Less a Home.

I’ve been homeless twice before in my life. Not out on the street homeless, thankfully, but I’ve certainly slept in my car on more than one occasion. I’ve crashed on friend’s couches, in their spare rooms, on a mattress on their living room floor. I’ve even slept in a hastily constructed bed in an actual factory.

Both occasions of previous homelessness were after the break down of a relationship, so I had some semblance of control, in retrospect. This time, however, I am homeless because the house I was living in is being demolished and nobody – NOBODY – will accept me for a new property. I have gone from almost always getting the property I wanted pretty much straight away, to being rejected multiple times for properties that aren’t worth the rent being asked. That’s the thing, even if I could afford some of these properties, I have learned over the last year that I cannot guarantee that I would even be accepted for one of these properties – despite my renting history. And this seems to be because I’m a self-employed business owner who is also on Centrelink. And I have cats.

The term “housing crisis” doesn’t seem to cut it. I’ve heard a few landlords complain about rising land tax or interest rates or whatever (I don’t know, I’m not and never will be a homeowner), which is then put on to the tenants as higher rent. But here’s the thing, we’ve seen exponential growth in rental prices over the past 5 years that aren’t matched by income growth. Example: There’s a 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom house for rent in Carnegie in 2025 that is going for $625 a week. In 2021, it leased for $550. In 2010, it was leased for $450. So, over 11 years – 2010 to 2021 – the rental price only went up $100 a week. Then suddenly, in the last 4 years, it shot up by $75.

Another 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom property in Hughesdale: circa 2013 rent was $460 a week. It went up to $495 in 2022. Today, it’s advertised at $650 a week.

Now, for many people, this seems to be reasonable. It’s not for me, as my income has barely changed since 2022. So how am I supposed to afford a $650 a week rent when I have a $530 a week rent-worthy income? Someone explain that to me without resorting to the out-of-touch conservative opinion of “get a better job.”

The thing is, I have a decent income. It’s not huge by any stretch of the imagination, but I’m not at the bottom of the barrel. I can stretch my income to cover a higher rent, I’m canny in the ways of making it work. But here’s a story for you. I applied for a property that was listed at $590 a week. The real estate agent said I had a good application. I didn’t get the property. Less than a week later, the property has been relisted at $570 a week. Apparently, I’m so unattractive to landlords that they’d rather drop the price to get a more desirable tenant than take a chance on a self-employed actor who was willing to pay $20 more.

I don’t get it.

We’re told rental prices are going up because interest rates have risen. We’re told there’s a shortage of rental properties overall, so supply isn’t meeting demand. We’re told there’s extreme competition for properties. If this is so, why then are people like myself being rejected for properties that are then relisted for less?? It doesn’t make sense! Something else is going on here, something far more insidious. My inner suspicious quasi-conspiracy theorist is saying that They (yes, capital T they) are trying to push the undesirables out of the inner city. The artists, the poors, the disabled, the depressed. We’re unworthy of not just good housing, but any housing. Even social and commission housing is backed up. There’s a 10 year wait to even get a look in. Believe me, I’ve checked.

(Side story: I grew up in New Zealand’s version of commission housing, what we called state housing. My childhood home was a badly haunted, poorly maintained house in one of South Auckland’s most notorious suburbs. My mother made that house into a home and taught me the importance of creating your own space in any environment through that house, but it was dark time in my young life. The energy in that place exacerbated my mother’s violence, and I spent a lot of the 12 years we lived there in survival mode. The well-meaning people who now suggest that I apply for social housing have a limited understanding of the connotations I have with that kind of housing, and how much of a backward step that would be for me mentally. Having said that, I have looked into and even started an application for social housing, because I’m 48 years old and should not be sleeping in my friends’ spare bedroom on the other side of town from my clients. For the third time in my life.)

I got really low last night, thinking about all this. My cats are staying with another friend on the other other side of town, and I miss them dreadfully. I recently had a crisis of faith regarding my career, and last night it all crashed into each other and created a despair soup that I splashed around in for a while. I cried. Quite hard. Last week, my father made a short sighted comment about my predicament. “I’m sorry, Kristina,” he said. “There’s no knight in shining armour coming to save you.” I got pissed off and shot back, “When has there ever been a knight in shining armour to save me, Dad? I don’t expect one because there’s never been one!” And it’s true. I’ve had help, most definitely. No more so than within the last 8 years. But no one’s ever “saved” me. I don’t think anyone can (and if anyone claimed they could, I would be very distrustful of them).

We’re in a seriously fucked up place as a society right now. Like, my problems are the least of my problems, if you know what I mean. It’s very easy to fall into despondency; to give into the anguish. I’m in no place to offer advice to anyone as I flap around uselessly in my soup but perhaps acknowledging that no one is coming to save us at least roots us in reality.

Just be kind, ffs. I’m saying this to myself as well as you, reader. And you, Universe, who seems to be merrily throwing chaos into the cosmos. I don’t know what’s going to happen. I don’t know how things will or will not change. Last night I wanted to die, today I wanted crumpets. Somewhere in the middle there might be the answer.

Special

The world feels entirely impossible to live in right now. The war in Ukraine. The ongoing conflict between Palestine and Israel. US politics, UK politics, Australians voting no to our First Nations people having a voice, and let’s not forget Jacinda Ardern stepping down from being one of the most influential world leaders we’ve ever seen. Some of us are still reeling from that.

Then there’s stuff closer to home. We’re in the middle of a housing crisis here in Melbourne. It’s truly fucked. I’ve only ever been rejected from a new home maybe twice in the entirety of my renting history, but in this month alone I’ve had four rejections. I already have problems with rejection (and I’m an actor. Go figure) but this is ridiculous.

Everyone I know is hurting in some way, including myself. It seems that there’s an increase in diagnoses of neurodivergence and mental disorders, and many of us seem happy to use these as excuses or reasons not to try anymore – myself included. That’s not a criticism by any stretch. The first time I noticed it happening in someone else (and was irritated by it) was a bit of a smack in the face as I recognised it in myself. And it’s never fun to realise that oneself is just as much of a jerk as another.

See, there’s this pattern. I am let down by someone I care about, but then I let down someone else I care about, then they let their friend down, or me, or their parents or whoever, and it’s this never-ending cyclic doom swirl of people hurting each other because they’re hurting themselves, and now everyone’s pissed off and hurt and no one’s apologising because no one understands how hard it is to live with [insert diagnosis here].

Myself included.

Then there are those with no diagnosis (they do exist), and life’s hard for them, and they’re like, “well shit, I can’t complain about anything, can I? I guess I’ll just go sit in the corner and eat worms because everyone is caught up in their own tar pit.”

Yeah. We are. Because we live in an impossible world with impossible standards and hoops that only a certain percentage can jump through, and the rest of us are left standing with our proverbial dicks in our hands asking, “what the fuck just happened?”

I feel like I’ve been asking this question for decades. See, I have just realised that I have a certain outlook on my life and its place in this world. I believe (yes, present tense) that because of the traumatic bullshit I experienced as a child and then as a 20-something lost soul, then as a married 30-something that I deserve to have the life that I want. I deserve success in my chosen field (acting) because I got smacked with the trauma stick, but I picked myself up and pulled up my big girl socks and got therapy and help and therefore I’m Special™. Idris Elba should rock up to my doorstep and offer me a part in his next project, not only because I’m a Good Actor™ but because I deserve it. I’ve worked for it. All the underpaid/unpaid acting jobs I’ve done, all the underpaid/unpaid music I’ve written, all the meditation and soul searching I’ve undertaken allows me to claim that I’m Special™ and I should have all of the good things. Because, you see, if I’m successful, all the stuff I went through would have led me to that point. It will have all been worth it. If I don’t reach that goal, then, well, it’s tragic. And it means I’m not special.

I mean, that’s dumb, right? Like, it’s actually dumb, because my belief system is such that the Universe has no ego, therefore it has no care, therefore it doesn’t actually owe me or anyone anything and it just gives you shit because you actualise it, so being Good™ is a choice and not a requirement, unlike traditional religion that believes in sin and Hell and all that fun stuff.

I have been given a lot in my life. I’ve achieved near impossible things and manifested desires out of nothing. Not because I deserved it. Not because I’m a Good Person™. Not even because I worked hard for it. I got them, simply because I asked the Universe for them. So why haven’t I achieved the thing I want most?

Because I’m an idiot.

No, seriously. I’m an idiot. Despite my well-read, well-researched and well-lived belief system, there are still some things that I don’t believe I’m allowed to have. Maybe that’s the Borderline Personality speaking. Maybe it’s my Mum, or my Dad. Maybe it’s society. Maybe it’s because I’m a woman. Maybe it’s White Guilt™. I don’t know, but it’s a sticking point to any of us who are Good by choice.

Being Good essentially makes no difference in the quality of one’s life. Not really. Screaming assholes like Bezos and Trump get everything they want (except maybe true self-respect). Cardinal Pell pretty much got off child sexual abuse charges, only spending 405 days in jail before he was acquitted. Then he died! The only saving grace is that he didn’t get a state funeral, but I digress.

Conversely, people like Jacinda also exist. Chadwick Boseman also existed. Pedro Pascal, I’m pretty sure, is real. Niloofar Hamedi and Elaheh Mohammadi exist – imprisoned for their goodness, yes, but still here. Ghandi was definitely a dude. All is not lost, is it?

A couple of weeks ago, I got this message in my Instagram inbox. It was from someone I don’t know, there was no name, no handle. Just this message. I probably don’t deserve this small kindness, but that’s not the point, stupid BPD brain, you shut up!

Anyway. I’m paying this forward. To you, dear reader.

A small voice in my head tells me, “see? You are special.” No, I’m not. Shrug. That’s okay.

Prioritize your mental and spiritual wellness. Do things that make you happy. Take time to nurture yourself. Don’t rush the process. Don’t judge where you’re at or where you think you should be. Just be kind and patient with yourself. Things are unfolding for you.

Pulling the Trigger

CW: Child sexual abuse

I was triggered today. It’s not often that I get triggered. This is not because I’m awesome, or tough, or strong or any of that. It’s simply because I’ve been in therapy for a very long time and I’ve done a heap of work to not be triggered.

I wasn’t always like this. In my 20s (and my ex fiance can attest to this) I was a nightmare. Triggered by any and everything – in a time when no one knew one could be triggered. I would scream and cry and shout and hurt myself, all in an attempt to convey what I was feeling. And what I was feeling was “aaaaahhhhhhhh. AAAAAHHHHHHH!! GRAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH!” Ineffectual communication? Yes. Did I have the tools to communicate in any other way? Probably, but you see, I was hurting. Constant, unrelenting mental pain was my every day state. Undiagnosed and untreated BPD and OCD will do that.

You see, BPD (Borderline Personality Disorder) is a trauma based disorder. And in my case, so is OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder). I am not defined by these diagnoses, but how I live with them is relevant to who I am as a person. I experienced sexual abuse as a child. It happened a number of times, perpetrated by different people. I don’t fully remember every single incident, but I don’t feel I need to in order to continue healing. I’ve done a shit tonne of work around my sexuality and attitudes to sex in response to this childhood abuse and the subsequent sex work I engaged in, in order not be fucked up by those experiences. I’m actually quite proud of how I’ve recovered from all that and that I’m a fairly well-adjusted sexual person in spite of the sexual violence I’ve experienced in my lifetime.

So, today.

Shit, today.

I was at a rehearsal for a performed script reading I’m doing in two days. We were reading a script that was “edgy.” The playwright was apparently going for “offensive for offensive’s sake.” So far in the reading, it was skirting the line between unacceptable and downright insulting, but nothing too controversial. Just assholey.

Now, anyone who knows me will probably attest that I have a well-rounded sense of humour. This is because I’ve used humour as a coping mechanism for most of my life. Be funny or die, pretty much. I’m not easily offended by things. I’m more likely to think a joke is stupid (and the person stupid for making it, let’s be honest) than to clutch at my pearls and cry for someone to please think of the children.

But you know what’s not funny? Rape jokes. Even less funny? Child sexual abuse jokes. Why? Because those acts can ruin lives. They ruined mine. I mean, I’m doing fine, but in the scheme of things, I live with massive monsters under my bed and in my head because of sexual violence. It’s. Not. Funny.

So, today.

Fuck. Today.

We’re reading this script, and then suddenly, one of the actors has to read this horrendous line that is making a joke about a child psychologist sexually abusing her child client. It didn’t hit me straight away, it kind of snuck up on me, actually. It’s like when the anaesthetic wears off after you’ve had a tooth pulled out. This thing happened, you didn’t feel it straight away, but now it really acutely hurts and it’s not cool.

The other actors weren’t very impressed with this line, but they continued to read, and then all of a sudden, I had to say something.

“I’m sorry,” I said, doing that thing where I apologise when I shouldn’t really have to apologise. “I’m actually triggered by that.”

Everyone stopped. And then, to my horror, I started to cry.

I’m in a room with five other people, only two of whom I actually know, weeping over words that immediately took me back to a night I’d prefer to not recall. This combination of words in the context that they were uttered in placed me back in my 6 year old body, back in that bed, back with that perpetrator. It took a while to hit me because I was numb. I was numb then and I’m numb now. This is not what I was expecting to experience at 4.55 on a Sunday afternoon.

I have always fully believed that when I get triggered by something it’s because I have more work to do on that particular thing. And every time it’s happened in the past, it’s been entirely true. Today, when the director – a dear friend of mine – hugged me and apologised profusely, I said to her, “it’s not your fault. I clearly have to have another session with my therapist.” I said that because that’s what made sense to me. It’s what I believed to be true.

But after I left rehearsal and made my way home, and as I fed my cats and took in my laundry off the line, as I pottered around the house waiting for my friend to arrive for our usual horror movie night, I felt off. I still didn’t feel right. I was angry. Like, really angry. And unsettled, and I felt icky and upset, and the need to yell really loud and high was making my skin itch. Then it occurred to me:

I don’t need another session with my therapist over this. I have dealt with this. I had a reaction today because that joke in that script was entirely unnecessary.

It was unnecessary. Completely, utterly, incomprehensibly unnecessary. It served no purpose except to offend – and to emotionally trigger survivors like me. Un. Neces. Sary.

RAPE JOKES AREN’T FUNNY. You know, just in case you needed reminding, Mr Playwright, sir. Being an edgelord is only cool if there’s a point to it. Just being offensive is POINTLESS, you scabby plague sore, because the whole fucking world is offensive most of the time! I am not oversensitive. I am not a lefty hand wringer. I am not a fucking snowflake. I’m a goddam survivor of this appalling act and your puerile joke is UNNECESSARY.

There. I said it. These kinds of jokes are not funny. They’re just not. Trans jokes aren’t funny. Racist jokes aren’t funny. Any joke against any minority is not funny. That’s punching down. Jokes against rapists are funny. Jokes against racist transphobes are also funny because those people deserve to be joked about. They deserve to be mocked, quite frankly. Survivors like me do not. I didn’t go through that trauma and the subsequent years of work and healing to be disrespected and disavowed by a dull-witted, artless “provocateur.” Get a clue, dickhead.

I feel better now. My response wasn’t overwrought or over-emotional. It was appropriate. I had an appropriate response to an inappropriate sentence in an inappropriate script.

Next time, I won’t apologise for it.

The Passing

Two years ago this month, on her 14th birthday, my cat Persephone Aphrodite died.

It happened quickly. She got sick, and a week later she was gone. I grieved, of course I grieved. It was like losing a child. I don’t have children, see, and I never will, so giving in to that trope of the crazy cat lady, my cats are my kids. And Persephone was my second eldest.

I got Persephone the year I went back to Uni. I had decided to get a second cat because I read somewhere that cats thrive with company. Well, Sappho was pissed, but more about that later.

Persephone was a tiny ball of squeaking fluff. When I first met her before deciding to take her home, I thought her name was going to be Aphrodite. The day I picked her up, though, was the day I realised she was not the Goddess of Love and definitely the Queen of the Underworld, so Persephone she became. She hated being picked up. Hated it. She’d do that thing where they stick all four legs out like some demented fainting goat, but she loved to sit on me – when she chose to, of course.

When she was 7 months old, she came into heat. It took me by surprise because she was so young, and I was in the middle of a show at Uni so was distracted. I remember coming downstairs one morning to find her up on the kitchen window sill, yowling like a banshee, her butt pressed up against the fly screen and about five tom cats sitting outside in a semi circle just staring up at her. Needless to say, she got out by accident one night and came home knocked up.

65 days later, she disappeared.

Now, as I mentioned earlier, Sappho – my eldest – was not happy about the arrival of the Queen of the Underworld into her nice little domestic scene that featured just her and me. It took only a month before Sappho softened somewhat and began to tolerate the fluffy interloper. They even snuggled on my bed occasionally. But all that changed when Persephone fell pregnant. I can only guess to the hierarchy of female cats together, but I can surmise that mumma cats are probably automatically the alpha cat. This confused Sappho, as she was clearly the alpha cat in our house. She was older, she had spunk, she was the neighbourhood stand-over cat, and when Persephone first arrived in our house, she deferred to her older sister. But now, there were pregnant pheromones flowing through the house, and Sapph was decidedly NOT happy.

But the day Persephone disappeared inside the house, it was Sappho who led me to where she was. I say led with purpose. I asked Sapph where her sister was so she led me upstairs into my Dad’s room and stood next to his chest of drawers and hissed. I was confused, but Sappho insisted, growling some more before running away, so I pulled out the bottom drawer and lo and behold, there was Persephone under the bottom drawer with three kittens, mewling away. I had prepared her a kittening box downstairs, but no, it wasn’t safe enough for her. (I have to say that the term “kittening” sounds ominous to me. “Beware the kittening!”)

Anyway, Persephone turned out to be an excellent mother. She showed her babies – all boys – how to clean themselves and use the litter tray and did all the things mumma cats are supposed to do. She wasn’t a helicopter mum though, she let the kittens discover things for themselves. And this is when I learned that she trusted me implicitly. I was allowed to handle her kittens from day two. I remember one day when one of the kittens was on my lap and got his claw stuck in my jumper. He mewed loudly and Persephone came running into the room, concerned. As soon as she saw her baby was with me, she relaxed and miaowed at me. Then she cleaned her paw.

Persephone was the type of cat that had to choose you. If she sat on you, licked your hand, bbrrrpped at you or showed you her butt, she approved of you. She liked boys particularly, but it took her a long time to warm up to people. She had her favourites over the years, but there were really only two people besides me that she completely adored. My brother Hiran and my housemate Sara.

I remember when Sara moved in, they thought that Persephone didn’t like them. I kept reassuring them that she was taking her time, scoping Sara out, much like she did with my brother when they first met. And again, like with my brother, within the week Persephone was sleeping on Sara. She had chosen her human.

But she was a mummy’s girl at heart. All my cats are. Mum is the one they come to when shit gets real. And my cats are the ones I rely on when my shit gets too real.

A few weeks before she died, Persephone slept in my arms for a whole night. She hadn’t done that since she was a kitten. Sappho was always the one in my arms, and Persephone slept on my butt, or tucked in by my knees, or curled up next to my tummy. This night, she ensconced herself next to my heart, purred loudly and stayed there all night. It was as if she knew.

See, Persephone’s middle name is Aphrodite because her love was subtle. She was choosy with whom she shared her affections, but once she had decided that you were worthy, she stuck with you. I’d tell her I loved her and she would tell me with little sandpapery kisses on my hand that she chose me. I miss her so much.

I didn’t write about her death at the time because it was too much. I’d had her for 14 years. She was rarely sick, she only disappeared from the house once (she was found two long and awful days later, skinny and dirty, but happy to be found). I had never expected her to go first out of my two girls, but she did.

Sappho, my darling black and white beauty, was devastated at her loss. Now, don’t get me wrong, Sappho barely abided by Persephone. However, when I was married, I got a third cat – Orpheus, a derpy ginger boy who I should’ve taken with me when I left – and Sappho and Persephone became allies against this invader. Once it was just the two of them again, mind you, it was back to the hissing and the growling because Sapph wanted to be the only one getting my affection.

There were moments, I must say, when I caught them playing. There was one time when they were outside my floor to ceiling windows together, happily playing with each other. I laughed out loud at their antics and Sappho heard me. As soon as she saw that I could see them, she hissed at Persephone and flailed a paw at her before stalking away.

Just before Persephone died, I was feeding them both one night. As they were waiting for their food, making those adorable chirrups that cats make when they’re being cute, Persephone started grooming Sappho, and not only did Sapph let her, she closed her eyes for a moment and enjoyed it.

Again, it was like they knew.

When Persephone crossed to the Summerlands, Sappho became dangerously depressed. She went searching for her sister, sitting in all the spots in the garden where Persephone liked to sit, meowing for her. When she couldn’t find Persephone, she’d lie down wherever she was and not move for hours. She wasn’t sleeping. She’d just lie there. For all her complaining, she missed her sister and it broke my heart. I got her a brother, Larichus Hades. She hated him, but she wasn’t depressed anymore. I guess I gave her something to hiss at.

Two years later, and I find myself lying down and not moving for hours for the same reason. Just last night, very suddenly, Sappho got sick. She had kidney disease, diagnosed last year, but was doing well. She’d had her treatment and was on her diet and despite a close call last December, she seemed to be making leaps and bounds. She’d always been a tough girl. Always been a fighter. But last night she had what I can only describe as being akin to a stroke. She had seizures and was yowling like I’ve never heard her before, and then she got worse and we had to go to the vet.

I knew this day was coming. I had prepared myself for it. But I thought we’d been given a reprieve because her kidneys seemed to be stable. I didn’t know her heart and her brain were not.

Sappho Mishka came to me in 2005. The night I picked her up I had to then go to work, so I took her with me to the brothel. She was supposed to stay out the back, but she kept hollering for me, so I set her up on my desk in the box I brought her in. She started chewing on this box, which gave me her name (it’s a gay joke, look it up). From that night, she became my staunchest ally, my best friend, and my saviour all in one.

I have so many stories of Sappho and her adventures. How she lost half her tail; how she’d puff up that stumpy tail to signify her moods; the different kinds of meows she had for different scenarios; the fact that she’d dribble when you scratched her cheek in that one spot; how she loved cheese and vegemite toast; how every time I cried she meow at me and purr; how every time I hurt myself – whether deliberately or accidentally – she’d lie on the sore bit and purr; how she’d go through stages of sleeping in my arms every night to sleeping on the couch when she needed alone time; how she loved my ex wife but as soon as we split, she hated that bitch and bit her to prove the point; how she saved my life numerous times by curling up in my lap as I contemplated leaving this earth.

My God, my heart hurts as I write this. It’s like there’s a weight attached to it, dragging it down into my stomach. My little girl is gone. Both my girls are gone. My constants for a total of 17 years are now away from me forever. They’re around, of course they are, but I can’t hold them. I can’t put my ear to their bellies and listen to them purr. I can’t look into their eyes and see my love reflected there.

I have two boys now. Larichus, my black panther, and Raef, my fluffy ginger kitten – a cross between Orpheus and Persephone. I adore them. They’re coping well with this loss. Larichus especially has stepped up as the oldest of my children now. I watched him search for her today, much like how she searched for Persephone.

But there will always be a hole in my life that can only ever be filled by my girls. I take comfort that they’re together again; Sappho no doubt hissing at Persephone while all Sephie wants to do is love her sister. I hope they know how much I loved them; how much they were my everything.

Rest in peace, my babies. I’ll see you soon.

The Dream

I had a dream that my mother came back from the dead. That I woke up next to my brother who doesn’t really talk to me anymore, but whom I love with all my heart, awoken by the woman I used to have a crush on. In introducing her to my brother, she informed me that everybody thought he was weird, and she should add me to the group chat that discussed it. I asked her why would I want to join a chat that was mean about my brother, and she laughed, tossed her long hair over her shoulder and told me to get up.

I did so, suddenly dressed and brushed and deodorised and so I showed her around the house I had never seen before but knew was mine. She asked me about a door to the outside that I had never used, but then realised was a double door that opened on to a beautiful wooden deck with too steep steps, and I remembered. “That’s why we don’t use this door,” I said. “My mother can’t climb these steps.”

The woman (I know her name, but I’m not going to tell you) with her long hair and lithe body, followed me everywhere. I went up to see my mother, this woman in tow, and saw Mum in her bathroom, one of my little cousins playing in Mum’s bed.

“Mum.”

There she was. My mother. A thinner, older version. As she said, “it’s been 7 years.” Her family was in my house, a whole heap of them. My cousins and their children, who were basically my cousins as children. Karen with her daughter, Karen. Patrick with his son, Patrick. I introduced them all to this woman attached to my hip. Then I got to be with my mother alone.

“I don’t like her,” Mum said.

“But you liked her in previous dreams,” I replied.

“Yes, but I’m alive again now.”

I went downstairs with my brother who doesn’t really talk to me anymore, but whom I love with all my heart, to a locked-in island kitchen where a man I didn’t know was mansplaining everything to the woman I had once liked.

“Who are you and what are you doing in my kitchen?” I demanded.

This man asked who I was and continued to dribble information I already knew.

“This is my house! Well, it’s my Mum’s house, but it will be mine and my brothers … in fact, Mum’s already dead, so technically, this is my house, get out!!!” Saying that made me happy in a strange way, as Mum never owned a house, but coming back from the dead had given her money and a comfort that life never had. It was satisfying.

The man disappeared into a fridge I had never seen before but knew was mine, and I rounded on the woman, the woman who smiled a coquettish smile, knowledge sparkling in her eyes.

“Why did you let him in here?” She cocked her head to the side and answered me with no answer. So I said, “you broke up with your wife, I was there as a friend, crushing on you, yes, but wanting to be your friend. Then you got a new girlfriend and now I don’t exist to you. Why are you here?”

She smiled, and my cat meowed so I woke up, still wondering why I’m alone with my thoughts, my cats and my pain, wishing Mum really had come back from the dead.

The Fool

I don’t miss her anymore. Not by a long shot. But I used to. Sometimes so much that it tore at my chest and punctured holes in my heart. What I finally realised is that what I missed wasn’t real. The her that I missed didn’t actually exist. It’s like trying to cuddle a cloud. Pointless, really.

She was on my mind last month. Not because I missed her, but rather because someone left a comment on my blog post about our divorce which stated, and I quote, “Really? I hear you had nothing at all to lose, not even a job.” This was preceded by an equally presumptive and incorrect comment left in January this year that read, “You only need lawyers if you OWN something. You have nothing to lose. No money, no property, probably not even a car. Lucky you.”

Now, I think it’s safe to say that neither of these commenters (if indeed they are not the same person) know me at all, and by their wording and tone, I gather they know my ex wife and have been given the revisionist history version of our marriage. So, commenters, even though it’s none of your fucking business, I’m gonna give you the lowdown on what I lost because now you’ve pissed me off.

I did have a job, actually. I had two: managing her career and working in a warehouse for a sexist, homophobic pig who fired me the week my marriage fell apart (after 7 years of employment, mind you) because I refused to stop listening to podcasts on my phone as I worked. In fact, one of the reasons I didn’t feel safe in our apartment anymore was because the ex wife threw my firing in my face and told me I should move back to New Zealand because there was clearly nothing for me here. This was after two years straight of financing her drag career. This was a month after I paid her fucking rent for her. This was three years after I paid for her first semester at dance school, using money I borrowed from the finance manager at the job I apparently didn’t have, which I then had my wages garnished to pay back, because why? Because my ex wife didn’t repay the loan, even though that was deal in getting the loan in the first place. So, not only was I busting my gut for her career in a myriad of ways, I was earning less for the last two years of our marriage because I was paying back her loan. After our separation, I tried to get her to reimburse me, but was told that “that’s just what spouses do in a relationship.” But I had nothing to lose, huh?

I figure that these commenters are, if not members of her family, then new acolytes or a new paramour joining the space junk in her orbit. I recognise the pattern. To suck them in, she’s gotta give them the sob story. The long, sad story of three partners one after the other treating her so badly and accusing her of such horrible things. Well, commenters, where there’s smoke, there’s some fucker with a burned match behind their back screaming, “FIRE!” Guess who the fucker is?

If these commenters are her family, then fuck off, I have nothing to say to you. If one of these commenters is a new paramour, well, buckle in, sweet cheeks. Let me tell you what you’re in for. Some of it may already sound familiar.

I stumbled across a video I had made the other day that featured us and our friends being idiots. Most of it was filmed during the first year of our relationship. The love bombing stage; that stage when she pursued me mercilessly, when everything I did was a source of fascination to her. That hazy, beautiful time when the world was ours. Of course I look back now and feel ill because it was all lies and oily, smarmy seduction, but there was one part of the video where she had her arms around me from behind and she actually looked like she was in love. It confused me, because narcissists don’t know what love really is. But there it was. She looked like she was in love with me. At the time, I believed it. It made me feel so good. So safe. Like I was finally home.

To be honest, her constant need to be with me bugged me. I’m very used to being comfortable with my own company, but her need was insistent. It was exhausting, actually, but I figured it would even out. She was young, I was older, I was set in my ways and she was discovering herself. I made all the excuses.

It didn’t even out. It got more uneven, and then I moved in with her and slowly her life became mine.

But that first year was wonderful. We were in love – well, I was because I believed that the personality she was presenting was real. But then things changed, and I can tell you exactly when that was: the first Christmas after my mum died.

Christmas Eve. I was not coping. Mum had been gone just over a month and I missed her and my brothers badly. My dad was out of town somewhere, so I just had my ex wife. I was grieving and I couldn’t stop crying. She – my new wife of 20 days – got shitty with me and went to bed, leaving me on the couch with my mum’s nursing medals, sobbing and group chatting with my overseas-dwelling brothers because I felt so fucking alone. And she was sulking in our bedroom with the door closed because my inability just ‘get over it’ for one night had ‘ruined’ Christmas. She made me feel so bad for having the audacity to be grieving my dead mother a month after losing her. Especially given that the year before was the last Christmas I had spent with her in New Zealand. She never apologised for that. It was referenced maybe once thereafter, in which she admitted that she had “fucked up.” But no apology. From then on, my grief – amongst other things I couldn’t control – would be blamed for our failed marriage.

That, my dears, is abuse. And it was the beginning of another three years of it.

I should have left. But I didn’t leave. Just like I didn’t leave all the other times she emotionally abused me. I tried to be understanding. I tried to be accepting… Fuck that, I didn’t try, I was understanding. I was accepting. I did realise that she was young and I made so many excuses for her and her behaviour because I thought I was leading by example. I knew she’d eventually grow up. I believed that she was essentially a genuine, caring, loving, generous person if a little misguided. She had me fooled. My god, did she have me fooled.

So that was it. That was the first event that set alarm bells ringing, but I ignored them. I ignored everything that told me our relationship was a bad idea, even her ex who I treated so badly by denying her claims. I honestly didn’t care, because I wanted her. I wanted her and when she wanted me back, all bets were off. So, I wilfully disregarded all ensuing red flags and alarm bells (if you want to know about them, commenter, read a few of my previous posts) and continued to excuse her behaviour.

To be honest, I stayed because I loved her. I stayed because I believed in her. I used to miss that love. I used to miss that person I believed in every damn day. What is truly heartbreaking is that she turned out to be everything she tried so hard to convince me she wasn’t. And she’s still doing it. Still skipping down the narcissist highway, baiting new young things to write comments on her ex’s posts, just like she baited me. Oh, and she never comes right out and asks you to do it. You, commenter, are supposed to get so incensed with those of us that came before that you gallantly defend her honour for her. She’ll never actually plainly state anything. That way she can’t be held accountable, see? Clever little dropkick.

I used to think I was a fool for falling in love with her. But I wasn’t. You can’t help falling in love, especially when what is presented to you is as attractive and charming as she can be. But it’s not foolish. What was foolish was staying, because she drained me dry and it’s taken me this long to fill myself up again.

Huh. Wow. I guess you’re right, commenter. I did have nothing to lose. She took it all from me before it was over; money, love, time, energy, talent, skills, my vacuum cleaner. All of it. But see, in being far away from her, I now have everything. I have my freedom, I have my own business, I have my cats, I have my acting career, my music career. I even have a goddamn podcast, bitches! Oh, and I have a new car. And I got it all on my own.

But back to you, commenter. I’m concerned. If you truly think the measure of a marriage is money and material possessions, then I’m sorry to say, your priorities are fucked up. If you think it appropriate to comment an ignorant and misinformed statement on my blog, then you’re an idiot. I mean, really. How dare you come on to my blog where I tell my truth and presume to know the “real” story that you’ve “heard” from a manipulative, abusive narc? You’re being a troll for a fucking narc, dude! There’s no joy down that road.

Trauma may have made me selfish, but it’s ensured I’ll never get sucked in that hard again.

I hope you don’t have to experience what I did to learn the same thing.

Landmines

CW: Descriptions of intimate partner violence.

In late 2014, I published on this blog a long winded bunch of lies by my ex-wife, explaining her “side” of the story of her previous marriage before me. I have since taken that post down, as I was ashamed and horrified to be a party to such blatant gaslighting against Ilana, her ex.

Now, on the eve of what would have been my 6th wedding anniversary, I feel it’s appropriate to let Ilana give her counterpoint through her truly excellent piece of writing, ‘Landmines’. I also still feel a great deal of responsibility in giving Ilana a platform to use her voice, since I spent nigh on 4 years being jealous of this woman, believing and repeating lies about this woman, and disbelieving her horrific story of abuse.

This is Ilana’s story, written by her in the immediate aftermath of her relationship with our ex. It is startlingly similar to my story, yet is much, much worse in many ways. In the near 7 years since she wrote this, Ilana has continued her healing process, smashing goals, living truthfully, and growing more fierce and strong every day. She has been essential to my own healing, reminding me that the pain fades, the work continues, and love is indeed possible again. The further I travel from the mockery of a marriage I was in, the more I am indebted to her and I’m so very grateful for her graciousness. I am so very sorry, Ilana.

(Note: choking is a particularly dangerous form of coercive control and narcissistic abuse, and is often a sign of escalation in controlling behaviour that in some cases can have fatal consequences. Resources to help if you or someone you know has experienced this will be at the bottom of this post.)

*

The shadow of an argument.

A hotel. One lamp each, illuminating the night tables that bookended the bed. You and I, backs to one another, sinking into the aftermath which was to become the prelude.

I think of that moment now and I can feel it, the stirring, the rumbling before the crack that ruptured everything, everything.

I would take it all back if I could.

I don’t fight like you, I never have. You are happy to rant and vent and rage. To scream while I am curled up on the floor, catatonic with tears.

To call me a cunt in the middle of the street.

I fight my battles inside, in the slight turning in the car, hugging the seat belt, praying that your mood will subside quickly tonight, cursing myself for stepping on the landmine.

That’s how it felt, living with you. Like I had knowingly purchased a post-War home that came quickly and easily because, hidden under beautiful floorboards and drapes, were the bombs.

Huge, silent, spontaneous, and lethal when detonated.

But the house was so beautiful.

And so I continued to live there, but in the aftermath of every blast I became more and more aware of the danger I was in staying in a house so fragile, so easily ripped to pieces.

But I stayed because who was I to give up a perfectly good house?

Wasn’t I so lucky? Didn’t I have it so good?

You set me up for the fall, so cruelly.

You painted yourself so perfect that when I first screamed, ‘Bomb!’, everyone who heard laughed, as if such beauty could never hide something so terrible. But it could.

A hotel. The night was hot, so hot. The type of night I would sleep in my underwear or nothing but you would insist on remaining clothed, you never could sleep skin to skin. One lamp each, illuminating the night tables that bookended the bed. Silence but for one or two tense words being volleyed between us.

And then, suddenly, I stepped on a landmine.

People ask me now, they say, ‘But if it was so bad, why did you get married? Why did you allow it to go on for so long?’.

I’m never articulate enough at the time, it’s so hard to explain. I’ve had terrible experiences trying to explain to people that you’ve gotten to first.

What I want to tell them is this:

When you are in pain, you want to believe that it will end. That it is only temporary. That it will get better.

The truth is, I stayed because I loved you. I always loved you, past the end. Past the sobbing parting of ways.

I loved you until you stopped loving me and that tore me apart.

I stayed because I loved you and I believed that one day you would be happy. I needed to believe that one day I would be enough, that you would stop searching for whatever you were missing and decide that we could make it work with what we had.

That was always your tune, you never had the wit to change it, it all boiled down to the same thing. I was less. Most of the time it was worthless. That was the message that you screamed in to me, until I could feel it in my bones, where I still hear the echoes rippling back to me every day. You tell me I’m hopeless, careless, worthless. You made me feel disgusting, undesirable, a waste. I could fill a book with the names you called me. In jest, in private, in public, in company, in writing, it didn’t matter. I still hear them, I still hear them. You never leave me.

It wasn’t just words. You sucked me dry of everything I had to give. I sold my soul to your happiness. I threw myself on the altar, sacrificed my very being at a chance to make you content.

And it wasn’t enough.

The mornings I was pushed out of bed because you couldn’t face the walk to the train, the same walk I had to make twice a day but you couldn’t fathom because it was too cold.

The constant demands of lifts and gifts and emails and favours and cars and money, money, money.

Because suddenly it wasn’t mine it was ours and couldn’t you use your card we used mine last time and it’s easier you’ve got the bank details saved and I’ll put my paycheck into savings and we’ll use yours for the bills or I really need these classes this is for us this is for you this is for you everything I do is for you can’t you see that

The shadow of an argument.

A hotel. One lamp each, illuminating the night tables that bookended the bed. You and I, backs to one another, sinking into the aftermath which was to become the prelude.

Silence but for one or two tense words being volleyed between us.

And then, suddenly, I stepped on a landmine.

I tell people now that I can’t remember what I said, it was something to do with the wedding, that terrific freight train that was careening out of control, that I couldn’t jump off even when I wanted to.

Or it may have been about your family, who you were so happy to denounce for their faults, who I worked so hard to please but who have since the split aggressively accosted me and my family, who you are now apparently back tight in the bosom of despite hating them so viciously, or at least that was the vitriol you poured in my ear. You were telling me how I should be doing more for them, because look at how much I do for your family you said as we lay in the bed in the hotel in Queensland that my parents had paid for, paid for the holiday, paid for our flights, paid for us to have a separate room.

Or maybe I mentioned something about our house, which I was paying all the bills and rent for but you still weren’t happy with, I may have made a comment about if we ever broke up that you’d need to find somewhere else to live. Because at that point, in that moment, I couldn’t imagine living with this thing, this non-human entity, this ball of tension and hate, this uncensored stream of bile for the rest of my life.

And then, suddenly, I stepped on a landmine.

Whatever I said, I felt it sit heavy between us, the way the first I love you does but worse, so much worse, because this wasn’t the kind of heavy that those words elicit this was the pulling back of a rubber band, the words pulling the band tighter and tighter and further and further and further away until

SNAP

You rolled over, rolled towards me and from my side pulled me onto my back. And then in seconds you were straddling me, sitting on my stomach, and your hands, snake-fast and strong, so strong, were around my neck. Tight.

I’ve heard since that you’ve told people you placed your hands gently around my neck and I don’t know how gently you can ever place your hands around someone’s neck but this was not gentle. Gentle means a grip you can break, a play fight maybe, a tap for attention, and this, this was a vice. And I fought, I remember writhing desperately against you because I couldn’t breathe. It was like all the movies you see, I was Desdemona struggling under the pillow but it wasn’t pretend, I was grabbing your hands and wheezing and no one was yelling cut. I struggled against the claws at my neck and you probably didn’t mean to kill me but I stared at your face, so demented with hate it looked cracked in two, and I thought I was going to die.

And then, within perhaps a minute, perhaps two, the longest I’ve ever known, it was over.

Just as quickly as you’d leapt on me you were off. Back on your side of the bed, fully clothed, facing the lamp on your bookend of a bedside table.

It’s almost funny how your mind adapts to new beliefs.

I was recently shopping and it was only after two sales assistants, two friends and a random girl peeping out of her change room insisted I had an amazing figure that I realised the long-held belief that I have fat thighs is probably more to do with you telling me I’m fat and look at your flabby legs and you need to tone up and I can teach you some exercises for your legs than it was to do with my actual body.

It was a slow poison, the self-hatred you gradually instilled in me. At first, like your other sinister doctrines, it was all for my own good. I wonder if you remember the early days of our relationship, the first few weeks, when we lived on potato chips and chocolate and take away food and the gym was as foreign a concept as the possibility of us ever being apart. I wonder if you remember your own struggles, your crushed confidence as the concept of working in your dream field grew slimmer and slimmer as your own weight expanded. And I never said a word about it, I loved you whatever your shape, and only encouraged whatever endeavour you were currently infatuated with. Your mind changed so quickly I could hardly keep up, your enthusiasm for jobs waxing and waning day by day, you leaving me to fill out endless applications for jobs, I have hundreds of emails still, ‘Found a job for you on Seek.com!’ but you never found anything for me, it was another desperate attempt for you to find satisfaction.

But then, suddenly, it was fitness.

I’ll skip the months I supported us both as you studied and didn’t work, the hours I spent coaching you through every quiz and writing assignments for you, just as I had done with your previous courses, I just wanted the whole thing over, you hated studying. So I would practically do it for you, I felt like I should’ve gotten a qualification as well, but anything, anything to make you happy.

And when it started leaking out of the pages of books and into life, under the premise of taking care of me, you don’t exercise, you’d say, so you really better eat well, I bit my tongue and let you write out a diet plan, because by that point I knew exactly how short your fuse was, and I still had scorch marks on my fingers. You, after all, always knew best.

Back on your side of the bed, fully clothed, facing the lamp on your bookend of a bedside table.

Lying again like nothing had happened.

It was a sign of the months ahead, and from that night, I didn’t know it, but there was still eleven months to endure. I lay flat on my back, gasping for air, aware of pain like a necklace around my throat, pain that would linger that night but never bruise, and I wonder now what would’ve happened if it did, if that would’ve saved me.

I sucked the first breath in with a sob, and then it wouldn’t stop. A hysterical stream of terror, of disbelief, of panic that somehow I had ended up underwater without getting the chance to breathe.

I did try to leave. For all the naysayers, the ‘oh how could it have been so bad if she still stayed with them’, I did try, I’ll have you know.

I would run devastated to the spare room, and sleep in a single bed, plotting my escape.

One night, close to the end, frantic with panic, I packed a bag and left it at the front door, running to the bedroom for one more thing.

When I returned to the door, you had taken my car keys.

You wouldn’t let me go.

You wrote me a letter a few months ago. Six pages, hand delivered, and seeing your handwriting but no postmark was terrifying, because you’d encroached on my space just as I had started to feel safe again. I don’t want to list what you wrote, that letter was near enough to acid, it burnt right through all the flimsy repairs I had started constructing. It made me feel sick. Amongst other accusations, you said I couldn’t possibly have been abused because I had never sought therapy. Little did you know I had been seeing a psychologist for weeks following our split, and why would you make such a claim, did you really think I could recover on my own?

I’ve talked with her about my predisposition for hating my body, I don’t think it’s unusual for a young woman to be insecure about her shape.

But it’s entirely different to hear critiques from someone you love.

But it was all for my own good.

Even when getting rid of all the junk food in our house turned into getting rid of all fruit and carbs as well.

Even when suggesting I exercise turned into calling me lazy and unmotivated for not, saying that I would get fat when I was older, saying that I had to do something now or I would surely have a heart attack later.

I’m just taking care of you, you said, no one else does.

Because by this point, life being drained from me from a constant uphill battle to make you smile, I had little to give to those who truly loved me, my long suffering family, who were fading like ghosts into the far flung corners of my life.

And then came the darkest time.

How I wish I could have blown the signs up bigger, brighter, hung them on the highway, pointed everyone I knew to them, somehow made sure they understood what was happening.

But all I did was gesture vaguely, and they missed it.

Even when I sat in the car with a friend I loved dearly but you for some reason hated, and said you had threatened him with physical violence if he ever touched me in public again.

And he, blind to the pleading in my eyes, just assured me he didn’t realise it was a problem, said he’d back off.

And so I sank under the wave.

I say you hated him ‘for some reason’ but that’s rubbish, I know why you hated him. You had it in your head that he loved me to the point of obsession, but it was you, you and your twisted evil thoughts, and you destroyed what I had with him, a friend that I could message at three in the morning and know he would care. I lost him because you hated him.

I remember lying in bed beside you, you screaming at me, do you love him, you said, and I just cried, because by that point anything, anything would have been better than what I was living with.

But I never, never cheated on you. You said in the letter that I did, but how could I, I loved you past the end. But I felt like I might as well have cheated on you, the way you punished me.

As I sift back through it now, though, I can feel a thousand things catch in the sieve. It wasn’t just the night in the hotel room, it wasn’t just your control, it wasn’t the sick things you said about me. It was living with everything, the combination, every day for four years.

Do you remember it now? The night I sat by the end of our bed, you screaming at me from the doorway, everything I do is for you, you yelled, I give you everything, and I just sobbed and screeched in agreement yes, I know, I know, you don’t have to tell me I’m a shit person, I know, those were my exact words, I remember so well.

The times, for it was more than once, I could feel I had just stepped on exactly the wrong spot and the bomb began to split and I ran, breathless with panic, to the bathroom, the one door in the house that had a working lock, so sure you were going to grab me, and then collapsing, shaking, on the other side of the door as you bashed furiously against it with your fists.

And after a couple of minutes, I would always, stupidly, open it again.

I do feel that losing him was the turning point. Your dogma had finally worked. Emboldened by thousands of repetitions, it was now the voice in my head. I felt worthless, I felt powerless, I felt sick constantly, I felt unworthy of life. I was your puppet, your pet, bent over backwards and still failing at every turn. I’ve never much been one for self-harm the way you see in the movies, but all of a sudden I needed to punish myself, to act out on the belief that I deserved nothing.

I certainly didn’t deserve to eat.

And so I didn’t.

For three months.

At first I was disgusted by my failures, so often succumbing to one big meal after starving all day. But then, as my body became used to less, I would go to bed having run on just black coffee and sugar free gum all day.

And was proud.

In my mind, I was disgusting, I was a failure, I was filled by a guilt that made me ill, and I needed a way to punish myself, to actively express the black fog you had filled my mind with. And there was a voice that told me that if I got sick enough, if I looked frail enough, people would understand how much I was suffering inside, and you wouldn’t be able to hurt me anymore.

I remember, as you lay there like nothing had happened, I slipped from the bed onto the floor, the sobs wracking me like blows, I couldn’t breathe again, on the floor with my back against the bed, and then I was panicking, where do we go from something like this.

Then suddenly your arms were around me, and I was shrieking, I didn’t want you touching me, but your arms were like a vice and it was easier to try and calm myself down then it was to fight you, shhhh you were whispering in my ear, how did my parents not hear, they were just in the room above us, I was crying so loudly and I love you you whispered, it’s alright you said and I let you lift me up and curl up with me in your arms on the bed, shhhh you whispered in my ear, it’s okay.

Three months of black coffee, black coffee, black coffee in the same reusable mug every day.

Seven kilos down.

You never noticed.

The week before my birthday and I was in a sleeveless black dress and you said, I was looking at your arms, I can show you some exercises to tone up, they were looking a little flabby.

The lowest weight I had ever been in my adult life.

And when I confessed, weeks later, desperate for some sign of affection from you, you looked at me with disgust.

That’s stupid, you said, don’t do that anymore.

But only a few days later you bought me a new dress and, noticing it was tight around my legs said, that’s alright, you’ll just tone up a little, just lose a little weight and it’ll be fine.

Because even after you knew it didn’t stop you, don’t eat all that at once, you said, you’ll get fat, and even when we were in company it continued, she’s such a little piggy, she’s such a fatty, she’s so stupid, she can’t do anything, and our friends would laugh and laugh, look at the lovebirds, always play fighting, the old married couple, such happiness.

It should’ve snapped something in me, that night in Queensland, and I curse myself a little now, why didn’t I run, why didn’t I run upstairs and scream at my parents what you had done to me, I could have saved myself so many times and never did.

But somehow I felt more afraid of the aftermath of leaving than I was of you. And the day I left was the day that that balance shifted, and suddenly, staying seemed far, far more terrifying than leaving.

So, finally, I leapt.

The pain didn’t end when we did, though.

I don’t want to recount the awful aftermath of the ending, because it was almost unbearable, and I lost friends that I loved dearly because of their refusal to believe me when I screamed, ‘Bomb!’

For their determination to see the house and not the pockmarked walls, the beautiful exterior but not the rotting foundation, the months of painted smiles but not the burns all over my body.

But I do want to recount how you dropped to your knees on the night I left you and begged me to reconsider, how after months of being starved of affection you said that all you wanted was to give me a hug, like that would fix all the times I had to beseech you on the verge of tears to hug me once in a day, how you would push me away disgusted when I tried to kiss you and complain about how clingy I was, how I should let you breathe once in a while.

I want to recount the day I found out, five weeks after our break up, when we were still married, that you were with someone else.

I want to remember the afternoon I was processing that information, relaying it, shell-shocked, to friend after friend, only to discover that they all already knew, and somehow no one had told me.

I want to recount how I finally made it to my friend’s apartment for a prior engagement and wound up on the lounge room floor, sobbing uncontrollably into my friend’s lap, doubled over in pain, wondering aloud how a wife who starved me of any indication of affection for months could so publicly lavish affection on a new partner. Softly moaning that if she had wanted that kind of loving relationship, she had a wife who was literally killing herself trying to achieve that kind of happiness.

And every time I started to recover, I would be hit again by the control and manipulation that extended far beyond our relationship.

You turning up, uninvited, at places you knew I would be, and my heart fluttering, my stomach clenching, the hair on the back of my neck rising with fear at just seeing you.

Constantly hearing more news, now they’re together, now they’re engaged, did you hear, did you hear. Now they’re married. Three days after we officially divorced, I was almost impressed by your speed, that has to be some kind of record.

Your family approaching me in public, in the shopping centre, where I was sitting unguarded having coffee with friends, to be asked, you’re good are you, you’re not fucking up anyone else’s life, to have to run to the bathroom and hyperventilate and never, never be able to feel safe in that centre again, even though I work there, always looking over my shoulder.

I know what you say about me now, I’m spreading vicious lies, I’m crazy. I’m telling everyone terrible things about you like a smear campaign, I want you to lose all your friends. The latest I heard, you were going to sue me for defamation.

But I have been silent for so long, and you have not, and I will not be silenced by you anymore. If you wanted me to speak kindly, you should have behaved kindly. And you were not kind.

I still hear your voice when I put on a tight skirt, your flabby thighs, you’d say, that’s not very flattering, I hear your voice but I wear the skirt anyway and feel good doing it.

I’ve grown my hair, it’s long now, don’t grow your hair down to your butt, you’d say, it’s disgusting, and when I wash it it brushes the top of my hips and I feel so glamourous.

You drive like a grandma, you’d say, you’re terrible, and you did all the driving because you liked to make me powerless, but these days I drive all over Melbourne and sometimes I don’t use a map I just remember which roads and don’t get lost and I wind the windows right down and blast my music and feel so free.

I still watch my back in the shopping centre. I still feel nervous in the city where I know you used to work. I still clench my jaw driving past your new partner’s old house. I still hear you, daily, in my head, telling me I’m fat or stupid.

But I would rather die of coronary failure from eating foods that make me happy than starve myself for one more day trying to punish myself for crimes I didn’t commit. I would rather let go of friends who think that I’m crazy and I’m just spreading insidious lies than have to continue pasting on a smile and believing that it must be me, there must be something more I can do and more I can give that will mean I unlock the secret to making you happy.

Now, finally, I have exorcised this house, made it mine, and I am excited to open the door and collapse alone in my bed, walls covered with mementos of things I have achieved this year.

Such a far cry from driving the long way home, afraid of opening the door and the kind of dark, threatening mood I would find on the other side.

I hope I never see you again. But if I do, I will be a different person from the one you last saw.

I realised recently that I have stopped mourning our relationship. It is hard to mourn something that now feels like a four-year con.

You’d move on quickly, you used to tell me, if we ever broke up you’d find someone straight away. We don’t need a pre nup, you said once, if we broke up I would have already lost everything. No one takes care of you the way I do, you said again and again, no one else cares about you. You’re so lucky you’ve never been with anyone else, you’d say like a threat, I wish I could take back all my experiences and be like you.

I don’t mourn the four years of slow brainwashing, of the continual con, of the wool pulled slowly over my eyes until I was blind to your will, of the heat turned up and up until I was boiled alive before I even realised the water was hot.

But I do mourn the innocence you stole from the nineteen-year-old who fell in love with a lie.

It’s only now I realise that I am my greatest guardian. And I will never let anyone break me again.

*

You can check out Ilana’s beautiful songwriting here.

Resources for those experiencing intimate partner violence in both LGBTIQ and heterosexual relationships can be found at the following websites:

DV Connect

Another Closet

Domestic Violence Resource Centre Victoria

1800 Respect

A White Woman’s Response to Racism

Shut up and listen to black people. Be an ally, yes. Call it out when you see it, yes. But most importantly, shut up and listen. In Australia, in America, in New Zealand, everywhere. Listen. This happens because white people don’t listen.

That is all.

Apocalypse Now?

I always knew I’d be around for the apocalypse. I’m indulging in catastrophic thought, I know, but it honestly feels like that. Firstly, in January, the whole of Australia was on fire. I’d walk through the streets of Elwood, an inner city suburb of Melbourne, and it looked like a disaster movie: red tinged and hazy streets, people darting from their cars to their homes, avoiding breathing in the smoke as much as possible. I caught up with a pregnant friend who lives in Canberra, and she spoke of investing in face masks and oxygen tanks just to make sure she and her unborn baby were okay.

Our government failed us, our Prime Minister going on holiday to Hawaii at the worst possible time, and it made us feel alone and afraid. But we prevailed and overcame, the true nature of Australia – the nature I admire – coming to the fore.

As soon as the bush fires were contained, however, we found ourselves in another crisis, unprecedented since the 1919 pandemic of the “Spanish flu” which killed 15,000 people in Australia before its end. However, unlike the “Spanish influenza”, the novel coronavirus (or in layman’s terms a new strain that has not been previously identified in humans), Covid 19 hasn’t had the same devastating impact on the health of Australia’s citizens. Rather, it’s affected our psyches in profound and possibly equally as devastating ways.

I was talking to my housemate about this just yesterday. The lockdown, the social distancing, the panic buying, and the self isolation are not limited to just us, or our town, or our state, or our country. Unlike the bush fires, that although affected the entirety of this vast continent was contained within Australia, Covid 19 has impacted the entire world. The. Entire. World. Just about every continent on the planet, bar Antartica, has a confirmed case of Coronavirus.

Before you start, yes, I know that the bush fires and Covid 19 are as comparable as cats and penguins, but that’s not my point. The bush fires were something Australia has dealt with before and many times, although perhaps not quite on the scale of January’s crisis. As gauche as this may sound, fires like these are quintessentially Australian. We pull together to fight them, we support our firies and our wildlife workers. We rescue our native animals from the flames and we rescue each other. We know exactly what to do to get through and survive a fire.

A global pandemic, however? We don’t know what the hell to do with this. And the initial response of some Australians was extremely disappointing. From casual racism to out and out violence against our neighbours – over toilet paper, no less – our inability to understand and listen to instruction was eye-opening. But it seemed to be happening all over the world. Everywhere had toilet paper shortages (I still don’t understand why), fights over hand sanitiser, and general panic related entitlement buying which kinda made me stop and have a really good think on human behaviour.

We really suck at this.

Because then the conspiracy theories started. Now look, I love a good conspiracy, and I’ve done my deep dives into the JFK assassination, 9/11, and Epstein didn’t kill himself (or if he did, he was allowed to), but I like to think I can keep a level head on what is likely and possible, and what is unlikely and improbable. What concerns me is that people I know and love, people who I consider to be highly intelligent and rational human beings are buying into absurd, insulting and quite frankly, ridiculous theories that are being spouted on Twitter of all places, by uninformed, shit stirring idiots, some of whom are leaders of powerful nations (I see you Trump, you goon faced twit). The theories range from Covid 19 being an elaborate hoax, or a means for the 1% to gain control of the masses by enforcing lockdowns, to it being a human-made virus deliberately set loose as population control or a foreign attempt to topple the US government. This is all apparently the start of the New World Order that the Reptilians, under the auspices of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, are preparing to unleash on the world and we better be ready, sheeple!!!!

Look, I get it. The response to this virus, which although virulent is certainly not as deadly as the “Spanish flu” (I keep using quotations, because that flu didn’t originate in Spain and terming it as such was a racist act) or even the AIDS epidemic, is seemingly overblown and reactionary. We didn’t have this level of concern over SARS or the swine flu so why Covid 19 and why now? There are reports that the death rate numbers have been fudged, that there is a vaccine that “the government” won’t let us have, or that it is a bioweapon or escaped experiment from a Wuhan lab, or a cash grab by greedy Big Pharma, or is connected to 5G WiFi, the list goes on. There’s no denying that the world governments have spread disinformation in times of crisis for political gain in the past, and certain media like Fox News grab onto this for their own piece of the pie, but here’s why seriously buying into conspiracy theories is dangerous.

They don’t help anyone. The people who tout these theories as facts, people like Alex Jones for example, are, in my opinion, only interested in themselves. Their concern for the truth is negligible. Their concern for their own celebrity and self importance is more than likely what propels them. I stress, this is my own opinion, but having dealt with narcissists like these before, I can now recognise the behaviour.

The theories themselves serve little purpose than to seed distrust, create panic, feed fear and isolate people from one another. The theorists claim that the mainstream media and governments and scientists are lying to us! That may be so, it’s certainly happened in the past, but there is every possibility that these theorists are lying to us too; just because what they say is the opposite of what the gub’ment is telling us does not necessarily mean it is truth. It is just another story.

Theorists claim that the 1% are wanting to divide and conquer us. Let me just say, I believe utterly and absolutely that a large portion of the globe’s wealth belongs to a distressingly small percentage of the world’s population and indeed the class divide exists and is for the benefit of that small percentage. However, this “information” that conspiracy theorists spout is doing more or less the same thing. Dividing us. It’s making us doubt each other. The common person is rarely going to get to vent their spleen at the higher ups of the world. The common person is more likely to come into contact with the police officers and nurses of the world, the civil servants and the teachers and unfortunately, they’re the people who will be adversely affected by an off-kilter conspiracy theorist who believes that anyone who is against them is a part of the conspiracy and then kablammo! Someone is dead. Someone who is not part of the 1%.

So why do we buy into these theories? I really don’t know. Perhaps because we’re trying to find some meaning to this existence. Perhaps we’ve been lied to so much we believe everyone is lying to us. Perhaps we’re lonely and scared and giving control over to all-powerful secret overlords is easier than taking responsibility for ourselves.

But then why is information about Covid 19 so disjointed and variable? Because we’re in the middle of it. There won’t be truly accurate information about this thing until it’s done. And that is perhaps what we’re most scared of. Nobody has all the answers.

Writer and occultist Alan Moore said, “Yes, there is a conspiracy, indeed there are a great number of conspiracies, all tripping each other up … the main thing that I learned about conspiracy theory, is that conspiracy theorists believe in a conspiracy because that is more comforting. The truth of the world is that it is actually chaotic. The truth is that it is not The Illuminati, or The Jewish Banking Conspiracy, or the Grey Alien Theory. The truth is far more frightening.

Nobody is in control.

The world is rudderless…”

Perhaps we are rudderless. Especially now, with the whole world on tenterhooks. Nobody knows when this will end, nobody knows how we’re going to get through it, nobody knows what the world will be like after it’s done. The only thing we have control over is our own response to it. So let’s make our responses kind, yeah?

Survivor Day

I’m gonna tell you a story. It’s a true story, not a very nice story, but true nonetheless. A few years ago I wrote a piece about being in Sydney (you can read it here), detailing how confronting I found that city at that point in time. A couple of other things happened at that time that I didn’t go into in that post, including getting triggered by a rape scene in a theatre show I saw, and being peeped on by the man in the room next door in the backpackers we were staying in. There was something else that happened. Something else that was lost in the mess of that trip but that stands out to me now as a pivotal point in my highly abusive marriage.

Ah yes, here we go, that old chestnut! Narcissistic abuse. Why am I writing about this again? Well, today, dear reader, is World Narcissistic Abuse Awareness Day. 1 June is officially the day to be aware that this shit actually happens, and it happens to people you know.

So, what is narc abuse? Honestly, you could read every post I’ve written on this blog since meeting my ex until now to get the full arc of an emotionally abusive relationship, but tl;dr so I’ll go ahead and tell you.

In adult relationships the person with narcissistic traits (my ex wife, KL) seeks out an empathetic, codependent-type partner (me) to suck dry in an attempt to gain power and control through the latter’s admiration of them (known as supply). This relationship starts with what’s called “love-bombing”, in which the narc falls intensely for the empath and idealises them, showing them the best version of themselves. In my case, KL showered me with gifts, flowers, food, love notes, calls and texts all day, every day. She made herself vulnerable by claiming she was being treated unfairly by her ex (whom I will call IC), and feeding me sob stories of her “challenging” life with IC, painting herself as the victim. I fell hook, line and sinker.

Once we were married, her true self began to emerge, but I was already addicted. I was a goner. Shit slowly started to happen, and that old adage of the frog in a pot of water that is slowly brought to boil comes to mind. This process is called devaluation and it starts small; the odd off joke here and there, casual belittling remarks that I took “too seriously” until it grew to adultery, contempt, triangulation, and gaslighting.

This is all very well and good, and I’m sure you all understand those words, but what I’ve discovered is without a clear example, these concepts are lost on most people.

So here goes, here’s my story.

We’re in Sydney on tour. I’m not having the most excellent time, but see, I have this habit of always being upset about something, always feeling things, you know, so I try to buck up and be happy. One night KL wants to go out and get drunk. I give her my blessing and tell her to go, happy to hang out with myself, read my book, drink my tea and relax for a damn minute. Our show playwright, Z comes into the room and some point and falls asleep, and soon I’m also in snoozeville.

It’s around 1.30am when KL comes stumbling in, sozzled to the tits and horny for me. This rarely happens at this point in our relationship and to be honest, I was gagging for it, so even though I was a little apprehensive because Z was asleep in the other bed, I comply with my wife’s wishes and fuck her silly. She goes to return the favour, but I gently rebuff her, concerned we’ve crossed the line already by going at it with our friend in the room. She falls asleep in two seconds flat and it’s all sunshine and roses.

The next day, Z goes to hang out with the rest of the cast and KL and I are left alone in the room. I’m feeling all sexy and glowy from the night before and say, “hey baby, how’s about it? I reckon it’s my turn.” I think I’m being flirty and I don’t see any resistance to the idea from her. She’s not overly responsive, which I attribute to the previous night’s drinking, but she doesn’t say no. So, she services me. I use that word specifically as that is what it felt like. She dutifully makes me come, and not two minutes afterwards as I’m pulling myself together, she says (verbatim),

“You forced me to do that.”

What?

My mouth drops open and I stare at her, aghast. “I what?” I rasp, feeling my stomach drop into my gut.

“I didn’t want to do that, but you don’t like it when I say no, and I figured I owed you from last night.”

WHAT??

I sat there, all the breath sucked from my body, my eyes stinging, my skin prickling and suddenly I feel sick and very, very dirty. “Are you saying I raped you?” I asked her, my stomach heaving. “Why didn’t you say no? Yes, I get upset when you say no, but I’d never force you. I feel like I’ve raped you.” I started to cry.

This seemed to shock her and she suddenly backtracked, exclaiming “no, of course not, I have issues, why would I say that, I love going down on you, I just …” But at that point I feel I want to tear my skin off my body, slough away the shame oozing out my pores, so feeling like a sordid old sleaze I excuse myself to take a shower.

In the shower I scrub at myself, feeling like the worst person in the world. Guilt, fear, shame, all of those awful feelings cascaded over me. I was certain I had her consent. Didn’t I? I went over and over what had just happened and I couldn’t understand why she would have sex with me if she didn’t want to. And then claim that she did want to! I was so confused. I later came to realise that this is gaslighting, a tactic to confuse and addle me, to keep me under control.

I start to sob and smash my head against the side of the shower. I clamp my hands over my mouth because I’m hiccuping and sobbing loudly and that embarasses me even more and I don’t want her to hear. I hear her calling my name but I yell for her to please leave me alone so I can get myself together.

Eventually, I calm down and get out of the shower, dry and dress myself, and open up the bathroom door to find her lying on the bed, foaming at the mouth. There’s a part of me that knows I’m being manipulated, but I’m learning now that this is a game, and I have to play my part. I stare at her. “What have you done?” She’s crying and foaming and gurgling, so I say I’m going to get Z who is a nurse, and she suddenly sits up, spitting the contents of her mouth into her hand and says, “I didn’t swallow them.” I understood then and there what this was. This was emotional blackmail, something she would do a further two times. So again, I played my part and I comforted her and I apologised while she convinced me that she put the pills in her mouth because she was “so hurt” by what she had accused me of doing.

And then it was forgotten. Just like that. A few days later the peeping incident happened and the last two nights of the show we were performing in was cancelled, partly because of the peeping, partly because sales were shit, and partly because the venue organisers were being difficult. I, being the eternal martyr of course, felt overwhelmingly responsible and began to disappear into myself in an attempt to dissociate.

Our last night there was the Mardi Gras parade and we were marching. I didn’t feel festive, I didn’t feel celebratory. I still felt dirty and disgusting and responsible for the tour being ruined, so my energy was low. Despite this I got dressed up, did my hair, did my face, slapped on a smile and we went to the marshalling area.

I couldn’t maintain the level of energy required to keep up that façade, however, and the mask started to slip. So my wife, the person who was supposed to hold me up when I was falling, the person who promised to hold my hand through the crap as well as the parade of life, the person who had seen first hand what kind of week I’d had in Sydney, got shitty at me because I wasn’t “having fun.” She told me I always did this, I always ruined it for her, and as much as I tried to defend myself, her anger won out. So I played my part. I conceded. I apologised and “had fun”. We marched, and she loved the attention. Every time a camera was on us she would grab me and kiss me in a show of defiant lesbian love. She held my hand and performed her role of loving wife for the public to see. I smiled and nodded and waved and danced and in doing so, unconsciously prepared myself for the shit storm of the last year and a half of our relationship to come.

I didn’t tell anyone except our therapist about this. I didn’t feel like I had the right. The irony is, deep in my heart, I felt like I deserved it because of my dismissal of KL’s ex IC and her claim of abuse. I was so invested in my ex wife’s version of this woman as a scheming, lying harpy that I failed to see the parallels in our stories, that she too had an incident that is not mine to tell, but that affected her as much as mine affected me. I will feel the sadness and embarrassment of that failure for a very long time to come.

~

Writing that didn’t make me feel better, I’m afraid. I’m not crying, I just feel gross. Rehashing all of that stuff isn’t cleansing for me because I know that wasn’t the first time – and it certainly won’t be the last time – she’s done something like that. However, I tell that story to illustrate what an abusive incident is, and as it was the onset of a continuing trend of behaviour, not just an isolated occurrence, it bears telling.

I understand that people with these narcissistic traits don’t actually love themselves. At their core, a narc is a mixed salad of entitlement, low self esteem, and shame. They have an idealised version of themselves that they seek out others to confirm and bolster. Underlying all of this of course, are profound feelings of inadequacy which are almost always projected onto their target. If KL was feeling unattractive, she would make underhanded comments about my age or my weight, never explicitly insulting, but barbed enough to make me start doubting myself. If she was feeling loss of control in another part of her life, she would start withholding sex, or demanding money, or claiming that I wasn’t pulling my weight.

The last year of our relationship was a blur of me working my arse off managing her career, arranging her music, writing and directing her cabaret (which she recently publicly claimed ownership of), funding that cabaret, producing that cabaret, doing all of her admin, paying some of her rent, giving her money to go to South Africa, accompanying her to night clubs in which I watched her getting hit on by various women while holding her wallet, keys and phone and generally being ignored by her and most of the other people in the club, promoting her, being available for sex on the rare occasion that she was drunk enough to be interested, and warning her about stringing along the young, 18-year-old girl that had fallen for her. Devaluing 101.

The next part, in which she ended our marriage and shacked up with the girl – who I’ll call PR and who she went on to also abuse – is called the discarding stage. PR, young, inexperienced and naive was fully ensconced in the idealisation phase and only saw KL’s ideal self, not knowing that she was caught up in the next cycle of narcissistic abuse. Of course, KL took no responsibility for this, just as she took little responsibility for her abuse of IC and again the cycle has continued onto the next woman.

This is what KL wrote to me just before our divorce application was submitted (I will add that this was not the end result of a text fight, this was in response to my refusal to print a document for her):

“Being married to you that last year sucked as you never appreciated what I could do for you, only pointed out what I couldn’t. Stop blaming others for your problems. Stop blaming just me for our failed marriage. I am safe and happy now and in a great place that I have forgiven myself for everything. I am moving forwards.”

She wrote something similar to both IC and PR after their relationships were over. I don’t think either of them refused to print a document for her, but who knows what atrocities they committed to elicit such a response (joke).

Despite what it may look like, this is not a “dump-on-my-ex-wife” post. To be honest, I feel genuinely sorry for her. Her behaviour, that message from her, her continued vicious cycling all point to someone who is deeply broken and self-hating. She doesn’t know how to fix it, how to make it right, so she keeps repeating the same thing over and over again, hoping for a different result. However, the only person that can get her off that wheel is herself.

I am a survivor. The other two women who have shared in these experiences are also survivors. We are strong, we are supportive, we still cry over what happened to us, but frankly, we’re kicking ass and taking names.

If you see anything similar to what you may be experiencing in my story, please seek help. In honour of World Narcissistic Abuse Awareness Day I end with a link to their page, and a list of warnings and red flags, edited because I’m a grammar nazi. I experienced probably about 95% of these signs. Be safe, peeps.

WNAAD

WARNING SIGNS

  • They have a sense of superiority, often being highly critical, often judgemental about others.
  • They have a sense of entitlement. Sometimes this comes off as confidence, but can manifest in subtle ways, like cutting through a service station rather than wait at the traffic lights, or deliberately leaving rubbish for someone else to pick up.
  • They give out back-handed compliments, such as “she has a figure like yours, you know, slim but no muscle tone.”
  • In a romantic relationship, the relationship moves quickly. For example they will shower you with attention, compliments or gifts, and say “I love you” very early on in the relationship.
  • They will start to subtly ignore you. They may appear to lose interest/get distracted or check their phone while you’re talking.
  • Their seemingly innocent words are often contradicted by their body language and tone of voice.
  • Their stories don’t quite add up, and you start to see the little lies. You may even tell yourself, “I just heard them lie to their friend, it was just a little white lie. But s/he wouldn’t lie to me.”
  • They have two sets of rules. Rules that apply to them, and rules that apply to everyone else. They may have unrealistic expectations of love and nurturing from others, but don’t hold themselves to the same high standards.
  • They have a lack of empathy, and are unable to see things from the perspective of others.
  • They have poor boundaries, and may regularly invade your privacy, go through your belongings, or expect that you can mind-read their wishes and needs.
  • They may be highly sensitive to criticism, or any suggestion that they are not in the right.
  • They have a “my way or the highway” attitude. They believe that they know best, and that their way of doing things is the correct way.
  • Initially they can come off quite charming and charismatic, always knowing the right thing to say.

RED FLAGS

As the relationship becomes more established, you may start to see some stronger warning signs, or red flags, such as:

  • You may spot bigger lies, and when you confront them, you never get a straight answer or they will turn it around and accuse you of what they’re actually doing.
  • If you try to raise an issue with them, it becomes a full-blown argument. They may accuse you of causing the fight, or they may use the silent treatment as a way of punishing you for confronting them.
  • Arguments feel circular and nonsensical. You’re left feeling emotionally battered and confused. There is no resolution to the issue, no sense of compromise or seeking a win/win outcome. It feels like they need to “win” regardless of the issue or what’s at stake. You’re left feeling unsupported and misunderstood.
  • They may tell you something didn’t happen when you know it did, or vice versa. This is called gaslighting and it’s designed to make you doubt your own reality and judgement.
  • You feel like you need to ask for permission before making plans with others. They may try to control where you go, or call and text constantly to check up on you, and interrogate you about where you’ve been/what you’ve been doing.
  • You start seeing less of your family and friends. Perhaps because they openly prevent you from doing so through guilt tripping or threats of abandonment. Or, it could be more subtle, where they make such a fuss about seeing your family and friends that you start avoiding them so you don’t have to deal with the fallout. You end up feeling isolated and lonely.
  • The relationship feels one-sided – like you are the one who is doing all the giving, the one who is always in the wrong, the one who is trying the hardest, changing the most or doing the most sacrificing, just to make them happy. And it still doesn’t work. Nothing is enough for them.
  • You can’t feel at ease or relaxed in their presence. You feel like you’re walking on eggshells, waiting for the next time they lash out at you. You realize you feel a sense of relief when they aren’t there.
  • You feel like whatever you do, it’s not enough. You’re manipulated so that your flaws and vulnerabilities are exploited and used against you at every opportunity. You begin to feel inadequate, unlovable, and like everything is all your fault.