Category Archives: Gunnas-Masters

Why Women Will Change The World – Rod Williams

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

053 urlHis Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama has stated that Western women will be the force behind the change the world needs. I totally agree with this, I keep coming across feisty women of all ages who are standing in their power and speaking their truth.

From Jordanna Jaffe who empowers women to create their own on line businesses to Danielle LaPorte who is transforming people’s relationship to themselves and their day to day actions through living from their Core Desired Feelings through her fabulous The Fire Starter Sessions and her amazing work book The Desire Map, these women are enlivening my heart as they go about creating a New World Order of Empowered passionate people especially women. 

This movement was started in the 60’s by women such as Germaine Greer but was thought to be too extreme for the mainstream.

Lissa Rankin with her ground breaking views on self healing through her excellent Mind over Medicine, Gabrielle Bernstein with her get up and go attitude in May Cause Miracles, Carla Golden with Because being Happy is your Life Purpose, Locals Tanishka Tantrika with her goddess empowerment work expressed through her Moon Woman Facebook page and online courses and Thea Westra through her ForwardSteps.Com.Au blog and Time for My Life: 365 Stepping Stones are chipping away at the mainstream opinion that you need to have a dick and balls to truly succeed in Life, They are empowering women to become modern day Lilith’s, Wild Women who are in touch with their power and speaking from their souls. Bring  it on I say.

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Lost with my girl – Sammy Cameron

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer.

lost-with-my-girlWhen I need to be nowhere any time soon, there’s no better feeling than to be lost with my girl on a windy beach road, far, far, from home.  On my motorcycle, it’s all about me; and the only place that matters is that which is around me right now. 

Watch my speed, look out for hazards, scan the road surface, am I in the right gear, where’s the right place to brake and accelerate. After endless miles, these things have become second nature, and we ride as one.

I study the camber and radius of every corner, keeping my head horizontal through each one as my boots and foot-pegs sometimes scrape the tarmac when I’m leaned over too far. I calculate the perfect time to accelerate hard out of the apex of each corner. As I get hard on the gas, I’m rewarded with the symphony of the gearbox winding, the exhaust note rumbling, and the roar of the induction screaming through her lungs. She might kick and buck and scream for me to be gentle, but in the end she does what I ask of her, and we always get to where we are going safely.

My skin can feel the world around me; the temperature change as we rise and fall through the hills; the heat of the sun on my leathers; the rain on my face through my open visor, the cold making me shiver, the wind blowing me from side to side.

My body, eyes and ears detect each change to the road surface, the tires grinding on the rough, and every bump rumbles through my body. 

My nose tells me more about where I am, from the grass seeds blown up by the wind, the recently fertilized market gardens; diesel fumes from trucks and buses; the freshness of the wet forest; factories, cars and other human activities.

Now I’m aware that I can’t talk to anyone; I can’t write anything down. I’m free to notice, observe, and take my mind into special places. I’m solving problems I haven’t had time to think about, planning what I’m going to do later today, tomorrow, the week and months after. Sometimes it’s the careful words I’ve now chosen to communicate a delicate matter to a friend or colleague.

But our ride must come to an end. I’m filled with adrenaline. My mind is charged. My body tired but satisfied. We bask in our solitude; taking a break to watch the sun set, listen to the sound of the ocean, and the waves crashing onto the shoreline.

I realize now that some things are just as they are. Like that life is a journey with unexpected twists and turns that we must skillfully navigate. That day turns to night as night turns to day. That some things we do well at, because we have invested the work to do so. And when we want something badly enough, we can learn how to do that too.

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Life turned inside out – Kirstie Innes-Will

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer.

truthOn 8 January 2013, the CAT team come to my house for the first time. After I reported daily panic attacks and suicidal ideation to my new GP, he has pulled out all the stops. I am self-conscious. Surely I’m not that bad, am I? But he points out that’s what the system is there for. So I think ‘fuck it, I want help’ and accept it. 

I am 35 years old, and outwardly my life looks pretty good. Engaged to be married to my long-term boyfriend, we had planned to buy a house and have kids together. Isn’t that what you’re supposed to do? Isn’t that what the whole point of life is? More and more, I seem to be surrounded by people whose only goals in life are these things.

The only problem is that deep down, I don’t really want to do any of that, and lately my body has been rebelling. I’ve been waking at 5am flooded with fear and desperately wishing there was a ‘way out’. Why do these seemingly normal actions feel like a coffin lid shutting?

For two weeks, the CAT team’s visits and phone calls are the only thing that get me out of bed. I write daily ‘to do’ lists that consists of ‘eat breakfast’, ‘shower’, ‘eat lunch’ and ‘eat dinner’. These actions feel surprisingly hard to achieve some days, but each day I do a little more.

My doctor has started me back on antidepressants, after 12 months spent detoxing from them in the hope of having a child without medication. My adrenalin-filled body reacts violently to the new medication, and I suffer nausea, physical aches and mental confusion, but after six weeks the fog clears.

I write a list – what would I really do if I wasn’t so scared? Top of the list is the one thing I’m most scared to do: ‘Come out as bi and (potentially) date a girl’.

However, at first the guilt eats into me like acid. My boyfriend – fiancé – is a ‘nice guy’. How could I do this to him? And what will my parents and family think? Brought up to view the end of a long-term relationship as the ultimate failure in life, I am torn between two equally fearful options – being the ‘good girl’ and staying, or being authentic to how I feel inside at the risk of losing what feels like everything.

I make a bargain with myself. I can give up on life entirely, but only after I’ve done a few more enjoyable things – I list the books, tv series and movies I wish to see. I buy a ticket to a concert in July. ‘Just keep going until then,’ I tell myself. I laugh at the absurdity of bribing myself with pop culture, but it works – day by day, I take more and more baby steps.

Flash forward three months, and I’ve moved out. My ex and I have negotiated to share custody of our dog, and I’m sharing a unit in Thornbury. I have a new office space, and I am managing to work enough to support myself, even if it’s not the most lucrative year for my business.

Three months after that, I’ve made lots of new friends in the lesbian community and have even braved a couple of dates, albeit rather disastrous ones.

Most of the terrible things I thought would happen haven’t come to pass. Rather than terror at being on my own for the first time in years, I feel exhilaration. Rather than sorrow at leaving behind so many beloved objects, I find I enjoy living with fewer physical possessions. Rather than feel anxious about the future, I increasingly feel excited by possibilities. 

In August, I fall in love and start dating my first real girlfriend. It feels both completely natural and totally unexpected. Can this really be happening so quickly?

Those first CAT team horror days seem like something that happened to someone else. It is remarkable how quickly a new normalcy asserts itself.

I no longer need bribes to keep myself going, but I realise I don’t have any other life plans – but it doesn’t matter. Whatever I do now it will be more governed by my own intuition and less by what I think I’m ‘supposed’ to do, for I have lived and felt in my own body how incredibly bad that can be for me.

Doing the thing that scares you most, confronting the thing you’re least willing to confront, can be the most liberating action of all.

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It’s Not About Social Justice – Joan Beckwith

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

ellaThat’s my passion – social justice, and that’s what I usually write about. But, this piece is an exercise fromThe Gunnas Writing Masterclass. It is fictitious, and any connection to the facilitator of the class probably has some Freudian explanation (but little foundation).

Once upon a time there was not much life for women – apart from ornament or trophy. However, the woman in the picture I drew from the lucky dip (I will call her Ella for now) looks like she has a bit of ‘attitude’. The era looks Edwardian, maybe Victorian, and Ella is showing some leg, for heaven’s sake, and her dress is hitched up over her knee by a non-domestic animal from the cat family.

This animal (I assume is male and will call Milos) would no doubt run with feline grace if he had open space and freedom to move. Every day the woman would need to make sure her companion got exercise. Otherwise, he would become stir-crazy and might make a run for it, possibly causing considerable damage to himself and anyone or anything in his path.

One day, Ella decided she was sick of having to wear hats and dresses and meet the expectations of lady-hood. So, she whipped off her clothes, exchanged them for the gardener’s, put Milos on a lead, and they both made a run for it into the hills beyond the homestead.

Because of this escapade, Ella was grounded for two weeks, and Milos was sent to the zoo. And because of that, Ella decided to abandon her inheritance, and remake herself as an artist.

Ella is now a stand-up comedian, writes, teaches, runs classes for people like me, and has changed her name to Dev. She lives happily ever after – with no superannuation fund, no private health insurance, no private schools, a wreck of a car, lots of love, and the minimum of housework.

I think the shift has been a good one.

Thanks, Catherine Deveny for a great day, great material, and great facilitation.

Joan Beckwith writes about social justice on her website and Facebook page as follows:

Websitewww.2020socialjustice.com

Facebook page: www.facebook.com/2020socialjustice

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Escape – Kate Allardice

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer.
escapeWhere in the world would you go….if you could go anywhere in the world would you go?
Oh, I don’t know really, she says.  It’s just, oh, I don’t know really you know, so big.
And I’m so small and why would I go anyway?
Isn’t it nice here, like isn’t it, anyway?
I sure don’t want to like, rock the boat or anything.
Hey!
Isn’t THAT funny?  Like rock the boat that you float on to sail away to anywhere in the world that you want to go.  Or maybe just stay on that rocking boat. Ride that baby on the whimsical waves of unreality and dreams.
Where in the world would you go to if you could go anywhere in the world.
Oh, I don’t know, perhaps India she says.  You know it seems so, well, exotic.
But things have changed so much from my navel gazing, Ashram going envy of others in saffron robes and sandals with Sanskrit names bestowed by a bearded guru in a Mercedes.  Playing the harmonium around the bonfire, chanting, chanting, kidding ourselves we were in Poona where Sanyasans whirl and twirl like dervishes in dynamic bliss. Attempting to recreate the sacred whilst getting stoned and fucking our neighbours sweet thing and calling it freedom.
When in the world would you go to if you could go anytime you wanted.
Ah, now that’s a horse of an entirely different who.

 

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Average School Morning – Meagan Bertram

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer.

mumschoolkid“I don’t want to wear these pants. I HATE these pants.” She stamps her bare foot on the floor, crosses her arms.

“What’s wrong with them honey?  They used to be your favourite pair. You wore them yesterday.” Feigned patience.

“I hate them. They are too small, and they are itchy. I have ALWAYS hated them. I was faking it.”

“Well, Mummy hasn’t had the time to do any washing. I am afraid this is your only choice.”

When did I start talking about myself in the third person? And using the word Mummy? I throw the pants on the bed, leave the room; defeated.

Kids are like dogs. They can smell fear.

“You’re the WORST mum in the WORLD!”

“Thanks darling.” I secretly wonder if she is on to something.

“And I hate it when you are sarcastic.”

Self-hatred for lack of self-control. Pride in the insightfulness and eloquence of my five year old daughter.

Through gritted teeth;

“Listen. If you don’t get dressed now, we will be late. The bus is leaving for the excursion at 9. We have to go soon.”

Deep breath, soft voice, pleading;

“Please put the pants on darling.”

“NO! NO! NO! I hate THEM, and I hate YOU!”

She is red in the face, shaking. I want to hold her to me, comfort her.  Let her know I understand frustration.

My mobile phone rings. It is the client I am supposed to be meeting in an hour. Against my instincts, I answer the call.

“Good morning. Jane Buchanan speaking”

“Hi Jane, it is Sarah Mayne here. I was just wondering if…”

I can’t hear her over the ear-piercing screech. I go in to the bathroom and lock the door.

“Sorry Sarah. What were you saying?”

She speaks slowly, like you would to a very old person, or a very young child.

“I was just asking if we could make the meeting a bit earlier?”

I do my best to sound normal, but the pounding on the bathroom door is distracting.

“It might be a bit of a push Sarah. I’m so sorry!” I don’t know why I am apologising. I haven’t broken any commitment. Not yet, anyway.

Her voice is cold. “Ok. See you at 9.30”

“Bye.”

“MUUUUUUUUUM!”

Unlock the door, rip it open.

“Couldn’t you see I was in the middle of a call? For Gods sake Amelia, why do you have to make life so fucking hard.”

That will come up in therapy. I wonder whether I should document it for her myself, so she doesn’t have to waste too much time wading through the mystery of her low self-esteem.

She puts her hands on her hips, eye contact, standing firm.

“You shouldn’t say bad words to me. That’s illegal. And it will teach me to say them.”

“You’re right honey. That was very bad of Mum. I’m sorry. Please, can you just get dressed now?”

She complies with every request. She puts the itchy pants on, and the ugly t-shirt that makes her look like a boy. She eats the cereal she hates, because I haven’t managed to go shopping and buy bread. She even lets me put her hair in a ponytail.

She is smug, self-righteous.

The bus is about to pull out of the drive when we finally get there. I have to park in front of it to alert the driver he can’t leave yet. He smiles, opens the door. Waiting doesn’t bother him. The teacher steps down. Her face is stern, voice brash.

“Come on Amelia. We have already waited for five minutes.”

Amelia reacts to the coldness, clings to my leg, buries her face in my hip.

The old bag grabs her, pulls her toward the bus.

“Come on, stop being silly!”

Amelia goes, but as she looks back at me, her eyes are teary, her mouth pursed tightly.

“It’s okay honey. I’ll see you this afternoon.”

“Just in case you have forgotten, school finishes early today.” She turns around, guides Amelia up the steps. I feel sick. I can’t bring myself to ask what time pick-up is. I will text Lisa.

~~~

Sarah is waiting at the office. She is early, but I apologise for making her wait anyway.

“Sorry, my daughter was being a little difficult this morning.”

“I don’t have kids.” Voice tinged with distaste, barely discernible screwed up nose. She doesn’t elaborate why. I suspect it is a lifestyle choice.

My chances of winning the contract are getting slimmer with each interaction, but I need this job…badly. I make a mental note not to mention children again.

Unlock the door, motion for her to enter.

“Take a seat through there. I will just go and grab the proposal.”

 

 

 

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Gunnas And Lemons – A Reflection On Procrastination – Kylie Witt

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

“Write for 10 minutes …”

proqueen… or sit for ten minutes thinking about writing? I’m halfway through a day with the Gunnas, trying to conquer writer’s block with a ten-minute task designed to help me face the demon Procrastination. Not an easy task, given that I am just one of many self-appointed Queens of Procrastination. But isn’t that why I’m here – to see if I can break that habit? I’m starting to wonder if it’s something even bigger than that.  Is NOT putting pen to paper really just a slack habit, or is something else more sinister standing in the way? Is it in fact more about adjusting my sense of who I am? Am I a genuine writer-in-waiting or really just a Gunna who fancies themselves as something grander than they really are, but lacks the guts to test the water? Like all good gunnas from all walks of life, if I never actually try it, I can always say I want to be a writer and maintain the belief that if I just had the time, the quiet, the place, I would be a good one, or a popular one. Once I actually go there, I face the prospect of realising that perhaps I have been kidding myself all these years.

Don’t worry, I’ve done all the groundwork – researched whether anyone else had already pinched my cool blog name – they had! Researched what other people were writing in the genres that interest me – they have! Questioned my own capacity to write something worth reading – turns out we’ve ALL been there! And you know what? Whilst it is very possible I will never write the next big thing to sweep the reading planet, I found myself reflecting on some of the shit I’ve read in the name of “research”. And who defines what is shit and what is good writing, anyway? If I’m willing to read what other people put out there, who’s to say my shit won’t make perfect sense to someone else?

So here goes. Who am I as a writer? Dev encouraged us to create a symbolic connection to our writing self – wear a hat, light a candle – whatever works for you, whatever will glue you to your seat long enough to let those words out of your head and onto a page. As someone who has spent their life immersed in language teaching, the idea of creating an identity for the new me resonated – life is all about different identities for the different worlds you inhabit. Just as many of us learn to inhabit different identities in our working and home lives, speaking different languages creates different versions of your identity. The language and the culture of those who speak it shape how you can and do interact with others in that community. Sometimes language will limit your capacity to express some concepts; at other times, it opens doors to elaborate on something in ways you never knew existed. In the past, I felt I needed a nom de plume before I got started as a writer (just another distraction?); hence “The Lemon Queen” was born. There’s a wealth of material waiting to be mined there, due to my propensity to find the lemon in any situation. If there’s a dud in the pile, I will take it home. People who know me well are familiar with my plaintive queries as to why I have to factor in a second visit to the shop for almost all my purchases; and the lengths I have gone to in order to try and outrun the gremlin behind my troubles have provided loyal listeners with a constant source of laughter and perhaps more than a little Schadenfreude on occasion. Mind you, it begs the question – if my eagle eyes are so damn good, why don’t I spot the lemon before I pay for it and take it home?

In the context of procrastination, though, why did the Lemon Queen jump into my head during today’s workshop? Am I really doomed to pick out all the lemons all my life, or am I hiding behind them to avoid using my time more productively?

Take the shoe saga – just one example of the Lemon Queen’s madness! Ha! Why am I writing about shoes in a workshop run by the dazzling Catherine Deveny? She is shiny and bright in red lipstick and full stereo sound, with a gorgeous red dress to match, and all I can come up with as a writing topic is a pair of grotty, dusty walking shoes that I choose to wear like bathroom scuffs.

I returned the bastards twice, each time swapping them for a pair that looked flawless, only to get them home and find I had missed something in all my jumping, hopping and posturing in the store. I even changed colours and sizes during the process! Isn’t it great how shamelessly humans can prance around humiliating themselves in a shop for the sake of a shoe purchase, but lack the guts to send a few words to the printer in case people judge and find us wanting? What the hell is going on there? And with the benefit of hindsight, what was the point of looking for a perfect pair when I was only going to treat them like gumboots anyway? I’m never going to wear them to meet the Queen. And even if I do, I don’t actually care what the Queen thinks of my footwear. I don’t even believe in the monarchy!

Which takes me back to this dedicated search for perfection – what’s it all for and whom does it serve? Why wait till something is perfect before you set it free for others to see? Why did I waste so much energy on seeking perfection in a pair of functional shoes that is now filthy and scuffed – by me? Why can’t I let go and work around the many lemons that clutter my life? None of the issues they raise are life threatening. That time could have been spent writing! As Dev says, “perfection is the enemy of good”, and the search for perfection in many ways is just another form of procrastination. Life’s too short to be worried about when we will be good enough. So here it is, warts and all – my first gift to today’s Gunnas! I wish you all happiness and success in your efforts and look forward to seeing you in print!

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The Weight by Cinova

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer.

008images-1These days seem to bear down on me like heavy rainfall on sodden leaves. I seek the intellectual stimulation of work, the humour of friends and the distraction of the everyday. And yet it remains. That constant drum beat, the march of inhumanity, the secrecy, the lies and the slow degradation of all that we know to be real and true and good.

Words feel too heavy sometimes. There is so much to say. I’m afraid that if I start, once I start, I might never be able to stop. I’m angry. Grief has finally given way to an anger that will lead to action. I used to write about love and peace. I used to rant about racism and injustice. That was when I lived ‘the writer’s life’, in that downtown loft in Edmonton, Alberta. That was before my own heartbreak seemed more important than boatloads of refugees being discarded as if they were criminals or cattle.

I know why I stopped writing. Filled with some fanciful myth about being abandoned by my muse. Excuses. Distractions. Fear of what I might express. And what might remain unexpressed.

Always something to say, always weighed down by the wait. What am I waiting for? That first snowfall.

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Losing My Religion – Alex Brown

 

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

The choice to leave my religion behind several years ago makes me feel good. Powerful, strong, insightful, awake, more intelligent adult and less naïve child. It also every now and then makes me feel disappointed, sad and confused. I don’t want it back (fuck no) but there are some things I miss. It’s removal from my life has left some small but significant spaces. Sometimes when I have run out of answers to the shit bits of life I want to pray, out of habit I guess, but who am I praying to? Leaving the church has thrown into chaos all my beliefs about the whole god thing. It was prayer that once gave me comfort. When all other options were exhausted, when I had no idea what to do about something that was distressing me, prayer was my answer. Not formal Hail Mary full of grace type prayer but just a chat with with god. Well a desperate plea for help really. I was handing it over, saying here god, can you take this and do something with it? Because I have no fucking idea.

During a particularly revolting period of my life when I was in a marriage I knew I didn’t want to be in, I would do this weird thing where I would recite, mantra like “Dear god please help me not to have any bad thoughts today”. Somehow this was meant to protect myself from the onslaught of terror my mind was feeding me on a regular basis. I now know that was a manifestation of my anxiety at that time. My GP would some months later describe me as having “an anxiety disorder with a dash of obsessive compulsive tendencies brought about by post natal depression” Lovely. The prayers slash mantras were my wonky brain’s way of helping me feel safe. Due to my strict Catholic upbringing and my tendency to be anxious and fearful as a child it is now not surprising to me that my anxiety took on a weird and bitter tasting Catholic Guilt flavor.

It makes me shudder now thinking of that scared, secretive weirdo I was back then when I thought my life was falling apart. I don’t solely blame my religious upbringing. A large part of my anxiety was because I know I have a predisposition to being depressed and anxious. I have no doubt however that the indoctrination of fear and shame as a child really messed with my already anxious and impressionable mind. The flipside of this however is that the ritual of attending Mass every Sunday was incredibly calming to me. Mindlessly reciting the prayers, standing up, sitting down, more standing up, more sitting down, kneeling down, more standing up and repeat and repeat every Sunday for entire childhood. To me this was a dull but calming and predictable hour a week that was a balm against the anxiety and confusion I often felt as a child. I didn’t understand much of it except that we were all sinners and god was somehow saving us. I did know however, even as an eight year old, that having to confess your sins to the priest was pointless when you couldn’t think of anything bad you had done. We were eight for fuck’s sake! So I would make stuff up. Yes, lie about my so-called sins. I knew that it was mental that the sacrament of confession required us to make shit up. But I didn’t dare tell anyone I felt that way.

There are many reasons I left the Catholic church, none of which will really be a surprise to anyone. The whole disgusting-beyond-belief abuse of children and the church’s ruthless efforts to ensure their organization was protected makes me sick to my stomach. Their stance on homosexuality – the patronizing and offensive viewpoint that homosexuality is wrong but god still loves gays, even though they are… well gay… and unnatural and sinners. But god loves them. Fuck you Catholic church. I often think if there is a god (and the jury is still out on that one for me) he is up there wherever he hangs out shouting “I never fucking said that!”

I think many people who were not indoctrinated with a religious belief to the extent that I was have difficulty understanding what a big deal it is to say this is not for me. I’m done. This is bullshit. It seems so obvious that of course as an adult you give up and outgrow the myths of childhood, just as you would do with santa and the easter bunny. But it is more complex than that. My childhood was Catholic Catholic Catholic. I was baptized nine days after I was born, attended Catholic schools, my mum taught religion in a Catholic school, priests were regular guests in our home and missing Sunday mass was just unheard of. In the end it was a simple choice in many ways to leave the church and to me it was like ending a very toxic relationship. However even leaving a toxic relationship can leave you with a sense of loss amidst the triumph.

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Confessions of a qualified body consultant* – Rebecca Patena

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

LindaBraFitter1The most magnificent breasts I have ever seen were in 1995. They belonged to a woman who was probably my age at the time. Her features have faded but the moment she revealed her breasts to me has not. Her measurements were either a 10E or possibly a 12DD according to the tape measure, soft, firm and real. Without inhibition or shame, a woman proudly baring her nakedness in a way that was disarming and beautiful and all too rare in the intimate apparel department of Myer Northland.

Behind those heavy curtains, most stories were told without words. Eyes and mirrors revealed stretch marks, scars, inverted nipples, hairy armpits, shrunken necks, papery skin, pimpled backs, swollen stomachs, bulging veins, downcast eyes, tight mouths. Scents of talcum powder traces, faded perfume and stale sweat hung in the air. A soundscape of whispered confessions, airy chatter, soft groans and throaty laughter.

A first bra fitting appointment stood before me, arms hugging her chest, eyes darting nervously around the dimly lit cubicle. Milky flesh covered in goose pimples. A fine down on her arms stood to attention. Alert, alarmed, uncomfortable. Her mother stationed protectively beside her.

“We’ve got big boobs in the family. She’s in grade 6 this year.”

This golden haired child of 11, pig tailed with dimpled cheeks, had to cart around mammary glands that were bigger than her head. A full cup size difference between each one, a G cup and an H cup, a weight borne by tiny size 8 back. Breasts that could only be trussed up into an apricot, lacy, point and shoot number. Bras like that were that were usually sold to post menopausal women who had deep grooves worn into their shoulders. Women who had weekly appointments with their chiro or physio to attend to aches and pains suffered from carrying around the load of a lifetime. Her Mum told me that the family had almost saved up enough for surgery but her daughter was still too young and had not stopped growing yet.

Another invitation to check a fitting for a woman who was in a hurry. Her husband was being kept waiting, and prowled around outside, being kept at bay by the change room gate keeper. Having breast fed all of her four children she was getting herself something sexy. She said she was blessed with good genes. She wanted a balconette bra that my experience did not accomodate a generous bust that may not have been as firm as it once was. I doubled it would contain her bountiful cups when she told me her size. Yet it did. I was confused. The story of her breasts did not match up with the one she had told me. These breasts did not drop gently when her bra came away, there was no yeidling of that taunt flesh with the usual wiggling and jiggling. Her purple nipples pointed out at odd angles and I was puzzled by the ridge at the top of her breast where it met her chest.

I realised later that it wasn’t good genes that gave her those tits, but cash, a scalpel, silicon implants and a mediocre surgeon.

I recently heard the familiar refrains and the intimate apparel ladies when I was recently looking for something fitting for my F’s that had long ago graduated from my first C fitting.

“How how you going in there?”

“Now there Darl, see how you are spilling over the top there. You need to go up a cup size.”

“Bend over, I’m just going to give you a little jiggle so you are sitting right in the cup. ..Ok, you do it, take your hand, scoop up your boob and drop it in.”

“Now you need a bit more room, you’ve got another 3 months and then things might change again when your milk comes in”

“When was your surgery Love. ..I can see that’s a bit tender..”

“No sweetie, you can’t see your nipples. Get the nude, white will show under that top”

And woven in between all these fittings was the life chat, the wedding, the 3rd baby, the prolapse, the celebrity bastard son-in-law, the sales, the bullshit, the stuff of life.

I love women and their breasts. My preference is for natural, they tell the best stories and a bra fitter can work her magic if needed.

*as stated in my Berlei Bra fitting course certificate.

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