Author: Veronica Foale

  • Growing up

    Screeching your displeasure, you throw yourself at my lap. I enfold you in my arms and watch as you sprawl across me, all careless limbs and wide eyes. You’ve gotten so big, so fast and I wonder where the time has gone. How did you go from what you were to what you are?

    You were born in a rush, a hasty exit that we weren’t expecting. I put my hands down and caught you myself, bringing you up to my chest. You screwed up your face and screamed at the indignity of it all, being thrust from your haven of warmth into a world of nakedness and cold, of bright lights and voices unmuffled by amniotic fluid. I held you close and whispered to you. They clamped your cord and I cut it myself,  making us two separate beings, no longer one person in two bodies. I had held you within my body for nine long months, now it was time to hold you without.

    I watch you now, crawling across the carpet, racing away from me as I struggle to dress you; change you; inflict my will upon you. You have your own wants and they don’t always mesh with mine. I want you to be warm and comfortable, I want you to be happy. You want to be left alone, to not be poked, prodded and removed from the electrical outlets.

    You pull yourself to standing and look at me, pleased with yourself. Clapping, I tell you how clever you are and we move on from there, your increased mobility helping to leave the traces of baby behind.

    Of an evening, I snuggle you into my breast and feed you, the curve of your head matching the curve of my exposed skin. You wiggle around, contorting yourself into new positions without my help, getting yourself comfortable before sighing and falling asleep, my nipple still in your mouth.

    I savour these moments, knowing that you’re growing up faster than I ever imagined.

    Isaac 30 minutes old.

    Isaac, Christmas 09

  • Christmas

    The anticipation of an event is always worse than the event itself. I wasn’t looking forward to Christmas. The thought in fact left me with a ball of nerves and anticipation in the pit of my stomach, wondering how we were going to get through it.

    In the end though, the excitement of the children swept all of us up in a tsunami of joy and sugar. By the evening, I felt like I’d been battered against the rocks all day, but it was a good battered, not a war weary exhaustion.

    Boxing day, we were left with a detritus of packaging and watermelon rind. Slowly we cleaned up in preparation for another family barbeque, an informal affair. We sat around, watching the children play and eating and if I thought about the person we were missing, it was only briefly.

    I couldn’t afford to be sad you see. Because of the children.

    Boxing day evening though, as I cleant up yet more packaging and randomly dropped cherry pits, I was allowed to be sad. I was able to miss her, my grandmother. She of the larger than life personality and the most holiday cheer.

    It was a hard year, this year. I watched her die, in front of me with tears in my eyes. I nodded my head and along with the rest of us there, I gave her permission to go. It was a hard year, traversing the realms of grief, watching those around me walk the same path in a slightly different fashion.

    It was a hard year, as I thought about things I’d not had to think about before, as I helped pack up a house for sale and weighed possessions in my hands.

    In the end though, the anticipation of Christmas was worse than the day itself. I’ve got the children to thank for that.

    But for a while, I think I need to curl up into myself and be sad, to miss her desperately, to want her here with us. Selfish, yes, but she was mine and we were hers and not having her here leaves us all lacking.

    And that lacking breaks my heart.

  • But where have all the writers gone?

    ‘Where have all the writers gone?!’ she cried, clasping her hands together in despair. Frantically she clicked through the blogosphere, looking for writing.

    And here is Nancy on her first outing to the ZOO! See her ribbon? Isn’t she cute! one blog screamed at her.

    ‘Are you a writer?’ she said hopefully.

    The blog scoffed at her. ‘No! I am a MOMMYblogger. Hear me ROAR.’

    Hastily she skipped away before the poison pen could destroy her.

    Then! I spilled red wine ALL over the carpet and OMG I was SO UPSET. BUT! Now, there are these awesome…

    ‘Are you a writer?’ she asked timidly, a little scared now from her MOMMYblogger experience, but still hopeful.

    ‘How dare you!’ screeched the second blog, now a little stained with red wine. ‘Compare ME? To a penniless writer? Of course I’m not a writer! I’m a reviewer. Do you need anything reviewed? I can do it, you just need to send it to me, along with a second sample for me to give away…’

    Frantically she pressed her back button, only to be faced with the MOMMYblogger again.

    Home! Home! Home! Three times she clicked her home button and luckily, her home page loaded quickly. The relative safety of Google sat looking at her.

    One last try she thought. Or maybe two. Surely there are writers out there somewhere?

    A third time she clicked.

    I’m so lonely. She read. So lonely. The baby isn’t any company and I’m stuck at home all day changing nappies. Didn’t I used to be a human being too? Worthy? Now who am I…

    Carefully she asked ‘Are you a writer?’

    The blog looked at her sadly. ‘No. I am not a writer. I am merely journaling my days as a mother, so that when my daughter has children she can read it. I am not a writer.’

    Sad now, the woman clicked away.

    One last try she thought.

    And there I stood, surrounded by emptiness, thoughts running through my head…

    ‘Excuse me.’ she said. ‘But I couldn’t help noticing you. Are you a writer!’

    ‘Of course I am!’ the blog scoffed. Then carefully ‘why?’

    ‘Well because I would like to be a writer too.’

    The blog clapped it’s hands. ‘OH GOOD! We need more writers here in the blogosphere. Come with me. I’ll show you how to be a writer.’

    The woman followed the blog, up hill and down dale, through Google and back out the other side. Finally, they stood in front of a small house. The blog walked up to the door and knocked. The door opened.

    ‘Oh! It’s you. Come in, come in. Who have you brought? Never mind. We need all the writers we can get.’

    The woman followed the two blogs through the house, until they came to a room filled with tiny little people. A baby gate on the door kept them inside. The noise was deafening, nearly a hundred little people clamouring to be heard over one another.

    The blog looked at the woman.

    ‘Take out your writer.’

    ‘Pardon?’

    ‘Your writer. Take it out!’

    The woman didn’t understand. She wanted to be a writer, not get rid of her writer.

    ‘I don’t understand.’

    The blog sighed. ‘Your inner writer. Take it out.’

    ‘But I don’t know how.’

    The blog looked at her sharply. ‘You don’t know how?’

    ‘No.’

    ‘Reach into your soul. Inside you will find a little writer. Pull it out. This is the only way to becoming one of us.’

    The woman did. Reaching into her soul, she felt around until she could feel her little writer. Tugging, she pulled.

    It hurt. Oh how it hurt, but she pulled anyway. If this was the only way, then she was determined to do it too. She felt something inside her give and carefully, she extracted a tiny little caricature of herself.

    The blog gasped. ‘Oh the poor little dear! Look at how sick she is. You’ve been neglecting her!’

    The woman was taken aback. ‘No I haven’t. I’ve been trying to be a writer.’

    ‘Oh but you’ve been doing it all wrong and look how badly you’ve messed it up. It’s going to take weeks before you can write anything of your own.’

    The woman looked at her little writer sadly.

    ‘Now, give her to the Nanny.’

    ‘What?!’

    ‘Give your writer to the Nanny! She will look after her for you until she is strong and well.’

    Carefully, the woman handed her writer over to the Nanny. The Nanny bustled away with the writer curled in her hands.

    ‘Come and have a cup of tea’ the blog said.

    The woman felt empty inside now but she agreed. Seating herself, she peppered the blog with questions.

    ‘Can I visit?’

    ‘No. Not for a while. Your writer needs time alone, without you bothering it. It needs to be with other writers.’

    ‘But I can’t leave her alone! She needs me. It was hard enough to hand her over to the Nanny and walk away. You can’t expect me to go away and not visit.’ Tears streamed down her face. The emptiness inside grew bigger and bigger.

    ‘What she needs is a group of other writers to play with. She needs our group exercises and to build her trust in writing again. Don’t worry, she will be safe and supported here. We will keep her healthy and strong. We won’t let anyone criticise her.’

    The woman sniffed, still not convinced this was the only way to becoming a writer.

    ‘What do you do here?’

    ‘Oh everything.’ the blog announced. ‘We do group exercises, we allow your writer to stretch her wings without any criticism, we foster trust and we teach your writer how to network.’

    ‘But what about the technical skills of writing? Do you teach those?’

    ‘Of course not!’ the blog scoffed. ‘Who needs technical skills when there is a group of supportive writers to watch your back?’

    ‘I thought you were going to teach her how to be a writer!’

    ‘We are. Don’t fuss your pretty little head. When she comes back to you, she will be able to write.’

    ‘Will it be any good though? The writing?’

    The blog looked at the woman, hard. ‘Good is subjective though, isn’t it. As long as the other writers think she is good, she will be fine.’

    ‘You said there were group exercises. What are they?’

    ‘We give out a topic and all the writers are expected to write on that topic. Then we run around and read everyone’s writing and make sure that the writers have done it properly, to our standards.’

    ‘I think I read some of those, a few weeks back. They all sounded the same.’

    The woman sipped at her cup of tea and looked at the blog. Her advertising had started to flash a little faster now with all these questions.

    ‘Good. That’s how they know they’re doing it right.’

    ‘But I don’t want my writer to sound like other writers.’

    ‘I’m sorry. This is the only way to become a writer and not be merely a blogger.’ The blog’s advertising flashed dangerously now.

    The woman finished the last of her tea and stood up.

    ‘I’m sorry, but I don’t think I can be part of this. I want to be my own writer, not be part of your giant writer.’

    The blog looked shocked. ‘Without us, you’ll be just a blogger!’

    The woman thought about it. ‘I think I can handle that.’ She walked across the hall to the room filled with other people’s writers. In the corner, her’s sat huddled alone. Stepping over the gate, she rushed over to it and picked it up.

    ‘Poor little pet’ she murmured. ‘I’m sorry, I should have left you how you were. You don’t want to sound like everyone else, do you.’ Her writer shook her head sadly.

    The woman stepped back over the gate, careful not to crush anyone else’s writer. Stepping lightly now, she left the house with the writers and the blogs clamouring after her.

    ‘The cheek! To think she can get along without us!’

    She smiled before tucking her writer back into her soul. Her empty feeling dissipated and she could almost feel her writer snuggle back down.

    Ideas rushed into her head as she made her way home again and she thought about paragraphs she could write when she got home. She knew now where all the writers had gone and she didn’t want to be one of them.

    A faint cry of ‘You’re doing it ALL WRONG!’ floated to her ears.

    She didn’t care. Right or wrong, she was doing this her way.

    No one else mattered.

  • Around the world – Tasmania

    Today I’m participating in Shannon’s ‘Around the World in 80 Blogs’. You can find the other participants here. I personally am looking forward to clicking around the world and finding myself some new blogs to read as well.

    I live in Tasmania, at the bottom of Australia. I’ve done posts about Tasmania (with photos!) before on my other blog if you’re interested.

    I’m about 50 minutes drive from Hobart, the capital city. Being Tassie though, that leaves me in the middle of nowhere. I’ve got farmland on three sides of me and a road on the fourth side, with more farmland across the road. Last year my neighbouring paddocks held sheep and the occasional herd of cows.

    I suppose I am in the middle of a tiny little township, there is a pub [a bad pub. food is shocking, I’ve seen inside their kitchen] and maybe half a dozen houses within a kilometre radius.

    Last year I took photos of sheep. Lots and lots of sheep.

    Gambolling

    This year however, I’m surrounded by a sea of Opium poppies.

    Yay me.

    Poppies

    Sea of Poppies

    Sea of Poppies

    I’ve also got abandoned houses to photograph.

    Empty House

    And creeks where bushrangers used to swim. Author Nan Chauncy lived here and now, it is named after her. Chauncy Vale.

    Rocks in the Creek

    We don’t get very much snow where I am living at the moment. The occasional dusting on the surrounding hills is about it.

    Snow

    You can’t see the mountain from where I live, but Mt Wellington is gorgeous. I could happily live underneath it (again – we used to live in the city, underneath the mountain) if it wasn’t for the damp and the cold. Also snow. I don’t do well with cold and wet.

    Mt Wellington from the car

    Mt Wellington from the car again.

    I take a lot of photos from the car. Sorry about that.

    The Derwent River

    I don’t go into Hobart very often anymore, as I don’t drive. I miss being within walking distance of the city.

    Hobart

    A few months ago, it flooded here. Rained and rained and rained. I’m fairly sure that the underneath of my house has only just started to dry out. My grey water system and the back corner of my paddock still hasn’t recovered.

    Flooding

    [This is not the back corner of my paddock. This is the river, breaking it’s banks and flooding my neigbouring paddock.]

    Hills

    I’m almost tempted to nip over and pinch one of the pine trees for our Christmas tree this year. Do you think the farm manager would notice a missing tree? Then again, that is part of the poppy paddock. It’s probably wise not to venture into that one this year.

    Tasmania has a lot (A LOT) of spiders. Snakes too. All our snakes are poisonous so I do my utmost to avoid any and all snakes. It didn’t stop a snake scaring the shit out of me a few times a week when I was a kid though. There are also lots of insects.

    Redback Spider

    Cicada

    We’ve also got echidnas. Aren’t they cute?

    Echidna

    And Blue Tongue Lizards.

    Blue Tongue Lizard

    Pretty architecture too.

    Church

    So really, all you’ve learnt from this foray into my corner of the world is that I live in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by a sea of poppies.

    We get good sunsets though. I’m not complaining.

    Sunset

  • On Sadness.

    The music plays while the baby crawls around and I vacuum. He smiles at me and I smile back, playing while I work. I shut the vacuum cleaner off and look around. Taking a deep breath, I walk outside and find the hallway runner that we brought home the other day.

    Crying, I unroll it through the hallway.

    Step by step, more of it is exposed as my tears fall to the floor.

    The baby thinks it’s a great game, but I scoop him up and tuck him into his bouncer. He grumbles loudly while I turn the vacuum on again.

    Inch by inch, I vacuum the new carpet.

    Vigorously.

    Sobbing.

    Slowly the strands of hair stuck to the carpet come away. Silver, brown and gold, they collect in the bottom of the vacuum cleaner, to be discarded as rubbish.

    I cry harder.

    No one should have to vaccum their dead grandmother’s hair off a hall runner.

    ***

    I wrote this over a month ago now. I am still finding hair stuck to the hall runner.

    Sigh.