I remember travelling to Petrie as a child to play against the Pine Rivers soccer team. It seemed like a long way away. Reading Tom Petrie's Reminiscences of Early Queensland makes it seem even further. Tom Petrie was born in Scotland in 1831. In that same year his father Andrew accepted a post as supervisor of works in Sydney, and in 1838 the family transferred to the penal colony in Brisbane, then a ramshackle affair just over a decade old. When Queensland was opened up to free settlement a few years later and his position was abolished, Petrie senior refused the offered transfer back to Sydney in favour of setting up his own building business in the younger colony, and the Petries became pillars of early Brisbane society. All this meant that Tom had a very unusual childhood. Brisbane in 1838 was not really a community, it was a prison. Although there were some women prisoners the population was dominated by male convicts and soldiers. ...
"Maybe in this day and age, love thy neighbor should also be love thy nature. After all we are all neighbors to nature; we live in a grand neighborhood called the biosphere, the realm of life on earth, and we depend on it. We are it and it is us, from our gut biome to what we eat, drink, and breathe. Love in this case should manifest as active care." Rebecca Solnit