A life mapped in pets

‘Because freedom, I am told, is nothing but the distance between the hunter and its prey.’ Ocean Vuong. On earth we are briefly gorgeous

And distance can be reversed when a hunter loses their weaponry and the prey rise in retaliation.

I need not give examples. During the weekend of the Melbourne footfall grand final many people stopped to watch. Two teams, the Cats and the Lions, slogged it out. The cats were favourites and the lions won. The Lions team was once called Fitzroy and a beloved friend was devastated when the Fitzroy club lost its stripes as an AFL club and morphed into the Brisbane Lions a whole state away. I’m not sure his loyalty could ever extend to the transmogrified team which now stands glorious.

I do not care about this myself. I have never been a football die hard. Never quite understood the hype, though I see it all around me. Especially in one of my grandsons who is a devoted Bombers follower at the age of five, as his father was before him. Such are the power of parents to form a lifetime’s allegiance to football.

For me, when I asked my husband who takes a vague interest, a compulsory thing for men in this country it seems, who was playing. He listed the cats and lions and I was amused. Just the titles. Cats and lions are the two animals which feature in my dreams to represent my shadow side. Occasionally I have also dreamed of sharks, but wild cats like lions take the cake. Often they are stalking outside in my dreams while I’m bailed up inside terrified to see hem stalk behind the thin layer of glass.

These days we’re caring for a daughter’s cat. An orange tabby who goes by the name of Willis. Willis the proverbial scaredy cat. Whenever someone comes into the house Willis races to hide in an upstairs cupboard and he won’t come out until they are gone. He stayed hidden in the cupboard for a few hours when he first arrived, but he has stayed with us before and each time he comes, his hiding out reduces to the point where he is now at home with us as long as we don’t have visitors. An indoor cat, but not acrophobic. I can see he’d depart for the great outdoors, but we will not let him out. This territory is dangerous and unfamiliar to a timid cat. Besides we rarely see cats roaming the streets these days. Nightly curfews and the like and so many people deciding cats are better off indoors even if the cats dislike it, to preserve other small creatures in the dark.

We have cared for many cats over the course of our years in this household. Tillie, Pickles, Chan Cho, Molly and Anoushka among others whose names escape me, but they will come back when I ask for reminders. 

Cats rabbits, frogs, birds, and more recently two dogs who moved out with my daughter and her partner some time ago rehomed in Preston.

People can map their lives over the course of their pets. When I was a child there were cats. So many I can’t remember any names, only I have photos of me carrying a kitten in our backyard. But for me most significant of all was Peta, the black mongrel cross between know not what. 

We loved him, but he being a female kept getting pregnant and the story goes, a woman up the road volunteered to take him off our hands and have him spayed to spare the unwanted litters of puppies and my mother agreed. 

With all her many children in her care she could not be persuaded otherwise. And we kids had no say in the matter. At least as far as I could tell. Peter loved to chase cars up and down the street ats they rounded the corner into Wentworth Avenue. He knew to run close by their tyres but far enough away to stay safe. It was heart attack material to watch.

I have a strange day ahead. I will help one of my daughters prepare her house for the arrival of her newborn, due any day now, though officially not for at least two months. But this little one might need to enter the world sooner than ideal because her mother’s health is compromised through high blood pressure, that thing they call pre-eclampsia.

It happened to my elder sister seven months pregnant with her first, a child conceived out of wedlock to a priest. A scandalous story. A life and death story. She had travelled to Tasmania to hide the fact after she discovered she was pregnant. Staying with a catholic family there and helping with their children as her pregnancy advanced. 

I thought she had gone off on an adventure to Tasmania to teach. I was sixteen years old and she not much off twenty. But she could not bear to bring shame upon herself and her family it seems and this is what young women did during the 1960s if they fell pregnant without husbands, especially Catholic ones. 

But she could not stay away and when she returned revealing all, my mother let her stay with us. We were then living away from our father. A whole year in a shack in Parkdale near the beach. A rental my elder brother had organised to help our mother escape our father, but she could not leave him for long. 

In this year my sister’s pregnancy unfolded. She stayed in a small bungalow in the back garden attached to this shack and one day called my mother with a splitting headache, a sure sign. My mother went with her to the hospital and for several days my sister was lost in a coma. 

The baby died and she nearly joined her. A little girl whom my sister never saw. Another helpless decision in those years. For my sister at least. Dead babies were shipped away never to be seen. Buried in a communal grave somewhere near the women’s hospital. So many lost souls.

And such grim territory while we await this next little one. 

Life and death and I’m struck all the time by how precarious life can be. I hold my Rosie beads to my chest and hope for the best. May this little girl live a good long life and may she help to make the world a better place. Simply by her presence. 

The cultures of childhood

A shorter version of this piece appears in the spring edition of Persimmon Review under Short Takes: https://persimmontree.org/spring-2026/cultures-of-childhood/

My childhood during the 1950 and 60s was marked by obedience, invisibility and an expectation you pull your own weight from the moment you can walk. The seen and not heard variety where some of us were conceived in large Catholic households without contraception. Dispensable when death or disease comes knocking prematurely and although my parents were sad momentarily they needed to get on as did the rest of us. 

My childhood is book ended by dead babies, the first daughter before I was born during the Hunger Winter of 1945 when an elder sister died at five months of malnutrition. At the other end, the last child in my family of nine, my youngest sister was pronounced still born. Her mother’s placenta could not hold firm enough to nourish her. 

My childhood was marked by hunger.

My children’s childhood during the 1980 and 90s is marked by expectations. Four daughters and two parents hoping to improve their children’s lot which leads to a different conclusion and load, not so much of hunger as a type of excess but still the notion this time you pull your own weight once you come of age.

Forty years later we are in the current generation. Grandchildren so far numbering seven and their culture fluctuates between empathy and a type of one of indulgence though I hear my daughters speak of setting limits in some cases in others, the need for gentle parenting. 

Children the harbingers of a future that is marked by unrest and climate change and will we be the last on earth.

My childhood in the shadow of the second world war. My children in the shadow of a nuclear explosion and the current lot fresh hold fresh fears of extermination.

To offset these, the culture of childhood must offer hope. 

‘My body, my choice,’ my granddaughter tells me when I suggest she choose an alternative outfit to the oversized princess dress she has in mind. She’s four years old and already knows the concept of choice and of privacy. The toilet doors installed now in childcare centres to prevent abuse.

In my childhood such abuses were overlooked and during my children’s we began to recognise the pernicious nature of small people used as playthings for the adults. 

Childhood is a time of joy and wonder where everything is new.

Childhood is a time of terror when everything can be marked by danger, the unexpected, the unpredictable, the abusive.

Childhood is a time of utmost vulnerability that stays with us throughout our lives and returns with full force in our final years when once again we are rendered feeble in our bones and bodies.

Childhood the signature of our beings.

It’s never easy being small. Subject to the whims of those who hold greater power. But there’s also strength in childhood in the sense of honesty and authenticity a child brings before their minds are warped by adult cultures that override the joys of youth and the hope of a future filled with wonder. 

If as psychologists argue we are born almost hallucinating a bright future ahead, then childhood is that time when hopes for the future burn brightest. And this must be a good thing, however much life might subsequently disappoint. The culture of hope.