All posts by Princess Sparkle

Morag – Barnez

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

I have this friend, who I have to say, is quite wonderful. Why? Well because she has a gift. I guess we all do. I am a full believer in that. It is just a matter of uncovering it and then flogging it for all it is worth. It is the finding just what IT IS that is so often the tricky bit. Anyway, back to my friend….

She is a psychologist, a writer, a sports person, a mother, a cook, a gardener, a sister, a daughter, a friend….. oh and….. Morag the Jiggler.

My friend is a self-made woman. A business woman. She has made a living from listening to people, helping people, being exactly what she wanted to be…. Oh and….. she does a fantastic Morag the Jiggler.

Much of my friend’s life is quite serious. Her partner is quite serious and I’m sure could well do without ….. Morag the Jiggler.

I’m proud of all that my friend has done. What she does. Who she is. But what I love most is when she steps outside of her everyday self (ok there may be a wine or two involved here), crosses whatever might be handy (sometimes broom sticks, sometimes fire pokers, pens, tea towels, really most things can be crossed it seems….) and does this crazy Irishesk jig, above them, around them and through them…. to the laughter of all those around her.

I love my friend most when she shows that little part of herself. That part that fills the room with contagious laughter. That part that is so much funnier because of the contradictory nature of it all. How can this person who spends so much time being surrounded by serious. Being serious. How can she possibly be ……. Morag the Jiggler. Well maybe just maybe that is her true gift. Certainly to me.

Thanks Morag for coming to the Gunnas with me. And thank you Gunnas for setting me on the path to bringing life to my inner Morag!

 

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Ask your body – Jay Gui

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Intimate room, curtains drawn, lights dimmed. You have permission now just do it. Just get it done.  No technology honey.  Do it for real.
What a load of bull I thought as I cracked on. How the hell can I keep doing this for 5 minutes without stopping.
Surely my wrist is gonna lock up after 30 seconds.  Christ I feel my hand cramping already.  Slow down. If I stop and massage then it might get better.
I think of Jesus again. I need to stop. What if I stop and get caught. That’d be OK I guess. I’d live.  I wasn’t to stop.  That was the rule.
Oh yeah, breathe you mad thing. Keep going and remember to breathe. This is supposed to be fun. My hand is starting to shake.
Now my whole Christ almighty arm is shaking. I’m gonna fail. The humiliation. Can’t fail, must keep going. Wait, you can do this. Breathe, breathe, relax, relax.
Wow, what just happened?  I did it. I really did it. My eye is starting to leak. Is it emotion or pain? My back is cramping up too. Am I nervous? No! I’m excited, really excited.
Who would’ve thought writing on paper could’ve been so much fun?

 

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Cracked eggs – Jacqui Triffitt

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

I hate it when I get home and find cracked eggs in the carton. Cracked eggs! Why didn’t the woman at the check out, check out the eggs in the carton. What does a check out do? I need a carton of good eggs. I’m home, 10 kms from Coles, with a carton of 10/12 eggs !

Cracked eggs are my life. I think I’m paying for quality or the whole deal and then it turns out to be another ‘cracked egg”.  The new fence has a post with a knot that I can put my fingers through and its sitting near another post with a disfigured head. ” They were the only posts left” said the fence layer. ‘Well you can bloody well replace them. I haven’t paid $ 3500 for a new fence with knots, bits missing, and dodgy painting”! “What’s happened to quality control, an honest day’s work, and a job well done, cock”! “We will rectify it if you just calm down. I’ve sent the photo’s to the blokes who built the fence and they will call you in the next two days”

Two days has gone. I’m in a Gunnas Masterclass, thinking about the “gunna” fence layer, who was “gunna” call me and “gunna” meet me and “gunna” rectify my knotted post.

“I hate cracked eggs”!
“I hate knotted posts”!
“I hate gunner tradies”!

I reassure myself ” I’m not going to kill anyone, I’m just writing a story”. The world is full of cracked eggs and I’m never going to get the perfect dozen!

 

 

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Ever Onwards – Monica Cartwright

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

There’s an idea I hold onto: that I need to sift through all the muddy memories of my past in order to start living my life. An idea that I’m so bogged down by the legacy of grief that shrouds my family that I can’t begin to know myself. But here, a novel thought! What if I just write ‘…and they all lived happily every after…’ as an end note to all that grief?

Because…

My father’s parents died before I was born. He hardly speaks of them, but I remember going with him to their graves when I was young and looking away when I saw my hot-head father cry. He says he doesn’t mow the lawn, because that’s what his father was doing the day he died.

And they all lived happily ever after.

My mother’s sister died after a battle with long term illness when she was just past 40, buried by her parents and siblings. I was four and it seems like no one ever really talked about her death. She was barely mentioned again and I couldn’t say for certain what killed her.

And they all lived happily every after.

My mother’s father died three years later of a midweek asthma attack at just past 60 years old, in the middle of the street at dusk. We buried him next to my aunty. I don’t remember the funeral but I remember the wake.

My grandfather’s businesses were not in order, and his children’s lives bore much of the brunt of his business choices. His business partner went for the throat, settled for cutting open the belly. The fallout left my grandmother with no money and a mountain of grief.

And they all lived happily every after.

My father cheated on my mother, repeatedly I think. Something pushed it past breaking point, and they separated in the months after my grandfather died. My mother lost the two men in her life in the same year, and was left with the children and the family business her siblings didn’t care to tend.

And they all lived happily ever after.

We each live separate lives now. Having survived years under the same roof of unprocessed grief, I saw my older siblings leave and detach in their own ways from our family’s history. They went out into the world, and began making new stories, which they tell with conviction as long as they never get stuck looking too long at the past. I left too. I went further away, yet feel the most caught up in the past. I’m watching my parents live out their grief in their own ways, by never looking at it directly, and I ache with the need to put the pieces of our past back together to make this game of happy families we play feel real.

As my mother often says, an anniversary is still an anniversary after a divorce, a birthday is still a birthday after death. The events that roll on through our lives reshape our memories of the past, but they don’t change the fact that this time has passed.

Is there a way to move past a sadness never touched, never aired, or will we forever be processing our grief and loss?

My family’s stories are not mine to tell or to finish off. They’re not mine to redraft. If holding onto our collective grief doesn’t make me stronger, it might kill me. So I persist. I start living the life that I want to live, and I let the stories begin to unfold around me.

And we all lived happily ever onwards.

 

 

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William And His Boots – Caroline Sheehan

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

The first time I was photographed with the boots I knew they were way too big. I stood next to them and they were as tall as me. The photo showed the Valley in the background and those giant boots diminished me. Had I ever been that small? As a young boy I longed to grow up, to be tall enough, so that I could wear those boots. I hungered for the time when I could stride across the Valley in those boots. To be able to be tall enough to wear the boots, rather than stand inside them, or be overwhelmed by them.

They were black and shiny, made of fine grain leather. The boot-maker had crafted them for my great uncle on request. They fitted him perfectly. He wore them walking through the Valley as he went about his work. But he had left them when he went off to France…and he never came back for them. He died over there, before I was born, but I seemed to always know the journey of the boots and their wearer. The boots were worn in, but well cared for. The leather shiny and supple, the soles worn but not shabby, evidence of having been reshod, all scuff marks polished away. They usually stayed in the cupboard under the stairs, in a box that seemed to have been made especially for them. Awaiting the return of the owner to once again place them on the floorboards, sit on the box beside the hearth and don them to walk into another ordinary day, walking.

A dog barked in the Valley below distracting me from my reverie of the photo. That dog was one of the progeny of my great uncle’s dog. A farm dog and a true companion to me.   A border collie, breathtakingly black with one white star on the forehead. Fiercely loyal and constant, perennially gentle. We had walked through the Valley together on many days. Checking this, fixing that, tending to that animal in need, ensuring this fence was repaired and then returning to the cottage at the end of the day.

My great uncle’s dog was gentle too. Whenever the boots came out and were placed beside the hearth, it was if she could sense my great uncle nearby. Her ears would prick up and she would almost stand to attention, waiting. Perhaps it was the smell of the leather, that still contained some essence of my great uncle, perhaps it was the sound of them being placed on the wooden floor, as if in readiness to be donned then off for the walk, striding through the Valley, the pair of them side by side, on their daily journey of repairs and tending.

The old dog would bark in anticipation and my grandmother would shush her. Firmly imploring the dog to settle. Her eyes glistening with the memory of her brother. She knew about loss. She knew about waiting. She knew about remembering. She knew the dog missed the man and that the wait had been too long for that loyal companion. I remember sometimes wondering why my grandmother seemed so sad each time the boots were taken out and then later in the day put away. It only seemed to happen once or twice a year. I didn’t understand then. But in time to come understanding would seep into my consciousness and I would be aware of the loss and the need to remember.

I recognized that memory and loss go together. That loss of a person is found in memory. That in memory the loss can be acute. The recollection can bring tears to the eye, tears of sadness and tears of loss for what could have been. But that bittersweet moment of recollection, while creating certainty that it can never be a newly formed event, still allows for the mind to play out the scene. And so it was for my grandmother whose memory would be tweaked by sound or smell, by bark of dog or scent of leather. The remembering of her brother with the placing of the boots by the hearth was enough to honour him, to remember the man.

As a child I would smell the leather, that heady musty smell, but it held no memory of my great uncle for me. In time to come I would understand that they were his boots. He had worn them in. Worn them while striding across the Valley. And that photo would trigger memories of my grandmother, as I gazed at myself standing there next to the boots once again. And then the smell of those boots would conjure up, not a man gone off to war and not returned, but my grandmother’s kitchen, a place of roast dinners and scones, of marmalade and jam tarts, of lemon curd and the best roast potatoes you have ever had.

Until finally I was old enough to pull all those threads of the story together, to collect the memories of smells and sounds and objects and faces. Then I could understand the import of that photo. It was like William standing in his boots next to his namesake.

 

 

 

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In Another Life… – Zoe Green

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

In another life I would still be in love. I would still be happy with the man that was part of my life for over eleven years.

In another life I would happily be remembering that on this day thirteen years ago, after months of getting close as friends, I realised there was so much more between us. I can still so vividly remember being swept up in the joy and glory of sheer talent and emotion at a Radiohead gig and having this overwhelming yearning for him to move closer in behind me and wrap me in his arms.

In another life, we would be able to reminisce together about how we had shared the floor in a hostel that night so that we could be closer than the bed set up would allow for us to be, but that nothing happened, we just talked and drifted off to sleep, knowing there was something growing deep inside us. We would be laughing about the day shopping for Xmas presents, eating yummy food and stealing ever longer glances at each other, and the smiles we shared, as we grew more certain in this joint realisation of respect and affection.

We would remember how we caught the train back south and both went home separately. I went out with friends and realised how much I missed you so called and asked you to meet me at home. We watched a movie side by side as heat built. You slept in my bed and we curled up together knowing there was something big happening but not quite sure enough to act just yet. We slept.

In another life we would be away somewhere romantic to celebrate our love on this anniversary weekend. We would remember the hotel room that went to waste at our work Xmas party that year because you didn’t sleep there, you slept with me. And this time we knew, we were sure that we were falling for each other and we were so deliriously happy.

Over the years our love grew stronger and we built a great life together. We were so happy for a long time and I truly believed you were the one and our future was together. But something shifted at some stage, imperceptible at first, but from there we ended up slowly falling apart. You sunk into uncertainty, anxiety and depression and we somehow got to a state of complete stagnation.

I tried to talk, listen, understand but was increasingly excluded and stonewalled in my concerns. You ultimately checked out, but still I tried to fix and fight for what we had.

In another life you would have fought for us too.

When I finally called out what was happening more directly, we imploded spectacularly and I really did not see that coming. I pushed for resolution because I was so certain of the strength and depth of our love that in my mind there was no way we wouldn’t make it through. But you ran and hid and retreated further.

You forced my hand. I didn’t want to lose what we had, but you wouldn’t engage. You left me with nowhere to go if I was to retain a shred of self-respect.

I had to let you go. I lost you but I still loved you.

In another life, there wouldn’t have been nearly two years of grief – over a year of sleepless nights, tears, self-doubt and utter bewilderment. No – you would have been there, curled up next to me.

In another life I wouldn’t have endured days and weeks of forcing myself to survive and engage in the world even though my heart was shattered and I could barely breathe. I lost all of my optimism and I literally could not comprehend how we had come to this.

In another life, I wouldn’t be here frozen on the precipice.

Regardless of real personal progress and achievements through the torment of the last couple of years, the spectre of you still remains. Holding me, haunting me.

You weren’t the perfect man and I am not the perfect woman, but what we had was so good and its loss devastated me. I am so close to moving on but this weekend and this month of significant dates has pulled me under water again somehow.

How can I be so raw still? It makes no sense. I still don’t understand where the love went and I question if this broken heart will ever really heal?

In this life, I want to be free of you. I don’t want to hurt anymore. I want to be me without this underlying sadness. I don’t want to cry for your loss ever again.

In this life I want to move forward. I want to be open and not hold myself back from anything because of fear of hurt. I want to live life to the full. I want to love and be loved. I want to laugh, and create, and inspire, and be happy.

I choose to let go of the other life. This is the last push and then it’s done.

That life is no more.

This life is for living and I will be good at that again.

_____________________________

Zoe Green

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Our True Selves – Alexis Sharp

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

It’s a typical Saturday afternoon. I’m squeezing in a cheeky writing class run by the academic crush of my early twenties. She just told me to peel the skin off my potato. Give me a couple of wines and I’ll turn this into erotic fiction, ‘she peeled my clothes off like she would a supple round Desiree’. Stop daydreaming and put pen to paper you idiot; it’s not that type of crush and you’re too unimaginative to write porn. Besides, potato and porn don’t mash.

And did she even say potato, or did I make that up? Am I the potato? I’d be better as a pear. No, I don’t have enough arse to be a pear. Bananas are too phallic. An Orange? Already been done. I’m being concrete again, clearly there’s no need for an actual named vegetable. It’s metaphor you fool; remember you’re with the Creatives today, play nicely. Start peeling.

Speaking of skin, academic crush-lady is far less intimidating in the flesh. All pulp and no peel. What a wonderful skill to have…to just be. Unfortunately, I’m built more along the lines of false front and hidden self. I’ll have to do something about that. She talks and shares and wells and meanders and the class can’t help but be carried away with her. I’m sitting watching her flight-of-fancy and then I realise, she’s gone and taken all our peels! We’re just sitting here in our mushed up warm pulpy flesh! Just her words, no peeler required.

I have to be more real.

It reminds me of the woman I treated in the Emergency Department last night. The blow delivered by her boyfriend had caused the skin over her cheek to split, revealing gouged wet flesh. I sutured her wound and brought the skin edges together while she cried out her raw heaving sorrow. I stitched and she talked and there was no rind, just two women with nothing in common but their presence in this moment.

In the last 24 hours, a beaten woman and my twenty-something hero have reminded me of what it is to be our true selves in a moment. The unedited uncut first draft, not buffed, polished, or laminated, just our raw bleeding, selves.

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When she met him by – Holly Hedge

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

When she met him she felt she was looking into a mirror,  not a reflection, a mirror of her future. Not a a visual mirror, a mirror of thought, a mirror of feeling.
Yes, she could imagine herself with him. Long, languid discussions lazing in a beautiful sun-kissed garden – a picnic rug, a thermos, a newspaper. Lying looking at the sky, hands barely touching, the smell of jasmine in the air, talking about the themes of the day – politics, books, ideals.
When she met him he had no idea she had mapped out a day into their future – it could be a future starting in two hours, it could be a future in 10 years. To her it was what she wanted that afternoon. She wanted the dream to become reality. She wanted him.
When she met him he was standing in front of her, looking uncomfortable, ill at ease not wanting to be anywhere public, anywhere personal. He seemed to disappear into the music that engulfed them. He avoided her eyes, then he looked at her. He avoided her eyes, then he looked at her.
When she met him he was introduced as Jimmy. Jimmy, who had the voice of an old-time singer, a dream from another time……
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Chickpeas Tunisian and the spam castanets – Chloe Gaul.

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

Our heroine Chickpeas Tunisian is half woman half beastess who lives in a 2 bedroom Brunswick smell cave with a cat. She’s a private detective, unformed genius, inveterate root rat and treats her body like a bikie clubhouse. She can find anything and anyone for that is her superpower and is partners with a 50ish year old lone gunman type called Derek who she knows nothing much about. She does not drive.
Morning
Torn between finishing the text to her ex asking for a ‘friends with benefits’ arrangement and  getting stuck in with her vibrator Chickpeas stopped to ponder her future errand. Lying down on the floor where she passed out earlier sometime was helping her a bit. She’d read somewhere you’re more creative lying down and more likely to engage in complex problem solving or even come to think of it napping, delicious quiet sweet…..”Honk!” “Fuck”! Chickpeas bolted upright “What is happening ? …oh yeah the delivery”  she thought leaping towards drawers and throwing what she  assumed was clothing on. ‘Coming!” She yelled at the closed door as she chucked shoes and sunglasses at the right ends of her body. She got downstairs fast. “What took you so long?” Derek remarked in a I do not really care  about the answer kind of way. ‘Doing my nails” Chickpeas swung into the cab of the van “where’s the package?” She asked. Chickpeas liked to allude to her life being more mysterious than it actually was to add an air of enigma to her pick up situations. The package was an unknown brown paper wrapped  box that needed to get to Uncle Knuckles that morning. Now Uncle Knuckles had a lot of strings to his bow and Chickpeas and Derek were new to the operation and the area, they’d been recommended by a mate of a mate so it was probably his dry cleaning but Knuckles needed it and they were getting 300 bucks to get it to him.
Derek moved his 1983 discovery camper through the Brunswick back streets like a turtle on valium “In the back Peas, obviously” ” well lets get there quick , i’ve got shit to do”. “You want to drive?” “Don’t be a penis Derock, you know I can’t” and on it went until they found themselves staring down the barrel of their destination. ‘That it then?” Chickpeas asked. “Yep” replied Derek “In you go”. Chickpeas put her head through the curtains that cut off the cabin from the van proper and held her breath. Derek was paid to hunt feral cats by the Catholic church for environmental reasons and he kept all his ‘things’ in the van. Chickpeas saw what she was looking for and grabbed it while at the same time ignoring everything  else in sight and trying not to breathe.
Ok then? Derek asked “ok then D” she replied stepping away from the van and the festering mass of  Eww in the back.
The sky had started to turn a light grey and a misty rain feathered down  muting the glare of the city and making it softer and even relaxing to be outside of the day time doing a semi sinister transaction for a split of 300 bucks. She popped into the Cornish for a pint and a vegan pizza being 20 minutes early for the meet and pondered her next move.
This was the first real job they’d done for Uncle knuckles  and if she fucked it he’d fix her for sure. The twenty minutes ticked by and no one showed, she had another pint and waited. 40 minutes and still nothing. One more pint and then the phone call “k Derek get over here before I get too pissed, we’ve got a situation..no I don’t know what to do you Massive PENIS..ok, k I’m calming down, fuck you very much, see you in a sec goodbye”.
An hour later Derek and Chickpeas were back at the smellcave down 300 and up an extremely unwanted box.
To be continued…..
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First Time – Sian Davies

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER.

The first time I took off my clothes in front of him I felt cold. Cold like blank paper discarded on the floor, lifeless, empty. He surveyed me forensically as I slowly, deliberately removed each garment feeling confident that was what he wanted. He took no pleasure in the revelation, he could have been waiting for a doctor’s appointment but his eyes never left my body.

“Dear god!” a man’s orgasm boomed through the walls at us. He didn’t blink; he just stared at my crotch. My thumbs slipped under my thong, let it drop to the floor. I stood motionless, waiting for the next beat of our scene.

With surprising grace, he lay down on the sofa and closed his eyes. He lay so still I wondered if he was ill but I couldn’t speak, he had drawn all sound from the atmosphere. I could hear my blood in my ears.

“Go” he whispered. I waited for a moment, uncertain if this was part of it. “Go”, he said, firmly this time then “No” jumped out of my mouth, a bright fish that leapt and fell to the ground between us, gasping for air.

He opened his eyes; I saw a glint of emotion. Was it fear or threat? He appraised me, calculating. I couldn’t hide the rise and fall of my breasts, my hands felt hot. I checked the clock.

“You have ten minutes left,” I said, apologising. “Do you want to touch me?” He closed his eyes again, “God no”

Like a painting we hung there, outside of ourselves in the endless silence. “Face the wall. Put your clothes on. Do it slowly”.

I turned away, bent down to pick up my thong and presented myself to him. I could hear his breath, the first evidence of life. As I fastened my bra his breath quickened. I pulled up my skirt, the discreet thrum of my zip aligned with his barely audible sigh, “Pick up your clothes and leave”.

His tone made my skin prickle, my cheeks washed with heat. I couldn’t remember when I’d last felt shame. I hated him for it. He was shoplifting with dirty hands from the version of myself I’d worked so hard to create. Adrift in a room I’d worked a thousand times, I couldn’t move.

“Get out!” he hissed. I turned on him and with the voice of a child who still believes the world cares for them I said, “I’ll call security”.   Then he laughed, a laugh so full and human it disarmed me for a moment. He smiled with infinite kindness, “I’ll see you next week”.

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