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spring 2012

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 1


Before deciding you hate me, BEST YOU GO FOR A

Need to think of a good standfirst to go here. Something about KERRI SACKVILLE finding out that all hate mail is not the same and something something something that is much better than I can come up with because my brain just isn’t working tonight. And I am not good at this stuff anyway. SPRING 2012 // PAGE 2


THE

OTHER

DAY

I

having lost his business

received some hate mail.

in the global financial crisis.

Now, this was unusual receive hate mail, nor do I get trolled. As a writer, I’m just not that controversial. On the scale of zero to Alan Jones, I rate about a two. I write funny anecdotes about my kids, the occasional story about grief, and, more recently,

wife

had

suffered from extreme

I honestly believe that everyone can be helped by knowing the truth about other people.

for me. I don’t usually

His

depression, one of his three kids had a chronic illness, the bank had foreclosed on his home, and he’d been deserted by many of his friends. “Have you ever known what it’s like to eat at quality restaurants one

a book about my struggles

year and be forced to go

with anxiety. Not really the

to St Vincents to feed

stuff of shock and outrage.

wearing the wrong dress out to

Still, the other day, there

dinner with your husband...”

it was in my inbox. Amongst

(oh please, I thought, T and

the latest deals from Ouffer,

I haven’t been out to dinner

blog comment notifications,

alone in months) “but you are

feedback from readers and

so completely out of touch

correspondence

with reality.”

from

my

editors was a bitter rant from an angry man named Ray*. Ray, apparently, was not a great fan of my work. “I picked up a copy of your book When My Husband

your family the next?” he had written. And just like that, my anger disappeared. I

wrote

back

to

Ray,

expressing my sympathy for his plight, because I really

Huh? Was he kidding? Me,

did feel for him. The guy had

out of touch with reality? Me,

suffered terrible misfortune,

who writes about the gritty

and was obviously in pain.

truth of modern life? Okay,

However, I did correct a

now I was furious. My fingers

couple of his misconceptions

hovered over the delete key.

about me. Partly, I knew,

Does The Dishes,” he wrote,

But then, as I glanced back

this was because I still felt

“and when I read about your

over the text, I caught the

the irrational need to defend

issues I wanted to vomit.”

words ‘lost everything’ and I

myself to a complete stranger.

continued on reading.

Partly, however, I genuinely

Vomit? Really? I felt my shackles rising.

Ray, as it turned out, had

felt that it would help him. I

“I understand that in your

picked up my book at one of

honestly believe that everyone

life the worst drama that

the country motels he visited.

can be helped by knowing the

you may have experienced is

He was a travelling salesman,

truth about other people.

*names have been changed

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 3


No, I told Ray, I’ve never

world, or the physical

had to seek help from

pain, or the cloud of

St Vincents, and yes, I

depression. You’ll see

acknowledged,

the marital problems,

my

first

book was light and fun. But he needed to know that my life certainly wasn’t. I’ve known as much pain and sadness and despair as any other person. I lost my sister - my only sibling - when she was just in her thirties. I have a child who, for many years, had

They may look from the outside like they are living a perfect life, but walk in their shoes for a year and everything will look different.

or the problem child, or the extreme anxiety, or the dependence on alcohol. And if they haven’t yet been untouched by misfortune, they will be sometime in the future. No-one gets to old age without

their

share

special needs. I have two

of tragedy, and you

medical conditions I don’t

never, ever know what’s

speak about in public, and

experiences of suffering to

an anxiety disorder that I

that of my Jewish relatives

frequently do.

murdered in the Holocaust.

around the corner. I used to resent people who seemed to be living perfect

been

Furthermore, no matter how

are

limited my weekly budget can

often tight. And there are days

get, I will be rich compared to

when I’ve woken up in the

the hundreds of thousands of

gorgeous,

morning and thought, how

people starving in the Sudan.

came

My

marriage

challenging.

has

Finances

bright,

from

an

popular, extremely

not one person alive whose

the right clothes, and - worst

I needed Ray to know what I

life will be untouched by

of all - was going out with

think everybody should know

hardship. They may look

the boy I’d had a crush on for

- that no-one’s life is perfect.

from the outside like they are

three years. She seemed to

Of course, some people’s lives

living a perfect life, but walk

be leading a charmed life. I

seem far easier than others’,

in their shoes for a year and

would have done anything to

and to a certain extent they

everything will look different.

change places with her.

really are. I could never, for

You will see the childhood

example, compare my own

abuse that they hide from the

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 4

there

in high school. She was

wealthy family, dressed in all

through till bedtime?”

ultimately,

whom I envied passionately

is

the hell am I going to make it

But

lives. There was a girl, Talia,

Talia

didn’t

marry

my

childhood crush, but she did


get married, and ended up

know this. There is no such

alone in our challenges. After

having three kids. Two of her

thing as perfect. There is

all, it’s hard enough struggling

kids are profoundly disabled

no such thing as a life free

through your own dark times

- the kind of disabled that all

of suffering. Of course, that

without believing the rest of

the money in the world, all the

doesn’t mean that life isn’t

the world is dancing in the

brains, all the fortune, can’t fix

wonderful, because it is. And

sunshine.

in any way. It is desperately

it doesn’t mean that we have

Because no-one dances in

sad, and it is a huge lesson for

to constantly brace ourselves

perpetual sunshine. And if

me. There is no such thing as

for tragedy, because for most

they appear to be, I promise

perfect. There is no such thing

of us, there is boundless

you, you’re just not looking

as charmed.

potential for happiness. I just

hard enough. 

I wanted Ray to know

feel it is incredibly helpful to

this. I want everyone to

understand that we are not


Need to think of a good standfirst to go here. Something related to this story by BIANCA WORDLEY about her adventures in the Sahara and Morocco and you know what I am talking about and it is clear that I am just waffling on now to fill this space.


I’D BEEN OUT dancing when I was mugged in Barcelona. I have vivid memories of the moment. The men pushing me back against the bench, their hands grabbing my neck, the taste of bile in my

The country heaved with men. Smells of sweat, mixed with those of fresh bread, olives and spices.

It was the men and children

who

trailed

us though the twisting alleys in the souks, in an attempt to sell us carpets. On a drive to Essaouira,

locals

had

placed goats in trees and

throat, my screams. I think

were charging people to

of the feeling of survival

take tourist snaps of the

and how travel from that

docile creatures standing

night was forever peppered with fear. I packed

in the branches. And children tried to thrust

that fear with me in my carry-on luggage and

glitter-sprayed rocks through our car window.

took it with me around the world.

Much like travelling with your kids, in Morocco

I took it with me across on the ferry to Morocco; a place that always fills my thoughts when I’m on yet another micro-managed family holiday. It reminds of when travel made me feel alive.

you were seldom left alone to soak up the atmosphere. We hired the smallest two-door Toyota car and smugly insisted we could drive it through

While I traveled with my now husband, I

the sand dunes to the tip of the Sahara, to the

wore a $10 “fake” engagement ring to imply

tiny town of Merzouga, en route to Erg Chebbi.

“possession” in an attempt to avert the prying

We were armed with a Lonely Planet guide with

eyes of the men who filled the streets and coffee

directions that relied on pure hope. They read

shops; the men who sat at crowded tables

something like: “Follow the track, making sure

drinking mint tea and smoking apple-flavoured

the stobie poles are to your left, and when the

tobacco from water pipes.

poles end then turn left and follow the sand

The country heaved with men. Smells of

tracks until you reach the town.” Or in other

sweat, mixed with those of fresh bread, olives

words, just drive until something resembling a

and spices. Smells of dates drying in the sun

hotel turns up.

and the tagines they sweetened wafted from

To look out at stretches of vast nothingness

doorways. The women were hidden, behind

was a welcome relief. Finally, we were alone.

veils, in kitchens and offices.

Nobody wanted anything from us. We had time

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 7


have planned been it better himself. My fear of being robbed was immediately overturned by my fear of dying from dehydration or having to eat my boyfriend. So, as we drove through the sand with a djelleba wearing, bearded stranger in the back seat, we begun to wonder if we’d been had. And when he directed us to his “cousins” hotel, we knew we’d been had. Pushing money into his hand, we drove away leaving him angrily shouting profanities at us. We had our already-booked Kasbah to find. But, after our fourth circuit through the small town, even the local children had given up chasing the car and were instead back playing soccer in the sand. We were lost again and we’d had enough. We were tired and needed some respite. In one last ditch effort, we drove to soak in the vistas without being hassled or stared at. We laughed as we drove through the sandy landscape. We questioned whether perhaps we should have hired a more capable car. We were determined to make it. And then it happened. We got bogged. We tried digging away the sand from the tyres,

further along the sandy track until like an oasis in the desert, there stood our hotel, a traditional Kasbah. Moments later, our luggage was propped in the corner of our room. Brightly patterned pillows piled on the bed, velvet curtains blowing in the light breeze. The place was bursting with

but still they’d spin without traction. The sun

colour. Our refuge was straight out of a film set.

bore down on us. And as we started to give up

As the golden hues of sunset spread across

hope, a man emerged from a nearby bush. I

the desert, we wandered past the resting sand-

was immediately anxious. I was immediately

blown camels and we climbed the sandy hill.

fearful of being robbed again. Yet, instead of

Holding hands we sat and watched light glisten

threatening us, he started to dig. In return, he

on the dunes. This was what travel was about -

asked for a lift to the nearby village, the same one

an adventure, blind faith and sharing your tiny

where we were struggling to get to. He couldn’t

Toyota with a charlatan. 

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 8


Sam DCruz / Shutterstock.com

gather

THE WOMEN Need to think of a good standfirst to go here. Something related to this story by LINDY ALEXANDER about this article that she has written about waffle waffle trying to fill in this space to give an idea of what it will look like.


a small gully. He tumbled off his bike with a big grin and a wave yelling Jambo. Jambo we had called back. One month and it already feels like my previously singular understanding of this place has broken wide open, finding me right here; content and still in the heart of Africa. Most days now before the sun starts to slide below the horizon, Nat and I walk from our small brick house, across our yard to a little wooden Hector Conesa / Shutterstock.com

IT’S BEEN A month since I arrived. One month since I was covered in grime and dirt from our long bumpy journey. I had travelled for six hours through central Uganda with Nat, another international volunteer, in a bus that churned up small squalls of red dust. We had passed women sitting out the front of mud huts on the swept earth, shelling peanuts, nudging hot pans over charcoal stoves and throwing

table that has pyramids of small tomatoes and onions balancing. Our neighbour Harriet sells these few things most afternoons. She lives on the edge of the trading centre and sits on a brick step that leads into the front room of her two-roomed house. As Harriet watches the day settle into dusk, she hopes her tomatoes will be sold before night darkens the trading centre. If she needs to light her lamp the cost of the oil will steal some of her profits. We ask Harriet how her day has been and she smiles, just fine,

stones at bold chickens trying to steal the nuts.

she says. Alon, her eldest son whose dimples

By the time we arrived in the tiny village that

bracket a cheeky grin peers at us from inside the

was to be home for the next seven months, the

house. We call to him but his head quickly jerks

chickens squawking near my feet, the dusty

back from the door. One eye slowly reappears to

boxes of soda bottles and the empty yellow jerry

see whether we are still there. He is shy, Harriet

cans were long gone. All had been unloaded at

says.

earlier destinations. We were the last ones on

His reaction has been typical of the children

the bus. As we stepped down onto the warm red

in the village, startled at our pale skin, our

ground a little boy riding an oversized bicycle

difference. However, as the weeks have passed

saw us and wobbled off the side of the road into

some of the children have been unable to contain

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 10


their curiosity and as we pass their huts, we

shoulders lift as if to say, well, this is Uganda.

can hear their excited yells to each other. Soon

Nat goes on to say that we are hoping to gather

enough their round-up calls bring other children

some of the women together, to see if we can

out of their homes and most days we have a ready

do something for and with them in the next

group of admirers trailing

few months. I look over

us on our walks. These

at Harriet and ask her

are the children who are

what she thinks.

not yet brave enough to

At first she is unsure

visit our home, but in a

what we mean. Nat

crowd they are confident

explains that we have

and cheeky. Some try to communicate with us. They run alongside us on the road’s embankment trying to impress with a few rote English phrases gleaned

from

older

siblings. They shout, How are you Madam, Give

They think you are complicated and that you are going to complicate their lives. They are afraid.

the time and energy to dedicate to looking at the women in the village and supporting them if they wanted specific things. I cut in, like HIV/AIDS testing,

information

about their health and their children’s health,

me money Madam and

a sort of support group.

the ever hopeful plea for

Harriet

lollies; Sweetie, Madam,

slowly as we talk. Her

is

nodding

Sweetie. If Nat or I break our stride to go over to

eyes are sparkling. She tells us she thinks the

them, they shriek and scatter. Alon is also at the

women will be keen to come, that some of them

wide-eyed stage, inquisitive but not enough to

have been talking for some time about finding

risk actual contact with us. His eyes are intent

a way to come together and support each other.

watching from behind the door.

But, Harriet goes on to say; some of their

As we give Harriet money for one of the piles

husbands may not think it is such a good idea.

of tomatoes, she asks how we are enjoying

They are suspicious of you, she tells us. She

living in the village and when we tell her that

goes into her house to look for change. Nat and

the welcome has been quite overwhelming, her

I look at each other but are silent. When Harriet

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 11


comes out she says, these men

they wear; trousers. It is as if

full age range of women kneel

here, they are worried what

the division of our two legs

and greet men. It does not

you will tell their wives and

by a thin strip of fabric also

matter that they may have

their daughters. They think

signifies the divide between

a jerry can full of sloshing

you are complicated and that

‘their’ women, and us.

water balanced on their head

you are going to complicate

It is also traditional for

and baby on their back, nor if

their lives. They are afraid.

females here in the Musoga

they are old enough to be the

She hands us our change and

region to show respect by

mother of all those they greet,

puts the tomatoes in a small

touching both knees to the

they must show deference to

clear plastic bag.

ground. We greet everyone

even those they have born. As

I am puzzled. I think about

eye-to-eye and do not kneel

soon as young girls find their

what the men have seen of

when addressing the men as do

feet, they are pressured from

us so far. Although we dress

their wives, sisters, daughters,

behind the knees to kneel.

modestly

village,

mothers. I have heard that

I am terribly uneasy with a

ensuring that our shoulders

some international volunteers

culture and tradition that

are covered and our knees

have followed tradition and

manages to pay one person

do not see the light of day,

kneel when addressing males.

so much respect and pays the

perhaps some of the local

But my discomfort extends in

other so little. And so I don’t

men have seen us returning

all directions. Since arriving

kneel.

from Jinja in clothes that only

in the village I have seen the

in

the

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 12

But surely that doesn’t make


I am terribly uneasy with a culture and tradition that manages to pay one person so much respect and pays the other so little. And so I don’t kneel. us complicated? The men

village. Our difference makes

have seen that Nat and I have

us unpredictable and no one

gadgets;

knows quite what to make of

cameras,

phones,

drivers’ licences, bank cards, and the means to make our way in the world without relying on what we grow. We are mobile and not bound to the land and seasons as they are. Perhaps the complication that Harriet refers to comes firstly from being strangers in the village, then from being white and then lastly because we are women who are both strange and white. After male

us yet. Especially the men. I take the bag of tomatoes from Harriet, and say, the men don’t need to be afraid, Harriet, we are simple. And so is what we want, she replies with a sad smile. She looks at our faces, and leans on the table, her palms flat. She can see that we are disappointed by what she has said. Don’t worry; she says as she dusts off her hands, I will come. A

and female, we seem to be a

little voice flickers from the

sort of third sex. We are people

darkness behind her. And I

who don’t have a history,

will come, echoes Alon.

tradition or a role within the

Our first supportive male.

SPRING 2012 // PAGE 13


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