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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Today – Helen Thomas

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

I was armoured up. I had put a load of washing on. Tick. I was wearing my running gear, to ensure that I would go for a run later. Tick. The fear of becoming one of those people who wear active wear but who don’t actually engage in strenuous physical activity would far outweigh the lack of motivation to run. I had set myself up at the kitchen table surrounded by teetering piles of paper – work, life admin, to do lists. Excellent. Safe and secure. Do as I have always done. Feel nice and productive. Missed out on Gunnas. Probably a good thing as, really, I have so much to do. Just look around me. Then ping. An email from Dev ‘YES!! SICK PERSON!!!! COME! 10am’. Safety extinguished. A pause in time, fear pushes through. The excuses begin immediately. Oh, I’ll be late. I’m not ready. I’m not prepared. Ping. A text message this time ‘JUMP IN THE CAR’. Fuck it. I defiantly refuse to change out of my active wear and dismiss my piles of paper, mentally torching them as I lock the front door behind me. I do as invited. What a gift.

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Why? – Jane Rathdowne

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.


Why?
Hurt, mistrust, deflated.
Am I not good enough?
Why do you speak that way?
Alcohol fueled tirade.
“Fuck facebook,fucking computer, fucking book, your father is a cunt, blah, blah, blah”
Please don’t talk that way
“Fucking fat arse, fucking do gooder, fucking ballet, blah, bla, blah”
I hope you fall asleep soon so I can sleep….this is hell….
“Go to fucking hell!”
I am already there!
What am I doing putting up with this?
Care, do the right thing, can not leave…
He has a problem.. Depression.. Been a tough time.
“Who are you fucking? Is there another bloke?”
Why, why?
Cover up, pretend, no one can know.
Shame, hurt,mentally beaten, feel physical pain.
Heartbroken.
Despair.
I need a way out!

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Gunnas SYDNEY

Thrilled to be back in the glorious glittering city of Sydney to run the only TWO Gunnas Writing Masterclasses in NSW for 2016.  A brilliant day at the fantastic Bishop Sessa Surry Hills.

Friday February 19 10am-4pm

Saturday February 20 10am-4pm

Gunna write? Gunna write better, different, more or that project you’re blocked on?

Let me give you the magic pill and provide you with that creative enema you need. I’m the midwife to help you birth your creative baby.  Here’s what people said after doing Gunnas.

25% writing tips.

25% life motivation.

25% stand-up comedy

25% incredible food and fabulous people.

Everything you need to know about Gunnas Writing Masterclass here.

And the best thing is that no one has to share their work.

Love to see you,

Dev x

Gunna write? Gunna write better, different, more or that project you’re blocked on?

Let me give you the magic pill and provide you with that creative enema you need. I’m the midwife to help you birth your creative baby.  Here’s what people said after doing Gunnas.

25% writing tips.

25% life motivation.

25% stand-up comedy

25% incredible food and fabulous people.

Everything you need to know about Gunnas Writing Masterclass here.

And the best thing is that no one has to share their work.

Love to see you,

Dev x

 

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The Ring – Sok Leng

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

I wear a wedding band.

I’m married, but that’s another story.

I wear a wedding band that belonged to my paternal grandmother. It’s thin and heavy for its size. I think it’s platinum. There are some engravings that mark some squares and then rectangles but they’re worn and barely recognisable. It’s loose on my finger, so I keep it in place with my engagement ring.

I wear her wedding ring now, not as a symbol of how her marriage was or ended up being, but in recognition of all that I shared with her. When I was little I would crawl into her bed as soon as I woke. We would chat in a sing-songy broken English and there were crazy hand gestures.

We understood each other perfectly.

She didn’t tell me her stories. Why bring up the past? It was over, she said.

She endured a lot, I’ve been told. She was displaced during the Second World War and separated from her husband. She didn’t even know if he was alive. She had a toddler and a mother-in-law in tow during the great famine in rural China. She was accused of being a beggar and a drain on family resources.

You’re not a high priority in the family when your husband isn’t around.

She carried my father on her back across a river when he was sick. She picked willow leaves to boil for food when there was nothing else. And she drove a cattle-drawn cart which held the heavy wooden coffin of her mother-in-law.

She was tiny, my grandmother. But only in height.

I know that ring was on her finger as she struggled daily on her tiny crumpled bound feet. Her toes were broken and curled under foot. She marvelled at her only granddaughter’s growing feet and would laugh and shake her head as they headed for size 10.

I know that ring was on her finger as she followed her only child to a new country. When she wrote to her only sister and told her that this would be the last letter. That she was leaving more than just her country behind her.

I know that ring was on her finger as she continued to struggle every day, but went to English classes and to the Vic market to buy me trinkets and polka-dotted windcheaters that I never wore.

I wear her ring, but I don’t really need a reminder.

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Before ancient rocks – Jen

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Once upon a time there was a girl who glittered and sparkled. She sang, twirled, beamed and glowed. She played, she laughed, she took risks and was always ready for adventure. She was in control of her life and knew her worth. She felt joy and gratitude and full of possibility. Her heart was strong and kind and generous. Sometimes she felt sad. But the sadness was real and raw and honest and vulnerable. She had fears but they didn’t control her. She had worries but they were concrete and could be tackled head on and solved. And when she dreamed under the stars, her vision of the years ahead was clear and wondrous.

Every day she soared. She took risks. She was a leader. She stuck her neck out. It never occurred to her these things might be scary. She just knew she could do them. She knew she could leap and the net would be there. She never worried the branch might break because she knew her wings would do what they needed to do.

One day things started to change. A Big Challenge came her way. It lasted seven years. And although she did everything she could, it wasn’t enough. She worried more. She feared more. She thought about how other people would judge her. She wasn’t enough. She wondered if she still had wings. Could she feel them? No. Could she see them? No. She stuck the Big Challenge out and did everything she was supposed to do, but not as well as she thought she should. So she began to trickle away.

Because of that life was different. The pizazz, the sparkle, the glitter, they were all gone. She forgot she had ever had wings. And then Big Challenge Number 2 came along. Oddly, it also lasted seven years. Again she did her best but it didn’t feel enough. The stakes were higher than they had ever been but she felt like she failed. She had lost control. There were no wings and no net.

And because of that she tried to control anything she could. She tried to control all.the.little.things because she couldn’t control the big things. She couldn’t nurture herself and her wings were long-forgotten. Instead she worried about dust on the floor and crumbs on the bench. The dirty toilet and the leaning towers of laundry. All she could see were the little things that didn’t matter but felt important. Why did they feel important? Because they were in her control.

Until finally she said ‘FUCK THIS’. She bowed before ancient rocks. She felt the warmth of the sun on rocks so old her head hurt thinking about it. And she forgave herself. She decided: from now on my life is about wings, not crumbs. She knew what mattered and she knew what she needed to do. So she did it.

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Let the (Corporate) games begin – Mary McConnell

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

They weren’t quite sure what Senior HR Executive Barbara Colt had just said.  She had been striding animatedly from side to side on the “World Summit” stage in her serious navy Pantsuit, crisp white shirt and ‘Madonna Mike’ looking enthusiastic.  Something about ‘new Global focus’ and ‘Talent Management’ had registered, but sitting obediently shoulder to shoulder rubbing suits, uncomfortably cold in the enormous ballroom, mesmerised by her perky powerpoint slide of bright geometrics – the local Sales team, who occupied the entire back row, had slowly begun to register.
Steve whispered to Sophie “see the pea shape in the middle of the slide?.”  Sophie could see the pea – it had been more like a pink grapefruit originally, then with a powerpoint ‘whoosh’ it had become an orange, before unceremoniously morphing into a green pea surrounded by larger encroaching circles during Barbara’s ‘DCM’ section of her presentation:  ‘Directional Career Management.’  “That’s our department” Steve hoarsely whispered, barely containing his distress. Sophie had already joined the dots.  At best, they would now be an irritant like in the ‘princess and the pea’ – giving all the Global divisions they were now subservient to the shits while simultaneously having to provide them with resources and knowledge.  At worst  –hello Centrelink.  It made winning her current Deal even more critical – her job may depend on it.  Frank – not the brightest crayon  –  had also finally cottoned on: “DCM – don’t come Monday” they mean, he cracked. Nobody in the back row laughed.
Sophie checked out the Executive panel sitting uncomfortably upright in their line of chairs stage right.  They were taking in the Barbara show.  His glossy hair and visage caught under a stray spotlight, Global Director of Sales, Andy O’Connell looked pleased with himself in a smug sort of way.  Still (relatively) young, Andy’s, rise had been (relatively) meteoric, and the global move had totally played – unexpectedly – into his deeply ambitious hand.  Much to almost everyone in the know’s surprise –  Andy’s (not so) secret affair with Marketing Director Sandra – sitting primly on the opposite end of the Executive row – had not appeared to diminish either’s career prospects.  Apparently not even being caught with your pants down in the staff kitchen in the early evening could dent one’s career trajectory.  This state of affairs both confused and angered Sophie – and her feelings were reflected in the look on the face of Operations Director Paul Berry – sitting on Andy’s left.  As hard as Paul had worked, he found himself passed over as a classified dinosaur in this brave new world.  The rules had changed and no-one had enlightened him on the new playbook.  Even his nemesis David Warren – Director of Platforms – seemed to display a rare irritation with the ‘new breed’ of directors.  He sat on the Executive row looking impervious and above the others.  But David, was a force to be reckoned with, with a history spoken about in hushed tones over private coffee meeting, and a Boardroom game unsurpassed.  It had been said that he had been instrumental in the demise of the most recent CEO.  Game on, Sophie thought to herself…
Kind Regards

 

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