Hard News: Again: Is everyone okay?
897 Responses
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Craig Ranapia, in reply to
Meh... I contained my disappointment by picturing you topless on the radio.
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Paul Williams, in reply to
It was lovely to hear you Emma and, in response to something you said, you and all your friends and loved ones in Christchurch are constantly on our minds.
ETA: Ranapia...
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Craig, Megan, Jack, thanks heaps. Hugging you all right back! Megan, are you still in Chch or are you home?
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Fringe Fest in Wellington. Nothing like a parental plug. Daughter has a show on this week at Fringe Bar.
Profits are going to Earthquake. See the link to Fringe Friends of Canerbury.
I think the Ma and Pa will be there Wednesday night.
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recordari, in reply to
That’s sort of what I sound like, except apparently I was disappointingly unsweary. I’ll work on it.
Can I just say, while we do appreciate the sentiment about how much we are suffering not having our houses destroyed, our families displaced, our work, livelihoods, schooling, toiletries disrupted, that we'll cope.
This is about 'you'. We would love to be able to do more, but over time we'll hopefully work out how best to do that.
Take care.
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Megan Wegan, in reply to
Nah, I've been back for a week.
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Craig Ranapia, in reply to
Exactly -- and it's not a bloody competition. I'm sure Debs Coddington and whoever wrote the headline to her HoS column had their hearts in a good place, but "Today, we're all Cantabrians"/ Nope - nowhere close.
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Meanwhile... while we are wondering what is the right thing to say and how to say it...
Qantas sends bill for earthquake flight -
giovanni tiso, in reply to
Can I just say, while we do appreciate the sentiment about how much we are suffering not having our houses destroyed, our families displaced, our work, livelihoods, schooling, toiletries disrupted, that we'll cope.
This is about 'you'. We would love to be able to do more, but over time we'll hopefully work out how best to do that.
I thought that what Emma expressed quite beautifully was a very valid point, actually. It's about all of us. It's about the bereaved, the people in Christchurch who didn't lose their home or any of the loved ones, the people in the rest of the country or overseas who felt a connection to Canterbury and the wider New Zealand community. I thought that it was also the point of Emily Perkins' lovely piece for the Guardian, that she could quite legitimately write as a non-witness, a non-Cantabrian.
It's about all of us. Just like it is a duty of all of us to participate how we can in the relief and the reconstruction.
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recordari, in reply to
It’s about all of us. Just like it is a duty of all of us to participate how we can in the relief and the reconstruction.
While I agree there are aspects of it that are about all of us, and I haven’t met or spoken to anyone not affected in some way, it was the suffering by degrees that I’m struggling to get my head around. Earlier in the week I looked up ‘vicarious traumatic stress disorder’, and thought that this could apply to lot of people I know, and a lot of media and rescue, and support personnel who have arrived on the scene afterwards to help bring the full impact of it to the world, and start the recovery. But when it gets as far as my own difficulties in coping, kind of start to feel I should harden up, be thankful for what I’ve got, and see what opportunities arise to help further than the seemingly trivial donation made on Wednesday.
We could play ‘we’re all in this together’, but seems Qantas might need a gentle nudge from our new friend Gillard, and I’m sure they won’t be the only ones.
EAT: Emma certainly displayed a generosity of spirit that is quite humbling. Haven't read Emily P's yet, will seek it out.
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In a place far far away- yesterday, in the Oamaru Countdown/Warehouse parking lots, I heard a piper playing- it wasnt especially good piping, but o! it struck us both quite deeply. I rushed* across from the Warehouse side and deposited the contents of our pockets into the pipes’ container. Guess what? He was 11 maybe 12, and had his older sister standing guard: she said, “See the sign? It’s all for Christchurch.”
*fast hobble
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From Emily J Perkins piece for the Guardian.
"You see people right in the centre of their lives just trying to make one thing work,” she says, “so that they can move on to the next thing."
I can’t find any disagreement with anything you say about that or Emma’s radio piece Gio. Just navigating the path, and the debris keeps falling.
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giovanni tiso, in reply to
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(Naturally nobody is saying that we're all equally affected. But what Emma said - that Cantabrians need to feel the solidarity of the rest of us, and the rest of us need Cantabrians to put their experience in words in order to begin to understand what it feels like - was crucial I thought.)
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Nice to see Helen Clark visiting Christchurch. (She may have already been in the country as her birthday is about now.)
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Weird, that link has changed and the headline, photo of Helen comforting a friend and her comments have disappeared.
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Anthony Hubbard weighs in on the imagined community. Second half is about the welfare working group - a pretty good example of appropriate political pivot, in my view, but reader beware if it's not your thing.
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Is there a list of the confirmed deceased available online somewhere?
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Thanks Robert, much appreciated.
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The media are slightly less circumstances - and on the Herald's home page for instance you'll see a longer list.
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Here is my audio for those who missed it. Thanks to Sacha for managing to find it for me.
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Islander, in reply to
Getting back to no4mality good people~
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Getting back to no4mality good people~McGonagall was a really good dramatic TRYER. He did his awful best to provide information for his society & for his family, and he worked very hard.
I have deep respect for William.
I have no respect for media-clown Gary Mc Cormack. -
Er... for "circumstances" read "circumspect" above. What the?
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