Monday 31 October 2011

Swallowing Tears

I can pinpoint almost to the day when I started to fall behind. I was still close enough to keep up, but the deep paring of this year dragged me, and time, back further still. There are changes afoot and the ground is preparing again to fracture my time and disturb my balance.

At the time of our great southern investment there was little I could hold onto that remained my constant. My parents, my family were the touch stone, reliably present, and knowing enough to stay with me whatever I did and whatever choices I made. They provided an anchor, a central strength. My friends shifted their orbit around me as the changes in my life impacted on them, and Salt was this new creature who promised dreams I’d never thought to imagine.

I can see a time ahead when this new life, this present, and this future will have normalised and I’ll have caught up. In the interim I wonder if immobilisation can aid the lag. Maybe if I sat still long enough, stillness would give breath to the space. Staying in the present I can do, believing the present is something else.

I’ve listened to those who’ve lost who search for meaning, who want to make something of it, to do more, to action the loss. I’ve wanted to do so much less. To ground down, to curl in, to protect, to loosen the jaw, and be still, so very still.

For October we remembered.

Saturday 29 October 2011

What's in a name


Yesterday afternoon a new acquaintance, Johnno, kept calling me Rach. ‘Good question Rach ...’ ‘well, Rach, it’s funny you say that ...’ A few references passed before I realised he was referring to me. By then it was too late, so I didn’t correct him. I liked being Rach. She’s more relaxed than I am, her hair’s a bit longer, and she favours navy blue. Rach is less complex, knows the community better, and rarely wears make-up. She likes to read although her political interest wanes faster than mine. I think she was going to be a better friend to Johnno than what I would've been.

While I was away from the table putting Squid in her bed Salt began to tell a few stories, ‘Katie and I went to Tasmania last year ....’ ‘Yes Katie enjoyed it immensely.’ When I returned, without a skip, I was Katie again. Rach wasn’t around long enough for me to miss her, but I think Johnno does.

Monday 17 October 2011

Taking Turns


Last weekend I jumped on our mower for the first time since before I was pregnant with Squid. On previous mows I’d give an envious nod and wave to our man neighbour flying by on his double paced, flash Gordon mower. The envy was such that Salt invested in a new mower. The old one made Salt swear like a sailor. It stopped without notice and got bogged mid-mow. The swearing made my eyes water and the cows blush. The new mower has a wider cut and goes like the clappers.

As kids my brothers and I were allowed to mow around the farm house. The farm itself was on five hundred acres, but the house was on about three. We had to take turns on the route marked out by my grandfather. My eldest brother did a circuit, held the gear down while my middle brother jumped on, released the gear and off he’d go. It involved steep inclines and in some places we had to navigate grandma’s trees. I misjudged once, which is to say that I drove straight into the water gauge. On occasion my brothers wouldn’t stop and they’d career off on another great loop. I’d protest, but it fell on deaf ears and roars of fading laughter. As I got older I didn’t stop visiting the farm and there were times when I got to mow the whole property. What a gift. Whether with my brothers, or on my own, on the mower I’d sing, reflect, admire the scenery, inhale deeply, and provide my grandmother with space from her ever present shadow.

Salt’s new mower is yellow. It has a driving wheel and an accelerator. It took me little time to return the property to lawn, but it doesn’t have the same feel, it was simply too fast. The old mower might’ve given up the ghost every now and then, but its gentle, familiar pace and beer holder created space for quieter singing and time to solve some of the world’s most pressing problems and ponder the abstract.

With Spring the grass has awakened, and the opportunities for mowing have grown. Next time I’ll lay off the accelerator and slow the lawn down, and then remember to buy Salt a water gauge. 

Wednesday 12 October 2011

That's a funny thing

Salt is a synesthete. Each letter, number, and day of the week he associates with a colour. The colour variations are limited, but they are always the same.

1 is white
2 is red
3 is yellow
4 is blue
5 is a mustardy yellow
6 is pinky red
7 is green
8 is a dark, strong red
9 is also yellow
10 is black, as is zero.

For teens, the second number dominates, for example, 19 is yellow. For all subsequent numbers the first number’s colour dominates.

Sunday, Monday and Tuesday are all different shades of yellow;
Wednesday is a red, orange;
Thursday is grey;
Friday is black; and
Saturday is a reddy, pink.

Some characters of the alphabet interchange between black and white depending on the context, the others are permanently their colour.

His form of synesthesia means he has no emotive connection to the colours, and he describes it as an internal connection, rather than an external one. He can see that the text is black and white, but says that the colours ‘exist in the ether. I can see a black 2 on a page, but I know that the real character of 2 is to be red.’ He has no explanation for the associations, and says that it hasn’t particularly helped him in life. The colour sequencing can help with spelling although it’s not reliable for double letters in a word, for example, meerkat. Too much yellow.

Oliver Sacks talks about synesthesia in MusicophiliaTales of Music and the Brain. Sacks says that synesthesia occurs in about 1 in 2000, probably more although most people don’t see it as a “condition.” Each synesthete has their own colour correspondence, and it can also involve any of the senses, so that a colour can have a smell or every musical interval its own taste. Many musicians have synesthesia and associate colour to sound. Salt is a jazz musician, and after relentless questioning, he assures me that he doesn’t colour associate to sound, but he does to the notes. He has met only one other synesthete and their colours were all together different, “it made no sense, to think that the colours would be different, it was like the world was upside down – what? No! 2 is RED!”

I remember Salt first telling me about his synesthesia. It was followed by a bombardment of questions. Every now and then I think of a new question, like, what if you see an actual red 2, does it make it invisible? One of Salt’s many virtues is patience. “Nothing happens when I see a character in the colour I imagine it in, that would be normal, what is more strange is if I see a character in a different colour ... and they are all 'wrong' then it seems a little strange. Not overpoweringly so. I mean, I still function pretty normally, ask my wife if you don't believe me...”

He functions normally, well, normally enough for me.

Saturday 8 October 2011

Special Needs


One of the less intelligent agreements I entered into was to get a dog. Love can also delude and the euphoria can smear what would otherwise be a constructive, insightful, unsentimental decision-making process. One summer afternoon I arrived home to Salt standing in the kitchen doorway with a red kelpie puppy safely tucked under his right arm. Their smiles were as wide as the ocean.

I think I thought that all dogs were like Sam. Sixteen when she died, she was a beautifully overweight beagle. Sam was never far from us, she was calm, barked but once and surprised herself, and loved her bed as much as we loved her. Aside from having someone else iron while you’re watching telly, one of the most comforting visions is a dog fast asleep in their bed.

Emma arrived one week before we moved. Poorly timed is a kind analysis. She slept in our bedroom, I didn’t. My senses piqued, I smelt and heard her every movement. On the afternoon of her arrival I quickly noticed her back left leg, it looked skewiff. Salt couldn’t see it. My special needs assessment proved not only correct, but absolute. Emma started to scratch, chew, and gnaw at her wrists, and caused such eczema empathy that our vet adored her. As Emma gained weight, her back leg weakened. X-rays, wringing hands and nervous pockets, the specialist declared that he’d like to write an academic paper on Emma’s knees of which he’d never seen the like. We came home appreciative of Emma’s unique knees, but curious about how to help her. Let us know how she goes, he said.

Emma’s troubled knees disappeared, the daily cortisone heals her skin, and we’ve tested barking collars to sooth our relationship. She’s nothing like Sam, but Emma and Salt have a connection, and a love for one another that leaves Emma forlorn when Salt goes to work. I was warned more than once that having a baby is much like having a puppy, only worse. Nonsense. We joke, nervously, that Squid’s first words will echo her mother’s - Emma! Get on yer bed.

Saturday 1 October 2011

Sugar cubes

Our dear friend and neighbour, Mona, was here long before us. Trim with a thick New Zealand accent, dark rimmed glasses, cropped grey hair, comfortably clothed, she reliably causes Squid to sob. It will be a year next week since her partner died.

Aside from our neighbour the only other Mona I’ve ever known was my great aunt. She married my grandmother’s brother. The only boy of five children, my great uncle worked at Mobil until he was made redundant and consequently suffered depression. My grandfather had a house built for him on the farm and employed him as the caretaker. I remember him well on the red tractor in navy blue overalls, or standing by the great, grey shed overlooking the dam. I can still smell that shed; the hay, the thermos, the earth. The shed housed sugar cubes for tea at smoko. My brothers and I sucked through them while being pulled behind the tractor on a farming contraption better suited to ploughing. Hanging from the cattle yards, we’d watch my great uncle mingle with the cows, he looked at ease and content.

Mona was never out in the paddocks with us. On afternoons we’d walk down the road to see her. She’d be in the front of the house with pieces of her pottery scattered here and there. Mona drove a pale yellow beetle VW and was Olley-esque. To enter their home, we’d walk through a converted garage, which was my uncle’s music room. He’d play the organ for us, but on Sundays he’d play at church. He died of a heart attack mending the bridge over the lower creek.

Mona stayed on in the house, but her mind aged more poorly than her body. My grandmother said that she’d have piles and piles of oranges in the kitchen having forgotten that she’d already been shopping. Eventually, she required full-time care. There, she met Bill, and at an ancient age, found love again and remarried.

Puzzles, crosswords and Sudoku are said to stave off a slowing, ageing mind. I’ve never been one for crosswords and such, and I doubt great aunt Mona was either. A gardener, a potter and artist she once even joined the circus. A wistful self who found love again. I wonder if our Mona next door ever dreams of love again. She’s less wistful, but wistfulness isn’t a precursor for love.