Mar 11 2008

Other kinds of babies…

Tag: Saffron noodlescerebralmum @ 9:41 pm

So, I’ve spent the last two days in bed unwell and miserable. Yesterday, (Shock! Horror!) I didn’t even turn my computer on. But I’m getting better and here I am again, thinking of all the things that I haven’t done. Is one ever able to catch up? Anyway…

On Saturday, Big Sis’ favourite cat (her baby) was hit by a car. Our neighbour came and knocked on the door. She’d seen him slam into the gutter and then dash off only to make it as far as the neighbour’s garden bed. So there he was, lying in the bark, Big Sis too upset to hear what the women were telling her about what had happened, while B and I organised blankets and a basket to take him to the vet. He spent the weekend in ‘emergency’ and was just transferred to the regular vet today but we’re still not sure how he is. It looks like one eye is gone and but the scans haven’t shown anything too frightening.

They are a little worried about brain damage but he seems to be responsive when Big Sis has visited so that’s promising. To be honest, I’m not sure what the vets can do at this point except wait and see how he improves so perhaps we’ll be able to bring him home tomorrow. He has peed, so his kidneys seem to be okay but he’s still being fed with a syringe. I just don’t know how Big Sis will be if he doesn’t make it.

But on to other, nicer news… I didn’t tell you about my first philosophy lecture last week.

I walked in to the “small” lecture hall which held only about 150 people and heard this booming “No way!” coming from the centre of the seating and looked up to see one of my ‘babies’ unfolding his 6′ frame from his chair and waving at me. I say ‘baby’ because when I was cocktail waitressing, I had my ‘baby boys’ (19-22 year old bartenders) whom I adored and who adored me in return.

This particular one was my favourite and when I changed jobs, I took him with me. But I’ve been out of the game for a while now and hadn’t seen him in ages. Even though I knew he’d attended the same university, I thought he graduated last year but apparently he had broken his wrist and then got a Staph infection so with his hospital stay and his inability to hold a camera (he’s a photography major) there he was…

Which means I have a friend at university!

Of course, he’s not entirely a baby any more, and I’m a little older and a little more faded and flabby, so his company isn’t the vanity-food it once was, but it’s nice to have someone to sit with in the sun between lectures and also to get a lift to the train station after class, removing 2 parts of my 4 part trip to home. (Tram, tram, train, bus. Grrr.)

And it’s even better to have someone to argue with about morality and and objectivism and relativism (the subject of today’s philosophy lecture) because that’s the kind of conversation philosophy and I are all about.

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Dec 01 2007

The Cerebral Mum, from another perspective…

Tag: MemoriesHG @ 10:53 pm

[As you know, I’m am struggling to figure out who I am right now so a little while ago I asked an old friend to tell me who he saw, both in the past and now, hoping that I would recognise something by looking through someone else’s eyes. This is the guest post he wrote for me. It made me smile. And left me with many things to think about. ~cerebralmum]

This is going to be a roughly chronological remembrance. A collection of moments that I hope will also serve to reflect your character as I see it.

I met you in 1994. I went to high school with L, your then-boyfriend. Before I met you, the main thing I knew about you was that you’d gotten my friend into Tori Amos. He was giving me a lift somewhere, and the CD was playing in his car. I was struck by the melancholy whimsy of Happy Phantom. I ended up a much bigger fan of her than he did.

The first time I actually met you is still vivid. We were on our way to the beach, L giving a carload of us a lift as usual. We stopped to pick you up on our way. As I stepped through the front door, you came thundering down the hall, wearing a pair of jeans that would comfortably have fit me, tightly belted, a clinging black singlet top, pigtails, and a scowl, bellowing, “We can’t go yet! I can’t find my TAMPONS!” L trailed down the hall after you smiling sheepishly and shrugging limply as if in apology. I failed to see what he had to apologise for – I was still laughing. So there you were: brash, unconventional, confronting, funny, honest to a fault, and, evidently, bleeding.

Early impressions: You were fun. You were loud. You were sharp. Incredibly observant. You were enthusiastic - it seemed like your energy was boundless. Sometimes you seemed to try on new personalities for a day or two, just to see what would happen. I remember thinking it must be tiring to go out with you. Your curiosity was huge, and it seemed like you’d talk to anyone about anything. You were idiosyncratic in your tastes - in music, clothes, literature, art, décor. You thought deeply about things, and considered your opinions. I relished your point of view on issues, and always enjoyed talking with you. You were always elbow-deep in some fascinating book.

I ended up getting to know you better, while you were sharing a house in Glance Street with another of my high school friends and C, one of your oldest friends. I spent a lot of time there – it became a home away from home for my close-knit geeky crowd. Many late night videos, talk fests, and parties. I went out for a short while with C. My first real heartbreak, that one.

I watched you working through a lot at that time. You read voraciously, taking what you needed and moving on. Lots of stuff on journeys and archetypes. I could almost see you piecing these things together, and making them your own, feeding back into your own narrative. You were bold and systematic in this self-exploration. More than anyone I’d met, you were committed to really looking at yourself.

You made things: decoupage, furniture, decorative pieces. It seemed to be therapeutic to you to make things with your hands. There was also a restlessness to your activity sometimes – an inability to stay still. You couldn’t stop moving. It seemed like the flipside of the therapeutic aspect. You didn’t necessarily feel better, but the movement gave you something to do. I heard about the cleaning at four in the morning. I saw for myself the overnighters on The Table.

You showed me your writing. You handed me sheets one at a time, watching my face as I read. I thanked you, and I still do, for sharing your voice with me. Reading your writing is like speaking to you.

I remember you curled on my lap once, sobbing and shaking while I held you and stroked your hair. You stopped and looked up at me, clear-eyed, and asked, “Are all your female friends fucked up?” I had to stop and think about that one. I believe I eventually came back with a lame “…not */all/* of them…”

I arrived late for the Epic Party. The wrestling was over, sadly. You pounced on me in the hallway, shrieking, and bit me hard on the neck. I was happy to see you too.

Tattoo - Neil Gaiman's DeliriumI remember the first time I saw your tattoo. It was a Vietnamese restaurant on Smith Street. One by one, you led the dinner guests to the foyer of the toilets to flash them your new ink, grinning. I loved it, and told you so. It fit you well: she is the youngest of the Endless, who sees more than people know, who knows delight and pain, and who isn’t as mad as people might think.

L ended your relationship in bad circumstances. In retrospect, it was one of the key incidents that made me look at him more closely and see that we were drifting apart. His new girl reminded several of us of you, in looks at least. One of us accidentally called her by your name in front of him while we were in Brisbane for his wedding. Oops!

(I’m not sure if I ever told you about his wedding. I got tremendously drunk at the reception, and came oh so very very close to standing up and adding an impromptu speech, because the “official” one mentioned that he’d met her on a cricket trip to Brisbane, but left out the fact that he was still with you at the time. I felt this was a terrible oversight, and barely kept myself seated. I later shook his hand on the dance floor and complimented him on his continuing excellent taste in women, and only avoided telling him how I would happily shag his wife because a good friend thankfully grabbed my elbow and steered me away.)

After everyone moved out of Glance Street, we largely lost touch. It was a totally benign neglect, at least on my part. I always asked after you when I saw C, and asked her say hi for me. I think you two didn’t see as much of each other in those days, as she moved to the bush. I got the odd update, but I didn’t see you for about ten years.

I met you again at C’s wedding. It was also my first meeting with Caspar. My immediate reaction was “Wow, what a cute kid!” closely followed by “Why did I lose almost complete touch with this person? I really like her!” My strong suspicion that you and my wife would get on well was confirmed.

Caspar doesn’t seem to have changed you so much as become a focal point for several of the attributes I’d seen in you before: your attentiveness, your creativity, your sense of humour, your gift for observation.

Seeing you again has been a great thing. From spending time with you in the flesh and following your blog, it seems almost impossible that there was so huge a hiatus in our friendship. I’m glad we’re back in touch.

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Nov 11 2007

The Shadow…

Tag: In a dark wood, wandering...cerebralmum @ 8:21 pm

I am trying to extricate all the puzzle pieces.

I am thinking about archetypes and the shadow and the ego and the persona and I cannot entangle one from the other, if I even recognise them at all. I have an inkling that my masculine side, a strength I grew, has gained too tight a grip on me. I feel, but I feel in principle. I feel and express those feelings rationally. I manage them. As I write this, it doesn’t seem like a bad thing to me. I wonder if it is?

I wrote this excerpt not very long ago, a part of a post I did not finish which meant to make a comparison between Big Sis’ and my way of dealing with strong emotion…

My mind works in a way that conceptualises, intellectualises my emotions. My emotions are filtered cerebrally. I am not without passion though, and if my emotions pass through these filters (clearing the debris of petty, narcissistic, self-aggrandising or self-destructive ones hopefully) I express them. The principle I work on is this: It is either important enough to be addressed or it isn’t important enough to hold on to.

Obviously, this kind of negotiation within myself involves trying to determine the motivations of the person I am responding to as much as trying to understand my own. In any given situation, another’s intentions or needs may be more important, even if my feelings are justified. For me, relationships are an endless cycle of these types of negotiations. I have no expectation that people should always behave toward me in a way that suits my needs, but I chose to act when a line is crossed. My intention is not necessarily to change the other person’s behaviour; it is to make them aware of how their behaviour effects me. At worst, I then learn that they don’t care. At best, I succeed in communicating.

Is there something wrong in my thinking? I think perhaps it is that “thinking” has too tight a grip on me, that my filtering system is making parts of me feel voiceless.

The possibility of that is painful. Because I think (I cannot stop saying I think…) that this rational strength, this reasonableness, was the boon I brought back the last time I went into the dark wood. How awful that I have corrupted it. Just… how awful.

I have to ask myself, all those years ago, did I not grow at all? Did I just change modalities?

Last night, when I wrote the word connection, something I wrote in my novel came to my mind, but I could not find it to quote. As I was searching, I realised how unpalatable my protagonist seemed to me - although I love her. I realised that I did not want to reveal her here, in this context. I realised that she engendered shame in me. As a literary character, I am proud of her. How does she stand in relation to me?

The shadow embodies all that is repressed, pushed aside, locked up, forgotten-not only the seven deadly sins, but also the introvert’s extraversion, the intuitive’s sensing side, the thinker’s feeling function, and the emotional person’s thinking side. The shadow contains what we left behind in childhood, our wishes, and our dreams. The Third Eve

Once, I considered her character a shadow, and I learned from her as I began to write her story. She is a far, far from evolved person. She struggles with her identity as a woman, a daughter; she seeks power and is destructive toward men, she drives one man to suicide, aborting her child, acting out in opposition to the mythology of her childhood. She is the Shadow in control.

I’m sure in the beginning, I identified with her in some ways. After all, she came from within me. She did not appear out of thin air. I remember that not long after I gave those first few passages to my boyfriend to read, our relationship began to circle the drain. I always thought the two events were connected.

She frightened him.

It was obvious at the time that she frightened him. That he felt emasculated by it. I made strong arguments about the distinction between a character and an author, yet his visceral response remained. Perhaps his instincts were correct. When I look back at that relationship, I see a story being acted out. I played the fey maiden needing to be saved, and he played the role not, as he thought, of the knight in shining armour, but of my loyal page.

I used him as a mirror to show me my Self as beautiful. I used him to make me feel safe and with that safety, I grew. My growth shifted the power structure in that strange play of ours, until he was faced with the untenable fact that his role was not the one which supported his ego. So childish was our bond; it could not be sustained.

But where did that Shadow go? The one who was first beautiful, then strong, then frightening? I think I danced with her for years. Perhaps I never really incorporated her. Perhaps I just chose parts of her that I could shape at will. With my rational mind. If so, perhaps she is roaring again.

Perhaps my “protagonist” can provide me some clue as to what is going on beneath the surface of my world. I don’t like that now, in my virginal state as Mother, I will need to dig symbolically into my relationship with the masculine. But I think it is that screaming Lilith and that remnant Persephone who have been restrained for too long.

Maybe. I wonder how clearly I’m seeing. Everything is blurred. Dark and blurred. I think my eyes are white. I think I am blind.

STORY

Blindman, will you be my lover
will you love all that you can see
will you be my analyst, my piano-ist
and unlock the shape of me

I thought it was you who sat at my head
held my mind in your white-vice eyes
and called me child

I thought it was you who kept me fed
drank my tears and never told lies
and called me child

Blindman, will you be my lover
will you love all that you can see
will you be my analyst, my piano-ist
and unlock the shape of me

I wanted it to be you who made me forget
who lost my age in a glass palace cage
and called me child

Blindman, will you be my lover
will you love all that you can see
will you be my analyst, my piano-ist
help me dance across the keys
and unlock the shape of me

And a voice says…
I saw you once upon a time
when your skin was still green
and your hair was still gold
and I cradled my voice in the
flame of your hair but I
can’t untell you child…

My head is held
I can’t untell you child
My head is held
I can’t untell you child
Call me child
I can’t untell you…

I need a blind man.

[Original Lyrics - 199?]

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Sep 08 2007

Vanity thy name is woman…

Tag: Galleriescerebralmum @ 9:55 am

I found some pics from my old website in the dark recesses of what is kindly called my computer’s filing system. I thought I’d share them.

And yes, that picture with the bubbles is from the party I talked about in The fable my tattoo tells me…

View gallery…

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Sep 06 2007

One of the few joys of packing…

Tag: Memoriescerebralmum @ 12:11 pm

I’m still struggling through packing up my house but after months of procrastination I’m finally on the move.

I’ve become ruthless. After laboriously sorting through every tiny item and trying to decide what to keep, what to recycle and what to toss, I’ve had enough. 12 industrial strength garbage bags of clothes for goodwill. That’s enough. I’m throwing it all out the window.

Literally.

There is a huge pile of garbage on my back patio just waiting to be bagged and binned. I may never quite be Zen, but how on earth - Why on earth? - did I amass all that stuff? No wonder I feel so weighed down by the whole process.

There is one small joy in stripping all that clutter away though. The memories. Those odd little scraps amidst all the debris that make you recall things you thought you had forgotten.

That film script I started but never finished, entitled Triptych: A Road Movie which is almost a cross between Female Perversions and The Wizard of Oz.

That poor, bedraggled porcelain doll I named Molly in primary school, which my Opa bought for me on his one and only visit to Australia, a country he swore he would never set foot in. But that’s another story. I had the most wonderful Opa.

The longneck beer coolers from the Grand Final Party at La La Land. I didn’t work that night, and I loathe football, but we hung out there all day, drinking and talking. A sunny afternoon in a dark bar, with musicians and cocktail waitresses, bartenders and actors, sprawled over the sofas and the floor, surrounded by red walls, passionate about everything.

A price list from Little Matchgirl Muffins, my tiny business selling baked goods to the cafe next to my office. Up at4am making chocolate éclairs and passionfruit tarts and caramel and almond fudge before settling in to do data entry for nine hours, my clothes smelling like cookies.

That fax with the phone number that just said, For things to do with Baileys after a car accident… And more recollections of life in bars after closing.

Those scribbled notes on the back of the Tranny Bingo list from my 30th birthday, especially the one that simply read, Happy Birthday Rayette…, a reference to Five Easy Pieces, one of my favourite movies, from one of my favourite boys who is now a man I respect so, so much.

And there is a box of love letters and trinkets still waiting to be explored. I haven’t opened it yet. There is only so much you can fit into a smile and mine will already last all day. It is slightly Mona Lisa but I can feel it.

In my eyes.

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Aug 28 2007

The fable my tattoo tells me…

Tag: Memoriescerebralmum @ 12:17 am

Tattoo of Neil Gaiman's Delirium

Motherbumper wanted to hear more stories about people’s body art. So this is mine.

Unlike Girl’s Gone Child, I do not “remember what I was wearing, feeling, and why I walked through the door,” but I do remember where I was in my life. These are the memories which return to me as I contemplate my tattoo:

I remember the beautiful arrogance of my youth, the arrogance of a girl who had left home at a time of her own choosing.

And I remember that boy, not yet a man, with the chocolate curls and the gloriously old fashioned name who often climbed in through my bedroom window to read Keats and listen to me speak although I would never let him touch me.

I remember throwing teacups and crying huddled in my closet.

I remember that party when the bed was moved into the back yard with the living room rug thrown over it, when the living room was cleared for dancing and we made a foam-room by lining the bathroom walls with black garbage bags and filling the tub up to the jets with litres of bubble bath.

I remember a girl named Lisa saying, “Thank-you,” after my friend and I had told the stories of our childhoods, the stories no child should ever have to tell.

I remember the first song lyrics I ever wrote.

when the shadow falls away i try to face all the pain
when the child comes out to play i try to turn her away
because the lover starts in again
i open my limbs to him
he opens the wound

insane

I remember reading everything I ever wrote to anyone who would listen.

I remember that power I had which I did not yet fully understand, which I used brutally against that boy with the chocolate curls after a night sitting on the floor in a corner of the uni bar talking to a girl who had far worse stories to tell than mine and a tattoo of the same comic book character. I remember pushing him hard up against a brick wall after we had left, crushing him with my body and kissing him deeply before turning and walking away.

Just because I could.

I remember my righteous anger.

I remember feeling fully justified and sure about everything I did.

I remember peeling back all my flesh, word by word, and exposing myself literally and figuratively to a world which could never contain me.

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