On poetry and culture

When I was twenty-two I took the photos of my ex-boyfriend Paul and cut him out of the frame then set a match to the amputated pile in the kitchen sink.

Smoke curled . To my mother, Paul, as an Australian lack culture

She said it often enough in my childhood to believe she was onto something. 

What’s culture? My mind ricocheted to the men working on building sites in the suburbs erecting yet another AV Jennings special on the back blocks of Cheltenham. 

I did not ask her to elaborate on the word culture, but my mind shot off to my father’s art books with all those images inside, mainly of half or fully naked women leaning on one another or draped across beds with one flopping to the floor as if they had lost all ability to hold themselves together. 

Was this culture?

This was not Australian. Not like the scenes of the bush by Hans Heysen, another European, who like my mother, likely longed for home. 

Home was a long way off and this place where I was born felt foreign from the get-go. While our name attracted derision for its foreignness. The difficulty of Schooneveldt. 

Was this culture

Surely culture was a good thing because my mother used the word ‘lack’, and in her choice she hinted at loss and sorrow. As if culture rested elsewhere, in Europe, her home. 

Did I have culture? 

Was culture a skill or was it more an aptitude for fitting in? 

When I was in my final year of school the nuns awarded me a book for what they called academic excellence. Not because I was an extraordinarily gifted child, as I saw many others around me, but because I was conscientious, handed in my homework on time and knew how to string polite words together. 

My mother loved the beach and on weekdays during holidays when we took the blue bus to Mentone and staked out our yellow piece of sand, sandwiched between all the heaving bodies that came in view on hot summer days, my mother looked across the still waters and pined for home. 

There over the sea is my homeMy family

I knew then these people way away over the water were the people who oozed culture from their fingertips. While I simply clumped through life carelessly, whose BBC English voice cultivated under the care of Catholic nuns in a blue stone boarding school and by listening to the announcers on the ABC whose rounded vowels reminded me of the late queen, the plum in the mouth, pomposity of the regal family. 

Only later I developed the clang and nasal twang of the inveterate Australian and lost all sense of culture. 

When I revisit the land of my birth after a trip away over the seas and look at the colour of the sky, those luminescent blues. I think of poetry.

But I do not know this thing called poetry 

The way people find words and convert them into shapes with meanings that fly off the page. 

In every word ,a lifetime. 

In every image, a universe. 

In every cloud, the promise of what lies behind. 

I do not know how to write a poem. 

I tried when I was young seated under the Lombardy poplars 

on the abandoned Farm Road estate of my childhood. 

I was Elizabeth Barret Browning with her list of ways to love.

My pencil and notebook in my lap.

I looked to the blue above for inspiration but found none. 

I cannot write a poem, not like the poets.

They have a way with words and images, 

cadences and syntax, 

of summers and snow, 

of frosts 

To settle on the ground of our minds.   

Over worked, overwrought and weary of the burdens of life

‘You don’t know me, but you have been inside me,’ writes Anne Enright on the plight of those who are raped. Girls and women mostly. A cry to strangers who take it upon themselves to invade the bodies of others.

We are not encouraged to speak too loudly of the details beyond the word ‘rape;’ unsettling as it is for most, especially those who have been raped, less so for those still untouched.

Someone once talked about how when a doctor examines us anally or vaginally and does so from necessity as part of a medical procedure, the doctor wears gloves. If they do not wear gloves it, too, is tantamount to rape.

So many rules about how we approach other people, a handshake, or a kiss, a bow, doffing your hat, or tugging your forelock in the old vernacular in deference to our betters. Always accompanied by the qualification, not to take it upon yourself to enter the body of another without their say so.

A baby might poke a finger into your mouth while exploring the contours of your face, as babies sometimes do, but no one else, unless invited, can enter the orifices of your body except in cases of medical care or the agreed love of another. A dentist to check your teeth. A surgeon to remove your tonsils. 

Recently at a book launch a friend had an argument with their partner who’d gone overboard haranguing another friend who happened to be American about the horrors of that country, at least as they saw it. They ranted until the friend could take no more and stormed out. 

Then the person of the rant was apologetic and approached his partner with whom I was talking. She was annoyed. And he chastised himself out loud as ‘a naughty boy,’. An expression I dislike. For its insincerity perhaps, or the idea that it is as simple as being a naughty child to so invade another’s space by going on at length on the woes of their country.

Later over dinner we laughed about various people’s countries of origin, in a sympathetic and curious way, and few people, if any, criticised the mores of Germany or Hungary or the Netherlands or even France or England. We were a universal lot with not an American between us.

I cannot understand why my heart has decided to race this morning. As usual my head takes me to extremes. As if I’m about to come down with some dreaded disease like congestive heart failure or a slowly failing heart, the type my mother suffered. But she had two decades on me in age, and I remind myself this hypochondriosis gets me nowhere.

Writing today is a chore as I am caught in the storm of too many thoughts and not enough time before the next seminar which is on somatisation of stress states or some such, which might also be the case for me.

Over worked, overwrought and weary of the burdens of life. But as usual, I tell myself to get on.

My phone will bleep at me in a few minutes to tell me it’s time to stop and stop I must. Speak when I have something worthwhile to say while most of the thoughts that rumble around in my heard are forbidden thoughts that should not enter the white space of an empty page. Words which should not see the light of day.