Friday, January 30, 2015

The happy hordes




take
tea with a tangy twist    
coffee with a hot hiss
conversation with a cute kiss
news with two towering twin tits --
hold the gritty bits.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

A classy moon



A classy moon
looks down
not
upon all those
beneath her;
with bent back
in humble hammock
she rests
not full of her best,
dignifying all those
below
who slow down
enough to
look
up
and see her.

Friday, January 23, 2015

I am a twit


Ricky is a twit, but he's
one of my favourite twits


Call me a twit, you won't be the first, or the last, but I just joined Twitter  https://twitter.com/OWWonewomanswo  

Witness, I am writing this with sponge plugs in my ears because the neighbour is leaf blowing AGAIN! and it sounds like a plane permanently taking off outside my study window. TAKE OFF ALREADY! (I can still hear it).

And, via Twitter I have just watched an Italian video of four 12-year-old boys being told to first admire, then touch, then slap a 12-year-old girl. Its purpose? supposedly to educate about the evils of domestic violence, but it FAILS on about a billion levels, which is DEPRESSING!

Could it get any worse? It could.

My face, thanks to the cheap skin cancer treatment I am using to save money (admittedly oodles of money I don't have), looks like a family of barnacles has mistaken it for a suitable breeding rock and moved in, bringing all the relatives. I feel bad for my kids (not to mention the husb) who have to look at it. Hell, the husb has to sleep with it! I only have to live with it growing on my face.

But... a good review of crap slap video found here: http://t.co/ehAdIYkwRS. Twitter is not only for twits.

Ahhhh -- the plane took off!!!

Sometimes things have to get worse before they get better. Unfortunately, this includes my skin!


  

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Waiting room

The Waiting Room by Essel Art

"I have told you to keep your hands to yourself, Dante," the large lady sat on the sofa beside me in the waiting room of the doctor's office booms across the room at her young son of about four or five, probably four, because he, too, is of a big build and Polynesian, unlike his mother, who is Caucasian.

I can't help but smile at the name of the boy presently tugging a play gym from his younger sister in the corner of the small waiting room, thinking that a less Dante-esque scenario might be hard to imagine.

When the girl, also sturdy, in tight pink top and mauve leggings, comes over to throw herself at her mother, who is checking her mobile, fixing me with a second questioning, slightly wary glance -- the daughter not the mother -- I think about moving to sit on the adjacent sofa to give the family room, after the couple waiting there were called in by the doctor. The third sofa, stretched out opposite the one we are sitting on, with me squashed in one corner, is still basked in sun from the skylight overhead, which was why I avoided it in the first place. The last thing I need right now is sun while I wait.

Girls notice everything, while boys are busy doing. It is difficult not to notice my face scars mind you, though Dante doesn't seem to. His younger sister, three or four, they might be twins, noticed my scars from across the room the first time I looked up, her smile twisting slowly into a slightly frightened frown.

I could not put cover-up on this morning, as I wanted the doctor to see the scars in all their burning red and yellow crusted glory. Well wanted is not quite the word. M was worried about the swelling under my left eye caused by the treatment, also I needed some more cancer cream, which isn't subsidised by the government unless the doctor takes another biopsy.

"Thank the lady for moving, Dante," the large woman says, as I finally decide to take my things to the other sofa just as Dante is preparing to land on his mother too, losing interest in the play gym as soon as his sister leaves it behind.

Dante can't quite muster a thank-you and says instead "I'm sitting here," plonking himself down on the chair next to the sofa, the high one with a straight back reserved for elderly patients who can't get out of a squishy, low-lying sofa.

I smile at the large woman, trying to convey no need for a thank-you and to Dante too, who casts me a fleeting look then, his first, still not noticing my scars as his broad brown face doesn't change expression from one of cheeky defiance. But the woman's face does change. She is so large her lower legs could be thighs and I can't tell if she is heavily pregnant or not, but with her children and her mobile phone to hide behind she exudes a confidence that I have seen often on fat women and mothers. Perhaps confidence is not the word, but more of a strong defiant shield, such as a warrior might carry, except with an easily wounded shame lurking just beneath the surface, not unlike my cancer before the treatment. But when she sees my scars, which she had not noticed before when I was sitting next to her, the less scarred side of my face facing towards her, that surface defiance relaxes as her face opens up in almost happy surprise and intrigue, as she stares, considers smiling, then turns away and back again for another reassuring look. She is fat, I am scarred. We are equals. There is some satisfaction in this for me too.

After a few moments Dante drops his easy-come-easy-go child's defiance and flops down into the soft sofa seat I have just vacated, next to his comfy mother, before taking up a red plastic play phone off the floor onto his lap to make a call: "Hello, I've had an ackident with someone. Can you send a man for an awest." Dante seems to have some experience with the police.

"Hello, Sally speaking," the receptionist answers a call, and my resentment of her having MY NAME, though I hate it enough to have changed it, brews up with brimming irrationalism inside me. "How dare she!" I don't like her anyway. She is too tall to be a Sally.

A thin middle-aged woman wearing fitted boy shorts and sandals, springs in then, exuding lightness and chatty confidence with the receptionist who appears to know her, not in the way she 'knows' the rest of us, but a closer confidence than that. Or perhaps that's what she or the receptionist want the other to think. She turns to breeze her way out, flinging chit-chat over her shoulder back at Sally who replies with equal fling, having hung up the phone.

"Hi! How are you?" says the chatty woman in boy shorts then, having changed her mind about leaving, seeing someone else she knows now sat where the large woman and her children had been -- they are now in the nurse's room down the end of a short hall with the door closed on some of their noise. Dante is too loud for the closed door. Perhaps the name fits after all.

"Hi! How are you?" the other woman replies, repeating the exact phrase the first woman used, making both redundant, like double negatives. They both say at once that they are "great!"

The woman in boy shorts stays standing, directly in front of me, looking down on the seated woman, showing off her boy legs which, on closer inspection, have fine purple veins showing all over the clammy-looking off-white skin. It's January 19 so too late for New Years' wishes amongst the sophisticated set of which these two are clearly paid-up members, but not too late to find out if the other has been somewhere fancier than they have for their holidays.

Woman B: "How have the holidays been for you?"
Woman A: "Oh, great. Actually we went to America for the skiing."
Woman B: "Really! How fantastic. Where?"

The 'where' comes a little too fast for it to be a matter of genuine interest rather than prying to find out to which ski resort boy shorts went, and how rich she really is.

Woman A: "Aspen," she says, for the benefit of the entire waiting room, also a little too fast for it not to be the case that she knows all too well the game they are playing and that she has just played the trump card.

Woman B, almost apologetically quiet now, being tragically bound to tell the truth about their inferior holiday because her son (twelve-ish) is sat with her on the sofa, has to then recount her humble sailing trip to the Coromandel, adding that Ben (husband, presumably) had to come back for one day in the middle so they couldn't go too far, trying to redeem some points for having a husband doing such important work that he must interrupt his holiday for it. Also, that they went with 'friends'. They have friends, better than all the Aspen in Aspen. Still, when boy shorts says how wonderful, the second woman, either from honesty or humility in the presence of the very rich, or sensing a slight condescension in boy shorts' enthusiasm, and/or to show that she too can not only ski, but, much more importantly, can afford to ski, says "I'd rather have been skiing, to be honest with you."

Meanwhile, I who can't ski or afford to, sit there, less than a metre away, the unwilling silent accomplice in this jealous joust, struggling to read P.G. Wodehouse's Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit collection of short stories, M's Christmas present to me. Aspen is winning. But just as boy shorts is letting rip with the next instalment of her holiday adventures, on which, the room then learns, she is venturing as soon as tomorrow! I read about poor old Ukridge in trouble with his creditors on account of his performing-dog business going awry, defending himself with the view that: "Without credit commerce has no elasticity. And if commerce has no elasticity what dam' good is it?" and let out an involuntary "Ha!" Boy shorts and the other woman, who is also trim but better dressed in a blue fitted stretch-cotton wrap-around dress that I had earlier admired when she walked into the waiting room, turn together to notice me for the first time. Well, when I say notice me, they notice my scars as I glance up, momentarily forgetting the scars, wanting to smile apologetically for my outburst, sensing they had turned to look. But seeing their brows knit and noses lift in confused repulsion, almost in an identical fashion, possibly wondering what on earth I could have to laugh about, I smile, not in apology but in arrogance: "My scars will heal, but yours are for life" I say to myself, before hastily burying my scarred nose back in my book, cursing the dam' sun and wishing I could ski.

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Sea me


walking through water
the churning shore
rolling, rushing
stretching, lifting
exercising
giving off body odour
musty, sweaty
muscle
salt under strain
washes my legs
cools my feet
kicks up my skirt
splashes one cold finger
all the way up
ooh!

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Sticks and stones and guns

My last post has left a bad taste -  
the legacy of haste


When anger ascends
there is no end

Sticks and stones and guns
and words
are all heard.

My son cried
when I tried
to deny
his first chance to fire
a gun,
he was young
nine or ten;
boys will be men.

What girls will be
I can't see.









Tuesday, January 13, 2015

The right to be a dick-head

This was the title of an article I submitted to The New Yorker after the attempted assassination of U.S. Governor Gabrielle Giffords in 2011. The article was praised but not published, and the magazine mistook me for a man. Never mind.

The French President François Hollande is surrounded by heads of state; Paris; January 11, 2015.

The recent shooting in Paris has reminded me of this shooting, though one hardly needs to go back that far to cases where men with guns have attempted or succeeded in assassinating progressive public figures, to prove some damn point or other. It all amounts to: 'My gun-dick is bigger than yours', in my opinion. You don't prove anything with a gun, merely that you're a dick-head. And our collective refusal to do what we can to politicise and reduce gun violence continues to sanction and support men's sense of right to be gun-wielding dick-heads.

Giffords' took a stance against guns, and her assailant didn't like it, nor did he like the fact that she was a woman, only the third woman ever to be elected to Congress in Arizona's history. Her predecessor and successor were/are both male. He put a gun to her head in broad daylight and pulled the trigger. He was at liberty to do so because of the right to bear arms in the U.S. and the gun-lobby that supports this right unimpeded (though Obama did try). He then shot at the crowd of people gathered to hear Gifford speak, killing six in total, including a nine-year-old girl and a federal judge.

The dick-heads in Paris were at liberty to shoot and kill twelve, again in broad daylight, largely because gun manufacturers in the West, the biggest dick-heads with guns, sell them the weapons and ammunition to do so for the sake of huge violence and killing-dependant profits. The wider politics in each incident are practically a side issue. Dick-heads with guns will always find a reason to kill if money is at stake.

One dick-head, one gun, six people killed; two dick-heads, two guns, twelve people killed, and many more injured in both cases. The maths is simple.

Dick-heads with guns kill and always will, as long as dick-heads and guns unite.



    

Friday, January 9, 2015

When the cat's away...


Actually we left our two cats behind when we crossed the Ditch this festive season, entrusting them to the boys (21 and 16), as well as these fresh strawberries intended to ward off rickets in boys who would otherwise live on Cocopops and pizza (based on past experience). As you can see, the strawberries were not quite used for their intended purpose and grew so much fur they practically came to life and ran around like regular mice. 

So much for rickets' prevention! Indeed we'll be lucky if they -- and we -- only get rickets. With this amount of mould we'll all be on life-support by the end of the week for some never heard of before and totally incurable strawberry mould-bearing disease.

But at least the cats survived; they ate the mice!  

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Brother and son


My big brother and his lovely late baby boy, Wyatt. Painted from a photo taken early 2013. 



Sunday, January 4, 2015

A bridge not too far


Happy Newish Year! 

A belated New Year's wish to all you fine folk out there in the blogosphere, and apologies for being three days late. My excuse, and I'm sticking to it, is that I was taking this photo (and just a few others) of the Sydney Harbour Bridge in full festive firework swing when the New Year struck and have been in recovery mode ever since -- I don't think my hearing will ever be the same. This is 
A LOT LOUDER than it looks! 

Also, I have been off-line since flying to Oz on the 23rd, which explains why I haven't blogged ANYTHING for an unforgivable twelve days. The twelve days of Christmas, we shall call it, and be forgiven. I gave my blog brain a holiday too. So sue me. I wish you all the very best of luck with that!

That said, I am a little ashamed of my somewhat woeful slowful blog count for 2014; not even a round hundred and less than half of what I blogged in 2013, a year I only began in the April! Getting this year off to a slow start does not bode well for the trend either, but I have resolved, you'll be pleased to hear, along with various writing-related resolutions for 2015, to do better on this front, a nice vague resolution that protects me (and you) from disappointment. Particularly protected will be all those who believe quality is a better measure of 'better' than quantity and less is invariably more... 
You will not be Australians, I fear. 

Meanwhile, I have had a very nice off-line holiday back home in Sydney with my brother, sister, various in-laws, lovely little nephew, family friends and dear old mum. Thank you for asking. And Christmas Day put on one of the best natural fireworks' displays I've ever seen, prompting me to write a second 'afterword' for my Aussie memoir, so that was good. Never mind less is more. Not for us Aussies. In Australia, two is always better than one, less is less and more is MORE. And because I've already had one rejection back from an Aussie publisher for said memoir submitted just before Christmas, with only the one afterword, I think that must have been the reason: not enough words and at least one too few afterwords. Fortunately, I only submitted it like that to EIGHT publishers. I have three more up my sleeve who will see the new and improved, more is MORE draft. 

But that's a different story. For now, I wish you all a grand start to a year filled with more of what you want and less of what you don't, or more of what you need and less of what you want, if you're anything like me and the two rarely coincide. 

Sacha
(Auckland)