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 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.

I lost myself, defining myself by my grief and by the mental illness which is a result of events beyond my control in my childhood. I lost belief in my self, in what made me who I am. I became stuck in my limitations, trying to validate myself through pouring my energies into others.

Being with someone younger seemed only to remind me that I am older, and that became a limitation. The more limited I became, the less secure she became. How foolish. In trying to be everything she wanted, I forgot to be what I needed. Her security was not my responsibility any more than my validity was hers. But I understand now. I understand that I failed to see the beauty in that difference between us. I see it now and I am grateful.

This does not define me. This failure is a gift. It has reminded me of my worth and that worth can only come from within. I am my own power. I am my own worth. I am my own success. Of all the lessons she taught me, these are the most valuable.

I have no need to prove anything to anyone, or even myself. I am content to sit in the moment and be present with what and who I Am. This does not discount my pain, this does not decrease the value of my experience. It is what it is, and I am who I am.

This is my lesson.

Beginning Again

A Letter To My Mother

Dear Mum

I sometimes wonder what it would be like to fall from a great height and survive; what the impact of my body hitting the ground would feel like. Would I pass out? Or would I lie there, all the breath knocked out of me, at one with the moment?

Since you’ve been gone, I feel like I’ve jumped off a cliff and tried to fly. My back is fucked, I have a constant cough (probably more due to the amount of cigarettes I’m sucking down than anything else), my knee is giving out and I’m tired all the time. All the fucking time. My wife gave me a massage last night that left me in tears. In trying to fix my back, she released all this emotional garbage that was caught up in the muscles, sinews and tendons supporting my spine. I sobbed like a child, keening and hiccuping, like the world was ending. Something has to change.

Something has changed. The world has hit breaking point and I feel we are on the brink of a world war. This is what history has dictated since we have failed to learn from it. It may seem that all the conflict is oceans away from those of us here at the bottom of the world. Distance – usually a tyrant – is saving us from the immediacy of suicide bombs and guns and planes being shot from the sky. We weigh in our opinions on issues we know little about – not for lack of trying, but simply because what we are fed through mainstream media is homogenised, censored and spun into webs of carefully worded (dis)information. Those seeking transparency are labelled as kooks, naysayers and agitators. We as a people are being gently patted on the head and told not to worry, it’s too far away from us, here, have a free iPad!

A lot has happened in the world in the past two months since you passed. A man held up a chocolate store in Sydney. The country thought it was terrorism, when in reality it was one unhinged man on a rampage. Staff of a racist, xenophobic magazine were gunned down by religious extremists in France. Neither party was in the right as neither freedom of religion nor freedom of speech justifies such violence. Thousands of people were massacred in Nigeria. Nobody knew about it here because the victims weren’t white or Christian or American or important.

Evil isn’t so easily defined anymore. I’m afraid of what the world is becoming. I’m afraid of what I’m becoming. I’m so angry, quick to snap at anyone for anything, allowing myself to get dragged down by other people’s shit, hating on myself for getting a little bit fat, I’m publicly reacting to things I have no business reacting to, letting the little things become big deals. My wife is suffering; it’s been such a difficult year for her. She’s not been doing well; the pressure of the past year has finally gotten to her and the shit has hit the fan. She’s struggling with newly diagnosed depression, and I’m struggling to support her. She met you and you were a support for her and she needs you so much and now you’re gone.

Why aren’t you here? Why did you have to go? I am a child, because all I’m thinking about is my grief and what’s happening to me when all this stuff is going on in the world. The times I have thought how much I’ve needed you is triple the amount before you went. That’s funny, isn’t it? You were always there, always sending me cute emails, always ready to give help when I needed it, which in reality wasn’t often. Now that you’re not here, every time something goes wrong or a celebration is due, I feel your absence keenly. I’ve seen you no more than eight times in the last 19 years, but your energy was always with me. My brother assures me you’re now looking over me. I can’t feel it yet.

All I can feel is this emptiness. I’m lost. So very lost. Theatre, usually the saviour of my soul, holds no joy for me anymore. My home, usually my sanctuary, is threatened by malicious outside forces. My love for K, the thing I’ve fought for at the expense of friendship and my reputation, is buckling under the weight of somebody else’s hate. I want to run. We both want to run back home to the safety of you, but you’re not here anymore, and I’m so angry and sad and grief-stricken.

I needed to talk to you the other day. Not about anything in particular. Just to talk to you and hear one of your stories about Daisy the cow, or the crazy things you and your kin would get up to on the property, or the songs you would sing for Granddad. I wanted to hear more about your nursing days, about you parachuting out of planes and landing in the ocean, about the judo you learned so you could be safe and independent. I even wanted to hear the sorry story of you and my father, how you loved him, how you failed each other. I wanted to tell you that I’ve forgiven you for your violence towards me when I was a child, that I forgave you long ago, and that your death brought all of that shit back up again, and I had to reconcile who you were then with how you were before you died. Two different women. One I feared, the other I admired. One I grieved for, the other I celebrated. I wanted to tell you that I understood. I wanted to tell you how grateful I am that you saw and heard all the terrible things I did to myself and other people during those awful years of my twenties and that you loved me anyway. You never threw it in my face. You never told me you were disappointed. You just told me that you loved me, that I was your precious girl, and that you were so proud of me.

I had so little patience with you the last few years. You seemed so caught up in your pain and in your past. You would linger there, dwelling in all the things that hurt you, refusing to let go of that and see the present for what it was. I didn’t know, until you died and I was sitting on your bed in your bedroom, how hard you tried. I saw the symbols of your faith throughout your house: crosses, pictures of Buddha, your precious angels, notes to yourself reminding you to let go and be thankful. I saw those things and I felt so ashamed that I didn’t have more faith in you. My gods, you tried. You tried so hard. I’m so sorry.

I miss you. I miss you like nothing I’ve ever felt before.

I wish you were here.

My eternal love,

Missey

The Long Journey Home

Stepping off the plane onto the tarmac at Brisbane airport, I’m hit with a wave of sticky humid heat, like a slap in the face with a warm wet towel. My hair immediately responds with vigour, springing out from my head like little snakes, unruly and untameable. I am reminded one should never wear jeans in Brisbane.

Here ends the first leg of my journey home. I have a headache – a persistent sickly thud in my temples that has been present since the car ride to Melbourne airport. I have cried already today several times. My eyes are sore and the salt behind my contacts is making my vision fuzzy. I think back to the day already half gone: my brother Karl’s phone call at 7.30am (“get on a plane, sis”), having a bath to soothe an anxiety attack, phone conversations with my father, my cousin, my mum, the trip to the airport, K and I playing ‘spot the lezzy’ as we wait for me to board the plane. I think I cried as much for leaving her as I did for anything else.

Brisbane smells like salt; a sea breeze. The air is thick but fresh – an odd combination. I trundle my suitcase to the Airtrain while on the phone to K. This is my first experience of a layover itinerary. I had connecting flight jitters and needed the sound of her voice in my ear. I’m already thinking about the future and how lacking it will be without Mum. I feel ashamed, as if I’ve failed her somehow.

I board the flight to Auckland, my eyes puffy and red. The attendants take pity on me, asking if I’m all right. I smile that defeated smile of one who isn’t all right, actually, but has to be. They stow my baggage for me. I’m grateful for someone else taking control of that one little thing. In the plane, gaining altitude, I have the unexpected pleasure of witnessing an achingly beautiful sunset reflecting vaguely off the darkening Tasman Sea. It seems fitting, somehow. A last hurrah.

I knew Mum was going to go since I heard about the heart attack. When my brother told me of the plan for open heart surgery I got that cold prickly sensation in my chest. That knowledge and the acceptance of her impending death made me feel callous and cold, like I had given up on her already. But I know that feeling. I seem to have a gift for predicting doom.

K kept saying to me right up to the moment I left that Mum could pull through. My beautiful wife with her unending optimism when it comes to me; I wanted to jump on board with her. But I knew. My brother knew. Mum knew.

I sit, uncomfortable in the airplane seat, screaming kids everywhere, it seems. Their high-pitched whining is boring into my skull, and their mother sitting behind me talks too loud because she’s wearing headphones. The kid kicks the back of my seat. I want to yell at them to fuck off but I don’t because it must be hard mustering three kids on an international flight. I spill wine on myself because I’m clumsy and that’s what I tend to do without fail on any plane trip, so now I smell like bad South Australian Sauvignon Blanc. I’m starving, but I didn’t book the ticket with food, so I miss out. I begin to feel resentful and shitty, my weariness turning me into a brat. I just want to be there already.

Mum
I arrive in Auckland at silly-o’clock in the morning, met by one of my 50+ first cousins, Cleave. I’m already exhausted but I heave up my heart and am spirited away to the hospital. I am met at the hospital by a gaggle of my mother’s sisters. All these women, all eight of them, are alpha females. I can only imagine what that must have been like to contend with in a family of 13 kids, but at this moment I am glad of their staunchness. They prepare me as best as they can, but the sight of my mother hits me hard in the chest and my breath is knocked out of me. This woman, this strong, intimidating woman is now as fragile as a butterfly, her wings paper thin. She has been waiting for me. She cries as I take her hand. I cry. When will I ever stop crying? I sit with her as the aunties rally. They have stepped up to heights unimaginable. Their support and their love is as thick as syrup and I am enveloped by it. My mother has been safe in their care.

My brother, my poor, wrecked eldest brother walks into Mum’s room after catching a few hours’ sleep. He’s been here since yesterday, a constant presence. He looks like I feel: wasted, drained exhausted. Yeah, that is a word that will live with us for the next 24 hours. It will define us from here on in. Exhausted.

I hold Mum’s hand as my brother fills me in. My mother, weak but present, interjects.

“Missey, where are you?”

“I’m here, Mum.”

“What are you saying?”

“It’s okay, Mum,” my brother says. “I’m filling Kristina in on what you’ve been up to.”

My mother smiles benignly. “Misbehaving,” she whispers.

My mother is a crack up.

I sleep badly for two hours that night, curled up in an armchair in Mum’s room. My mother has restless leg syndrome, so my Auntie Doreen stretches her legs and massages them. Mum talks to her all night. I catch snippets of the conversation but I tune most of it out, my body needing my mind to rest. I know Mum is achieving catharsis in talking to her sister; I don’t need to know what is said. My eyes open at the sound of the nursing shift change and immediately they fly to Mum’s heart monitor. She’s been having VT episodes – Ventricular Tachycardia – which is when her heart rate spikes to upwards of 208 bpm, so I’m making sure she’s sitting nicely at 74 bpm. She’s alert, perky and engaged. My aunt is exhausted. I wake Karl and we go to breakfast and there’s that faint hope again that she maybe might come out of this. We discuss our dad, how many hours we’ve slept since Mum went into hospital, the outrageousness of hospital cafes not automatically serving real butter with their eggs and toast, a little about politics and a lot about my wife. We go back up to Mum’s room and she’s sitting up chatting to more of her sisters who have arrived to see her. The rallying of the family has amazed us. Their presence has kept her heart rate stable and the love in the room has made her cheeks rosy again. Karl and I decide after a few hours that we’re going to go home for a shower and a nap because we’re wrecked, despite the few hours of sleep we’ve had.

Ten minutes after leaving the hospital we get a phone call. Mum’s had another major spike and she had to be shocked twice with the defibrillator to bring her back. Karl and I look at each other and that inkling of hope we had earlier in the day has gone. Neither of us say it, but we both know this is not going to end with Mum walking out of hospital. I ring K and my other brother Hiran. Come now. You need to come now. Hiran is still in Kuala Lumpur, waiting for a flight. K is reticent because she’s a stresser. I’m tired and I just want them here.

I shower and go back to the hospital. Mum is quiet and faint again, her colour faded. More family turn up. My nana comes to see her daughter, another strained filial relationship that is now being resolved. I can only imagine how my 95-year-old grandmother feels about knowing her second born child is going to die. Everyone thought Nana would go before her children. No one expected this.

My mother’s heart rate suddenly spikes to 198 and she gasps. Nana is pulled out of the room as the nursing team rush in and I watch my mother lose consciousness. I yell for my brother. The nurses call all clear amidst the chaos of people running and machines screaming and Mum is shocked back to life.

I am shocked. And terrified. I can’t describe how it feels watching that for the first time. Karl has seen it before so he rushes me out of the room and I sob and keen like a child. Less than half an hour later it happens again, and this time I watch my mother die and be brought back. I see that heart monitor go to 0 and it’s clear my mother is not going to last the two days until Hiran arrives. The nurses are calling her name, coaxing her out of the darkness. “Cathy! Catherine!”

My mother’s eyes open. “What? Stop yelling at me.”

The laughter breaks the tension enough for us all to take a breath.

Mum insists that she must be kept alive until Hiran is here. Karl and I are asked to make a decision. Strangely, it’s not hard to make. Mum is feeling no pain during these spikes, but the damage these electrical bursts are doing to her heart and her body mean that it’s going to happen again and again and more frequently and none of us can do it. Despite Mum’s burning desire to see her middle child, it’s destroying us to see her die over and over again. The cardiologist has a chat to Karl and me, and then he has a chat to Mum.

The decision is made. No more resuscitation. The next spike that happens may well be her last and we just have to let her go. We can do that. We know we can. Mum’s been in pain for so long, emotionally and physically tortured by the circumstance of her life that her death will be a blessed relief. She has struggled and fought and been knocked down so many times, and although she’s gotten back up every time it has taken its toll. Her soul is tired. She misses her father, 50 years gone. She wants to go home.

We get Hiran on Skype; he’s still in KL. They say their goodbyes. My heart is breaking.

I am exhausted. Debilitated. Sapped, shot, wasted. I have walked from the cardiac unit to the car back to the cardiac unit time and again. I know the journey down that corridor like the steps to my own house. Everything is surreal, coloured in stark light like an over-exposed photo. I’m running on autopilot: have a cigarette, wash hands, watch Mum, talk to cousins, make huge decisions, be responsible. I feel like a child lost at the supermarket.

I sit next to Mum as they take the wires and catheters and IV tubes off her. I tell her I love her. She tells me she blesses my marriage, that she wishes she could be there to see me be married legally. She says she can go, confident to leave me in K’s hands. She says to tell K she loves her and she will be looking out for us both from above. She tells Karl to find someone who makes him happy. She wishes she could touch her son Hiran just one more time. We all fall silent, waiting for her to go. We sing Pokarekare Ana, one of Mum’s favourite songs. The aunties sing a waiata, we sing Amazing Grace, for my mum is a Grace and she’s amazing.

What feels like hours pass, but in reality it’s probably only 20 minutes. Mum stirs.

“Oh,” she murmurs. “I seem to be still here.” She breathes. “You must be so bored.”

Again, laughter. We disperse, Mum’s not going yet. Karl and I have a discussion, how are we feeling? Wrecked, tired, drained, sad. Karl says he needs a drink and some food. Cleave and I go on a fish and chips and wine run. We smuggle booze back into the hospital. The nurses don’t care. They’ve been so excellent, the care they’ve provided has been extraordinary.

I eat, sigh because the food is awful. I sit by myself as I need the space. I’m so tired. I announce to my cousin that I’m going to take a nap.

“Kristina.” There’s an urgency to the voice calling my name. “You need to come in now.”

Mum has a look about her, like she’s not quite behind her own eyes. There’s no longer the beep of the monitor to let us know the state of her heart. There’s just that look.

I sit next to her again and take her hand in mine. She’s still holding the rose quartz crystal I gave her when I arrived at the hospital. It gives her comfort. I tell her I love her. I can’t seem to say it enough. She whispers to me, “you have no idea how much I love you, my precious baby girl.”

Karl is standing on the other side of the bed, holding her other hand, stroking her forehead. The aunties, uncles and cousins are crowded around us, but all I can see is my mother. My strong, independent, imposing mother who taught me how to survive in a man’s world; who hit me as a child but loved me fiercely; who accepted every decision I made because she knew it was my life to live; who spent the last decade making up for bad mistakes; who tried her best, and despite the circumstances raised three good kids; who gave up dreams of owning her own home so that we could have music lessons; who did it all on her own.

My mum’s face changes – she’s going. My auntie Doreen says very quietly, “her pulse is threading.” Suddenly, Mum opens her eyes, queerly blue after a lifetime of hazel. She gazes directly at me, long enough to register my sad smile, then her eyes shift to just behind my shoulder. She has a look of wonder on her face and I know that she’s seeing her beloved dad. She closes her eyes again, her mouth slackens (oh shit, this is it). Her breathing becomes laboured and shallow, more time lapses between each gasp. It is disturbing to watch, but this is apparently a peaceful death. Doreen quietly informs us that Mum’s heart is fibrillating and then she stops breathing.

My mother is dead.

Something in me cracks and I sob like I’ve never sobbed before. A list of facts races through my mind: she’ll never see me marry legally she won’t see me on the big screen she’ll never get her house she’ll never meet my babies oh god what do I do when I’m pregnant I took it for granted that she’d be there I need her to be there what am I going to do what am I going to do? I’m panicking so I don’t realise I’ve said the last part aloud. Karl looks at me. “Karl, what are we going to do?” My big brother, who stepped into the role of my father when he was only 8 years old rushes around the bed and wraps me in his arms.

“It’ll be okay,” he murmurs. “We’re going to be okay. We’re all going to be okay.”

We may be. But we’re changed.

A few of the aunties and I wash Mum down and then the wonderful nurses help us get her into the shroud. We form a guard of honour as the orderlies wheel her to the elevator to take her downstairs to the morgue. One of the nurses comes out and stands with us. We sing again and then we escort her down. Mum’s gone. We say goodbye.

The next few days until her funeral are blurred into hours awake and hours asleep. I sleep simply because I can’t stay awake. I’m awake because things need to be done. K arrives just over 24 hours after Mum’s gone. Hiran arrives a few hours after that. Arrangements are made, people are informed. My father is coming over for the funeral. The boys (my brothers) and I prepare for the event. Mum wanted music so we have to rehearse. We play together like it hasn’t been 20 years since the last time. We sleep little, we eat little. I cry a lot. K is a rock, she sheds tears privately with me. She is trying so hard to be strong.

The funeral is beautiful and brutal. I can’t sing the beginning of our second song, but then I do because it’s Mum and all she wanted was to hear us kids play together again. My father breaks down and into applause simultaneously, leading the charge for the Benton kids. I don’t know how we did it, but we did. Karl and I cry. Hiran is as stoic as ever, but I know my brother. His heart is breaking as much as mine. Our fractured little far-flung family.

The next week flies by as quickly as the last. K and I get New Zealand married; a legal, happy celebration with a few of our aunties from both sides of my family in the midst of such sadness. Three days later, my grandmother dies. Mum’s 95-year-old mum. We reel in shock again. It was expected, but not yet. I can’t do another funeral. I know now what I can and can’t take, so K and I decide to fly home. The extended family step up again and my auntie Liz and uncle Pat offer to cover me financially so I can stay. The offer is considered simply because of its generosity, but I have to go home. I can’t escape my every day life – now without Mum – any longer.

I fly home with K with money given to me by another wonderful aunt Carolyn who has now taken a responsibility of sorts for my welfare. Our rent is paid because of that money. I can’t thank her enough. On the plane I finish this piece of writing because I need to. I am no longer what I once was. My mother is gone. I, ever the empath, the sensitive, can’t feel her. I get messages from her. I get information, but I can’t feel her. This scares me because now I feel so very alone, even though I know I’m not. But I’m too young to not have a mum. I know she’s happy. She’s no longer in pain. She has her garden and her house and her dad.

But I don’t have a Mum.

Catherine Mary Grace (Benton until she reverted to her maiden name by deed poll), born on 26 May 1943, died on 22 November 2014 at the age of 71 from Ventricular Tachycardia. She also had cancer in her uterus and liver. She is survived by her three children: Karl 42, musician, Hiran 39, musician, and Kristina 37, actor/composer. She is also survived by her sisters and brothers Anne, Bill, Rita, Mary, Elizabeth, John, Doreen, Marie, Patrick, Robert, Carolyn and Valerie. Cathy’s years of sacrifice enabled her children to follow their dreams and their art. She left behind a legacy of music, responsibility and accountability, which I will uphold to my dying day.

Her last word was my brother’s name. “Hiran.”

Young MumI love you, Mum.

Fifteen Assumptions That Might Be Useful To Make

Exactly what I need to read right now.

The Belle Jar

1. Assume that you are loved.

2. Assume that those who love you find some kind of value in you and the things you do.

3. Assume, however, that you don’t need to be valuable in order to be worthy of love.

4. Assume that there is no one out there keeping a tally of all of your failings, ready to throw it in your face when you’re either feeling too good or too awful about yourself.

5. Assume that if anyone actually is keeping a tally of all your failings, that act says more about them than it does about you.

6. Assume that you can’t make all of the people happy all of the time; maybe not even some of the people some of the time.

7. Assume that you will, over the course of your life, sometimes anger or disappoint the people you love.

8. Assume that…

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In Memoriam

Being an actor means being vulnerable. I think so, anyway. I don’t believe I could do what I do on the stage if I hadn’t lived, really lived. That isn’t to say that if a person hasn’t rolled around in the muck of life they can’t be a convincing actor; some people just have the gift of telling stories. I like to think of acting as representing life as honestly as possible. My dear mentor and teacher Peter Oyston once said to me that nothing we do on stage as actors is ‘real’. It’s all contrived, but to be in the moment when we’re on stage, to utterly believe in that moment is the best chance we have of producing an authentic representation of life.

Peter passed away two weeks ago, which has driven me into a long series of moments of reflection. He was the first person in my life to sit me down and say, “you can act. And you should.” I’ve been acting all my life: when I was in the sex industry (bombshell alert!), I was acting. At school, at Uni, I was acting. We all ‘act’ at various points in our lives, but Peter gave me permission to act for a living, and he helped me to see that my experiences in life were only going to inform my process. He accepted me with no judgment. He saw the shitty things I went through in my younger years as a boon to my craft. To be unapologetically poetic, he set me free. And I thank him for that.

Peter in 2009. Photo by Phoebe Taylor

Peter in 2009.
Photo by Phoebe Taylor

Earlier this year, another theatre-maker friend and I wrote and produced a play called “Skinhouse” which Peter came to see. It was a play based around my experiences in the sex industry and how my friend – who I lived with for a time – and I coped with these experiences. I was standing outside after the performance talking with Peter and a reviewer, and I said of Peter, “this is the man who taught me how to act.” Peter smiled and said, “you already knew, Princess. I merely helped you to see that you could do it.”

How true.