This afternoon I sat down to read the Australian Government Guidance Note on tick anaphylaxis. I’d just spent a couple of hours on my hands and knees clearing weeds out of the garden, and, my brain slowly recognised that I had taken no tick precautions at all. No Deet, no permethrine treated clothing, not even long pants and long sleeved shirt. Instead, I had crawled about the thickest part of my garden in shorts and a tee-shirt in an area where ticks are endemic. Complacency is a state easy to enter but hard to leave.
The tick incident is almost two months ago now, but, when I think about it, I still shudder. Not so much about the airlift incident, but more the tick bite the previous year when I crawled off into the woods, on my own, and lay down in the dirt vomiting. The best I could do raising my head to spew and then collapsing again. Too stubborn to call for help, too concerned that I was being weak or hypochondriacal, and, perhaps, within a hairs breadth of dying by the side of the track to be found a couple of hours later by Doug, cold, white, still, with the froth of vomit on my lips.
When I first got the tick allergy, it was Deet from head to toe, permethrine treated light coloured clothing, long pants tucked into socks, wearing even underwear that is permethrine treated. But, it’s been two months since I got a tick, the weather has been drier, and I’ve been busy, and, for no good reason, I’ve let my precautionary measures lapse. Reading the literature again, I vowed silently to take no more chances, to resume full precautions. I don’t know if any of the things I now do: the Deet, the treated clothing, the worn clothes into a hot dryer for 30 minutes, the body checks, will prevent a tick bite but, if nothing else, they give me the illusion of control. And that’s really all we have, illusory control, but better than none, like the wrong sized cam or a wobbly chock when climbing; a piece of gear that you know will not hold a fall but which allows you to pretend it will so that you can keep climbing.
We all pretend we have control so that we can continue to live our lives with some semblance of normality because, despite what the motivational posters proclaim, it is simply not possible to live each day as if it were our last. We have to attend to the ordinary matters of life in order to allow ourselves those few days, weeks, or if we are really lucky months, when we can escape to the place where our hearts and souls sing.
No group among society is more schizophrenically attuned to the idea of control than the far left. This is the group that believes that all social ills, from the aboriginal outcome gap to gender dysphoria to substance abuse to homelessness and domestic violence will magically evaporate once these “communities” of individuals are ceded control. There is no myth more powerful or more impotent in society today, because there is no “community” of people who all think or behave exactly the same and individuals in the grip of addiction or mental illness are the least likely people in society to be in a position to exercise control. We all know, if we can admit it to ourselves in our darkest moments, that there are elements of our own lives where we have little to no control, and certainly the most vulnerable in society are the least equipped to engage in behaviours and decisions that evince control. Complacency kills and even the most robustly healthy among us sometimes requires protection from our own worst impulses.
There is a general sense in society that we are all making informed decisions and choosing the best course for ourselves, but, frequently this is simply not true. We are buffeted by mental distortions and often caught deep in the murk of situations unable to make decisions or enact behaviours that are both in our best interests and aligned with our stated objectives. A true friend could help because our blind spots are, by definition blind, but although we might listen to advice, we seldom actually hear it.

















