Kirky's wife blog on swans website

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  • Tuhob
    Pushing for Selection
    • Sep 2003
    • 65

    Kirky's wife blog on swans website

    Has anyone been reading Hayley Kirk's blog "The Other Half" on sydneyswans.com.au?

    I've found it quite an interesting read and it's regularly updated.
  • Primmy
    Proud Tragic Swan
    • Apr 2008
    • 5970

    #2
    Beat me to it. I was going to post a thread right now. I enjoy Hayley's blogs very much. No wonder Kirky is so balanced. It is quite a double act going there. Mrs Kirky is a writer anyway, so it is doubly enjoyable to read what she has to say in good english and syntax as well as content.
    If you've never jumped from one couch to the other to save yourself from lava then you didn't have a childhood

    Comment

    • royboy42
      Senior Player
      • Apr 2006
      • 2077

      #3
      Just read todays edition and she tells us he had 3k time trial and she wondered how he'd go. I was there..he went well..top 6 or so and wouldn't blow out a candle at the end, well not a big one.

      Comment

      • Alison
        On the Rookie List
        • Feb 2003
        • 155

        #4
        Kirky's wife blog on swans website

        Has anyone been reading these blogs??? Quite out there and crazy!

        Comment

        • Molly dooker
          Lifer!
          • Jun 2007
          • 247

          #5
          I love her blog, it's honest and of course "out there", can you imagine our Kirky going for a "pearl necklace"? I definitely would not think her "crazy" as she's managed to have an educated background, a successful marriage and four kids and still manages to spare us some time to write from behind the battle lines.

          I find her generous, inspirational and a bloody good sort. I love the bit today about hot-cross buns, I am soooo with her on the chocolate ones!!

          Comment

          • erica
            Happy and I know it
            • Jan 2008
            • 1247

            #6
            Love Hayley's blog. She sounds like a great person and I wouldn't mind meeting her one day.
            All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. - Edmund Burke

            Comment

            • BSA5
              Senior Player
              • Feb 2008
              • 2522

              #7
              Originally posted by Molly dooker
              can you imagine our Kirky going for a "pearl necklace"?
              No, though I wouldn't put it past Shane Crawford...
              Officially on the Reid and Sumner bandwagon!

              Comment

              • Primmy
                Proud Tragic Swan
                • Apr 2008
                • 5970

                #8
                Anyone see the snip on TV with Kirky and his Grandpop (nice old fella with the same facial expression of "expectation of something good" that Kirky has). It was on late at night, and I'll be blowed if I can remember exactly what it was about specifically, all I could concentrate on was how nice the love cloud around them was. That and my occasional Seniors Moment seasoned with wine.

                Wonder if Hayley will b ring us up to speed on it.
                If you've never jumped from one couch to the other to save yourself from lava then you didn't have a childhood

                Comment

                • Xie Shan
                  Senior Player
                  • Jan 2003
                  • 2929

                  #9
                  We can't comment on blogs on sydneyswans.com.au but I know people from the club read this board so... I really like Hayley's pieces (I think of them as columns more than blogs), they're little slices of life and always add insight. Her writing is honest, wise and inspiring. Hayley and Brett complement each other so well...

                  I have to comment on her recent post will they or won't they? just before the Tigers game, for those that don't know, Viktor Frankl is the author of a famous book about psychology called 'Man's Search for Meaning'. It's about his experiences in a concentration camp during WW2 and how it shaped his theory of psychology.

                  Comment

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