Death and taxes are two unavoidable certainties in life. I'm glad I learned as much as there is to know about taxes instead of, let's say, parallelograms which only comes in handy during parallelogram season, whereas the tax season starts on the 30th of June every year.
I must've signed off on literally hundreds of tax returns after the Registrar of Tax Agents for Papua New Guinea assigned me Tax Licence TTA222, but all that came to an end when I left Papua New Guinea at the end of 1974, and I lived and worked in countries with more benign tax regimes, or none at all (e.g. Burma and Kingdom of Saudi Arabia).
When I came back to Australia in 1985, I felt at first quite flattered when the nice people in the Australian Taxation Office sent me a letter, telling me that my tax return was 'outstanding', particular since I could not even remember sending them one.
Since then, for the past forty years, I've been sending a return every year, and for the last twenty-five years I've been sending three: one for my superfund, one for Padma, and one for myself. It's called 'income-spreading' to avoid the punitively high marginal tax rate of 45%, to say nothing of the Medicare Levy of 2%, or the Medicare Levy Surcharge of 1%, 1.25% or 1.5% in the absence of private patient hospital cover.
It's that time of year again, and I may start crunching the numbers this weekend - unless I can find an interesting book on Euclidean geometry.