Category Archives: Gunnas-Masters

My Life Is Disastrous – Anonymous 31 Year Old

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

CatherineDeveny_Gunnas_AnonMy Life is Disastrous.

I’m 31 and I live at home.

In a granny flat.

On the wrong side of town.

I’m a single gay man and I’m horny all the time.

Canberra is my home and there is no one to fuck in this town.

I am a teacher too. I work in a high school and mostly my students are little toe rags who have no passion, talent or ambition. Respect, empathy and concern have bypassed these kids. In fact, I think these traits may have got lost on their way to this satellite suburban nightmare. My boss is a prick. The kind of person you wouldn’t piss on if they were engulfed in flames.

When I’m not shackled to the teenage asylum I make pictures and I write stories. My artwork doesn’t sell and I’m not yet published. My mum likes my writing though, and so does my grandma. They both encourage me to keep going. And I do. My mum also likes watching Sam and Kochie on Sunrise. Her taste is sometimes questionable.

My dad and step mum stopped talking to me shortly after I turned 30. They had a fight with my big sister and accused me of taking sides. I have become collateral damage in this war. I recently found out that they moved out of the family home. I don’t know their new address. I don’t know where they live anymore. My brothers are in their late teens and early 20’s and I don’t see or hear from them anymore either. I’ve been cut out of the family unit.

4 weeks ago my little sister on my mums side was in a car accident. Some fuck-face on the Hume highway swiped the car she was travelling in as she returned from a weekend away in Sydney. She spent 2 nights in hospital with 3 of her friends who were also injured. Sadly one of the girls died at the scene of the accident. Laura is now in therapy. She’s working hard to deal with the haunting of this deeply traumatic experience. As a result of the tough time she’s experiencing her relationship with her boyfriend is showing signs of stress and fracture. She’s spending a lot more time back in the family home again. In the weeks following the accident the story featured on the news and it made the front page of the Canberra Times. I’m still hopeful that i’ll soon be published too.

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Come Home – Fiona Kerr

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

ApprovedIt has been a long and slow winter and I haven’t seen you in such a long time.  I miss the smell of your skin, the warmth of your body and the energy of your presence.  I miss the care of your touch and the gift of your focus to me.  Without you I feel lost.  I wait for your call and long for the sound of your voice.  I miss your mind and your humour and the spark that you hold.  I long to speak to you, to sit back over a coffee and listen to the rhythm, timber and vibrations of your voice.  I miss the glisten of your eyes and the nape of your neck.

I miss being able to see your walk and the way you stand.  I miss the power and the strength that you have within yourself and the commanding energy that you project, your ability to stand in a crowded room yet for me, I see you as the only one there.

I miss your wisdom and your care and your intuitive nature to know exactly when to call.  You know exactly what to say and exactly how to say it.

I miss your knowledge, knowledge borne through hard work and life experience, your fascinating past and your intriguing stories.  You fill the space and disperse the void.

I miss you.  The winter has been too long and I want you with me, I want you to hold me.  I have not had anyone hold me in so long in the way that you hold me.  You are generous and allow me to feel fulfilled.  It’s spring and winter is over and I want you here.

You say that you do not notice what goes on, but you know exactly when to call me.  I sense you and feel you even when you are many miles away.  When I am in trouble or feeling lost, I feel you are in the room with me to aid me even when you are nowhere to be seen.

I become sad that I feel this way and convince myself that it is time to let you go and that it is time to move on, but you sense and feel this and you contact me and I am back where I started, missing you and wanting you, please come home.

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My Life Is Incredible! Or Is It…? – Jane Smith

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

CatherineDeveny_Gunnas_JaneSmithSo…I find myself at Gunnas again!  Dev has asked us to write for 5 minutes.  Either “My life is disastrous” or “My life is incredible”.

I guess it says something that I immediately thought that my life is incredible.  And the very next thought was ‘WHAT??? ARE YOU KIDDING??’  For the past two and half years, my life has been a DISASTER!!

The answer to whether my life is incredible or disastrous depends very much on the day, and who is posing the question.  My life has undergone a massive change in the last four years.  My life will ALWAYS be defined in my own mind as pre-44 (years old) and post-44.

Pre-44 was disastrous, yet incredible.

Post-44 is incredible, yet disastrous.

There are people in my life that would think that I swapped incredible for disastrous.

But I KNOW that it was the other way around.

What is incredible about my life now?  I am a mother of 5 fantastic children, I have wonderful girlfriends, I am healthy, I am independent, I am free, I am my own person, I am safe, I am encouraged, I am helped, I am comfortable, I am at peace, I am in love, I am loved.

Some of that may not seem so incredible to some people…but to me it is.  Some people may think that the disastrous – the no money, no job, no house, no financial security, a bullying ex, an angry son whose relationship with me is dodgy to say the least – must overcome the incredible.  But it hasn’t, and it won’t, and it never ever will.

Because I am learning who I am – after 48 years – and I’m learning to like who that is.  I have learned what it is to love and be loved unconditionally.

And that is always going to be incredible.

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Kasper The Ghost – Roland Bull

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

CatherineDeveny_Gunnas_RolandBullThe first thing I remember is the yellow and black neon sign: ‘Men’s Bar’. It stuck out in the cold, foggy darkness of the Copenhagen night. I was drunk as usual. A lone traveller doing the rounds of a new city’s gay venues. I love those nights. I head out by myself, sit down with a beer, and quietly observe the people around me. This was before the advent of the iPhone and 3G internet. There was no hiding in Facebook or Grindr, communicating with people through ‘windows’ from afar. I would sit there with my beer and eventually, without fail, someone would strike up a conversation, and I’d make new friends. I’d usually get laid too.

As I strode up to the neon sign, the happy warmth of my drunkenness offsetting the chill of the Scandinavian winter, I was surprised to see a young Asian man stoically clutching the railing of the small set of stairs leading up to the bar entrance. Initially I thought he was holding himself steady to keep from falling backwards but as I came closer still, I realised he was trying to prevent himself from being evicted. There, on the steps with him was a barman patiently but sternly prying the man’s hands from the railing with slow, strong determination. The entire operation was taking place in silence, and because of the lack of violence or aggression I slipped past the two, into the gloomy bar, where my eyes immediately began to explore.

It was a dark and seedy venue, where women weren’t allowed, but which welcomes men of a certain age, who have overcome the delusions of their youth. Men who’ve given up on the pursuit of beauty, and the capitalist, consumer-driven psychology that preferences the cosmetic over the tangible. The lifestyle all gay men explore during their homosexual adolescence and that encapsulates the extraordinary depths of vanity and hedonism for which many of us are known. Well, most gay men explore it. And some never leave.

I did a quick scan of the venue and was struck by how small it was. The barely lit, sepia interior revealed a couple of upturned barrels and a smattering of bar stools, in front of the gravitational effect of an actual bar which had attracted a few regular flies to the warm familiarity of a relatively handsome, young bartender. His mission, it would seem, was to keep them awake. Or alive. Beside the bar was a dark, black space that I instantly identified as the ‘back room’; it emanated a mixture of shame, stale semen and possibility.

Having surveyed the room I sidled up to the small cluster of downtrodden patrons seated at the bar and, enjoying their interested glances, took my time examining the display of beers on offer. After selecting the cheapest looking drop I ordered a stubby and plonked myself down on a stool to the right of an elderly man whose tall, slender build and flowing silver hair betrayed the heritage of a Viking. Despite his (at least) 80 years of age, I could discern the cast and gait of a sexy, strapping young man in his features and physique, and was immediately entranced by his general stillness.  He was a serious looking fellow who drank his beer and stared straight ahead. Buzzing around to his left was a shorter, middle-aged man, dressed in a crisp, patterned shirt and slacks, and who clearly hadn’t quiet come to terms with not being 20. As I settled into my stool the 80 year old glanced at me, a look I caught and returned with a sweet smile to indicate that I’d like to talk if he was up for it.

He took the obvious course initiating conversation and asked where I was from, having doubtless determined my foreign-ness as a result of my inability to order in Danish and my being a short, dark-haired hobbit adrift in a sea of Scandinavian warrior-gods. I was immediately struck by the deep musicality of his voice. All Danes have an inherent vocal musicality – in fact most of them sound like deaf people trying to yodel – but this musicality was baritone, and coated in the historical rust of a long life.

“Australia” I informed him, still smiling to make him realise I was in the conversation for the long haul “I’m here for a semester at the University of Copenhagen”. He seemed to enjoy this so we got talking about my studies, about travel and about the Royal Family; it was not long since Princess Mary had married Frederik so there was a heightened sense of interest between our two countries at the time.

Another couple of beers passed, with me chatting to my new, old friend while the bartender and more energetic homo watched on, every now and then interjecting to re-establish their right to eavesdrop. As the conversation continued we shifted from talking about me (a favourite topic), to talking about him. At this point I should confess that I don’t remember the name of my Danish man, but remember that it was something traditional. Lars perhaps, or Bjorn or Kasper. Let’s call him Kasper because he still, and will always, haunt my memory.

I asked him about his life in Denmark, where he’d grown up, if he had always been in Copenhagen. I asked him about being gay and what that had been like; it’s a subject I always find interesting because the homo-cultural landscape has altered so rapidly and so dramatically over the years. At the beginning of the 21st century, for example, the prospect of me coming out in cosmopolitan Melbourne seemed ominous and laced with probable persecution. Today that same experience is almost the norm, and I can’t even imagine what it must have been like for people who are older, who were born into conservative 1930s Europe where a few years later homosexuals were being carted off to concentration camps. Indeed, my imagination was running wild at this point with stories of the evil Nazis impeding a blissful wartime love affair between two angelic schoolboys during the Danish occupation.

It turned out, however, that Kasper had lived quite a traditional life. A life that would seem unremarkable to the average Joe, but was entirely remarkable to me. Kasper had been married for over 40 years, and had resolutely lived a lie the entire time. He’d known he was gay since his early 20s he said, but he’d stayed with his wife out of a sense of duty. He had taken his wedding vows very seriously, had stuck by the poor woman for 60 years and had 3 wonderful children, each of whom was now in their 40s, with their own family! Here, of course, my imagination began to run wild once more. The torrid affairs he must have had! There must have been tragic love, covert sex and the eventual realisation that it wasn’t to be. That he must fulfil his duty and his obligation to his family.

I wanted to hear about the tears and joy, the meetings and dalliances. I had no issue with his situation from a moral perspective. I knew that some ‘straight’ men were gay. I knew that they fucked about on their wives and children, and for the most part it disgusted me. But Kasper was from a different time. A time when it might not have been safe for him to come out. He might have lost his job, his friends, his family…he might have been physically assaulted or even killed. We can’t all be brave pioneers for gay rights and I could understand how he might get caught up in his lie – I just wanted to know all about it.

Despite my excited curiosity, however, I was to be disappointed. Kasper had never been unfaithful. He promised in earnest that, while he had known for decades ‘what he was’ he had never cheated. It had been his wife and no other. It was only in the last couple of years since she’d had passed away that he had begun to explore his sexuality.

“Did your wife ever suspect anything?!” I asked, incredulous that a person could have sufficient restraint to deny their true nature for the better part of a century. “There was once”, he replied, the nostalgia of the episode evident in his voice and expression, “when we were walking down the street in the small town that we lived in, and a beautiful young man walked past us. He was tall and tanned with golden hair and I turned to look at him as he wandered by. I glanced only briefly but my wife noticed. She must have noticed before and she asked ‘Why do you turn to look at the young men but never the girls?’. I didn’t know what to say”.

So she did know. I thought. And he wasn’t the only one making a sacrifice. I wondered then if she’d ever cheated. If she’d suspected that her husband was gay, was having an affair and had one of her own. But I said nothing.

“And so what happened when she died?“ I asked.

“I wasn’t bound by our wedding vows anymore.” explained Kasper, “I felt as if death had parted us and I was free to be…what I am”.

“So you started coming here?“

“Yes, to Men’s Bar.”

“And what about your kids? What have they said?”

“They don’t know. I will never tell them what I am.”

He kept repeating this phrase, and it’s truly the part of Kasper that will haunt me forever: ‘what I am’. I remember the words so vividly, because they seemed to emerge from the very depths of his psyche. They represented the truth he’d been trying to express for a lifetime, but he still couldn’t bring himself to say “I am gay”.

His confession shocked me at first, but I understood it. Here was a man who probably wouldn’t live all that much longer – who knows, he may well be dead now. And he wasn’t looking for a new love affair, just to salvage the final years of his lost gay youth; to spend a little time being true to himself.

“What about friends?? Does anyone know?!” I demanded.

“My friends here at Mens’ Bar” he replied, gesturing about the tepid room.

“Aren’t you worried that someone will catch you?”

“No one I know would come here.”

“They probably think that about you.”

“Then we’ll catch each other.”

“And how long have you been coming?”

“Only a couple of years”

This next question you probably shouldn’t ask a man his age but I was so far into this conversation I couldn’t help myself.

“And…have you had sex with another man??”

“Yes. I have. For the first time a few months ago. He gave me a blowjob out there, in the back room.” My gaze followed his hand as he gestured to the dark, empty space.

I looked up and stared into that darkness and watching a vision play out in my mind. I imagined Kasper being led out there slowly, foggy from age and alcohol. Being taken into a still corner of the seedy expanse so that he would have something to lean up against. Being given a salty, sweaty kiss by a relative stranger who then got down on his knees, loosened Kasper’s belt and took his cock in his mouth. I wondered how it had felt. Whether there had been a kind of emotional release, the kind that happens when you come home from a hard days work and are finally able to relax. I wondered whether he’d been able to cum.

It was then then I started to feel incredible sadness for Kasper. This silver-haired ghost sitting next to me in the gloomy light, having deprived himself for so long, haunted by his own homosexuality. I wanted to hold him and caress his leathery skin. To kiss him tenderly and make him feel loved. To take him home to my apartment and lay him down in bed and take his clothes off, take off my own and let him hold my naked, youthful body, with sunlight streaming through the windows to destroy the shadows he was used to. I wondered whether the sunlight would cast a spell over Kasper, erasing the wasted years and transforming him into a young Danish man with the world at his feet and the future in the palm of his hand. I wanted to give him the gift of my flesh. Let him taste my cock and ass and chest and groin and smell the smell of a man’s sweat and cum as in a lengthy, passionate embrace. I wanted him to at least have that. But as my thoughts faded back into the darkness, reality set back in.

We sat in silence for a while, Kasper and I. In my mind the whole bar stopped speaking, but I’m sure it was just the two of us. Then as I got up to say goodbye. I gave him a kiss on the cheek, a lingering kiss, hoping that my soft lips would leave some kind of impression, and I promised to return in the coming weeks to talk further even though deep down I knew I never would.

He looked up at me, this beautiful ghost of a man, smiled a faint smile and shook my hand firmly. He was no victim. Perhaps he could have been happier had he made other choices. He could have been brave and blazed a trail for those who would come after, but that would entail its own set of sacrifices, and plenty of heartbreak.

Kasper had made his decisions. He’d spent his life in the shadows, and he would spend the rest of his days lurking there. But he will have a small legacy. I will live my life as a gay man for all the things he felt he needed to give up. I will live for Kasper, in the sunshine. And people will know what I am.

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The Way Back – Thelma Lewis

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

CatherineDeveny_Gunnas_ThelmaLewisOne day I couldn’t get out of bed. I just couldn’t. It wasn’t a choice. I couldn’t have gotten out of bed if the fucking house was on fire. I couldn’t move. I didn’t feel paralysed, I was paralysed. Jake was talking to me quietly and gently rubbing my shoulder. I couldn’t understand a word he was saying. I think he was talking a foreign language, but I know he wasn’t. I slowly came to realise I was crying. Not sobbing or anything, just lying paralysed in bed crying an endless stream of tears. I didn’t have the energy to even care enough to want to die.

He finally called in sick for both of us to work and called our doctor. He dressed me in tracksuit pants and a jumper, put an arm around me and pushed me towards the front door. I shuffled my feet as an automatic response to his leading, but couldn’t have actually moved of my own volition to save my life. Literally.

The next few weeks were a blur of assisted showers, tasteless food and regular pills. After my 3rd visit to a therapist called Julie in as many weeks, I felt somehow lighter and moving was easier – not like walking in a swimming pool like it had been.

A month after that, Jake cooked my favourite food (burgers) and we sat in front of the box watching hours of ‘The big bang theory’. I laughed for the first time in what felt like years, but had only been a couple of months. That night we made love for the first time in months too, and I remembered why I loved it so much.

From a dark pit of nothing, I felt a nudge of hope, a feeling from afar that things would be ok. It was like the hint of pre-dawn light, you can’t see the sun yet, but you have good reason to believe it was coming really soon.

I finally called my family and friends, and as best I could told them why I’d been ‘off the radar’ for a few months.

It’s strange now to reflect on that. I’d spent years reading everything from 1000 page self-help books to one line Facebook posts about how to tell who your real friends are, and how everyone thinks they have the answer.

If I’ve learnt nothing else, I’ve learnt this – there is no one way to be a good friend/family member. There is no magic formula. There’s a shitload of ways to be a total arsehole of course. Most of my nearest and dearest were amazing, loving, supportive, funny, silly, caring, and basically just there for me. There are no words that convey how much that support meant, but I’m still here, happier every day, and I guess that will have to be testament enough that they’re awesome.

So, various ways to be awesome: cook food, suffer long miserable phone calls into the night, shopping trips, shows in the city, send cards with beautiful messages; send packages full of ‘feel good’ stuff; make time to just sit and drink coffee (even when you’re really busy), Skype when you’re too far to visit.

And if you haven’t heard from someone for a while, try to understand that reaching out can sometimes be the hardest thing.

I know some people reading this, or similar stories like this, that don’t get it. Or won’t get it. Or choose not to get it. Those people who think the answer to depression and anxiety, is to ‘get over it and get on with it!!

Let me say this; the chances of getting through your life without someone you love (be it spouse, child, sibling parent or true friend) having depression or anxiety virtually nil. So good luck. I mean it. You’re going to need it, and so are they.

Jake, you’re the best thing that will ever happen to me. Every love song is about you, every love story about us. The last few months have been really hard, the hardest of my life, but I’m finding my way back.

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Genie Jim Is No Longer Thin! – Fiona Lee

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

CatherineDeveny_Gunnas_FionaLeeOnce upon a time there was a doll like child called Isadora. Isadora was a twin. The unusual thing about her twin was that she was trapped inside a Genie by the name of Jim! Isadora, the outie twin, was 5 and Genie Jim had been carrying around the other twin, Pandora, every day for 2 years. Actually, in the Genie kingdom, 2 years is only about 2 bees dicks past a crumpet.

I’m sure your all wondering how the &%$$(! Pandora ended up inside Genie Jim. Its quite a good story actually. Pandora was a curious child of fair to middling intelligence. She was the sort of child who possessed enough curiosity to ask quite a few good questions. She was also a bit of a sticky beak and she sometimes did’nt ask before playing with other people’s stuff. Do you know any children like that?

One day Genie Jim was out on secret Genie business. I suppose he was engaged in wish fulfilment and such. It’s a common misunderstanding that Genies only have one master at a time and that one and only master is given a finite number of wishes. Most people think its only 3 because of the Disney Corporation. The truth of the matter is that wish fulfilment is pretty much a full time occupation for any Genie worth his bottle. Actually, the angels get quite a bit of credit for wishes that are actually fulfilled by hard working Genies.

Anyway, because of that, Genie Jim, as usual, was out at work. Pandora, as she was wont to do, was poking around in her Mum’s office. Pandora saw the VERY BEAUTIFUL EXTRA SPARKLY WARKLY Genie bottle which was Genie Jims home, on Mum’s top shelf. Because of that, Pandora simply HAD to have a closer look at that bottle!  To be fair to Pandora, magical objects do have a way of grabbing your attention.

The bottle was on the sort of top shelf where Mummies put things that are too delicate and fragile for small children to play with. Despite knowing the top shelf was none of her beeswax, Pandora pulled up a chair and stood on her tippiest toes to reach the bottle. Really she was pretty lucky she did’nt fall off the chair. Fantastically fascinated, Pandora inspected the bottle in detail. It was smooth to touch and covered in little crystal tiles that seemed to shine from within. Then Pandora made a big mistake. She peered, with her sticky beak, very, very deeply into Jim’s bottle, so deeply that the tip of her nose poked into the top of Jim’s bottle. Now Jim’s bottle had an automatic, movement activated pixel portal. This resulted in Pandora being instantly unparticlised and  de-discombobulated and SKLUUURPED into the bottle – TRAPPED!!!!

When Jim got home from work, wish fulfillingly satisfied and snails pace weary, he was really looking forward to putting his slippers up on his magic carpet. Unaware that curious Pandora was already inside his bottle Jim went to de-discombobulate himself. This was a major problem because there is absolutely, definitely, only room for one person inside a Genie bottle. In a flash of smoke that stank like prawn heads left over from last Christmas, the universe folded in upon itself. Instead of Jim going into his bottle, the bottle, Pandora and the whole shebang, went into Jim!!!

So that is the story of how a curious twin ended up inside Genie Jim and it explains why Genie Jim is no longer thin and Isadora has no one to play with.

As far as I know, Jim is still out there somewhere, looking for a ride to a parallel universe in order to turn himself inside out and upside down to get everything back to the beginning.

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Stop Making Sense. Cougar Vox

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

CatherineDeveny_Gunnas_CougarVoxOnce upon a time, I was told the story of my paternal great-grandmother. She loved great-grandad something fierce, though she was a fair bit younger. As granddad aged, she doted on him, cared for him as he disintegrated into decrepit old age. Some say that’s what sent her ga-ga. I don’t know, I think it’s more likely that he’s what held her together all those years … or rather doting on him caused her to avoid having to be rational and make decisions off her own steam.

Anyways, they had a reputation for being quite ‘Bohemian’ for the time. A bit odd and wild–sounds like they had great parties(!) … but eventually great-grandmama seems to have gone a little bit too far into the deep end. I recently found one of her old journals up in mom’s attic … after she passed on. Here’s an excerpt, knda blew my mind, I never knew this story …

“Every day I wake up and I want to scream ‘Oh my God I miss you!’. I sit next to your decrepit skeleton and wish you back. I hold your bony hand and gaze into your unmoving eye sockets and think, my God, what have I done? I’ve scrubbed myself raw, to rid myself of my erroneous ways. My clothes have fallen to tatters as I have not changed since you … left. I’ve given up on clothes anyways, what good are they to me now. I don’t miss them, but oh my God I miss you! One day I’m going to get that paycheck from the Bureau of Agencies and with that I’ll have this x-ray camera un-installed from my eye. I’m done with the Agencies too. I miss seeing you as you really are, flesh and muscle, tears and phlegm. Now all I have is the brutal curve of your bony ribs to curl up against. It’s so cold. I’ll never move from this place. You are my sun my moon. Oh God I miss you!”

OK, so with family like that …. don’t tell ME to stop making sense … pssht, I done that a long time ago sweetheart. What chance did I have? Sense is overrated ain’t it?

So if  you’d like to hear more about me, my family and how I got to, well, where I am now—wherever the FUCK that is!–then come and see me tell my life’s story at Dane Certificate’s Magic Tricks Gags and Theatre on Sydney Road in Brunswick. From 9pm on either14, 15, 28 or 19 November 2014, tickets $15 or $10 concession. Google it.

Oh yeah free entry to anyone who’s taken the Gunnas Masterclass!

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The Caterpillar. A True Story – Braden Stuchbery

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

It was 3:45am when I arrived home from work that night, after a couple of beers I rode my bike back from the pub.

CatherineDeveny_Gunnas_BradenStutchberyI put two slices of wholemeal bread in the toaster, having naturally worked up an appetite, and stood at the kitchen bench whilst I waited for it to cook. Feeling slightly drowsy and a little exhausted from the ride home I eventually noticed something out of the corner of my eye, an unfamiliar green blur that sat above my name badge. Not all that worried about it I gently pinched whatever it was and removed it from my shirt. That’s when I heard it; the faint popping sound that you hear when you pop a pimple, closely followed by a gentle splash upon my cheek. Only I hadn’t popped a pimple, I had merely removed something from my shirt.

Now a little more concerned than I had been earlier I began my investigation. I brought my fingertips into my line of vision and glanced at the object that I found between them. It didn’t take long for me to realise that it was a caterpillar, and I would like to emphasize the word ‘was.’ The caterpillar’s empty skin dangled from my fingertips like an empty sleeping bag, half of its insides hanging from what had until recently been its head, the other half splattered upon my left cheek. “Ugh” I cringed, flicking the lifeless caterpillar to the kitchen floor and wiping its insides from the side of my face.

An abrupt popping sound filled the room, startling me, a sound much louder than the sound that had been produced by the exsanguinating caterpillar. I turned. It was the sound of golden brown toast ejecting from the toaster.

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Barclay’s Bikes – Made Stutchbery

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

CatherineDeveny_Gunnas_MadeStutchberyWhen I was younger, maybe 21 or so, I had this brilliant blue bike. It was such a fabulous bike. Cost me only £10 and I bought it from a dope dealer down by Camden Lock. The wheels were slightly out of alignment and the brakes squealed whenever I squeezed them. But it only took a couple of hours of labour and three bottles of stout shared between me and my flatmate to mend it, and then that bike was mine.

Each morning I would rise an hour or so earlier than needed and every day I would take the long way around to college. Scything down Knightsbridge and past the tight roundabouts that chewed up traffic in a spidery mess before spitting them out again. Past Harrods, with the great golden facade and those little guardsmen, all dressed in their green, delicate velveteen uniforms. I would sail past the traffic lights and enter Hyde Park. As I reached the gates I would stop, and take my helmet off, shaking loose my long red curls before putting my helmet in the front basket of the bike and pushing on.

One day I fell off that bike. I took a corner too hard and too fast and I flew off, up and over the handlebars before crashing down to earth. Stop. Silence. The wind that had been whistling in my ears was gone, and I could smell dirt and crushed grass and the iron in my blood. Everything was still, except the front wheel of my blue bike gently clicking over, still spinning of its own accord.

A passing jogger stopped a few yards from me, pulling her headphones out from her ears and treading up and down, up and down on the spot before meandering over to me, slowing to a walk. I looked down, averting my eyes, gazing down at my scuffed and bloody knees. Because of that, or perhaps despite the humility I felt in that little downwards glance, the jogging woman squatted down beside me, and put her hand under my chin and tilted my face up. I was now eye to eye with this brightly dressed stranger, music still streaming tinnily from her headphones that dangled against her chest. And because of that, because of this gentle little display, this foreign touch that said so little and yet said so much, I began to cry.

I no longer felt strong. No longer felt the city air being flushed from my lungs leaving me bright, so bright and emotionally vibrant. I felt so stupid and alone and so very far from home. I cried, and the jogging lady rubbed my back silently until finally, after what felt a hundred long years of gasping and sobbing and wrenching breaths and sniffles I stopped crying, stopping just as the wheel of my little blue bike stopped spinning and fell silent.

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No, I am NOT okay – Alix

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

(Note from Dev. This is one of the first pieces I ever posted from my masterclasses September 2012. It got over 30,000 hits)

At 8:30am this morning I sat down with Catherine Pham the acting manager of The Melbourne Clinic “Outreach Program” in Richmond.

Struggling to meet her fixed gaze, I nod robotically while she gives me her diagnosis:

“It seems to me that the future is looking fairly bleak to you right now Alex.  From the little time I’ve known you it’s become apparent that there are many different pieces to your personality that you’re not quite sure how to put together…but I think you already know this.”

I keep nodding.  I already know this.

“There’s a child in you that’s hiding away scared, that is afraid to fail.  That craves nurture, care and shelter.  But the adult Alex is ready to throw caution to the wind and start working towards your goals as a journalist.  There’s a part of you who’s is trying to take care of everyone who is around you and a bigger part of you who knows you’re barely taking care of yourself.  I imagine it feels a little bit shitty Alex, trying to put all these pieces together?”

I don’t answer for a few moments.  Not usually one who’s short on words I do my best to decide and to vocalise how ‘this feels…’

“Yeah,” I begin, faltering.  I clear my throat and start again.

“It just feels fucking frightening…” I hear myself say.

The Melbourne Clinic runs a program called “Outreach” which has been set up for patients who have recently been discharged from an in-patient facility.  The idea is that inside the safe and secure compounds of the Melbourne Clinic, the “mentally ill,” (or the old, the drug and alcohol dependent or disordered) individual is able to seek daily one-on-one care from a dedicated team of psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and in my case, nutritionists.

When one has completed their forty day stay, walking through those front doors feels like diving deep into a dark and wondrous unknown.

This is where Outreach steps in.  “The Outreach program provides support and assistance at the recommendation of your treating doctor,” says the brochure I’m gripping in my shaking hand.

This morning my fractured and fragmented self is sitting in front of Catherine Phem. I am hunched over and curled into myself like a scared infant, being “assessed”.

It feels a little bit like a psych session and a little bit like speed dating.  Catherine is helping me find my best suited “Outreach Support Worker.”  Another attachment to my expanding support network which assists to shift things from “fucking frightening” to “a little bit shitty”.

Catherine has thick square glasses and a mop of dark hair that she periodically runs her hand through.  She is sitting facing me, knees crossed, a Chanel scarf wrapped nonchalant around her neck.  Her fixed stare, professional attire and thoughtful insight stop my mind wondering too far away and my eyes from resting on the floor.

“I imagine it’s very frightening Alex…not only are you trying to figure yourself out, but you’re searching for an outlet for all those emotions the eating disorder once provided.  Our aim is to help you direct those emotions in a more positive and fulfilling way.

But you know these new ways are not going to provide the instant gratification that your old coping mechanisms once did.   Drug use, alcohol abuse, binging, purging, risk taking and breaking the law are a great way to feel whole for a little while.  But I’m guessing you were feeling pretty empty the day you decided to self-admit…Am I right?”

“I still feel empty,” I reply.

“I feel hollow and numb and scared.”

But even this feels better than how it felt fifty two days ago when I first dragged my tired, skinny self through to reception at the Melbourne Clinic.

“What scares you the most Alex?” Catherine gently inquires.

I don’t have to think too hard about this one…

“Fucking it all up again.” I reply straight away.

I think back to two days before when I sat with my hands cuffed behind me, sobbing and shaking in the back of a divvy van.  On my way to the Fitzroy police station to be punished again for acting out on those “quick gratification” behaviours.

“At least you didn’t end up binging that day.” Had been the retort from my psychiatrist after I’d finished fessing up in my session the following evening.

“Granted, you did ride your bike half way across Melbourne, minimize on your meal plan and get done for shop theft, but at least there’s still been no purging.”

52 days.

“You should congratulate yourself for that.”

Back in the room with Catherine I find some words to put to these fears.

“I just feel like I’m incredibly vulnerable right now.  I feel like there’s not much pushing me towards what seems like an invisible finish line and I feel like one more false move and I’ll spiral completely out of control again.”

Catherine nods encouragingly.  She has seen hundreds like me before.  All or nothing, black and white thinkers who succeed, succeed and succeed until one too many bumps in the road leads to complete derailment.

I nearly got there under the gentle eye of Constable Mitchells as I cowered in the corner of the Fitzroy interview room on Tuesday night.  But following the questioning, the finger printing and the anxiety evoked shaking fits I dome how got back up on my bike…quite literally.

At 7pm while I was supposed to be attending my first “post hospitalisation-binge-eating-information-evening” I was tearily making my way through the dark, back to the surrogate family who have opened their home to me for a short while.

Trying to out ride the shame, guilt and fear my latest “fuck up” had conjured I was “car doored” on the way home.

The unseeing driver had nearly thrown me off my bike and I’d just kept riding.

“Fuck you!” I screamed either at him or to myself.

You’re a fucking disgrace, the voice in my head yells back.  “Why must you keep on making it so much harder than it has to be?”

But at least I hadn’t purged that day.

“I’ve sat in on a few of your ward rounds Alex and I know the demi-circle of professionals sitting around telling you what to do with yourself can be an intimidating environment.  But I don’t think you’re one who is very easily intimidated.  That’s why I’m thinking of assigning Ainslee as you’re “Outreach worker”.  She’s going to be able to give you the push that I think you want.”

I’m nodding again.

“Just so I have something to pass on to Ainslee, can you tell me some things you like to do?”

“Besides eating, getting high and exercising?”  I mumble, using that familiar defence of sarcasm to deflect from what I’m really thinking.  Which is that I haven’t had time to enjoy too much else for the past few years…

“Ummm reading, writing, climbing, feeding my brain, I dunno, I like sitting in cafes for long periods of time and I like taking trips away from myself somewhere in the outdoors.”

“That’s a good start,” says Catherine.  “Now I’m aware that you’ve got a writing class to attend so I won’t take up much more of your time.  We just have to do a risk assessment which I’m sure you’ve done before.”

I have.

Catherine contrives from my “yes” “no” “yes” “no” answers to her (insert dangerous behaviour) questions that I’m not about to do myself or anyone else any harm and she stands up to open the door.

“You’ll be hearing from Ainslee in the next few days,” she says signalling it’s time to go.

I return her smile and make my way back outside the safe walls of the Clinic.

Outside in the sunshine, “Adult Alex” slings her back pack over her shoulder, fastens her helmet to her head and sets off to meet another Catherine.

“Today I’m doing something productive,” I almost smile.

This is how it feels to be only just ok.

Here is Alex’s email. She’d love your feedback alwix@hotmail.com

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