Category Archives: Gunnas-Masters

Out Of The Fog – Diane Koopman

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

If I had to be honest, if I couldn’t fake it, I’d say that life is pretty good right now. I think I’m finally out of the fog. The fucking bliss and heartache and shock and violence and wonder and aha moments that is having babies. Three of them in three years.

They are magnificent. We have made it through pretty unscathed. Actually, in better condition than most. Imperfect. Superbly imperfect to the point of perfection.

How did I not know that we’d get here? While at the same time being certain of it.

What a fucking ride. No matter what they tell you, you cope with what you get.

Here are some stories I made up that I tell my eldest when she nags me “tell me a story about a cat…” etc. She never gets sick of listening to the same shit. But I always have a message in mind. In my stories everyone is equal and little red riding hood and grandma are feminists who save themselves from the big bad wolf without the help of the huntsman. The princess is a queen and she doesn’t kiss the frog if she doesn’t want to. Fairytales are a fucking minefield of sexism.

1.

One day there was a black cat sitting in the shade napping.

He looked up and saw a yellow bird.

He crept and he creeped and just as he was about to pounce the bird flew up into a tree.

“What do you think you’re doing?” said the yellow bird.

“Nothing. I was just playing.” Replied the black cat.

“You were going to eat me.” Said the yellow bird.

“No I wasn’t.” Replied the black cat.

“Yes you were. Why would you want to do that? You’re not a hungry cat. You live with a girl and a boy. They give you food and water. Sometimes even a saucer of milk.” The yellow bird said.

“Well. You just look so delicious.” Said the black cat.

“Just because we’re different doesn’t mean we can’t be friends.” The yellow bird told the black cat.

And so the black cat and the yellow bird became friends. They did everything together and they were happy.

One day they were snoozing in the sun, when suddenly a dark shadow came over them.

The yellow bird looked up just in time and said to the black cat, “Quick up here!” and flew up into a tree.

The black cat followed him, clawing his way up the trunk.

The yellow bird and the black cat looked down and saw a big white dog with brown spots.

“What are you doing?” asked the black cat.

“Nothing. I was just playing.” Said the white dog with brown spots.

“No you weren’t. You were going to eat me.” Said the black cat.

“Well.” Said the white dog with brown spots. “You just look so delicious.”

“Why would you want to do that? You’re not a hungry dog. You live with a man and a woman. They give you food and water and even a tasty bone sometimes.” The black cat said. “Just because we’re different, doesn’t mean we can’t be friends.”

And so the black cat and the yellow bird and the white dog with brown spots became friends and had many adventures together.

 

 

2.

One day there was a grey owl who lived high up in the trees.

Sometimes she flew down to the lower branches to get food and twigs for her nest.

When she was sitting on a low log once, she met a green caterpillar.

“That will make a hearty meal.” The grey owl thought to herself.

Just as her claw was about to reach for it, the green caterpillar looked up and said, “Stop! What are you doing? Are you going to eat me?”

“No.” Said the grey owl.

“Yes you were.” Said the green caterpillar. “Just because we’re different doesn’t mean we can’t be friends.”

And so the grey owl and the green caterpillar became friends.

They saw each other each day when the grey owl came down from high up in the trees to the lower branches to fetch her food and twigs.

One day, the green caterpillar was nowhere to be found. The grey owl searched and searched, but could not find her friend.

She went to the same place each day and waited for her friend the green caterpillar, but could not find him. Instead she found a strange silver blanket in its place.

The grey owl never gave up and returned every single day, again and again. She flew down to the lower branches each day to wait for her friend the green caterpillar, but he never came back.

Sometime later, the strange silver blanket began to tear and out came two colourful wings of orange, red and blue. The grey owl looked in awe at the creature coming out.

“Hello”, said the creature. “I am a butterfly and I am your friend.”

“You look familiar.” Said the grey owl.

“Yes. I used to be the green caterpillar. Now I am a butterfly.” It said.

The owl and the butterfly remained good friends and had many happy adventures together.

Go Back

Let’s give the emojis a rest – Keryn Donnelly

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

 

First up, I love a good emoji. Nothing quite says you mean a lot to me like a well-placed eggplant. Nothing says please pass the salt like a pile of cat shit.

But we have to admit – we go overboard. We’re a little OTT when showering our friends, acquaintances, colleagues and random people on the internet with our emoji-filled love.

And we have to ask ourselves – would we really be so quick to plaster someone with praise in real life? Would we be so exuberant with our thanks and congrats if we ran into them in Woolies?

Would I really KISS KISS Cath from HR? You wouldn’t walk up to Brian from IT and say ‘thanks for fixing my computer HIGH FIVE, THUMBS UP, EGGPLANT, FLAMENCO DANCING WOMAN, BOWL OF NOODLES’.

Why does a simple text message/email/Facebook comment now seem cold without the inclusion of a bunch of tiny pictures? We’ve been pretty bloody amazing at communicating for centuries with just the written word. Do you really need to send a picture of a pizza to say that you’re hungry? ARE WE CAVEMEN?

With every insert of a smiley face/peace sign/prawn cutlet are we dumbing down what we’re trying to say? Maybe we’re trying in vain to make ourselves more likeable, more sharable.

Is it really that bad if we don’t wish Donna from primary school a ‘fab day and the most amazing year yet CAKE, PRESENT, PARTY POPPER, PARTY HAT’ every single year?

Let’s just be honest, we don’t actually give a fuck.

www.keryndonnelly.com
Go Back

What’s in a name? – Kerry Martin

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Naming a child is always very difficult. It is excruciatingly difficult if you have a mixed marriage with different languages and cultures to appease! My family is mixed Australian/Indonesian living in Sydney, and it’s always difficult to name a child with a name that doesn’t get eyebrows raised in each culture. After all, you don’t want the kids to be teased at school, or to have no-one able to pronounce it.

When my firstborn emerged, I was so ready! I had laboriously collated a long list of names for either a boy or a girl, as the sex was going to be a surprise. I decided that Indonesian names were what we wanted, and as my husband came from Java we decided to go for old Javanese names with Sanskrit origins. I needed a long list, for after the birth my mother-in-law, Grandma Siti, would then be able to choose the name from the list that fitted perfectly to the Javanese numerology of the birth-day.  This is the combination of the numbers from the 7 day European week with the 5 day Javanese week that the birthdate falls on, and its congruence with the numbers from the letters in the name itself! Fortunately Grandma Siti was staying with me for the birth, and she knew how to calculate all this stuff!

As well as helping out with her new grandkids, Grandma Siti performed all the proper rituals after the birth as well. The Javanese are Muslim, but many of their rituals come from Hindu/Buddhist traditions – from the deep layers of their ancient culture. After a child is born the husband brings the placenta home to be buried in the garden with objects placed within it, to ensure calmness for the baby and good attributes. For example, a sewing needle for good health, some rice for good luck and wealth, a pencil & paper for study aptitude and a prayer written on paper to encourage good character.

And that is how my firstborn got named Kartini, meaning serenity. It was also the same name as Princess Kartini of Jepara, the famous first feminist of Java, which I was doubly happy about!  It suited her admirably from day one – she didn’t even cry when she came out, but opened her eyes and looked at each of us present, one by one.

When it was time for my secondborn, I was so tired and busy I didn’t have any time to put together a long list of names for either sex before the birth! After all, why not wait until we found out which sex it was first, so I could halve the time spent on the name list? I did bring an Old Javanese dictionary to read through while in the hospital, with a vague hope of getting a list together to bring home with me and the baby. And so my second daughter was born without a list! I tried to go through the dictionary while breastfeeding the newborn, but didn’t manage to get very far.  There was one name I came across that I liked: Kartika, meaning star. I didn’t write it down or mention it to anyone, I just made a mental note that when I got home from hospital I would start my list off with this name…

When my husband drove the baby and I home from hospital, in the car I told him I hadn’t put together a name list yet. He threw me a sheepish look.  He then told me that his mother had already buried the placenta with the new baby’s name in it! I couldn’t believe it! I started to fume with disappointment and even anger. My voice was getting shriller and shriller as I asked him why on earth his mother had chosen a name without consulting me and him, the baby’s parents! It was not the custom in Java for the grandmother to choose the name without consulting the parents, I exclaimed! What if she had chosen an awful name that meant our baby would get bullied at school, something like say Fatmawati? I could hear the school ground chorus of “Fatty Fatty, Whatty is a Fatty!” ringing in my ears already…

After a long anguished pause, I asked him with great trepidation:

“So what name did she bury with the placenta?”

“Kartika”, he said.

I shut up and rode in silence all the way home.

Go Back

Moving – Andrew Faith

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

We’re moving soon and it’s been suggested that I might want to sell my Grandmothers piano. I have very mixed feelings about this. I only got up to first grade though I guess I could have gone further but there were other things happening in my life like coming out and puberty and acting and singing and being bullied and my parents divorcing and look at all the excuses I’m making even now. I think I just wanted to be able to play and not have to do the practice.
Anyway, the piano has a lot of sentimental value and it’s more a decoration these days. I don’t play though in the back of my mind I will start lessons again some time and be able to play a whole piece of music. Mum was the pianist but she hasn’t played for years – besides, the piano is at my house, not hers.
I don’t know why I’m keeping hold of it but I just can’t bring myself to sell it. It’s always been there and it feels like I’d be selling a part of my life or family. There’s other furniture I will sell – I don’t need DVD or CD storage cabinets because it’s all ripped to a hard drive and I don’t need the coffee table in the shed. It’s actually a decision I don’t want to make and would be relieved if it was taken out of my hands. I kind of want the permission from Mum to sell it but then I also want her to be adamantly against the idea.
I know what the ever practical original owner, Gran, would say – it’s time to let it go.
It’s just stuff and it’s not going to change the world or cure cancer but it’s also a little piece of my family and history and once it’s gone I’ll never be able to get it back. Some decisions are easy, but some are really hard – and this is one of them.

 

 Visit www.littledesignstudio.com

 

Go Back

Women want it too- Ingrid Katinski

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Dinner parties. How I hate them.

I sit, one wine too many, and watch myself as if through a window, laughing and talking and being the charming hostess.

Our friends have no idea. The happy couple. Still finishing each other’s sentences and correcting each other on the details of “remember that time when…”.

It is an out of body experience.

I wonder what my children think about daddy sleeping upstairs. It’s been going on for so long it’s their normal, so maybe they don’t think anything about it. In any case, the little one wakes and gets into bed with me most nights. I wonder if I should discourage it, but I haven’t got the energy and anyway, I like feeling her little cuddly body curled up next to mine.

I realise I am starving for physical touch. Skin hungry.

I look in the mirror. Even though I look tired, I still call bullshit on his “not attractive anymore” narrative and give myself a pep talk. I am fine. There is nothing wrong with me. I am small, slim, fit, strong. And still juicy.

I am reading the paper at breakfast one Saturday morning. My eye is caught and held by an article on male escorts for women. I read it surreptitiously while my husband is occupied on his phone. I am quietly gobsmacked.  Here are stories of women just like me. Attractive, professional women, whose relationships have gone wrong. Whose husbands won’t touch them. Who can’t seem to untangle the intricacies of their lives together.

So they pay a stranger to touch them. I mean I wasn’t completely naive – I knew there was such a thing – but here it was in black and white.

Respectable people, it seems, actually do this.

I can’t get the story out of my head. I reread it a few times. I hesitate. Until I’m alone one day and then I google the escorts in the article.

One is a dark brooding latino pretty boy, exceedingly gorgeous but too young. One is a handsome blonde haired blue eyed porn actor. I don’t quite feel right about him either.

I can’t immediately see a photo of the third one on his website. It doesn’t matter. I like how his writing sounds. Intelligent. Articulate. And there is a photo of his hands. They are masculine and sexy. Something stirs in me and I immediately imagine them on my body .

I clear the browser history.

A few weeks go past. I have read his entire website, every blog entry and every testimonial.  I know what he looks like. 40ish. Handsome. Nice. I tell no one.

I am not quite ready, but with shaking hands and my heart in my mouth I call him anyway because I want to hear his voice, to see if how he sounds in real life matches how he sounds in my head. It does. He sounds real. His voice is sexy. He is clearly practised at this because he takes no notice of my nervous faltering attempts at conversation and does the talking for me. I tell him I’m not ready yet but will call when I am.

I hang up, already breathless and save his number in my phone.

Eventually I call again. Luckily he doesn’t answer, because my heart is pounding out of my chest, my mouth is dry and I don’t actually know what I want to say. I don’t leave a message. I compose a sensible sounding text and send that instead.

He calls me straight back – calm, self assured, matter of fact, no problem at all. I calm down a bit and we make the booking for a weeks’ time.

The week drags by in a haze of distracted fantasies. I worry about what to wear. I buy new knickers and get increasingly nervous as the day approaches. I confide in a friend with all the details because #whatifheisanaxemurderer and arrange to call her afterwards. She is shocked but supportive. She lectures me about condoms and contraception.

It’s the day. I get up and go through the motions – coffee, no breakfast, school drop off. My booking isn’t until the afternoon, so I do the groceries, a load of washing, some housework.  Eventually I have to get ready. I have already waxed off everything in sight and had a pedicure. I take the longest, most detailed shower in history. I brush and floss my teeth twice.

Hair done, a bit of makeup and I’m ready. Hardly.

I look critically in the mirror and consider what I am about to do.

I am a fit and attractive 46 year old married woman, mother to young children and I am about to pay a man I’ve never met to have sex with me.

Entirely reasonable behaviour.

Shit.

I get in the car and drive. I am full of adrenaline and am at the address before I know it. Way early. I wait in the car with the airconditioning blasting cold air onto me because its a warm day and I am paranoid about being all sweaty. Finally it’s time. Shaky but determined I make my way up to his apartment and hesitate at the door. He doesn’t know what I look like and I’m worried he won’t like me.

I take a big breath and knock.

Go Back

I Fucking Did It – Matthew Lyons

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Leaving Singapore or should I say running was a tough moment for me and the hardest part is not being able to resolve what happened. I know I have been hurt and no doubt the people involved have been hurt as well. That’s what happens when you can’t control the outcome. Depending on how you look at things it really is hard to know who is at fault. There are always two sides to the story but if it becomes surrounded by controversy then those two sides become multiple and in most cases twisted and create unrest.

Riding along the bus I just look like an everyday individual going about my day with everyone oblivious to what I am hiding underneath and that makes me think what other secrets or mysteries are lurking on this journey bus 380.

Go Back

Five Minute Word Spew – Tania McMurtry

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

I’m Gunna think about this a bit more – later.

I have really enjoyed listening to everyone’s stories, ambitions and fears today  at the Gunnas Masterclass and while I relate to lots of it – it has led me to reflect on my current painting – the one in the studio that I keep talking about, worrying about and showing everyone and then hating how they respond  – it’s either  that I think they’re just plain wrong, don’t get it or that I think they’re just being nice. But why do I care and more importantly why do I ask?  Their comments just sit in my head like bad smells affecting my ability to do anything worthwhile – to be myself, to explore freely and wildly with out pandering to the possible expectations of others. These others that I refer to are my friends and my family and I love them – but why do I have to ask for an opinion when I know it’s going to cloud me – why do I need this fake reassurance? Is this similar to how Jess (a comrade Gunna) thinks young women think about sex? I wonder…..

I love the studio work that I’m doing but I also want to write and I worry will  one take away from the other – alter my energy so to speak? That sounds silly doesn’t it? Another nagging insecurity – my god am I really that insecure? I do have great sex though – mostly.

Is it an artists lot to feel insecure, to need reassurance and if it is, why? Is it a necessary part of the creative process – a productive pain like a contraction in child birth – a means to an end. Does that mean that an artist shouldn’t grow too confident – is that what will happen if I find a way to manage my insecurity. Will not sharing, asking and talking about my work in progress make me more confident or leave me to wallow in my own suffocating, spiraling chaos until I find my way through.

I wonder what everyone else is writing? I wonder what Aine is writing – I’m starting to struggle – but only because I guess I don’t want to go any further – to explore my insecurity – shit – when will this 5 mins be up? I think she lied – it’s 10.

I can see others looking around from my excellent peripheral vision – I know my mind is wandering to what I will teach my kids class on Tuesday – oh- that’s right – I know already – charcoal drawings of an autumnal scene – yea we’re gunna do that.

Phew, time is up!

www.taniamcmurtry.com

Go Back

A Moment With A Comet – Peachie Pantelis

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

They lay and watched the night traffic in the sky- satellites and planes, planets and starbursts. Finally the comet, so long awaited for and soon to vanish for another one hundred years burst across the sky… They watched it steadily, sighing and exclaiming, and then…they were left with just the sound of their breath and the rustle of the trees- and the wishes they had sent to the night sky lay around them unanswered…
Go Back

Two Pieces – David Packman

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Sister madly

I can’t remember the last conversation I had with my sister. This thought has a nasty habit of springing to mind uninvited. For better or worse, it is invariably throttled before it has time to take hold. If I’m brutally honest, I struggle to even recall the true extent of our relationship at the time. I think it was OK. That phrase sounds so hollow as it echoes around inside my head.

Most of the time, I don’t allow myself to feel the sting of that particular barb. My sister loved me, and she did so with all her heart – and I loved her too, of course – but the parameters of our particular family dynamic never allowed for such wild and uninhibited displays of vulnerability. My mother yearned for such a thing, but for my dad, it was simply a step too far. Life was about discipline – military style – sharing nothing too personal for fear it could be used against you. Giving was an acceptable commodity, but only if one was sure to be in receipt of something greater.

My sister left me a letter. An outpouring of life-affirming emotion – even in death – but hidden within it was an undercurrent only a big brother could decipher; I know you have an immense capacity to love, but will you please fucking find it before it’s too late.

Notes from within the test tube

As the day drew on, he observed some reduction in his current dwelling on the human condition. The disturbing sound below him turned out to be just the hum in the kitchen. Sure, the Wi-Fi caused some pain in his nether regions, but on the upside, last night’s altercation with the mould seemed more distant, perhaps brought into perspective by the slight smell of must that had greeted him as he first materialised in the room.

The day itself went from shockingly offensive – from the teacher, to the material, to the surrounds – to somewhat bearable, distinctly pleasurable and eventually, highly fulfilling. More than a few exceptional takeaways in addition to some characters well met.

A beautifully broken lot, writers, inevitable drawn together like moths to a flame. As he listened to the combined melange of their experiences, he was reminded to allow people in. Suddenly, he felt everyone was dancing to the same tune. Turns out it was just him making the needle stick.

Check out a little more of David’s world here

Go Back

My Third Birthday – Ernest Price

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Today is my third birthday.

I’m not usually one to celebrate milestones.

I didn’t celebrate when I received my new name in the mail on an unbendable, unbreakable certificate, or the first time that my GP gave me a large, painful injection.

I didn’t mark the day my voice began to break from its lifelong falsetto, the day my body fat began to shift from my hips to my gut or the day that I could finally cobble together a respectable approximation of a 13 year old’s beard.

I didn’t write about the moment that I stood in front of 100 colleagues and told them who I had always been, or the moment that I stood in front of 250 students and told them who I was becoming.

I didn’t speak about the time that I first passed as male in a supermarket, or the first time that I suffered the privilege of using a male public toilet.

I didn’t share my experience of draining my superannuation to have life-changing surgery that would render me immobile and inconceivably joyful.

I didn’t celebrate these milestones because I didn’t want to paralyse myself waiting for change that may never happen. I didn’t celebrate these milestones because many of them came without notice or without fanfare – arriving in parts rather than as a whole. More than anything, I didn’t celebrate these milestones because I didn’t want to be the kind of straight white man who thought himself entitled to broadcast the minutiae of his everyday existence.

So I carried on, shifting incrementally towards the man I wanted to be. Days, weeks, months, years passed and life happened. I got a job that made me happy. I travelled. I made friends. I lost friends. People around me had babies. People around me died. My mother, from whom I am estranged, developed what is likely to be a terminal illness. I lived the way most of us live, with moments of joy, moments of desperate banality and moments of sheer anger at life’s absurd cruelties.

And so, because life happens, I am choosing to celebrate this day. I gifted myself the Gunnas Masterclass for my third birthday because I know now that I am never going to be the man I want to be. I also know that I want to live every day like he is a possibility. And so I will continue to move, incrementally, towards his image.

Go Back