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I had arrived in Canberra on a rattletrap train called The Spirit of Progress with my pregnant wife. We knew no one at all in Canberra and we had been dumped in a hostel called Beauchamp House – pronounced as “Beecham” by the local Canberrans.
My work location was in the half of a wooden building that had not been extinguished by a recent fire. The building was in Canberra city centre and was called Jolimont House.
My life was not very promising, even if working as a public servant was much easier than working as a labourer.
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Margaret loved visiting her friend Ann in Ireland. This is Margaret in Ireland on 15 June 2013. By then, I had been granted the miracles of a reprieve in Margaret’s health. I had walked the Camino in Spain praying for just this miracle – and got it.
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To do the impossible, we have to keep going when “common sense” says we should give up.
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Go with a clear, open and receptive spirit, and the universe will not treat you badly.
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I know Margaret is in a much better place where she no longer has to endure the constant pain that never left her in the final years of her life.
I still miss her so very much.
Accept what is and keep moving. Swallow the sh*t sandwich and keep moving.
There is nothing else that offers any hope of survival.
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Beauchamp House was a shock. The cost of living there for one week was more than the wage I was going to be paid by the Immigration Department once it got around to actually paying me my wage as a Graduate Clerk. If we continued staying in Beauchamp House, and if I actually paid the accommodation bill there, I would never have the money to rent a flat for us to live in.
We had to move out of Beauchamp House fast – before the first of the fortnightly accommodation bills arrived. What money I had scraped together would have to be used to pay for a bond on a flat and for the two weeks’ rent in advance.
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The cost of living was so high in Canberra that most public servants received an additional payment called a “living allowance”. I was eligible for the living allowance, but it would be weeks before I got my first payment.
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I enrolled at Australian National University as a part time student in three subjects, hoping that my scholarship would pay the fees. I had no idea how I was ever going to get to lectures or study for the exams in the subjects – but I enrolled anyway. I always keep as many options open as I can.
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I focused on our most immediate needs.
We had to find somewhere to live.
While I went to work at the Committee on Overseas Professional Qualifications in the burnt out hulk of Jolimont Building, my wife started flat hunting. We did not have the luxury of being too fussy. If we were still there when Commonwealth Hostels Limited demanded their money, we would be in a mountain of trouble.
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When we moved into a cheap flat in a multi storey block of flats in the Canberra suburb of Campbell, we had zero furniture; the few sticks of furniture we did own had not yet arrived from Melbourne.
Canberra has bitterly cold weather but I worked out how to get some warmth for us even though we had no radiator.
I turned on the oven and opened the oven door.
It was better than nothing – but not much better.
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Terrible situations can be overcome. Whatever you do, do not panic.
Add meaning to your life by acting with purpose.
When you add meaning to your life, the way out of the terrible situations becomes clearer.
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I will tell you more tomorrow.