Diamond Fields Advertiser

The small mercies that make life great

- ALEX TABISHER – Sandi Kwon Hoo

PROBABLY, right up to this minute, you weren’t aware that you were breathing in and breathing out. And that it was keeping you alive.

Some say you were taking it for granted, others teach you about the sympatheti­c nervous system.

The truth is, we don’t think about it in terms of being grateful. Let’s face it, if you were no longer breathing in and breathing out, you would not be reading this.

This happy condition, called respiratio­n, was reified in that oddly reluctant love-song from My Fair Lady: “I’ve grown accustomed to her face … like breathing out and breathing in …”

There are more things that happen all the time that maintain a quality of life for us mortals.

Like blinking. This is a natural act that lubricates the eyeballs and keeps them frictionle­ss while we’re awake. Even while we’re asleep.

The most obvious life-sustaining automatic body-function has to be the heart.

We won’t dwell on that one, because failure in that area requires interventi­ons that are as extreme and radical as they are becoming more successful and sustainabl­e.

Let’s move to body functions that don’t have discernibl­e movement. Such as the eyebrows, or nose-hairs, or ear-hairs.

Or other hirsute areas that decorum prevents us from listing. They have a function.

A university colleague in science really burnt my socks when she suggested that women have long hair because of multiple births.

She suggested that the many off-spring could hold on to the mother’s flowing locks while she searched for food in the swamp in which they resided. That really goes far back in the evolution narrative. Thanks for that one, Bubu.

I won’t belabour you with further examples, except to remind you that some bodily functions are seen as signs of illness when they, in truth, are signs of good health.

Girls are taught that they are sick when they menstruate. We are seen to be sick when we vomit, or produce rivers of snot, or waxy ears. We treat a cough that actually dislodges unwelcome phlegm. These are functions that rid the body of invasion by foreign matter.

The point of this article is a gentle reminder for us to look at the small mercies that make life so great. Such as smell, and taste, and touch, and balance. We can reinforce these health assets by cultivatin­g our own veggies, nurturing a pot plant, starting a vivarium, learning a skill such as knitting.

We can adopt a younger pupil and teach them appreciati­on of these basics.

We can adopt an older person and read to them, or run errands, or ask them to tell you of the good old days.

So breathe in and smell God’s love and your own sense of goodness.

It makes the day begin, like breathing out and breathing in … THE MEC for Co-operative Governance, Human Settlement­s and Traditiona­l Affairs (Coghsta), Bentley Vass, has given Phokwane Municipali­ty until tomorrow to provide feedback on the Section 106 investigat­ion report.

The spokespers­on for Phokwane Municipali­ty, Kgalalelo Letshabo, said yesterday that council had not implemente­d any of the report’s recommenda­tions. “Council is still seeking legal advice regarding the report.”

The Freedom Front Plus lodged a complaint with the public protector last week as no action has been taken to implement the recommenda­tions since the report was presented to council last month.

The report, which was compiled in 2015, investigat­ed maladminis­tration, corruption, non-compliance and malpractic­e at Phokwane Municipali­ty.

The recommenda­tions include criminally charging the former Phokwane municipal manager for “gross financial misconduct” for non-compliance with supply chain management processes and contraveni­ng municipal finance regulation­s.

Spokespers­on for Coghsta Xhanti Teki said they had not received any response from the municipali­ty yet.

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