Half-hearted escape into the unbearable lightness of footy

YES, I am from Melbourne. But no, I’m not into the footy. How about I stand still while the rest of you skin me alive with broken glass?

But I do have a team. Actually a few years back I changed from North Melbourne to Essendon. Informing my family I’d defected felt as if I’d admitted to an attraction to dog food. The response was supportive in a “sure, we’ll stand by your decisions no matter how ethically barren, socially corrosive and fundamentally wrong it is and what an appalling example you’re setting for the children” kind of way. I’m not into footy enough to care about the cultural transgression of changing teams. But into it enough to bother. I don’t get it either.

I do feel left out at times. I envy people’s passion and the rapture of their pilgrimages to their sporting meccas. Occasionally the sight of the fans in their regalia frothing with excitement at train stations urges me to rug up and rock up to the MCG to give it one more try. I feel like an eight-year-old watching grown-ups drink beer and having that occasional sip to find out if I still don’t like the taste, assuming eventually I’ll be like everyone else and I will.

I went to the footy a bit when I was young. Mostly as a St John Ambulance Brigade cadet (don’t ask, long story involving capes) and working in the canteens serving chips and pies and being dared to drink the hot-dog water. Rarely did I have the experience of the duffle coat smeared with sauce, flat Coke, pie as hot as lava on the outside with a block of ice in the middle. But it was never really me.

It’s not because I don’t have a team I really love but because I don’t have a team I really hate that I’m not into footy. I don’t get the premise that if you barrack for Carlton, you have to hate Essendon, if you barrack for Essendon, you have to hate Carlton, and if you barrack for either, you have to hate Collingwood, as everyone else does. And not just the team but the Collingwood supporters. Sitting in the St Kilda section at the MCG last Sunday, I was shocked by the jokes. What do you call a 30-year-old woman in a Collingwood jumper? Nanna. (Meanwhile, my son was sniggering that Collingwood had a Sidebottom, Goldsack and Dick in their team.) But look on the bright side Pie supporters, at least you don’t barrack for Adelaide. As everyone knows – including me who only found out last Sunday – they’re worse. It appears it’s not enough to win, the real joy is watching the other team lose. The more you hate the losers, the sweeter the victory. What’s with people’s “second” and “third” teams? A mate explained, “It’s like your family. Sure they irritate you at times and you check out other families thinking, ‘Ooooh they look nice’, but you’d never leave your own. Only a mongrel would do that.”

My seven-year-old and I found ourselves embedded with the St Kilda supporters on Sunday. In the first five minutes, the guy behind had called Collingwood players weak pricks, yellow turds, dumb faggots, a pack of girls, bloody wogs, the umpire a white maggot, and the supporters filthy bastards.

Someone suggested he “tone it down a bit. Women and children.” After one look at my son and me, someone said, “He’s all right, keeping spirit in the game.” It appears there’s a caveat: “I’m only racist/sexist/bigoted at the footy.” Well that’s OK, then. No harm done.

Two women in their 60s who looked like they’d washed thousands of footy jumpers between them commentated on the game in minute detail: the tactics, the game plan, the form, the stats. With analytical skills like that, they’d have no trouble deconstructing politics, religion or public policy. I wondered if they did.

I’m not into the footy but I do get it. That shoulder-to-shoulder not eye-to-eye thing. The talking but not communicating. Instead of the posturing egos, bumping psyches and deep-festering grudges that grow between family members like coral, people can get to spew their poison, massage their prejudices and release their frustrations as they hurl abuse at the players, not at each other. Existential crises are diverted by escaping into the unbearable lightness of footy.

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Mothers Day Is Bullshit

I say this every year. I do not want/need/require/deserve any Mother’s Day cards, gifts or bullshit.

I do not need to be thanked. My kids owe me nothing.

I chose to have kids. No sacrifice. I did it for the same reason every woman with full access to fertility control does.

Selfish narcissism. 

My boys did not opt into this life. We made them because we wanted to have children. No one forced us. I did it for no one but myself.

I knew there was effort and sleepless nights and fun AND I CHOSE IT. I opted those poor little bastards in to my life because I WANTED to have children.

Except Charlie who was an accident. Only joking. No I’m not. He’s just for spare parts.

No slippers, no Breville Snack And Sandwich Makers or ‘World’s Greatest Mum’ mug for me. Just a thank-you to my sons for tolerating a life, which is simply the outcome of my selfish choice.
Mothers out there upset or hurt because your child did not send you a card, message, call you or tick the box because they felt the grinding obligation of social critique, here’s a message for you. You don’t get it. Presents are not love. And while we’re at it neither is worry. That’s right! Worry is not love.

Be grateful to all the people around you. When you feel like it. Not when society tells you.

I’m no fan of the holidays and celebrations society or marketing dictates or prescribes. They all fall under the banner of Forced To Strap On A Fake Smile And Buy Crap You Can’t Afford That People Don’t Need Otherwise They Will Crack The Shits Day.

What does it really mean if your kids feel they have to buy you a present? HAVE TO. And what does it mean if you feel they have to buy you a present? HAVE TO. TO SHOW THEIR LOVE. On this day they are told to. It’s not ‘a nice opportunity to show appreciation’. It’s an insideous way to continue to maginalise women, under value their unpaid labour and promote the bullshit concept that ‘being a mother is the most important job in the world‘. (1. It’s not. 2. Firstly it’s not a job. 3. Secondly if it was why isn’t being a mother paid better/at all?  4. Thirdly, if it so important why aren’t the men fighting to do it? Any why is it used to sell toilet cleaner?)

rosemary-baby-mothers-day-cardMay I suggest that instead we ditch the hollow empty, commercialized token day where people are shamed into buying mum a new iron or microwave (that reinforces the unpaid domestic labor mothers, and women in general are expected to do). Instead we put that energy to paid parental leave, single parent benefits, cheap, high quality accessible child care, safe public housing for women escaping domestic violence, excellent public housing, public schools, public health care and public transport and family friendly work places.

“The greatest burden a child must bear is the unlived life of the parents.” –C.G. Jung

P.S. If you bought your partner a Mother’s Day present you are a fucking weirdo with Mummy Issues. Get help. She is NOT your mum. It’s Mothers’ Day not Valentines Day.

After writing this I read this. Clearly I am not alone.

You may also like Why I Am Against Step-Parenting  and The Narcissism Of Motherhood. 

Gunnas Writing Masterclass and 20 free online writing classes! 

Gift certificates on sale.  All here.

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Cheating. An email from a crazy person – Fe Lumsdaine

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

“Dear all,

The other day, while I was perusing an online dating site, I realised that I owed all of the important people in my life an apology.

I was reading the profiles of potential partners who met my very specific criteria and imagining a life with each of them that includes saving children in Africa and meeting Oprah Winfrey, and I suddenly realised that I hadn’t been at all honest with you, my family and friends.
Most of you know me as a wonderful human being.  A brilliant mother, supportive daughter and sister, caring friend and tireless community worker.  And while these labels are all accurate, there is one label that I have spent the last 30 or so years hiding from all of you.
I am a cheat.
Yes.  I am a cheat.
When I was in 4th grade, aged 9 or so years, I cheated on a spelling test.  The word was calamity, and I looked over to the desk beside me and read Prudence Smith’s answer and copied it onto my own page.
The fact of this, and of my hiding it from you, necessitates a re-evaluation of every relationship in my life.  Obviously, my relationships with you are based upon a profound dishonesty and are therefore invalid.
I realised this when contemplating my perfect partner.  I realised that I could not contemplate becoming involved with anyone who could lie to me.  And, in realising that, I quickly recognised that I could not stay involved with anyone whom I could lie to.
I have lied to you all.
And so I now free you from our friendships and relationships.
Yes, that includes all of my family members.
I know that this will come as a devastating blow to all of you.  The idea of not having me in your lives will be terrifying, I know.  But I honestly believe that naming my deception will ultimately allow all of us to become better people.  Hopefully you will all realise that you are as flawed, if not more, than I am, and will create a space for this kind of honesty in your own lives.  I’m looking at YOU.
So.  This weekend I will be having a garage sale of sorts.  I will put every item that has been gifted to me by any of you out onto my front lawn at 8am and I invite you to come over to collect them at your leisure.
And then I will live my life with an honesty and integrity and clarity that can only attract a partner of the highest standard, and I will be happy.
With thanks and love to you all,
Janet.
PS.  Please do not respond to this email.  My days of tolerating you all are over.
PPS.  I will notify you all of major events occurring in my life, as a courtesy and kindness to you all, you understand.
PPPS.  I am sure I will be re-marrying, as I have just virtually-kissed a perfect man on the dating site.
PPPPS.  I wish you all well.”
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Sunshine. moonlight. good time. boogie – Gina Direct

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

Every New Year’s Eve my Auntie Maureen and Uncle Fred would have a great big party around the big kidney shaped swimming pool at their house. The ladies wore maxis and kaftans and the men safari suits. The end of one year and the start of the next was the best opportunity there was for a big celebration.

Us kids would stay up in the house most of the time, hanging in front of the television in the family room or playing games in the room next door. From there we could dart out to the kitchen where the maids were preparing the trays of food for the waiters to take out to the adults. We’d sneak a patty or vol-au-vent and beg for a glass of kool-aid. The maids would make a play at shooing us away but they were always good-natured and let us have whatever we wanted as long as there was a steady flow of trays making it out of the kitchen. Every now and then one of the waiters would bring a half empty tray back from the garden into the family room and we’d all greedily grab at whatever goodies were left on it. Even a cold patty was good when it was fancy cocktail size and you could eat heaps of them.

It was 1973 and I was 13 years old. This year, my mum and I had matching maxis. I was pretty excited about that because she was always so glamorous and getting to wear a long dress was an acknowledgment of my growing up. It felt like a real marker that I wasn’t just one of the little kids any more. Mum and I had chosen the style together from a magazine and she’d had her dressmaker recreate it especially for us. Loose and kaftan-y and ever so chic. The neckline and cuffs of mum’s were trimmed in three tones of blue. Mine in three tones of my then very favourite fashion colour: brown. I didn’t appreciate it then but now, in hindsight, I recognise it as the layers of a really good macchiato. You get the idea.

This year was different to all the others in so many ways. This year there was a boy I’d met for the first time just the week before. His family was out visiting auntie and uncle for the holidays. It was a big deal because they lived in America. But not just any America; they’d come from New York. I didn’t know hardly anything about New York, except it was some magical fantasy land that was somehow the most important and exciting place in the world. I knew that I really had no idea what it was about except that it was amazing and different to anything I’d ever known.

This year was different because I got to wear a maxi dress. Because at the party when I went down by the pool with the grown ups one of my uncles asked me to dance. It had never happened before. And when it did it was absolutely the single best and most important thing that had ever happened in my life. I wasn’t a kid anymore. I was, well, not a grown up yet, clearly, but a person who was going to be a grown up. And that was thrilling. I felt I’d stepped into the foyer of the adult world and that beyond it was full of promise and new games and a new sense of being.

When another uncle asked me to dance, I knew that I had truly crossed a threshold and I would never be one of the kids again. Now I could boogie with the adults under the moonlight. I tossed my head and felt at once wild abandon and very serious responsibility.

And suddenly, as one track came to an end, at my shoulder was Jason and everything changed in ways I’d never even imagined before. His presence awakened in me something I’d had no concept of. Sure, I’d noticed boys before. But the guys my swim coach would have race against us girls to push us always seemed arrogant and obnoxious in their attempts to assert their physical superiority. And the older brothers of my brother’s friends were remote sporty or drama heroes.

Jason was real and close and interested in me. I’d never felt a boy interested in me before. That he was older and taller and handsome and New York-sophisticated made it all that more exciting.

We danced, apart, to a couple of whatever tracks were big that year. I don’t think I’ve ever remembered what they were. I was consumed by sensations of flying, tingling, excited confusion.

When a slower track started up, another uncle materialised beside us, asking me about school or something, pulling me into everyday reality. As I answered politely, I realised that Jason had slipped away.

We didn’t get close again that night. But as I crawled into bed I reflected on all the ways in which I’d grown up in the space of a few hours. I knew I was no longer the girl who had got dressed for the party. I knew this was the start of a new me. I fell asleep in awe of how different I felt and how full of full of promise this next stage of my life was. And of the excitement of Jason and his smile and his accent and the way he leaned forward when he talked to me.

Sometime in the early afternoon of the next day, my mum, dad, brother and I piled out of the car, back at auntie and uncle’s house. I’d fussed with deciding what to wear in a way I don’t think I ever had before. I’d chosen a favourite halter neck top and striped flares. I was quite sure I wasn’t carrying off the casual chic I was aiming for but I knew I had no idea what would be groovy in New York. I felt a bit of a try-hard klutz but I’d done the best I could with what I had and I was looking forward to seeing Jason.

We all wandered into the house, open as usual, through the entrance hall and into the big lounge room. Auntie and Uncle and a group of other adults were scattered around the room in animated conversations. I joined in the polite hellos as my parents settled in and then wandered outside as I usually did, always wanting to be near the pool.

My breath caught. Jason was in the water, face down, swimming intently. I wanted to wander away before he saw me. I wanted to stay and talk to him. Would it be awkward?

I watched as he got to the end of the pool, stretching out a muscled arm, then pulling his feet up under him and into standing position. He flicked his head and turned around, catching me eye.

I smiled. Nervous.

Languidly, seemingly with no effort at all, he swam over to just below me. He put his hands on the edge of the pool and pushed himself out of the water.

I remember now the rippling muscles in his arms, the droplets of water glistening in the midday sun. I bent down towards him as he pushed up towards me.

And I turned my head just as he pursed his lips. They brushed my burning cheeks just as uncle  called out “Happy New Year, young people” and materialised beside me, an outstretched hand proffering an icy glass of Kool-Aid.

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Gossip: as a group email from a crazy person – Sam Jacobs

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

Don’t think I don’t know. How dare you. Don’t think I can’t see what’s happening here. I know exactly what you’re all doing.

Monday. Every one of you mentioned the weekend. Little jabs. A dig here and there. All in on it together. Weekend this, weekend that. Pretending you’d all done separate activities. Avoiding each other’s stories and smiling with that dumb, open look on your faces. I know better than that – you think I can’t see through your lies?

Tuesday. Every single person wearing black shoes except me. Message received, loud and clear. Footstep by footstep. All fucking day. Pushing me around with your shiny fucking shoes.

Wednesday. You were all quiet. You knew I was on to you. You knew I was watching. You were all so fucking careful. But I got it! I saw. Café fucking lattes every single one of you, while offering to make me a cup of tea. Tea! As if.

Thursday. Or should I call it whisper-day. Hush hush. Eyes averted. Think I can’t hear you? Think I don’t know? I know exactly what you’re thinking. Exactly what you’re doing. Before you even mutter it to each other under your stinking fucking breath.

Friday. Today. My day. You’ll see. You’ll learn. You can’t shut me out like that. You can’t shut me up. I’ll give you something to gossip about. Not long now. Friday. My day.

Gobbledangle Goblin is contactable on 0409158627 or lexyfaery@hotmail.com

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Letter from a goblin – Lexy

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

Title: Letter from a goblin
Dear Lexy
Remember me. It’s Gobbledangle. You made me into a very scary goblin in 1999. That’s my opinion. Thanks.
(I pay no heed to the humans who labelled me cute. They knew nothing of my talents!)
 I always thought I was your favourite creation, but you sold me without even a thought at Mullum Markets!
 By the way, that the poem you wrote about me 15 years ago is outdated. I have adapted with the times. Speaking of time, in this small window of time, I am typing this on your phone hoping you don’t catch me at night here. 😱
There are just a few points I want to make before you conjure me up again. Firstly, the fears of humans of the city in 2015 are different. Notice them!. Secondly, My friends Lightning Feet and her girlfriends and the others miss you that’s all.
 P.S I am thinking of a colour change, can you give me purple and blue sparkles? The usual batwings,  boots and cape would be most appreciated.
P.S.S A big red heart stitched into my chest or ..on my sleeve is essential. I have feelings you know. That’s all.
Yours
Once
Gobbledangle Goblin of The Night

 

Gobbledangle Goblin is contactable on 0409158627 or lexyfaery@hotmail.com

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EXPECTATIONS – Beata Alfoldi

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer
Countless opportunities to deepen our understanding of a situation, or to forge new pathways have been destroyed by individual expectations.
An attitude of ‘no expectations’ requires a person to become spiritually mature, self-reliant and free ~ qualities that are very much lacking in our society.
Never let anyone else’s expectations direct the course of your life, for if you allow the course of your life to truly direct you, you would realise that an attitude of courage, trust and openhearted presence is all that is required in each and every moment.
The individual who expects nothing is never disappointed, for they do not place their power on anyone or anything that is outside of themselves.

~ Beata Alfoldi is the founder of Wild Heart Awakening ~
www.wildheartawakening.com

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Volcanic Eruption – Miss Appropriate

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

Dee was shrieking at him again and he watched her face with a detached fascination at the rapid draining of beauty, followed by the suffusion of red fury and resentful wrinkles. He stood, square-on, facing her vitriolic outpouring, and wondered at his own calmness. Where was the smiling, vivacious, laughing woman he had met two years ago? Where was his own angry response?

He tilted his head a little to the side, like a curious bird. He realised that he had become more focussed on his own mental wonderings than on any of the accusations being spat at him through hard lips. Then, he registered vaguely that an extraordinary thing was occurring. She was getting smaller, smaller. Fading into the distance, her words becoming merely a series of sounds, high pitched, clanging, but fading. And she was receding further and further away…away. He reached up his arms, or at least tried to hold his hands out to her, but they seemed not to obey his wishes. He was falling, falling backwards…and a dimming darkness was closing in…He was dimly aware of a sudden silence and the perfect, silent O of her mouth. The back of his head hit the floor with a crack.

A floating, and a wonderful, welcome warmth spread through his limbs. So he felt no concern that he could not move. He drifted to another place and time. Was it real or imagined? He could no longer tell. Where was he? Dee was with him. He had his arm around her slim shoulders. He had his earphones on and was listening to This American Life. He was laughing quietly to himself.  Dee shifted a little and snuggled her face into his shoulder. He felt happy, warm and proud.

Sumatra…they were in a taxi in Sumatra. A momentary confusion caused his prone body to twitch violently, but he surrendered to his injury and once more he departed the reality of the cold kitchen floor, his bleeding head, and his panicking wife. They were back in the taxi, on the way from the volcanoes to Lake Toba. They had climbed one of the steaming mountains that morning. They had taken some hilarious photos up the mountains at the steaming vents. He had bent forward, bum out, arms spread like aeroplane wings, while Dee positioned herself with the camera so it looked, for all the world as if he was about to take off..driven by the power of his own steaming fart! They laughed. They loved each other and the world. He laughed at the memory and his eyes flickered open a fraction at the sound of a sob. His or hers? Impossible to tell. Eyes rolling backwards behind lids.

They had, since that day, imploded and exploded. Mount Sinabung had erupted, blowing out the side of the mountain in an enormous, destructive blast of fire and ash. And tonight, an eruption of his own, smaller, but just as destructive and full of burning, searing power as the volcano.

 

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Time to live – Roshan Sahukar  

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

 

It’s as if writer and funny person Catherine Deveny designed her Gunnas course with me in mind, I’m a classic Gunna, all talk and very little action, in all aspects of my life. I don’t tell people I’m a writer, mainly because I’m not one, oh and also because I figure to be a writer you probably should be putting pen to paper at some point, to write more than tea leaves, coconut oil, AAA batteries, I mean. So Gunnas is a writing workshop for people like me who are always gunna write but never quite get round to it. I have a house to clean, for goodness sake. I signed up for inspiration, and it worked. Among others, Catherine quoted Carl Jung who observed that “The greatest burden a child must bear is the unlived life of the parents,” which I have to say struck a chord. Part of why I am exploring writing is because I feel like I’ve spent a fair proportion of the past five years consumed by parenting small children and now I’m furiously grabbing back some of the more important bits of me that were left by the wayside, and trying to figure out my own future at the same time.

 

It pains me to admit it but in some ways I feel like I’ve wasted the time I had before kids. I mean, it was fun, of course. I developed somewhat of a career, travelled, saw plays, learnt a language and forgot it again, but it’s not like I really achieved all that much, more than the odd spectacular hangover. Perhaps that’s when I should have been writing more, because I had the time, but, and I’m cutting myself a major break here, maybe I was waiting until something – or someone – worth writing about – or for – came along.

 

These two little people, at once so vulnerable and so strong, have turned my world upside down and inside out and back to front and every which-way and forced me to look at who I am, who I was and who I would like to be.

 

They have brought out the best of me and absolutely also the worst, I never knew I was capable of giving so much, I never realised I could be so tired, so happy, so angry, so content. They have heightened my emotional range and they challenge me every day. But I do sometimes wonder if I should have fulfilled some kind of potential before they were born, before they enriched and depleted me, before I was too tired to think.

 

But why worry about that? What I don’t want is for my kids to be burdened with my frustrations of a life unlived so – guess what? – I’m gunna live it. Today I was asked what I would do if I had six months left to live. For starters, I would find joy in the everyday. I wouldn’t waste precious time on the boring bits, if I could help it, and I would definitely employ a cleaner, possibly full time, but even so some of life’s boring bits would still need to be done by me so I would do them with joy. I WILL do them with joy. Remind me of that next time I am on hold negotiating a better insurance deal.

 

So often, at home with squabbling under fives, I find myself just going through the motions, some less-than-inspired afternoons I catch myself watching the clock, calculating the hours until the kids’ bedtime or, gulp, until I can drop them off at childcare the next day. Surviving but hardly thriving. I’ve realised I need to use our time better, get off Facebook, give my kids more positive experiences and to hell with the mess! Keep them busy, run them ragged and stop beating myself up for occasionally letting them be bored (while I quickly check Facebook). I will enjoy the time we have at home together because soon, whether I have six months to live or sixty years, it will be gone. I will stop killing time and start spending it wisely. Because the next six months could be my last, and if they’re not I’m gunna do my best to live them like they are.

Roshan Sahukar is not a writer and doesn’t have a website. Or a blog. Yet. Find her on Twitter, but not tweeting much @mrsyeo 

 

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The Girl in the Yellow Raincoat – Mary Llewelyn

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS writer

Once upon a time there was a sad and lonely woman who lived alone with 15 cats and lots of rats and mice and moths and spiders and cockroaches.  She lived in a creaky wooden house down a little lane filled with holly and jasmine.  She loved all her animals very much, even when they would sometimes eat each other.
Everyday she would go to her boring job in data processing where she sorted out lots of numbers in a way that meant something to someone, but nothing to her. She ate lunch at her cubicle desk and spoke to no one.  At 5pm she would walk home through the rainy streets of the town, and down the jasmine scented lane to her little house where the cats and rats and insects and spiders were waiting for her. After everyone had eaten dinner and settled for the night, she would most nights play music and dance around her lounge room. She would dance the song of longing and loneliness. She didn’t know what else to do with this pain in her heart.
Sometimes, if she felt more calm, she would let the cats comfort her. As they snuggled and purred on her lap, she felt their gentleness and warmth seep into her bones and her heart would soften and purr with them. But around people, her heart remained locked behind rusty iron gates.
Her heart had been open once, many years ago. She had come into the world full of wonder, and she had danced and sung in a chorus of others. And there was a special love once too. They had busted each other open with joy and tenderness and the golden light of love. She had not felt truly alive til she met this man.
But one day he left. And never returned.  Many months later she discovered he had gone away with another woman. He had broken their golden bond. Her heart was ripped open and crushed. Still today, many years later, she feels pieces of their broken love in her heart, like shards of shattered glass.  She never cleaned the wound. She left the glass inside and let the grass grow over it. And put a big iron fence around it so no one would ever come poking around in there again.
One wet windy day, when she was walking home, she saw a small child sitting in the gutter in her yellow raincoat and yellow rain hat. Her little yellow body heaved and sobbed and shivered with sadness. Her head was in her hands and her cries pulled at the heart.
The woman wanted to keep walking. She didn’t want to talk to this miserable child. “I have nothing to offer anyone. What can I say to this wretch? I am so full of sadness myself.”. But as she went to pass by,the child looked up.. In that instant, the woman felt a shock go through her body, like an electric current.  Looking back at her from under the yellow rain hat, were billowing blue eyes washed clean by thousands of tears. She knew these eyes, there was something so familiar about them, but she couldnt say what…..
Without thinking about it, she knelt down in the rain and hugged the wet and crying child. And then, she herself began to cry. But this time, her tears were not for herself. “it’s ok little girl. What’s wrong? Why are you so sad?”
The blue eyes fixed on her. But the child didn’t speak.  Her bottom lip still shaking and sniffling.
“come,” said the woman. “I live very close, just down the lane. Come and get warm in front of the fire, and I’ll make you a nice rich hot chocolate.”
The child’s face became a little brighter, a flicker of a smile on her lips.  She followed the woman down the lane and into the creaky old house. The moment she opened the door, all 15 cats burst out in a ball of fur and meows and purring and rubbing themselves against legs and door frames and tables.  The child broke out into a toothy smile and patted and tickled them, giggling with delight. The woman watched her as she stoked the fire and then poured the thick creamy chocolate into 2 mugs. They sat together on the old sofa, together with all the 15 cats, and felt the warm sweetness in their mouths and trickling down into their tummys. The woman put her arm around the child, and together they fell asleep covered in purring cats and full of contentment.
Then the woman had a dream.
She was running to the top of a big grassy hill sprinkled with daisies. The sun was high in the indigo sky, fluffy white clouds keeping pace with her.  Huff and puff, her legs were strong and fast, her tweed skirt flying about her legs. Up and up,,without slowing, she ran all the way. And at last she came to the summit, and from there she could see the whole world. The little farms below, and forests and the blue river winding to the great sea beyond. And she heard the seagulls swooping over the great cliffs,  and saw the great crashing waves and smelt their salty breath. And she could see further, into villages and houses and shops and schools where all the people of the world lived out their lives. And she could see still further, into the hearts and minds and dreams of every person. She saw a mother with her newborn, sleeping softly in her arms. She saw folk at the market bartering and bantering and feeling belonging and joy with their friends. She saw the squealing delight of the school playground.
 But she also saw the child left out and teased. And the grieving mother who’s child had passed away. And the lover left behind.
And because of that she started to see the sadness that lives in all people sometimes. And that this kind of sadness was as real and noble as happiness.
Suddenly, she felt a shift in the breezes, and she began to feel less alone in the world.
In that moment, her heart fluttered and trembled in her chest, and with a deep pain, began to shake off the scabs of self pity and suffering, and the dirt and grass that had grown over it and the iron fence that and imprisoned it for so long.
She began to let in the air and the sunshine and the rain and all of the beauty of the world. And there, behind the iron fence and under the dirt, was her long buried heart, it’s tender pink skin glowing softly. Then a strange and wondrous thing began to happen:  the pieces of glass buried deep inside began to dissolve in the moonlight.
Suddenly, a drop of water fell on her hand. She looked up from the grassy summit and saw the turning of the sky, now heavy with black rain. “time to go” she thought, still floating in the glowing rapture of her newborn heart. More drops. She looked down at her arm. She was wearing a yellow raincoat.

 

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