Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
Star Gazing and Navel Gazing – Anni Moss
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
I am on foreign ground, literally; a nursing home in a moderately small Californian town, inland and between San Francisco and Los Angeles. The staff are friendly and mildly surprised at my presence and the request I have. My husband and I follow a carer down a passageway to a two bed room, all the while my heart thumping in my chest.
The nurse pokes her head into the curtained space. “There’s someone here to see you Mrs. Armstrong”, she says. She steps aside and the curtain is gathered to reveal an elderly woman with white hair swept back and a ‘don’t get too close’ air about her. I come face to face with my mother, sitting up in bed, looking quizzically at this person before her. She looks much older than the last time I saw her: thin (always was), dignified, aloof and a little bit apprehensive, possibly due to the novelty of visitors.
“Do you know who I am?” I hear myself say.
“No”, she returns bluntly.
“I’m your daughter”, I respond hopefully.
“Oh, how interesting” she drawls in her mild American accent.
Where do we go from here after 37 years?
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
The first time I came across a foreign coin wrapped in paper was when I was walking along a dirty cluttered street in America. The front of my shoe kicked it along the sidewalk as I was rushing through the street. I thought nothing of it at first, but after kicking it a second time I bent down to retrieve it and felt something solid in the middle, carefully unfolding the paper around it so as not to disturb the piece inside or wanting to drop it, I revealed a Vietnam coin, which on inspection the paper around it read the words Emotionally Vibrant.
I sat on a cement wall just off the sidewalk to ponder what it might have meant. Knowing this coin had travelled from a third world country and seeing the words that accompanied it the temperature dropped around me giving me chills as it took me straight back to the time I visited Vietnam and how I felt after being there. Vietnamese faces were definitely vibrant and always smiling even though they had very little and were living in poverty. Emotionally it made me sad for them, but I smiled to myself as the thought of how little meant so much to all who live there and how it changed me in terms of living my life and being grateful for everything I have because being materialistic and greedy is a power that no one should own.
Next minute I found myself wondering about the coin, whether it was someone’s good luck charm? Are they devastated they have lost it? Did someone special give it to them? And, have they in fact realized it was even missing yet?
Away with my thoughts and in a dream like state, a voice approached me asking me if that was my dog? A little startled, my mind still feeling very foggy I answered no, but he’s gorgeous. You look faraway, are you ok? Smiling I answered yes I’m fine. I’ve just found something that could possibly mean a lot to someone as for myself it has already taken me back on a memorable journey and I would really love to have the pleasure of meeting the owner, finding out their story and re-uniting them with the coin.
I advertised in the local newspaper, I put picture posters up in the street where I found the coin and surrounding areas with a phone number so they could reach me, but to no avail, which saddened me greatly.
To this day I still have that very coin wrapped in the same paper I found it in and whenever I pick it up I still wonder how it came to be on that particular street and what sort of person it left behind.
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
Suffer in your undies! You don’t have to. While I treat a lot of women
& men in my clinic, I also take note of the underwear they leave on
the chair… usually bras.
So I try, if I get close enough, to see the size – cup & girth of the
back strap. Now if the lady has a red mark or indentation anywhere her
bra sits, she needs to re-adjust. Re-adjust her hook & eye or the
shoulder strap. If it’s too tight it’s not good for her health. Her
girls might look good but she struggles to breathe & this creates an
image that is detrimental to her lover & herself. Once the over the
shoulder boulder holder releases its captured audience – thats it. The
truth is revealed! The show’s over, she cant hold them in, or up, any
more.
Now, some people take my advice quite well. Others refuse to
acknowledge the issue.
So when I see a mature woman who rolls her ‘girls’ up into her bra –
she needs to be measured for a new bra. There’s new technology out
there I’m sure that your bra does the rolling for you! I haven’t seen
it or used it myself but I’m sure its out there or at least being
developed as I write!
Now please hear me when I say this too – when I treat women who look
like a Christmas Ham in a mesh bag, THESE WOMEN NEED TO BE MEASURED
FOR A NEW BRA!
“So you’ve got shoulder pain have you?”
“So all the headaches you had- how are they since your last
appointment? Oh they’re still happening…”
“… did you, at least, get measured for a new bra?”
All answers lead to no!
There’s part of your problem. I don’t mind ’cause as long as you keep
paying me to treat you for your pain, I’ll keep taking your money. As
long as you ignore my suggestions at getting measured for a new bra,
please keep coming to see me for treatment.
Not eating well? It could be a digestive issue, but see how your bra
cuts into your diaphragm & stomach area? That could be part of your
problem!?
Guys I see you laughing. Thinking about your Nanna, your mum or the
teacher you always made fun of, you don’t get away with this subject
either. Please wear the right fitting underwear. The pain you feel in
your nether regions could be because you’re wearing little boys undies
from K-mart. Grow up & start buying your undies from the adult
section. They make Batman undies for “adult” men these days too you
know?! Ive seen them. If only they made Wonder Woman undies… oh,
hang on, they do Im wearing them at the moment!
When looking for good undies you need the right amount of support &
give in the material as well as the elastic. Not too tight around your
intestines & lower back, or top of your leg/groin area. This is
another set of issues.
Ladies if you keep pulling & tugging at your bra & undies – you might
need a new set? It doesn’t have to be expensive or matching, just
fitted properly & comfortable. Your headaches will ease. You will
breathe better & you’ll look better because you wont have VPL’s
through your clothes. In the mean time you’ll see me for treatment to
undo all the years that bad undies have done to you.
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
‘Tennis racquet…….tennis racquet!” Quiet snigger. ‘Tennis Racquet…..tennis Racquet!’ More sniggering. Louder this time.
The sound of those words and the cocky, intimidating voices of her tormentors made the blood rise to Rebecca’s cheeks and her heart race alarmingly. She fought the urge to cry. It was the crying that had got her into this trap in the first place. She felt the cracked vinyl of the school bus seat, sticking to the bare part of her legs. The urge to peel her legs off the sticky surface and pull her dress down further to form a barrier, was niggling at her, but she couldn’t bring herself to move, for fear of attracting some new kind of taunt.
Rebecca had never been possessed of the self-assured nature of some of her classmates. At this moment, she longed to be the sort of person who could just turn around, say, “Fuck off losers!” to be rewarded by approving chuckles and cheers from admiring onlookers. Unfortunately, she was anything but. She was a compliant people-pleaser. A good girl. The shame of having been caught out as a ‘dobber’ and the resulting humiliation was excruciating. If only she had even one ally on the bus, but as usual, she sat alone in the front seat.
Her most recent moment of humiliation (the second one in a matter of days) had occurred only five minutes earlier. Mrs Stepwell or ‘Steppy’ as she was known by most of the students had cornered Rebecca as she ascended the undercover walkway towards the school bus stop. There was a common catch cry amongst the students: “Steppy’s on the war-path”. This ‘war-path’, on any given day might be carved out of a need to ensure all girls were wearing the regulation navy blue ribbon (“It must be 2.5cm in width, girls”) or simply out of desire to create fear. Today, she had been on her biggest war-path of the year so far: to catch the perpetrator of an act of vandalism: the smashing of a year 7 girl’s tennis racquet.
“Show me these boys then. Where are they?
“But Mrs Stepwell,” Rebecca had backpedalled desperately “I’m not sure if they actually did it. They might just be saying they did as a joke or something.”
“Just point them out”, she had ordered, and with that, Rebecca’s fate had been sealed.
Still stuck to her seat, Rebecca closed her eyes and tried unsuccessfully, not to think about her initial moment of public shame: the way she had cried on Monday upon finding her shiny new tennis racquet ruthlessly smashed up and sticking out of the school dumpster. There had been a significant number of witnesses to her tears. She had cried in a way that could not have been described as composed or measured. Her shoulders had heaved and the guttural howl emerging from her had provoked great mirth from the growing group of voyeurs who had stopped for the entertainment. Her sorrow was born of a feeling of horror at the prospect of telling her parents that she had let this happen to the racquet they had only bought her a week earlier. She had left it on the court after tennis coaching (an initiative her parents had organised in an attempt to help their un-sporty daughter fit in at her new school), and by the time she had gone back to the tennis court, it was gone.
Among the group of amused onlookers had been Max and Mike, two popular Year 8 boys with trendy haircuts and a plethora of female admirers. She had recognised them as the boys who always sat at the back of the bus, having conversations littered with obsceneties, in voices designed to be audible to everyone but the elderly driver.
On that Monday afternoon, however, Max and Mike had chosen not to sit in the back seat. Instead, they sat pointedly in the seat directly behind Rebecca, something which struck her immediately as unusual and unnerving. Then the taunting began.
“We saw you crying today. You looked really upset! Do you know who broke your tennis racquet?” asked Max, in an elaborately insincere imitation of concern.
“No.” Rebecca kept her head down, studying the pale blue stripes on her school dress.
“Well we know who did it”, piped up Max gleefully.
Despite her instinctive grasp of their mockery, she whipped her head around to face them.
“Who? Who did it?”
Both boys smirked.
“Us. We did it.”
“What? But, why?
“For fun”.
In her state of shock, it wasn’t clear to Rebecca whether or not they were telling the truth, but as the horror of their words sank in, the two boys stood up and strode triumphantly to the back of the bus, laughing. Once they had slid into their backseat throne, they started to quietly chant the words: “Tennis Racquet………….tennis racquet….tennis racquet” like some maniacal broken record. Other kids watched her for a reaction, while Rebecca just sat, looking deeper into the lines of her uniform fabric wishing to somehow melt into them. The sickening chanting routine had continued for three more painful afternoons.
Now, as she sat on the bus, overwhelmed with shame but grateful at least that it was Friday, Rebecca was full of regret. Why had she been stupid enough to report their taunting to Mrs Annesly, her homeroom teacher, that morning? Why couldn’t she have just toughed it out for one more afternoon, knowing that a two-day reprieve was in sight. Maybe if she had done that, a new victim would have caught their interest by Monday and she would have been off the hook. Now, however, she had reached a whole new level of vulnerability. Sure, she would have a break next week, while Max and Mike served their week of detention with Steppy, but after that, she knew she would be fair game.
“Tennis Racquet…. Tennis racquet…tennis racquet….”they chanted, their tone of amusement, today replaced with one of menace. As it built to a crescendo, Rebecca studied her lap with increased determination.
She felt a wayward tear escape and roll down her cheek. As it splashed between the blue lines of her school dress, she dreamed of being home, safe under her doona with a Milo and her favourite cartoons to distract her. Only ten more minutes to go.
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
The new year. Sharon gulped as it dawned on her that the entire committee, bar the president, was going to be made up of parents from the 3 year old class. All first timers at preschool. “Known unknowns”. With the exception of Rebecca. Fucking. Rebecca.
Passive aggressive bitches with scores to settle seemed to be a special sub-species of woman who would inevitably find themselves on a kinder committee 3 years after giving up their careers. Or 3 years after going part time. Or 3 years after choosing full time child care. It didn’t matter which choice had been made after the arrival of the first child, the result with chicks like Rebecca was the same.
Yes, the previous committee had been brimming with A types. All women, not a dad within cooee. My fucking KINGDOM for a dad, Sharon silently prayed. Loud, opinionated, flippant females. Most of them were a laugh riot with hearts of gold and a passion for chardonnay. A couple were positively giddy with power. When Rebecca meekly suggesting the sandpit be covered over night to decrease the instances of cat shit being eaten the following morning she was greeted with disdain and sarcasm. “Oh yeah. Let’s do that. Then, let’s wrap our precious ones in breathable bubble wrap before we let them out of the house. In our day, we ate cat shit every fucking day, and we turned out fine!!” – Squishing down a meek lady, it turns out, possibly not in the spirit of a committee who existed to run the day to day operations and processes of the first foray into education.
I mean, meek chicks concerned with the consumption of cat excrement just weren’t funny, were they? First, it’s the sandpit. Then, the edges of the Steiner approved building blocks would be sanded down, preventing injury. Finally, cordial would be outlawed altogether, thanks to these do gooders. And now, now Rebecca was president, and she had some scores to settle, wrongs to right, a year of being dissed to turn around. Sharon poured a pint of sav blanc. She could smell a dramatic year in the offing.
Small decision
“She’s been in the same position for at least 6 hours. I’m sorry, but I really think we need to move her.” Anthony, the nurse with the kind eyes and easy charm, had a good point.
When you’d popped in that morning to give a twirl in your fancy outfit, Mum hadn’t budged. Not a grunt, flicker or glance. No grin. No “Jesus Mel, your tits are out for all to see, aren’t they?!”. Nothin’. No, she sat propped up in the hospital bed, seemingly snoozing. She looked at total peace.
Well that was around 10:30am. It was now about 7pm. Visitors had come in and out between Mum’s bedside and the visitor’s lounge all day. Afterwards, you’d discovered she’d managed a few half sleepy smiles, approving murmurs and one “You girls are so beautiful”. This, after sitting up to a full breakfast at 7am.
“Yeah, that’s a bit long, isn’t it? Go for it”, you reply. Bed sores, you’d heard, were not grouse. Moving that sleepy lady seemed like a no brainer.
And that, my loves, is the moment you so badly wish you could take back. “Na, leave her Anthony. She’s comfortable”, you’d say. Yes, she’d likely have a numb arse cheek. She may, however, have lived a bit longer if her C2 hadn’t imploded upon being moved. Despite best practice, correct hospital procedure, with two nurses and a Philadelphia neck brace all in play, Mum’s cancerous vertebrae had turned to powder, and all you could do was watch and wish you’d said anything else but yes.
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
Kate the bouncer stood staring down the line stretching along the block and around the corner as the night grew darker. Young peacocks of every feather, preening, tilting their chins as they eyed each other jealously. Who would be successful in the mating dances and rituals of the evening? The night stretched ahead, glittering with possibilities. Kate knew she was but the first of many obstacles to be negotiated, and perused the queue, predicting in her head who would be a strutter, who a squawker, and who would use persuasive cooing in their endeavours to gain access. Some in noisy groups and some alone, they stepped up to submit to her scrutiny. She ran a critical eye over them, assessing their coloured plumage, exotic eye makeup, fanciful hairdos. Apart from the flamboyant customers were the ones all in sleek black, thinking they were safer and cooler than the noisy, bright ones who were making the night ring with their harsh mating calls. They would pick over the leftovers and casualties of the evening like the carrion birds of the air. Sure, they were at the bottom of the pecking order, but they knew they served a purpose.
Then there were the ones who puffed up their chests, trying to disguise the fact that they were merely chicks and not fully-fledged adults. Those she rejected swiftly and calmly, unmoved by their squawks of protest. Most of the raucous, strutting ones were harmless, simply show-offs trilling their songs. The ones who argued stridently at the entrance were always refused. “If someone wanted to argue with you at your own front door, would you then invite them all the way into your home? Hell, no.” was Kate’s rationale. She knew all too well that those who wanted to pick a fight on arrival would then go on to cause trouble at the bar, on the dancefloor or anywhere else they went. They thought they could rule the roost. It was her job to nip that firmly in the bud.
Still others were trouble of a more subtle kind. Something about the eyes was not quite right. Glazed and unfocused, or sometimes feverishly bright, they brought problems. Some of the punters were already in lovebird pairs, but many more were in flocks, looking to find a mate, even if only for the night. Those fortunate enough to pass Kate’s inspection found themselves admitted to the Aviary, a vast dancefloor with a domed roof towering above. Beneath the soaring arches, the patrons perched in preening rows, eyeing those making their displays of courtship on the dancefloor below. The dark rafters above hid many secrets and despite the swirling coloured lights, there were plenty of dim corners. The Aviary was an ancient building and the dances had not changed, although the music and fashion had. The dances included attention-getting manoeuvres, displays of physical beauty and technical brilliance, and finally, the sweaty pairings of potential mates, excitedly ebbing and flowing to the rhythm. Some ended up in stolen embraces in the darkened nooks. Kate and the other security guards circled the crowd like watchful hawks, cruising effortlessly on the currents, alert for danger.
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER
Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER