reduce the fracture (put it back in place manually) and see how that goes first. She said that at 11 days the healing bones are like chewing gum. No sooner than I said, "Yeh, ok" the nurse whipped out a massive needle to which the doc commented, "That's not for you" and I'm thinking she's joking but fortunately for me she wasn't - that one just draws the local anaesthetic from the vial and there's a much smaller one inside for me = ) which was promptly injected into several locations of my hand (Ouch!) A few minutes later she was trying to tear off my finger (that's what it looked and felt like anyway…) After rather a large amount of pain (did we even need to bother with the injections???) and what definitely felt and sounded like some internal movement of goodness knows what, she decided that was enough (what? no more? are you sure?) and proceeded to put my hand and wrist in another half-cast - no offense doc but you're not nearly as good as Lotta! Some more x-rays to check the position (which btw cost another SEK100 - about 20 aussie bucks) and eventually back in to see the doc who seemed pretty happy with her work and showed me the x-rays and that the knuckle wasn't quite as low as it was before and the bone is now in a better position generally. She didn't see a need to operate and actually advised against this due to the added complexity and inherent danger involved to tendons etc (Nooo! my metal hands!!!) She wanted me to come back in a week for some more TLC and x-rays to ensure the position hasn't changed and everything is going ok.

So there it is, in all it's embarrassing glory. Just couldn't not tell u all about it though! So I guess God wants me around for a little while longer… That's all it takes on a bike, lose concentration for a second or two and it can all be over. It is said that it's not a matter of IF you will come off a bike but WHEN. So I've had my WHEN and survived so let's leave it at that shall we? I sure hope so!

It's been an sad couple of weeks for us Aussies, and I must pay tribute to Steve Irwin - I'll never forget watching the first episode of "The Crocodile Hunter" - he's standing in this flimsy dingy at night, looking for some croc with a torch and then announces, "There it is!" and proceeds to dive head first into the water and then wrestle this croc into the boat, which btw ended up being a bit bigger than he was expecting! A lot of ppl knocked him but I thought he was a bloody legend! My condolences to Terri, Bindi Sue and Robert Clarence. I've attached a clip from the local Stockholm newspaper - Metro - below. More sad news with the death of Peter Brock, an Australian racing legend. He may have driven for the wrong team for most of his career but none of that matters now. RIP Brocky. My condolences to Beverly, James, Robert and Alexandra.

I'm back at work already (no rest for the wicked!) and am on light duties working the sound and lighting desk for a conference. That's about as much as I can handle typing with one hand so I hope you're all doing ok and 'til next time take care all!


© 2010 Ty Sundström