Early June started Early. No -- really really early. I
was invited to give three keynote talks in an online workshop that was 
running in the US, in the Texas time zone. My talks ran from 4-5pm in 
Texas. Which was 7am in Melbourne. The other talks started at 3:30am. I 
thought I might try to make it to the 3:30am talks. But I couldn't. I'm 
just ... not ... strong enough to get up for 3:30am talks. I made it to 
the 5:00am talks three days in a row. And that was hard, and I may have 
kind of dozed off during a couple of them. But I stayed awake through my
 own online talks. Although wow. It is really hard to give three online 
talks three days in a row. 
In June, 
Jonathan says he "sat my examinations. And got really stressed for no 
reason." That's a direct quote. You notice that Jonathan speaks 
Australian. He doesn't take exams. He sits them. But getting really 
stressed for no reason seems to be a family problem. His friend Edward 
came back for a visit. Edward graduated from high school with Jonathan 
but then returned to Singapore to do his mandatory military service. He 
had a week of leave, which he took here in Melbourne. During that week, 
he and Jonathan and other friends planned to take a few train trips and 
have adventures. They went to Ballan and hiked to a lake. The next 
morning, Jonathan got a text from Edward: Edward had tested positive for
 Covid. So that was the end of the adventures, and Edward got to go back
 to the Singapore military after a fun week of isolation in Melbourne. 
Tim
 says that he spent his June hanging out and avoiding being 
Covid-positive in spite of all our close contacts. Boring, Tim. Boring. 
The
 other thing I did in June was travel to my first 
international conference since 2019. I went to Austin, Texas. There were
 three flights involved, in theory, to get from Melbourne to Sydney to 
LA to Austin. I got a message the night before the trip saying that my 
flight from Sydney had been delayed 90 minutes, and I'd been put on a 
later flight from LA to Austin. I wondered if I might bump back my 
flight from Melbourne to Sydney as well, so I didn't have to get up at 
4am. But in the end I just got up at 4am and headed to the Melbourne 
airport. And that was a good thing, because it took me the extra 90 
minutes to stand in security lines in Sydney, where a lot of staff had 
called in sick with the flu and Covid -- people get sick in the winter 
in a pandemic. 
The 14 hour flight from Sydney to LA was fine. When I got
 off the plane in the US, I went through customs, and sent my bag along 
to the connecting flight. When I tried to get my boarding pass to send 
myself along to the connecting flight, I was told it had been cancelled -- but not until after I had stood in a two hour line. 
They put me on a new flight the next day, and booked a hotel room for 
me right next to the airport. 
I slept. Got up rested. Went to check in for my new flight. 
Unfortunately, someone had screwed up the booking the day before, and I 
was not on the flight. I had to walk 30 minutes to the other side of the
 airport to try to fix it. And then walk back. And then I still couldn't
 check in. Another long line. 
As I reached the front, and the helpful woman at the desk took my ticket and 
proceeded to make frowny faces and spend 15 quiet minutes typety typing,
 I thought -- maybe it is too early in the pandemic to be flying 
internationally. And then: If she sends me back to the other side of the
 airport, I am going to just get in line there and demand that they put 
me back on the next flight home to Melbourne. 
But to make a long story 
less long than I've already made it, she put me on a late flight to 
Austin instead. I got to spend the next 9 hours in LAX, but at least 
they were 9 hours inside security, with restaurants and chairs and not 
standing in lines. So ok. And I made it to Austin in time for the 
conference. 
And Austin is still as hot as it ever was in June when we 
used to live there. I did things like buy a massive container of 
Excedrin migraine pills at Target -- because they don't sell those in 
Australia, and after two and a half years of a pandemic, I was down to my last three pills. 
I walked around the Capital building, since it was near my hotel. The last time we were so close to the Texas capital, we were watching a Thanksgiving parade with a two year old Jonathan. 
I also checked out all 
the podiums on the University of Texas campus where the Confederate 
statues have been removed. And I walked down to the Congress Avenue 
Bridge at dusk to see bats -- which I never did when I lived there. 
On campus, of course the tower is still there. 
Texas barbecue still tasty.
The turtle pond is still there.
But the fountain where we used to get off the bus, and the rock garden from my days of taking Jonathan to day care, are now gone, no trace. That was a long time ago.
Texas barbecue still tasty.
The turtle pond is still there.
But the fountain where we used to get off the bus, and the rock garden from my days of taking Jonathan to day care, are now gone, no trace. That was a long time ago.
The conference was very nice. Though hot. And the day after the conference dinner, we 
all received email that multiple people had tested positive for Covid. 
So watch for symptoms! I made it home with no symptoms, and no flight 
cancellations, even with three flights. *Phew*
In June.  







 
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