More money, more problems: why I don’t want to win the lottery.

‘That’s the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard.’ That’s husband Bill speaking and if you’re following my writing you’ll know it’s something he says often. Especially to me.

‘It’s true,’ I say, ‘I hope we don’t win.’

We are sitting at the table and Bill is hunched over a 10-number auto pick ticket with a pen, marking off the lottery numbers that have just been drawn.

His eyes bug out of his head. ’70 million dollars! How could you honestly say you don’t want that? We can get a fancy house, a fancy car… I’d get a kick-arse boat with a crew!’

‘It’ll just cause problems. And it’s not like I’m unhappy right now.’

What would it be like to win 70 million dollars?

Bill puts down his pen for a moment, leans back in his chair and folds his hands behind his head.

‘For one, I’d buy us a massive house. Big enough for us and Baby Prince G and all the dogs you want. On the waterfront.’

I shrug. ‘Crime’s pretty high there. We’d have to start locking the front door. And a big house sounds hard to clean.’

‘We’d get a cleaner! And a security guard. Hell, we’d get 5 security guards! And a black Mercedes C63, but I’d never have to clean it either ‘cause I’d get a car man to look after it.’

I take it this Mercedes C63 has room for the Prince G’s car seat?

‘Hell no! Babies aren’t allowed in the coupe! He can come in the Lamborghini. A yellow one. He’d like that. But that would be for Sunday drives only… it’d be too nice to park in town. So we’d need a round-the-town car.’

He picks the pen up again, and goes back to marking off numbers.

‘There’s no way you’d be happy with a cleaner. They’d never do a good enough job.’

‘If they didn’t I’d sack them.’

You’d spend your days hiring and firing staff?

‘That sounds painful. It’d be a fulltime job just doing that!’

‘Think of all the awesome holidays and parties we’d have. We could tell everyone to come away with us for a week on our yacht!’

‘They’d have to find babysitters and get time off work… that wouldn’t happen.’

I feel tired just thinking of all the responsibility. I feel pretty tired to start with. I suspect Prince G might be teething. And 70 million isn’t going to stop that.

Would I have to start wearing make-up?

‘I couldn’t be a passenger in a Lamborghini dressed like this?’ I look down at my baggy pajama pants and Bill’s old t-shirt.

I shudder at the thought of having to move my personal appearance up my ladder of priorities. You could say I like my comforts.

‘You see Bill, money would not make me any happier. And that’s the goal here, right? I have everything I could possibly need, right here. A nicer house and a few more holidays would be good.’

But it’s not like they’d make me significantly happier.

I recently read on Wait But Why an article about why Gen Y are unhappy. The bit that stuck for me was that happiness occurs when your reality is better than your expectations, and sadness is when your expectations are higher than your reality. The 70 million would certainly increase expectations, but the improvement on reality couldn’t be guaranteed.

I have an idea. ‘In fact, what’d make me happier is donating 65 million to charity and helping thousands of people instead.’ The other 5 million I could handle without having to hire staff or alienate my friends.

Bill rolls his eyes.

To say we have differing thoughts on charity donations is an understatement.

I hope I don’t win! Photo by Upupa4me at http://www.flickr.com/photos/meanderingwa/8227653273

‘But Kitty,’ he says ‘the best thing of all is that we’d never have to work again!’

I put my elbows on the table and rest my chin in my hands. ‘I reckon I’d keep working. I like my job.’

I almost see the steam rise from Bill’s ears.

‘Now that,’ he says, ‘is the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard!’

He grunts and throws the pen down on the table with a clatter.

‘It doesn’t matter anyway. We didn’t win a thing.’

I actually feel relieved.

But I don’t tell him that. I’ve stirred him up enough for one night.

I simply stand up, kiss him goodnight on the forehead and head off to bed.

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A free breakfast in New York

Kindness from strangers can turn up in all places – including on a chilly autumn morning in New York.

Here’s the link:

https://open.abc.net.au/projects/the-kindness-of-strangers-26nr0uy/contributions/a-free-breakfast-in-new-york-28jm9rj

ABC Open 500 words project: The kindness of strangers

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The worst present ever

 

I’ve always had the habit of giving people gifts that I would like to receive myself. But is that always a bad thing? In the case of the bright blue ukulele: apparently, yes.

Here’s the link:

https://open.abc.net.au/projects/500-words-failure-44vx9ph/contributions/the-worst-present-ever-69al2ww

ABC Open 500 words project: Failure

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A complete shift in priorities

On becoming a mum.

This ABC Open 500 words piece describes what it’s like to go from career woman to mother overnight (and how now I couldn’t imagine life any other way).

https://open.abc.net.au/projects/500-words-on-the-job-84ef0zh/contributions/a-complete-shift-in-priorities-81ec4mc

ABC Open 500 words project: On the job

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About blogging and writing – my ABC 1233 radio interview with Carol Duncan and Anthony Scully

I was recently given the opportunity to appear on our local ABC radio station to talk about my blog and my writing. I have attached the sound file for your listening pleasure (select the play icon above)!

During the interview with Carol Duncan and Anthony Scully, I talk about this blog and also my travel novel about our 8 week journey across the USA (see https://jessieansons.com/my-projects/ for more information).

This interview was live and aired at approximately 1:15pm on Wednesday 10th July 2013.

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Being a writer is lonely: 5 ways to change this (ABC Open Guest Blog)

This is my first post as a Guest Blogger for ABC Open

Type ‘being a writer is…’ into a Google search and it suggests the following top searches:

  1. Being a writer is lonely
  2. Being a writer is hard
  3. Being a writer is like having homework
  4. Being a writer is depressing

Now, that’s certainly a depressing Google search! But is loneliness something that all writers have to suffer?

Read my Guest Blogger piece on ABC Open for my top 5 tips on how to turn writing into less of solitary hobby and more of something enjoyable you can share with others – and you’ll find that the quality of your writing will improve at the same time.

https://open.abc.net.au/posts/being-a-writer-is-lonely-5-ways-to-change-this-72wy2ez

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Water water everywhere

ABC Open 500 words – ‘The things we do for love’

July 2013

When the preparation for a medical test is almost unbearable

https://open.abc.net.au/projects/500-words-things-we-do-4-love-80kp2xx/contributions/water-water-everywhere-70ny5hh

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The war against dog fur: story of my life

Today at work I realised there was dog hair on my desk. And I know exactly where it came from.

Despite the dog never actually visiting my place at work, he somehow manages to send tufts of fur with me wherever I go. At a café having lunch with my friends, I’ll notice black fur on the table in front of me. In my dad’s car there’ll be some on the seat, even though my dog has never traveled with my dad. It’s even been found stuck to clothes that I pull from the very back of my cupboard that I haven’t had out since before I got the dog.

Just how does one dog manage to drop so much fur?!

I have to admit, we’re not the smartest people in the world. Our house is decorated in neutrals: white tiles, beige carpet and white walls. And we decide to get a black dog.

A big black Labrador that, according to my husband, should be almost bald by now.

There’s black fur everywhere in our house. And I mean everywhere. When my husband vacuums, the dog follows him around the house, dropping just as much fur as what was sucked up the vacuum. Often it’s even more.

And the dog only has to look at our rather expensive light cream lounge for it to need cleaning.

Sometimes when I’m eating my muesli in the morning, I look down and see a dog hair floating in the milk. I guess people who aren’t dog lovers would find this rather gross, and would even be tempted to throw the whole bowl out. Well, I’m going to admit something here that might shock you: sometimes I take the time to fish it out (often adding more new hairs to the bowl than were there to begin with), and sometimes I choose to turn a blind eye. Shocked?! Maybe it wasn’t a dog hair after all? It could have been an almond sliver or a cranberry. Yes, I’ll convince myself it was a cranberry just so I can eat my breakfast in peace.

I’m due to have a baby in four weeks. How old do you think our child will be before it has a dog hair stuck to it somewhere?

In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if the baby has one or two in there already…

Sigh.

The dog’s just lucky he has such an adorable face.

Image by Jessie Ansons

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ABC Open 500 words: Locals in the mid-West (Travel Tales)

Experiencing the locals in America’s mid-West

June 2013

A task as simple as paying for petrol introduces me to a bunch of characters I never expected to meet.

A post about an experience during our 2010 trip across the USA.

https://open.abc.net.au/projects/500-words-travel-tales-37vy0ey/contributions/experiencing-the-locals-in-america-s-mid-west-33cr3cd

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ABC Open 500 words: Bourbon St New Orleans (Travel Tales)

Bourbon Street

Image by Jessie Ansons

A quiet night on Bourbon Street

June 2013

Just when I thought I’d have an uneventful night in New Orleans…

This piece describes my New Orleans experience while we were travelling around the USA in 2010.

https://open.abc.net.au/projects/500-words-travel-tales-37vy0ey/contributions/a-quiet-night-on-bourbon-street-21wz9sq

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