jmgoyder

wings and things

Moments of pure joy

  • When you ring the electricity people to pay the phenomenal bill and the guy says you are in credit by over $700
  • When you take one of the pillows that your blogging friend from Turkey has given you, and you put it behind your husband’s back in the nursing lodge, and he sighs with pleasure
  • When your oldest niece, who is getting married soon at a castle in Scotland, emails you asking if you would write something for the wedding because she knows you can’t come over
  • When you finish all the blasted paperworky, redtapey, billy, taxy crap
  • When your friend comes over with a fold-up massage table and says she is going to give you a massage and you say you would rather be dead, and she doesn’t mind and gives your son the massage instead
  • When the damaged wing mirror on your car that was going to cost over $1,000 is fixed in 15 minutes by your friend
  • When one of the nurses looking after your husband says she read the thank you note you wrote to the staff, and loved it
  • When someone  you haven’t seen for decades finds you on facebook
  • When you finally finish the folding but still can’t find the iron
  • When, in a cupboard, you discover the gorgeous Italian boots your husband bought you years ago in a fit of extravagance, and you put them on your feet for the first time
  • When your son is angry that you have run out of cereal again and you calmly show him the 10 packets of weetbix in the pantry
  • When you realize that you don’t ever want to find the iron anyway
  • When one of your dogs snuggles happily into your armpit
  • When your son takes over all of the outside jobs but doesn’t tell you off for being behind with the inside jobs
  • When you find a new makeup to obliterate the circles under your eyes
  • When you laugh more times than you cry
  • When you remember something beautiful
  • When you think about planting sunflowers
  • When you see comments from bloggers who you may never meet but with whom you are now connected
  • When you find the gifts you got weeks ago but forgot to give your little, newly christened nephew and niece
  • When you look at the sunset
  • When you find out that the house isn’t riddled with white ants after all
  • When you rediscover prayer in a feather – or two

And all of that joy happened in just 24 hours!

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Love story 81 – When a child is born

Yes, I know I haven’t filled in the details of the wedding and all that but I will eventually!

Exactly 9 months after Anthony and I got married, Ming was born. It was a dreadfully painful 500million-hour labour, but finally at 1am on January 5th, 1995, he emerged.

It was a pretty weird moment because all of the nurses and the doctor had rushed away from me into the next door room to attend to a woman who punctuated every second of her child’s birth with screams that sounded like she was being tortured whereas I did most of the suffering in silence.

Anthony wanted a son so much, so much, so much and, even though I know he would have loved a daughter just as much, he just wanted Ming and so did I, and I thought I knew Ming would be a boy because of my dreamchild thoughts before we were married. It was always a boy.

As Ming emerged, Anthony quickly called the nurses and doctor back and our scrawny little alien was delivered without any further drama except for Anthony exclaiming with undisguised joy: ‘It’s a boy!’ I remember feeling very relieved because I didn’t want to go through that again!

Then, just after the following picture was taken, Anthony said he was exhausted and had to go home to bed. You gotta laugh!

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If you have been following this blog ….

If you have been following this blog you will already know that my husband, Anthony, is in a nursing home now due to advanced Parkinson’s disease and prostate cancer. He is 76. He is the best person I have ever met. He is my hero.

If you have been following this blog you will also know that our son, Ming, developed a severe scoliosis and had his spine fused surgically this year. He is 18. He is the best person I have ever met. He is my hero.

Ming doesn’t have his car licence yet due to the surgical interruption so he still needs me to drive him to music school etc.

Anthony takes an incredibly long time to answer that stupid phone.

I have two recurring nightmares: the first is of Anthony reneging on getting married; and the second is that he and Ming are in the ocean and I can only save one of them. Both nightmares never reach a resolution because I always wake up too soon.

If you have been following this blog you will know that I am very happy and very sad.

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Anti-bullying tactics

1. Identify the bully [this is Godfrey, the godfather of ganderdom].

2. Contemplate what to do with the bully situation [Bubble and Baby Turkey contemplating Godfrey].

3. Plan out a strategy.

4. Walk away from the bully.

5. Attack the bully if need be [Baby Turkey attacking Godfrey, with Bubble supervising so that Godfrey doesn’t get hurt, but is taught a lesson].

6. Turn the other cheek [Woodroffe and Diamond demonstrating this].

7. Ignore the bully and leave him next to the rubbish bins for at least one hour!

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Love story 80 – The day before the wedding

I got my nails done (I got one false nail glued to my bitten down ring finger);

I got my hair done (I brushed it);

I had a party (I chose to stay by myself in my ma’s new house);

I prepared my outfit (I put my blue silk suit onto a bed so it wouldn’t get creased and wished I could just wear jeans);

I slept fitfully because I had a recurring nightmare (that Anthony would evaporate);

I said thank you to the air.

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Love story 79 – The engagement ring

Oh what a lovely sunny day it was. We parked in Anthony’s favourite carpark in Perth and walked down to the antique jewellery shop where he had picked out an antique ring for me. We’d been there before of course and I had said which ring I liked, being very careful to choose something above $500 but below $5,000 – ha!

So he forked out a big wad of cash, put the ring in his pocket and we walked (well I kind of skipped) to the closest restaurant, ordered a drink and a meal and then he got the ring out of his pocket and took it out of its box and put it on my finger.

Just as our meals arrived, he mentioned that his brother thought it might be a good idea to get a pre-nuptual agreement so I very calmly took the ring off, gave it back to him, stood up, abandoning my meal, and walked back to the car.

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How are you?

‘How are you?’ has become, in whatever language, an almost universal way of saying ‘hello.’

Nobody ever wants the ‘how are you?’ recipient to say anything beyond, ‘I am fine, thank you and how are you?’

Sometimes I forget about this ‘How are you? I am fine’ etiquette and I either respond to ‘how are you?’ with a novel-length tale of woe, sprinkled with some joy (or vice versa) – or, even worse, I interrogate the howareyouer by probing how they really are. Neither of these two alternatives have proved satisfactory because, inevitably, I either give or receive that thing that is sometimes labelled ‘foot in the mouth’.

‘How are you?’ has become a statement of niceness, a verbal gesture of care; it is not a question requiring an answer because it is sort of rhetorical – it is just a form of greeting and, as such, it is lovely.

Just imagine if we really, honestly answered that lovely question, ‘how are you?’ like this:

  • I’m tired and I don’t want to talk to you
  • My life sucks
  • I don’t know
  • I’m envious of your perfect life
  • I’m bloody sad
  • Anthony is deteriorating
  • I am on the brink of poverty and wondering if humans can eat grass and leaves
  • How the hell do you think I am?
  • I am hating the world today
  • I am crap

So, you see, you can’t answer the lovely question in those ways because you would seem rude, ungrateful, self-indulgent etc. and the poor howareyouer would never ask you again!

‘How are you? is a bit like ‘What are you doing today?’ because the latter is a question that expects you to be doing either something or nothing, but it mostly wants you to be doing nothing so that the asker of the question can help you do something. So you either have to say ‘I am … ‘ and try to remember your schedule for the day, or you have to be really honest and say, “I am sitting down and I plan to sit down for much of the day, so I don’t want my sitting down interrupted.”

But you can’t say that to the really busy people who care enough to ask you how you are and what you are doing so you say things like, ‘I am about to embroider the paddock with sunflowers’ or else just say you have lots of appointments (but you don’t divulge that most of your appointments are with the chair you are sitting in because you really love the chair and are a bit frightened to get off the chair today.)

How are you?

What are you doing today?

79 Comments »

Rooster refuge

This is Malay who was ‘born’ under a shed here some months ago, and raised by two mothers. Both mothers and the other little chick were killed by that rotten fox but Malay has thrived. He is so strong (look at those legs!)

Now that he is a teenager, he is wondering if perhaps he could flirt with our new hens. So far, I have said no to his request.

No-name (on the left) and New kid (on the right) have also asked to be introduced to the new hens.

I think I should let Malay into the chookyard first because, despite the fact that he is the most ferocious looking of the four roosters, he is a gentle soul and loves a cuddle.

I have told Tina Turner that, until he stops attacking me all the time, he is not allowed to meet the hens. So far, this seems to be working as he did not attack me this morning when I fed the gang.

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I am a genius!

Today’s plan was to meet a bunch of great friends at a brewery up the road. Amazingly, I actually organized it, sort of – like a girls’s get-together thing. I wanted to prove to these beautiful friends that I am, indeed, capable of getting out of the house AND that I adore them.

There were a few glitches to the plan including the fact that after yesterday’s guilt episode I had promised Anthony to pick him up and bring him along. Long story short, I realized I couldn’t meet my friends and pick up Ants at the same time (it’s around a 25km trip to nursing home and back), so I did some detective work. First,  I rang the taxi service and asked if they had a wheelchair taxi; second, I rang the nursing lodge and asked if this would be okay; and third, I rang Ants (who answered the phone!) to say he was getting taxied.

When the wheelchair taxi came to pick Ants up from the brewery, the driver told me how to get really cheap taxi vouchers, and, since I’d already been told this by someone else this morning, I wanted to whoop with the joy of how much easier this kind of arrangement will be for me – not back-breaking etc. – I am elated!

It’s such a wonderful thing to be a genius!

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I sent my mother a saddish email and this is what I got in return!

For Julie. 2012.

Where to begin.

You are a symbol of all that is beautiful in my life.

I can’t remember my own infancy, but I remember yours, every detail, every freckle, every asthma attack, every giggle. I remember getting the news that I was pregnant with you, and telling absolutely everyone including the man in the ticket office when I bought a train ticket to Sydney that day.

I remember the newsagent’s surprise when I was on the way to give birth to you, and Dad stopped so I could buy a Readers Digest to read during the confinement, absolutely sure it would be a breeze. The elevator man on the way up to the labour ward commented with a smile, that he had never seen such a cheerful expectant mum. And the moment when you were placed in my arms. Unforgettable. Grandma and Grandpa were in Melbourne which nearly killed Grandma…. and me.

I remember decorating your room in Canada, for one of your birthdays. I remember the tiny little flared skirts and rope petticoats I made you when you could just toddle. I remember Percy, the wooden penguin, and your delight pushing him on the stick in front of you. I remember the excitement of driving over to Dee Why to show you off to Grandma and Grandpa so often. I remember the pushcart and you all dolled up in a knitted outfit I’d made, and getting you on to the train from Birrong, to once more show you off to the staff at MLC, who must have groaned when they saw me coming once again, to show how you’d grown, at least a week from the last visit.

I remember you with Daniel and Kalainu in PNG the baby on your hip, like a third arm. And the love shining in the eyes of those beloved New Guineans, Tulia and the rest…such love and adoration.

I remember your tears and the agony of leaving PNG in that tiny plane. You never got over that, nor did we, watching your pain.

I remember the look of love and concern when I opened my eyes to find you bending over me after my mastectomy.

I remember you playing your guitar and singing at Brin and Julie’s wedding, with your heart breaking because Anthony had let you down and didn’t come.

I remember you flying way over the rope marker for the high jump at Ukarumpa. I remember the basket ball against the PNGers on the top court at twilight….Dad and me watching.

I remember Dad, standing at the pulpit at St Matthews, with you, a tiny dot up to his knees, walking up to take his hand in front of the congregation. I remember Dad proudly saying you were a chip off the old block, after a conversation with you by phone from that awful Bible College.

I will never forget your face when you arrived in Perth airport after he died.

I remember Nanna’s face when you used to run into her house to visit. I remember you playing with all the dogs and cats we’ve owned throughout your life. I remember the tearful phone call to my school the day you found your precious pregnant cat, dead outside the house and asking could the kittens be saved, and the agony of the distance away that I was and how powerless I was to comfort you.

I remember your radiant beauty, set off by the sheen in the gorgeous blue of your outfit at your wedding. I see the look of total undying love that Anthony gave to you as he placed the ring on your finger. I remember the label still hanging off the sleeve of my wedding outfit at the church and I remember buying it in a shop, near where I was having some sort of nuclear cancer test soon after you were engaged.

I remember tiny Rohan and Jared all spruced up and full of importance on your wedding day, and your brothers so proud.

I remember the way you mothered baby Brin, and held this great fat child on your own little knees, and later even more motherly when a second little brother arrived. You never seemed to mind the attention they got.

I have a drawer full of your cards and letters telling me how much you love me. I have a drawer full of your amazing writings and a heart full of pride and wonder at your giftedness.

I remember sitting in the car with you when we pulled over to talk deeply about God, after a church meeting and how insistent you were that you understood it all.

I remember how literally you took some of the things your Sunday School teacher taught you and giving out tracts at service stations and how negative that whole part of your life was. But I remember your faith and Len and Betty Evans and the way they loved you.

I remember knocking on the door of the doctor in Ukarumpa when you were having a terrible asthma attack, and being afraid to wake him up.

I remember the patience of a small girl, sitting on a rock by a lake in Canada, as you coached a tiny chipmunk onto your hand. Later, I remember your skidoo taking off at high speed, with us watching helpless with laughter from inside the cabin, as Fred Brown tried to catch you and tell you to stop squeezing the accelerator. And was it you laughing when I did the same thing with your scooter, in Boyanup?

I remember when Mark gave you that little motor scooter. I see the way Mark’s face still softens every time he asks after you.

I see the way the whole room lights up when you arrive to family dinners and last time, I relished the sounds of laughter and love coming from the dining room as I played with the younger kids in my bedroom.

I love the way you love Ashtyn.

I remember Dad and me watching the three of you skating in Toronto, and the time a man skated up behind you and scooped you up to skate a few metres with you high in the air.

I remember how freezing the walk back to the apartment was afterwards, and how you cried with the pain of your defrosting fingers.

I remember how bewildered you were when you three burst into the apartment, identical to ours, but on the sixth floor of the wrong apartment block, in Toronto.

I remember the apple pies in Boyanup and how my stove was permanently welded with the overflowing apple sauce.

I remember the 10k ride at early light, day after day, to look after Gar.

I remember the phone call from UWA saying please could you come home, and Dad saying unequivocally, “Yes.”

I remember the poem you wrote to be read at Dad’s funeral, and the pain. Oh the pain.

I remember how homesick you were when you went to stay at Melodie Brown’s. I remember the shock of the news just after we left PNG, that Ruth had been killed on that motor bike. I remember you and Dad going away for Christmas at Yapeta’s village that year and how strange it was for all of us.

I remember Yapeta never wanting to turn the shower off when Harland brought the three PNGers to stay with us in Toronto. I remember Mandalia stopping in his tracks the first time you yelled a greeting in Wiru, from the front window of our house in Ukarumpa, and how amazed the missionaries were when you spoke more fluently in Pigin, than they did after all their years and years there.

I loved every moment of your young motherhood years. The zillions of photos you took of Ming, and the full blown motherhooding that swept over you, after never touching another person’s baby in your adult life…..or since. The almost unearthly knowledge of this child who had been promised to you even before you and Anthony were married.

The way you “wifed” Anthony and changed nothing in his home or lifestyle. A person so content, who needed nothing more than to be with her man and make his life seamless in transition, except for the wild surge of joy and the total texture of the life changing love you brought to him.

I love the transformation of the farm into an exotic bird paradise.

I love the way you give Ming absolute freedom to be himself. I love the no strings way you’ve brought him up.

I love your blog. Your honesty, your willingness to let us in. And most of all your sense of humour that colours absolutely everything you do and say, and yes, the guffaw, that has become your trademark.

I remember Dr  Dan Hugo saying you were a “real” doctor, when you got you PhD and how I wanted to trumpet the news to the world, while you left plain “Julie Goyder” on your office door for years, not bothering with the Dr.I love that you are free of materialism, when I’m so opposite. You have bucketloads of empathy in its place, but that’s a huge burden for you. I love the way everyone loves you and wants to be your friend, but you’re so happy with your own company.

I love you boot fetish.

When you write the dialogue between the birds, I love the way they talk about you, the human.

You are so refreshing.

I hated the months when you would only eat apples or have a glass of water in a coffee shop.

Do you remember standing on Dad’s feet and walking with him step by step on his big shoes when you were 2?

Do you remember the ominous silence when Dad would threaten to pull the car over when the three of you wouldn’t stop fighting in the back seat on our long Canadian trips?

Do you remember yelling “Turn off the wipers, Dad”, when he always forgot?

Do you remember Grandma shrieking with delight as you all tobogganed down the ravine in Bexhill Road?

Do you remember Grandpa laughing till the tears came, recounting the smell of the skunk as it drifted over them, upstairs at Bexhill?

And Grandpa giving us the red car when they left to come back to Australia.

What about Macdonald’s every Saturday after cleaning Islington Evangel Centre. The wonderful freedom to order whatever you liked as payment for helping Dad every week.

The horror of the “air hostess” uniform you were forced to wear at the Grammar School and that awful day when you fell over a laddered your stocking and bled all over the place.

What about the shock hearing Ming’s name suddenly read out at that same school about 35 years later, when he got the Principal’s Award. Uncanny.

I loved all those Sundays at the farm when you reluctantly played table games with Ming and me, with Anthony watching benignly on. And what about the hilarity of “Black Books”, Sunday after Sunday.

Do you remember telling Auntie Myra off for her grammar, or things like throwing the clothes onto the basket…”Don’t throw them, Auntie Myra….PUT them,” and the number of times you quoted the Bible at me, as a 4 year old.

I know you thought my singing in the car all the way to and from the North Shore every day, that year you went to Abbotsleigh, was hard to take. I remember you saying frantically, “Don’t kiss. Don’t kiss!” as I leant over to open the car door when I picked you up after school when you were seven.

I don’t like remembering the way you had to drag poor, little tearful Mark to pre school in Canada, after I’d left for work each day. Or those bullies who knocked you off your bike. I hate how hard some of your childhood was.

What a reader you were. You could read C.S.Lewis when you were so very young. The world of imagination was your friend and enemy.

Do you remember going into the woods with Dad to get a Christmas tree some years?

I remember how you saved up to buy me presents when you were so young.

You wrote the most beautiful letter to “Unkool Mik”, when he lost his legs from diabetes. I have never read anything so heart wrenching.

I love it that you call Brin Yelsnirb.

And that my daughters-in-law are mad about you.

And all my grandchildren.

And their partners.

In fact all my friends.

Surely you must feel the love. M xx

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