Category Archives: Gunnas-Masters

Entomological and mathematical metaphors save lives – Angela Lush

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

It’s 9:58pm – two minutes before my deadline – and I’m still festering. My words are on the page and I should have pressed send hours earlier, but the ‘What Ifs’ have gathered like a swarm of bees: drones following their queen wildly searching for a new home. Our eyes lock and she comes straight for me, her advance guard landing on my skin with their tiny tarsi that test the waters. I can almost hear them sniff the air, their antennae assessing my temperature and humidity to see if I’ll make a good breeding ground.

What if it’s shit? What if it’s awesome? What if, oh please god no, it’s beige? What if it’s too _______, or too ______, and too ______? Or not enough _____ or _______ or _______? Fuck.

What if I’ve used the word fuck too many times for sheer novelty rather than translating all the different actual fucks swirling in my head? What if my mum reads this?

What if’s are much more inquisitive and persistent than the ‘What evers’, which flap past me like giant butterflies without a care in the world. I wish they would stick to my skin and build their nest in my marrow, pushing out the What Ifs with their zero fucks given attitude. These Zero Fucks creatures are much more solitary and I can only seem to catch them one at a time. And the worse part? I have to give them away.

Zero Fucks given to the people who sneer when I wear tight clothes with my muffins, muffin tops and trays full of sausage rolls with extra puffy puff pastry underneath. Zero Fucks given to the people who say ‘aren’t you brave, I could never do that (or be that or wear that)’. Zero Fucks given to the people who ask ‘Where would I have seen your work?’. Zero Fucks given to everyone who ever said ‘That’s why you’re not married (or don’t have kids, or have no partner)’ or ‘Why don’t you have a partner, kids or a marriage – what’s wrong with you?’. Now I know that this adds up to a lot more than zero fucks given, but you get my drift right? Mathematics can actually be quite creative.

Q: If 64 million Zero Fucks were on a train travelling at 80 miles per hour and Angela gave a Zero Fuck away to every person on the train, or every person that the train passed, or every person that she passed when she left her house for just five minutes each day, how many would be left?

A: There would be no Zero Fucks left to counter the infinite number of What Ifs inside her own head.

Where do Zero Fucks even come from? Are they the unicorns of the insect world? Do they grow in a garden? Oh shit, there goes another Zero Fucks, given to those who know I have no skills in keeping things alive even in imaginary gardens.

If I can’t grow Zero Fucks, then it occurs to me that I must make friends with What Ifs. I’ve always thought they were quite nasty and useless and prone to oozing puss. But bees make honey, we collect it, and it tastes awesome with peanut butter, and nobody dies right?

What if I write a sentence? What if I write a book? What if I’m honest? What if I love? What if I just am? What if I had six months to live? What if zero fucks were given? Wow, now even What Ifs and Zero Fucks are coming together and making friends.

Q: If Angela had six months to live and gave herself 64 million Zero Fucks, when she was not on a train travelling 80 miles an hour or giving Zero Fucks away to others, what would she be doing?

A: Angela would be baring her soul on the page (and loving and fucking everyone she wanted to, and who wanted to back) and generally saving lives with story.

It’s 9:59 and my finger, sticky now with peanut butter and honey, goes back to the send button without hesitation. 2016, I’ve decided, will be the year that I, along with new friends What Ifs and Zero Fucks, will fuck the shit out of everything.

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Make a run for it – Sally Arnold

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

 

Once upon a time there was a blue and green planet floating in space. But we’re not here to talk about that.

Somewhere, in a dusty remote part of that planet were two small children. Small as compared to adults, but they themselves felt that they were quite big. They were four and six, a boy and a girl, a pigeon pair.

They were old enough to dress themselves and pour the milk on their cereal themselves, thank you very much. They were big enough to walk on their own to the park, to the babysitters, to school. Practically grown up really.

Life in this town was dry. The heat was dry, one of the seasons was called The Dry, and the ground was dry. Their mother was dry.

Some days they wondered whether life could dry out your happiness and if that’s what had happened to their mother.

Maybe, they wondered, it wasn’t their mother that had dried up. Maybe it was that their father had sucked the happiness right out of her. He was a big man, they had to tilt their heads back to see his face if they stood too close. He had dark tan lines at his neck and on his arms and ankles.   It seemed to them that the room sometimes shrank when he walked into it. Sometimes while he was away, it almost seemed like she was filling up again, but not quite.   They wondered what it was that dried up. It wasn’t water.

But then he’d come back, loud and big and taking up all the space, he was like a whirlwind spinning through. It was yelling and wanting and do this and don’t do that and be more this and their lives spun out of the neat little space that they usually fit into. Most of the time they liked it better when he was away. There were more lollies when he was home, but somehow it didn’t really even things up.

When he was away, there were cuddles on the couch before bed with books and stories and Mum’s voice changing with each character.

Some things don’t change whether or not he’s away. Everyday, there’s cereal for breakfast. Everyday, they have to have a bath whether they’re dirty or not. Everyday, Mum’s there in the kitchen with them.

But some of the things that happen every day when Dad’s home, aren’t everyday things when he isn’t. Smacks aren’t everyday things usually. When Dad’s home, they are and they all get smacks for being naughty, even Mum.

Dad says, in his big voice that seems to make the walls shake when he yells, that you get as many smacks as you are years old. Mum’s smacks at night seem to take a really long time.

One day, when Dad left to go back to work, Mum didn’t get up.

It was OK, because they were big kids, they could get themselves dressed and make their own breakfast, so they did. But it didn’t feel right going to the park while Mum was still in bed.

That was a lot of smacks last night. They’re not sure, but they think it was more than how many years old Mum is, even if that is a lot.

They huddled near the front door and held a whispered debate.

She said it was his fault, he tried to get away when Dad was going to smack him. Dad said Mum would get double for teaching him to be a scaredy cat. He should have just taken it like a man.

But, that only works if you’re as big as a man. He’s big, but he’s still only four is what he said.

They wonder if their friends dads gave their mums smacks too? Maybe you just don’t talk about it. Maybe you don’t tell people so they don’t know how naughty you are. Do dads get smacks if they’re naughty? Who gives them smacks then?

They conclude that probably not. They’re pretty sure that their babysitter’s hubby doesn’t smack people. He’s never smacked them or her and they’ve had sleepovers there.

Because of that, they decide to ask Mum if they can run away together.

Mum’s not naughty, she’s the best mum ever.

And because of that, they decided that the best thing to do was pack while she was still asleep.

They went to their room and pulled out the carry-on bags they use for trips to see Nan and Pop. They carefully packed their toothbrushes, some undies, their good clothes and shoes and some play clothes, just like Mum always does. They put in their favourite books and they each snuck the toy they snuggled with in and hid it under their clothes so the other wouldn’t see.

They dragged a chair to the linen cupboard and he climbed up the shelves and pushed Mum’s suitcase down to her.

They pulled it down the lounge room and they snuck in and got Mum’s pretty knickers and bra, her photos and her favourite books. They snuck in again and picked the clothes they thought made her the most beautiful. They kept adding more things that they knew she loved and thinking of more things until there was nothing more to do and they were packed.

They pushed open the door to her room and in the dim and dusty light could make out her face, staring at the wall with tears falling into her pillow.

They climbed up on either side of her and pressed themselves into her warmth. She froze but after a tiny moment her arms snaked around them and she let out a half sob as she relaxed.

For a few moments, the three lay there together in the dim and dusty light, the heat of the day just starting to really make its presence known.

He reached up and stroked the hair back from her face with his small hand and pressed his face into her neck.

“Mum” he whispered “Let’s make a run for it.”

 

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Heir of Change by B.S. Lewis

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

 

Like a bolt of lightning

It came to me. Just now.

Listening to these women.

Their stories of hardship.

 

Violence, dysfunction, abuse.

The nature of the cycle.

It leads me to my grandfather,

Himself a victim; I suspect

 

Choosing to perpetuate.

To propagate.

How did I remain unscathed?

Who was my redeemer?

 

But now I see.

She is the reason.

She broke the cycle.

She chose my father.

 

In all his kindness.

Generosity. Tenderness.

He was her choice.

With whom to build a life.

 

She would not fall prey

Like her mother before her.

To extend the pain, hurt, oppression

 

She overcame it.

To afford me the freedom

With that one decision.

She did not protect her children

 

From the perils of her childhood

Served at the hand of her father.

No, she protected my children.

I wonder if she sees this?

 

Does she think of this?

Does she understand?

How different things may’ve been.

If not for her; my mother.

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Engine Swap – Lucky Driver

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

All I want to do is drive the damn thing! So worried about whether it’ll start first go or whether the Quarterhorse will shit itself. Damn Quarterhorse battery – I’ve heard quite a few stories of them dying when left unused for extended periods of time. Can I make the bonnet fit somehow? If I space it up at the hinges it’s sure to hit the cowl when opened. Can I easily obtain a fibreglass bonnet with a reverse cowl or can a metal one be easily made? Have I damaged the bores turning it over the other day? Will the idle motor decide to fucking work for a change? If the issue isn’t that damaged wiring then I’m totally at a loss as to why it won’t work. I’m definitely going to need help from Matt or Damo to get it running with those injectors. Why can’t I find a belt that’ll fit? Should I worry more about engineering it? Should I have put more effort into finding out where the engine number is stamped? Should I have stamped it with the 5 litre’s number? God I hope I don’t get found out. I think it’ll fly under the radar pretty easily. The idea that it’ll be discovered by some random cop at a breatho is fucking scary. “Just pop the bonnet for me sir, it doesn’t sound very stock. Oh look, that isn’t the normal deck height of a 5 litre – you’d better call a towy!”

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Once upon a time there was a word I started to use – Alana Gilbee.

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Once upon a time there was a word I started to use. I used it in reference to others. Sometimes I heard it from others. A work colleague, over coffee, looking at me with her head tilted to the side and a subtle smirk on her face. “Your sensuality is understated. You’re sexy, but it’s not obvious.” Understated. Another word for subversive perhaps.

Subversive also describes behaviours, displayed by men, men who target women with daddy issues. “ Hey, I made it my business in the past to exploit women with daddy issues.” How little some people evolve. Despite your stated enlightenment you are still sitting there trying to unhinge me. You have tried before and failed. Now I see you are too stupid or corrupt to control your own desire.

Everyday I am unsurprised but astounded all the same. Theatrics, I guess we all use it. Sometimes we want to display our surprise like this guy. The hands and fingers are positioned correctly but the face lacks the corresponding feeling.

One day I thought of acting. But to hell with that. Enacting real life is more fun. “Fake it till you make it” I tell my students. Fuck up, get it right, be good, be bad.

Because of that I can be who ever I want to be. My intelligence is subversive. I’ll show enough to draw you in, fake it the rest of the time, ask me things I don’t understand and I’ll reply with enough sincerity to convey enough vulnerability which you fucking love.

And because of that I’ll continue to be like this guy- playing the role, doing the dirty, breaking a vow, being a tom cat doing the rounds (thank you Tim Freedman). Those ignorant enough won’t see it, those smart enough who know me and will say there are two sides.

Until finally the play ends. All that is left is the after party…. Back slapping, congratulations, thank yous, feeling on a high, not wanting it to end but feeling tired, all at the same time. Subversive till the end, dot points in the theatrics interspersed through real life. Don’t we all do that? Reality, pretend, trying on, practicing, mastery; the 10,000 hours. How did we go?

 

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Chasey – Heather Thomas

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

The bell rang and we all piled out the door, splitting into smaller groups as we shuffled down the corridor.  In the breezeway someone shouted ‘tiggy on the oval’ and we all started running.
The oval was soggy under foot after the rain over night.  Marty was the last to arrive, bolting across the oval and slowing, panting as he realised he’d be ‘it’.
We tore around chasing each other, taking turns to be ‘it’, with the vigor and exuberance of puppies excited by a new toy.
I noticed that Melissa was sitting under a tree near the oval as we played.  She seemed in a world of her own, as she always did.  Melissa was weird, and everybody knew she liked to pull the wings off butterflies.
After running around for a while the pace of our game started to slow.  Jane, who was ‘it’ was tiring.  Her efforts to tag the next person were flagging, the frustration with her faster friends starting to show.
It was James who said ‘let’s chase Melissa’. As he said it I watched Melissa leap up from where she had been sitting and run away from the oval.  10 filthy kids chased after her, yelling as they ran.
Amongst the school buildings she ducked out of sight momentarily and everyone paused, puffing and eyes darting for a sign of the quarry.
Between two buildings Melissa flashed past and we all took off again, pursuing her relentlessly.
This was a game we never tired of.  Melissa was strange.  She didn’t play with the rest of us.  There was the butterfly thing and her clothes never seemed to quite fit properly.  Melissa never looked at you when she spoke and she had no friends.  Kids often chased her and teased her, although I’d never actually caught her.  I generally tried to avoid her.
This day Melissa seemed to have got away.  We headed back to the oval.  I stopped at the girls toilet on the way back.  Emerging from the bathroom I rounded the corner of the gym and came across Melissa sitting on the ground against the wall.
I laughed.  ‘Well here you are.’  If felt my lip curl as I walked towards her.  If I’m honest, I don’t know what I’d planned to do.  I’d probably have just yelled out that I’d found her and chased as she ran off before my friends caught up with us and our game started again.
But as I walked towards her, laughing, she turned, lowered her head, raised her hands with her palms facing me and begged ‘Please don’t hurt me.  Please don’t hurt me’.  She just stayed in that position looking down.
There are moments in your life when you realise how other people see you.  Times like this can give you a sense of exhilaration and validation.  This was not one of those moments for me.  The realisation that Melissa was scared of me hit me like a kick below the belly.  Suddenly I understood that Melissa did not understand what a caring, thoughtful little girl I really was.  By joining with the group who chased and tormented her I had effectively put on the garb of the bully.  That was not how I wanted her to see me.  It was not how I wanted anyone to see me.
I took her hands, pulled her to her feet.  As she raised her head I met her wary expression and said ‘I’ll never hurt you, Melissa. I’m not like that. And I’ll never chase you again.’  I let go her hands, turned and walked away.  I headed back to the oval, only to be tagged ‘it’ as I got there.  Until the bell rang a few minutes later I chased my friends around the oval.

 

 

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Don’t be a Goner (Be a Gunna) – Katie Piper

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

As I woke up this morning I could feel the cool, sticky dampness of my hair. The result of a feverish sleep induced by too many alcoholic drinks the night before. Then the storm troopers came stomping through, wielding their weapons through my head. Battering my memory cells into submission. Until the images of the night before began to run through my mind, like a movie I’d been dragged along to watch. I’d told everyone I was going to a writers workshop today, this year was the end of the goner I thought I’d become. I wasn’t even going to be a gunna, I was going to be a doer. The trouble was, after two red wines I’d convinced myself that I could handle anything. And the Hemmingway’s cocktails had been made especially for me.

I got up, still panicking about how I was going to find the time to sort out my straw like mop, whilst scolding myself for not going home earlier. I needed to look like a writer, whatever that was. Terrified that even if I rolled around in Barbara Cartland’s powder puff the seediness from the night before would still be leering through the pink clouds. I dragged myself into the shower, praying the lavender shower gel would cleanse my mind as well as my grubby enclosures. A good scrub of my cave parts would surely make me feel like the respectable human I am, worthy of sitting amongst other gunnas, or at least help me to fake it through the day.

The remnants of late night poker were scattered all over the lounge room. The closed blinds with a small chink of light leaving a musty impression over the room. I reached into the cupboard for my organic muesli and green vanilla tea. Transfusing the good girl intellectual thinker back into myself. I traipsed back to the bathroom to brush my teeth. My mouth felt like it had been on suction with a vacuum cleaner so powerful, it could suck up gum trodden in the carpet ten years ago. Teeth so gritty when my tongue rolled over them it received a free exfoliation. Teeth like ancient ruins. The toothpaste felt glorious, like a fluoride Taser gun.

I finally made my way to the workshop on the tram, leaving just enough time to make it. Reading The Age newspaper on the way, the last step in my cleansing ritual. With a shake of each page the aura of seediness became dimmer and dimmer.   Getting closer to the venue the nerves started to take hold, questioning my belonging. I passed a sex worker standing in an eerie looking alley. It would be ok, I didn’t have to have sex with strangers.

On the journey home I reflected on the messages from the workshop. The fascinating and supportive participants, authentic and curious about each other. Not being perfect was the order of the day. And it was ok, I didn’t want to kill anyone…just entertain people. To be a doer might mean that I would have to ‘fail by daring greatly’ (Theodore Roosevelt). And, if I don’t get my arse out of this seat, I might just die before I make it. Metabolism grinding to a full stop. Found at my desk in my secret Dolly Parton ensemble, I’d be a goner, not a gunna.

 

 

 

 

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Billy Fucking Elliott – Emma Gibson

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Once upon a time there was a struggling art director… he was writing the story in his head as he wandered the housing commission looking for the kid he needed. A poor kid, a really povo kid, he needed to look like Billy Elliott at the start of the film. Malnourished for a start, dirty would be perfect and threadbare shoes were a necessity. The visibly poorer the better.

Where the fuck was he? There didn’t seem to be a single child without brand new fucking trainers and smacky trackies on. He blamed China and their obnoxiously cheap stupid sneakers under 10 bucks. And the culture of buying new instead of fixing the old. And sneakers, for fuck’s sake. How was he going to get the shot he needed, the one that would win him awards, with a kid truly grateful for a new pair? They probably nick them anyway. No one wants a new pair of leather shoes when they’re a kid, he could remember deliberately scuffing up his new school shoes as soon as he got them to his mother’s outrage. He certainly didn’t revere them, or know that they were his last new pair til he was an adult. Not that he’d grown up poor. Sure they had a Nimbus but not because his parents were thrifty, his dad just always got bad advice. Like buying a Betamax.

Every day for a week he’d lurked around the housing commission staking out potential subjects. There had to be a recipient worthy enough, poor enough, someone who would show him some genuine heartfelt gratitude because their shoes had died in the arse weeks or months before and been repaired so many times they may as well have been walking barefoot. Honestly, there had to be someone in that state in this country. Preferably in this particular block of flats.

One day he found him. His perfect ragamuffin. Dirty, disheveled, looking forlornly over the concrete of the estate, he was fucking perfect. He was wearing what might have been trainers once but they were unrecognizable. You couldn’t really have fucked them up more in the studio. He could practically taste the champagne at the awards, he swallowed at the thought of the coke at the after party. He started writing the acceptance speech in his head as he approached the boy, who promptly ran off screaming.

Fucking stranger danger bullshit brainwashing. Every child programmed to believe a man they don’t know is probably trying to rape them, every man by themselves in a place with children is suspect.

Because of that utter bullshit, his target was lost. He briefly considered following him home and approaching the parents, parent? Who knew in this sort of hole? And why would he want to have sex with a child? The only children he’d met were fucking annoying little shits, the idea that that would somehow turn into lust was alien to him.

He was going to have to hire someone. Some annoying little snot whose parents were so obsessed with their child’s looks they couldn’t help but share them with the world. Putting all the money into little Crispin’s uni fund even though Crispin would probably get a scholarship and inherit all his parents money after failing to look after them in their old age and wouldn’t even need the money after landing a plum job in a firm and retiring early after a brief but illustrious career.

Seething with the injustice of Crispin’s perfect fucking life, he wandered back to the car. Still carrying the brand news shoes he’d planned to present to his subject, he started art directing the shot in his head. Wanted: Billy fucking Elliot at the start of the film. Willing to get dirty. He could see the finished shot. He could taste the champagne already.

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Cars – Justine Hyde

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

 

Our family has a bad track record with cars. My maternal grandfather died in a car accident on the way to visit my mum and me in hospital when I was born. He never looked in the rear vision mirror. A truck took him out. The cops said it was the worst smash they had ever witnessed.

Mum took valium to deal with the grief. She remarked to her friends that I was a calm baby and a wonderful sleeper. She was breastfeeding.

The phone call came in the middle of the night. It was just past midnight, which made it my birthday. It was my father’s ex. She said there has been a car accident. Head-on with a tree. Your father is dead. I had trouble finding your number. I didn’t believe her. My father was very well organised.

Later that day I got a birthday card from my father, posted just before the accident.

I delivered his eulogy holding my 18 month-old son, who my father only met once. We had been estranged for over 10 years. I said you might want to meet your grandson. Two weeks after my father died, I fell pregnant with my second son.

I had a nasty legal battle with my father’s ex over his meagre estate. In the end, she got the house and I got the superannuation. A few years later she sent me a friend request on Facebook. I didn’t accept.

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Hush – Laura C McDougall.

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

I’m sitting in a room high above Rathdowne St, facing my creative demons. It’s a writer’s class. Not the insufferable kind where we talk about characters and narrative arcs and what publishers look for in a novel these days. We’re all here to face something inside us that stops us from doing what’s in us to do.

I’m surrounded by a long table of women and one man and their coffees and their stories. We take turns. Some of us have a novel in our heads.  All of us have ideas and social injustices we struggle with.  As each person speaks their creative vision, Catherine stops and says,

“Wow. Who wants to read that book?”  Almost everyone puts up their hand.

There’s a lot of nodding and mmming. It’s not because that person has a wild, creative idea like nothing we’ve ever heard.  It’s because something about that story resonates with us.  It resonates in strange ways, personal ways, creative and unexpected ways. Their stories are all so interesting.

I understand what stops me writing. It’s a shadowy monster who sits in my throat. Whenever I have something to say, it curls its long fingers around my windpipe and whispers,

“Hush, no-one cares.”

The monster has been my friend for a long time. It inspires the brevity of blog posts, which come out as neat philosophical packages. It helps me distil other people’s cloudy, unformed ideas at the office into value-added work. To sit quietly without presence or personal agenda is essential. I let it all wash over me. I catch the important bits in my net, just the bits people care about. My monster is good at that.

It also means I’m terrified to let out my own unformed ideas and feelings.  I always pull myself in. Stop it short. Keep it quick. Get to the point. Hush.

No-one cares.

The challenge I face is to let go. Who cares if no-one wants to read my trite, preachy nonsense, or whatever it is people think?  Maybe if I speak up, people will nod and say mmm just as I’m doing to these other women now.  They’ll see something that applies to their life in unexpected ways.

Hell, the challenge isn’t even that someone else cares; it’s that I care. I care to meet, know and befriend the idea I’m writing about.  I care about characters that have been knocking about in my brain for nearly 20 years. They’ve been patiently hanging out in there like tiny, trapped prisoners. They just want my pen so they can live their lives.  I want to spend time with them and hear what they have to say.

My challenge is that when the monster comes curling, squeezing, suffocating and saying ‘hush’, I respond with all the matter-of-factness I can muster and say,

“Fuck off.  I care.”

livingwithmuchness.com – photography by Urban Edge, used with permission

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