Reflections on retirement

It is now a year since I retired from the National Rural Health Alliance. (I was going to say “since I left the Alliance” but it will be longer yet before I ‘leave’ the organisation and it ‘leaves’ me.)

Some of my friends have asked what it’s like to be retired. The short answer is that it’s wonderful. Every day is a long weekend. There are few deadlines to be met, no meetings to attend, no representative duties to acquit. Getting out of bed occasionally at six o’clock in the morning is now to go for a walk or cycle while the air is still and the trees breathless – not to trail to Sydney or Melbourne with a tie on.

I will never forget how lucky I am. To be contentedly retired one needs the fundamental assets providing quality of life. A safe home – with all that the simple word ‘home’ connotes. Adequate income. Social interaction of the kind and quantity that suits you. Continued good health. Stimulation or brain food. And the means (technology; access) needed to pursue your interests or hobbies.

I was happy at work so there are many things I miss. The repetitive rhythm of a workplace can instil a sense of security and confidence. Working in a small organisation with colleagues who share one’s commitment is personally and socially satisfying, as well as professionally valuable. A happy workplace can provide some of the benefits of ‘community’: mutual support, shared purpose, recognition and self-actualisation.

Rather to my surprise, it has become apparent to me that some of this sense of community can be provided by social media. Facebook has been a revelation. It can be built in one’s own image – crafted to meet some of the needs of different individuals for ‘community’.

Two of the things one often hears about retirement before testing it for oneself are that you’ll be busier than you used to be, and that no one at work will miss you. This last might be suggested as a rationale for not working too hard: to ensure there is an appropriate work/life balance.

The first of these is palpable nonsense. You can fill the time with a wider range of smaller matters than in your working life – but you select the smorgasbord and there are gaps between each mouthful.

As for the second, it’s impossible to know because one is no longer ‘at work’ to observe the consequences of one’s absence. If you were fortunate enough to have work which gave purpose and value, all you can ask is that it continues and that the person who filled your position feels as lucky as you did.

It is so luxurious to be free of appointments, teleconferences, deadlines and protocols to which one had to be faithful at work. You can be true to yourself. If you write a blog you can wander at will over any range of topics you like.

Being retired makes it possible to look after yourself more easily. I try to walk or cycle every day which is something many people in the workforce do, but was something for which I had insufficient discipline at that time.

I am avoiding taking on regularised weekly happenings which would give the week a schedule or structure in the way that staff meetings, monthly teleconferences and other events did at work. Having a list of future appointments in a diary has always sat heavily on my mind – been a source of tension – as if the need to prepare or be prepared for each and every one crowded out the pleasure of the current moment. One of the consequences while at work was that the great majority of my own meetings with colleagues were called and held immediately – and I was always grateful for the fact that they almost always put up cheerfully with such a regime.

I’m reading a book.[1] The potted garden is being tended; next Spring’s display should be even better than last year’s. Alpha and I have time to catch up more slowly with friends and family. We haven’t fully made the switch from watching live TV to watching everything on demand, but it’s coming.

And of course if you have a partner, retirement means there is the opportunity to spend more time together. Or you can have separate work places in the home and separate interests and networks, and meet just now and then – as before.

We’re rather in the latter camp.

[1] Neal Stephenson, The Confusion.

“Julia Gillard is not a liar” – written in April 2012

This piece was initially published in Croakey on 10 April 2017 under the title: 'It’s time the truth was told – Gordon Gregory on lies, politics and missed opportunities'.

My thanks to Croakey and Melissa Sweet, who wrote the following introduction for the Croakey piece.

“Peak bodies have many advantages – they help to unite the diversity of competing interests in the health sector, and thus can be helpful in providing consensus advice and policies to inform decision-making.

But there can also be drawbacks. If the diversity of interests cannot unite to provide honest and unambiguous advice in the public interest, then our health can suffer.

See Exhibit One below, in which Gordon Gregory, former CEO of the National Rural Health Alliance (NRHA), shares an article he wrote in 2012 in an effort to correct the public record about the nature of Julia Gillard’s statements on a carbon tax.

If public debate about climate policy had been more informed at the time, would we now find ourselves in a healthier policy space in relation to climate and health?”


Gordon Gregory writes:

When I was Executive Director and then CEO of the National Rural Health Alliance (NRHA), I took very seriously the challenge of representing only the shared views of the member bodies. This imposed limits on the subjects on which I spoke or wrote, and in effect provided prescriptive guidelines for the positions taken on the subjects that were ‘within scope’.

GordonPic
Gordon Gregory: speaking out

Protocols were developed for involving all member bodies, usually through their delegate to the NRHA Council, in work to agree what was on the organisation’s agenda and what the organisation’s position was on each item.

Given the scope of the NRHA’s interests and the large number of public statements of one sort or another, I was occasionally taken to task by one or more of the member bodies for views I had expressed. However, in general, mutual trust was developed so that a large volume of public activity was maintained.

The areas in which the greatest care needed to be taken to avoid the risk of saying something that could not be supported by a member body were matters relating to the practice of particular health professionals and the relationship between them (scopes of practice, for example), and anything which could be construed as being politically partisan.

It was this latter constraint that led me to conclude that I should not publish a piece that I wrote in April 2012 in defence of Julia Gillard.

Every time I heard a reference to what became known as Julia Gillard’s ‘lie’ about a carbon tax, I felt outrage. No one – not even her own office – was able to see that statement the way I did: as something that would apply if the ALP won the election and there was a Gillard Government.

Once she failed in that endeavour, a new circumstance existed. Bets were off. A different arrangement for government had to be made.

Not only was I outraged, but also I could sense the political capital that would be made for her opponents. (What I didn’t pick, of course, was the fact that the negative capital was the reason why her stocks fell so far that it was Kevin Rudd who defeated her, not Tony Abbott.)

So here is that article, exactly as I wrote it in April 2012. It is not the clearest or simplest piece I have ever written, but it is very important to me and I am grateful to be relieved of the constraints there used to be on its public release.

Successful prosecution of the view that Gillard had lied – in which success her Party seemed curiously complicit – and the impact this had on Federal politics, set back the debate in Australia on climate policy by perhaps a decade. Because those political effects are still with us today.

Julia Gillard is not a liar

(Written in April 2012)

It’s time the truth was told. Julia Gillard is neither a liar nor the sort of person predisposed to lying.

Someone has to make this point or else the lead-up to the election due 18 months from now, and the election itself, will be dominated by just one thing: the assertion that Julia Gillard lied and cannot be trusted.

On 16 August 2010 Julia Gillard said: “There will be no carbon tax under the government I lead.”

During the same election campaign it was clear that the Labor Party wanted to legislate for an emissions trading scheme – meaning that, if in government, it would fix the quantity and allow the market to determine the price. And this was certainly not a small part of their agenda for, in calling the August 2010 election, Julia Gillard nominated economic strength, education and climate change as the three priorities for a re-elected government.

However, it was not a Labor Government that was elected but a combined Labor/Greens/rural independent Government. And that Government has been effective in passing legislation, including through the Senate where the Greens hold the balance of power, and in giving much-needed and well-deserved emphasis to the wellbeing of people in rural and remote Australia.

In 1987, the number of Australian children living in poverty was estimated at 580,000. Opening Labor’s election campaign on June 23, 1987, Bob Hawke said: “We set ourselves this first goal: by 1990 no Australian child will be living in poverty”.

Twenty years later he described the comment as one of the biggest regrets of his career – that it was “a silly shorthand thing”. “I should have just said what was in the distributed speech,” he later said. But it was not suggested as a result that Bob Hawke was a liar. After all, he could drink a yard of ale in no time at all and wished us all a day off after we won the America’s Cup.

On 2 May 1995 John Howard (the first to enunciate the difference between ‘core’ and ‘non-core’ promises) said: “There’s no way that a GST will ever be part of our policy”. By “our policy”, he meant the Coalition’s: assuming that the Coalition was elected, there would be no GST in the new term. And, true to his word, the Coalition Government did not introduce a GST during that term.

In August 1997, John Howard announced that the Coalition would contest the next election, in 1998, with a plan to introduce a GST. The voters elected a Coalition Government again and the GST was introduced on 1 July 2000. With the support of the Democrats in the Senate. Who never recovered.

After the election of 21 August 2010, neither side of politics had a clear mandate. The voters were not persuaded by the campaign promises of either. Julia Gillard had campaigned on action on climate change – but no carbon tax. That proposal was in effect rejected. But it is drawing a very long bow to suggest that action on climate change was rejected.

If ‘a Gillard Government’ had been elected in 2010 – meaning one with untrammelled authority in both houses – an emissions trading scheme would no doubt have been introduced.

But the people, in their wisdom, elected neither a Gillard nor an Abbott Government: they elected a hung Parliament with the balance of power held by one Green and five independents.

Flashback to the NRHA's Dr Jenny May and the independent MPs, Tony Windsor, Rob Oakeshott & Bob Katter
NRHA Chair Jenny May and independent MPs, Tony Windsor, Rob Oakeshott & Bob Katter

As far as Gillard and Abbott governments were concerned, all bets were off. Yet a government had to be formed. And it had to be soon, without the luxury of years to allow people to accommodate to new policy positions.

Deals were done – and good ones, too, because – thanks to the deals done by two rural independents – the Government is providing the opportunity for the people of rural and remote areas to catch up in health, infrastructure and regional development.

Julia Gillard might have tried the George Washington defence and hoped for the same boost in admiration:

“I cannot tell a lie, father, you know I cannot tell a lie! I did cut it with my little hatchet.”

“My son, that you should not be afraid to tell the truth is more to me than a thousand trees!”

But she had not told a lie in the sense of seeking to mislead people. What happened was a new political necessity: the nation must have a government, and whether it took a billion dollars for the Hobart hospital, the dumping of a Citizens Assembly on climate change or a carbon tax was for the moment in the hands of those elected who were not affiliated with the major parties.

She might have varied (‘broken’) that particular ALP commitment by fiddling with the fine print, as many had done before her, for instance by narrowing eligibility for a program or delaying its introduction to a later financial year. Perhaps due to the negotiating skill of the Greens and independents, or to her own determination, Gillard chose to go for a carbon tax after all.

And ever since, the complex realities surrounding her statement have been corrupted by even the most reliable sources.

For reasons I can’t understand, no one is challenging the view that Julia Gillard is a person who lied and who is a habitual liar.

The term ‘broken promise’ has become a key element of the current affairs lexicon. It is claimed without challenge that this is a government that lies, even though at the time of that statement there was no government in office.

The accusations reach a pitch in March 2011 with the demonstration at Parliament House featuring the infamous placards in front of which Tony Abbott was pictured.

One of those reliable sources, Radio National’s Fran Kelly, is speaking with Morris Iemma and Geoff Gallop in late March 2012 about the implications of the Queensland election results, particularly as they relate to “how much the trust thing is an issue” for Julia Gillard:

“– the promise just days before the 2010 election, “No carbon tax under a government I lead”, and then minority government;… has to negotiate with the Greens to form a government and that negotiation means bringing in a carbon tax.”

This is as full and accurate a summary of the circumstances as has been suggested by anyone. But Fran’s next question is as follows:

“Can she [Julia Gillard] win back the trust of voters – has she in fact lost it because of that broken promise?” (Radio National’s Breakfast, Tuesday 27 March 2012)

The demands the public seems to make of its media to simplify and abbreviate complex issues often support the political imperative of the Opposition – any Opposition – to destroy the credibility of the Prime Minister of the day.

This would be less critical if it were not for the extent to which Australia now has a so-called presidential style of government, particularly when it comes to elections. The personae of the leaders are all-embracing. This is for both good reasons and bad.

The bad reasons are related to the demand for simplicity and to common acceptance of the cult of personality. It’s far easier to sum up a complex choice between parties by reference to two individuals who are seen and heard nightly on television, than to undertake a detailed analysis and comparison of those policies.

The good reason for distinguishing in Australia between the major parties mainly on the basis of their leaders is that we are very fortunate country when it comes to politics and public governance. There are differences of emphasis and degree, but both sides of politics support the notion of a safety net for those who are on low income, have a disability, have chronic illness or are out of work.

Both of them will support continued investment in better roads, schools and tertiary educational institutions, public utilities and the arts. Both of them no doubt would like to solve the problems of the Murray Darling basin, save the Barrier Reef, close the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous life expectancy, support peace in our region and provide some overseas aid.

Many of the good things we expect of our governments are agreed – which is why, to succeed electorally, both sides of politics must win the middle ground.

The greater the challenge for voters to distinguish between the major parties on the basis of their nuanced approach to broadly agreed policies, the more will the political system become ‘Presidential’. It’s easier; for Gillard we know, Abbott we know.

On the morning of Saturday 17 July 2010, with the Prime Minister widely tipped to call an election, the media was staking out Government House in anticipation of her passing through the gates to ask the Queen’s representative to prorogue Parliament.1

The matter was being covered by ABC News 24 and, just as I left home for the NRHA office, it was reported that Julia Gillard was on her way from Parliament House. My workplace is close to where Kent Street passes over Adelaide Avenue and she would have to come this way en route to Government House.

So on a whim I stood on the bridge over Adelaide Avenue, half expecting it to be cluttered with people wanting to view this historic occasion. But I was there alone as a single black car appeared from the direction of Parliament House – no police escort, no cavalcade, just a single vehicle.

Looking down, I see in the front and on the left is the driver and on the right is the Prime Minister. In the front. Clearly visible. I lean forward and give a cheerful wave. The Prime Minister looks up at the bridge and gives a cheerful wave in return.

I have never met the Prime Minister; but she waved at me from her car.

What a wonderful open, trusting country. What a wonderful freedom to speculate on political personalities and motives and decisions made and never made. What an important and decent thing is politics, that must make daily decisions that will affect the lives of all of us. And how poorly understood.

So this is me waving back.

———————————————————

 

  1. The scene at Government House is described in the article that appeared next day in the Sun Herald, written by Dan Harrison and Steve Lillebuen: http://bit.ly/2orFawZ

Adelaide Crows Women: next year can we police have the chorus too?

If Bec Goddard wants to do the Adelaide Crows AFL Club - and the world - another big favour, she might consider insisting that the Crows' team song be revised upwards (in every respect!) to include the third musical motif: the one associated in the original with the chorus.

Apart from anything else, the words of the chorus in the English translation could hardly be more relevant to the game, perhaps setting a new standard in the AFL for the appropriateness of the words of team songs:

We run 'em in, we run 'em in,
We run 'em in, we run 'em in,
We show them we're the [mighty Crows]
We run 'em in, we run 'em in,
We run 'em in, we run 'em in,
We show them we're the [mighty Crows]

(The only possible reservation about the relevance of these extra words is that they might be construed as heaping too much praise on the rushed behind, rather than the goal. But my assumption is that the Club's preferred meaning of 'run 'em in' would in any case be far more combative or violent than the mere act of scoring a goal or rushing a behind!)

   Tayla Harris of the Brisbane Lions; 2017 AFLW Grand Final, March 25 2017. (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Media/Getty Images)
 

As for the melodic improvement that adding the chorus would achieve: who could possibly disagree? Even If the men can only manage a (let's be honest: rather dreary) melodic structure that is A-A-B-A, surely the women can manage A-A-B-C-C-A?!

(Given the music's provenance one is tempted to say "surely the women can-can manage A-A-B-C-C-A".)

So Bec, others: let's add some more art and finesse to an already great game!

By the way: has anyone commented on the irony of Bec Goddard, officer of the AFP, having to obsess about a corrupted version of a song about corrupt gendarmes?

A nice enough version of the duet, in English, is here: https://youtu.be/oSP3LF2K4k4
Postscript: The music was originally from the 1859 opera Geneviève de Brabant by Jacques Offenbach, which debuted in Paris in 1859. It was an 'opéra bouffe', which is perhaps what appealed to Australian Rules in the first place.

Opera bouffe is a style featuring comedy, satire, parody and farce. The opera became so popular that Offenbach expanded it into three acts in 1867. The newly revised opera included a duet between two French gendarmes.

In 1871 Henry Brougham Farnie translated the opera to English and titled the song 'Gendarmes' Duet'. It has become well known in the US, with quite different words, as the Marines' Hymn, "the oldest official song in the U.S. Armed forces". [http://bit.ly/2oT4nxK]

Gendarmes' Duet.

Verse 1:
We're public guardians bold yet wary,
And of ourselves we take good care.
To risk our precious lives we're chary,
When danger looms we're never there,
But when we meet a helpless woman,
Or little boys that do no harm:

Chorus:
We run them in, we run them in,
We run them in, we run them in,
We show them we're the bold gendarmes.
We run them in, we run them in,
We run them in, we run them in,
We show them we're the bold gendarmes.

Verse 2:
Sometimes our duty's extramural,
Then little butterflies we chase.
We like to gambol in things rural,
Commune with nature, face to face.
Unto our beat then back returning,
Refreshed by nature's holy charm:

Chorus:

The first two verses are the only 'official' verses in the original script, but the song was such a show stopper that the producers often added multiple encore verses - a dozen per performance was not uncommon - which commented on the hot social and political topics of the day. This encore verse is the one commonly added today:

Encore Verse:
If gentlemen will make a riot,
And punch each other's heads at night,
We're quite disposed to keep it quiet,
Provided that they make it right,
But if they do not seem to see it,
Or give to us our proper terms:

Chorus:
We run them in, we run them in,
etc

Here are the French lyrics. The characters are Grabuge, a sergeant, sung by a comic baritone, and Pitou, a 'simple gunner', sung by a comic tenor. (There's a note on the music that Pitou should sing in "voix de tête" - head voice or falsetto - presumably to enhance the comic effect.)

G: Protéger le repos des villes
P: Courir sus aux mauvais garçons
G: Ne parler qu'à des imbéciles
P: En voir de toutes les façons
G: Un peu de calme après vous charme
P: C'est assez calme ici, sergent!

G: Ah, qu'il est beau...
P: Ah, qu'il est beau...
G: D'être homme d'arme...
P: D'être homme d'arme
Mais que c'est un sort exigeant!

G: Ne pas jamais ôter ses cottes
P: C'est bien penible, en vérité
G: Dormir apres de longues trottes
P: Rêver, c'est la félicité
G: Sentir la violette de Parme
P: Vous me comblez, ô mon sergent!

The music chart is here:
http://looselywoven.org/concerts/caves/music/Gendarmes%20Duet%20Cello.pdf
C'Mon you AFC Women! C'mon Bec Goddard, Jenna McCormick, Chelsea Randall and Beccy Cole! Do it for art: incorporate the C part into the song!

(Thinks: "Oh I do love to be beside the C side.")

gg
31 March 2017