Ramblings – 15 August, 2025

Laughing? Don’t fall for it

LAST year I wrote a Ramblings about the plovers nesting on my front lawn.

I called them Mr and Mrs P. Lover.

This year they are back and nesting on the same raised patch of grass.

We have a big yard and there’s some distance between the front deck and the road.

I was working and heard a knock on the front sliding door.

It was a salesman with clipboard and briefcase in hand.

I told him, no we were not interested in ‘going solar’.

He turned to leave, and I remembered the P. Lovers and the four speckled eggs between him and his car.

They’d let their guard down when he’d arrived or maybe they were off getting tucker … who knows?

I decided to watch the show and it was quite the performance.

Poor dude, if it wasn’t hard enough cold calling and facing rejection after rejection, the plovers now had him in their sights.

As his foot hit the bottom step, the plovers clocked him.

Two, three, four steps in and swish, one plover to the left and one plover to the right.

There was a bit of distance yet to go and he was unwittingly walking in the direction of the eggs.

Oh dear, up went the briefcase and up went the clipboard as he ran trying to shield his face.

I was watching and cracking up, then just as he neared the end, he slipped and fell flat on his face.

The briefcase went left, the clipboard went right and he became horizonal.

The whole time I’m wishing I was videoing what I was seeing.

He was fine, it was a soft landing, but I imagine he’d said a few choice expletives when safely in his car.

Falling over is funny unless you’re the one on the ground.

The millions of video clips with just as many views on social media prove I’m right.

But why do we laugh when someone falls or hurts themselves unexpectedly?

Some say it’s nervous laughter and a way of distancing ourselves from the person who has fallen.

Laughter also means the person in question is being ridiculed and it is society’s way of setting boundaries.

AKA … stop, don’t do that!

Falling down as part of an act also elicits laughter.

Circus clowns, for example, pretend to walk into things and get knocked down.

They’re not really getting hurt; they are pretending and the audience knows it but still laughs.

Even videos for toddlers have silly fall or slip comedic content and perhaps that’s also a reason why we laugh as adults.

A Colorado psychologist reasons that seeing others get hurt is funny when the viewer doesn’t feel sympathy for the victim.

Content makers might get hurt but because they’re doing it on purpose, we don’t empathise with their shenanigans.

Some philosophise that laughter helps to maintain the rules of society because we learn to laugh at careless or eccentric behaviour.

Laughter is also a response that apparently calms the nervous system.

But it’s funny until it’s not and that’s when someone is genuinely injured.

Slap stick comedy actors and circus clowns are skilled at looking like they were injured when they weren’t.

I read that while plovers swoop at humans, they very rarely make contact.

I also read on an Australian government website that the best way to avoid getting swooped was to avoid plovers.

Well, duh.

Perhaps our ‘attack plovers’ are paying their rent as part time security guards on our property.

I’m hoping someone else turns up unannounced because this time I will be ready to film as they walk away.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Father and son’s light tribute

    Father and son’s light tribute

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 524233 A retired Glamorgan Vale dairy farmer’s Christmas decorations light up his neighbourhood in December. Geoff Beattie goes all out and has over 400,000…

  • Rosewood celebrates

    Rosewood celebrates

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 524244 Families flocked to the Rosewood Showgrounds on Friday 12 December for the annual Rosewood Christmas Festival, organised by the Rosewood and District Supporting…

  • Cabanda Care transitions

    Cabanda Care transitions

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 525016 Rosewood retirement home Cabanda Care is now owned by Lutheran Services. Cabanda Care was built in the 1970s by the Rosewood community for…

  • Bush campground plan

    Bush campground plan

    Graham and Jude Turner are planning to expand the accommodation offerings on their Hidden Vale property outside Grandchester. Applying through their company, Jilrift Pty Ltd, the couple are hoping to…

  • Bootscootin’ in Marburg

    Bootscootin’ in Marburg

    Line dancers donned festive outfits and cowboy boots for a Christmas social held by Belt, Buckles and Boots this week, marking the group’s end-of-year celebrations. Instructor Ms Angie Harris said…

  • Christmas spirit in Lowood

    Christmas spirit in Lowood

    The Lowood Show Society welcomed families and locals to its annual Lowood Christmas Carnival, with fine weather setting the scene for a festive evening of entertainment and community spirit. Show…

  • Elf on the shelf is work we can’t shirk

    Elf on the shelf is work we can’t shirk

    If I found time machine I’d travel back to November 2017 and talk myself out of inviting an Elf on the Shelf into our home over Christmas. I have three…

  • Festive fun in Rosewood

    Festive fun in Rosewood

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 524244 Families flocked to the Rosewood Showgrounds on Friday 12 December for the annual Rosewood Christmas Festival, organised by the Rosewood and District Supporting…

  • Tyre trees delight passersby

    Tyre trees delight passersby

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 522963 A Mutdapilly local had the crazy idea to build faux Christmas trees using tyres of differing sizes. They were painted green and once…

  • Cold moon lights up Rosewood night sky

    Cold moon lights up Rosewood night sky

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 522848 A flying fox cast a spooky figure as it explored the night sky over Rosewood last week. Its illumination from the splendour of…