In the library of my heart

Lost opportunities, lost possibilities, feelings we can never get back. That’s part of what it means to be alive. But inside our heads – at least that’s where I imagine it – there’s a little room where we store those memories. A room like the stacks in this library. And to understand the workings of our own heart we have to keep on making new reference cards. We have to dust things off every once in awhile, let in fresh air, change the water in the flower vases. In other words, you’ll live forever in your own private library.

― Haruki Murakami, Kafka on the Shore

Your own private library, what a treat. If only it was possible. And what about the sections we avoid as against the places we might visit regularly. I’d avoid war, horror, violence and go directly to sorrow.

This surprises me. I had thought first up of romance and fantasy, but these days I’m into the sorrowful mysteries, not so much of the rosary, based on the death of Christ, more on the miseries of the underdog. The one who misses out. The one who struggles unfairly against oppressive regimes. 

But I do not want to see sorrow mashed into hatred and regret. I want it to be constructive. A grief that takes wings. And helps us rise above the ordinary despair of life in the trenches.

In my library beneath the obvious section of lost opportunities and hopes, I like to crawl beneath the desks and enter the mouseholes of my childhood. Those small spaces where everything is new and challenging.

When my children were little and I interviewed potential nannies for the job of occasional care, to those who said things like, ‘I love children’, I scrawled a fat cross alongside their names. 

I am wary of such adulations. As if children are an homogenous mass of chocolate pleasure, and separate from the rest of humankind, by virtue of their size.

When children instead are as idiosyncratic and diverse as the entire human population. Some you love and others you resent. 

In the mouseholes of my childhood, these categories are more distinct, more black or white. In one of my earliest experiences as a fledgling therapist on social work placement at the then Citizen’s Welfare Service, my supervisor, Barbara, a woman not much older than me in years, but seemingly decades older in experience, urged me to write my own assessment of my performance. To set it alongside hers for our visitor from university in fieldwork who assessed my student progress.

I remember little about the bones of the report other than a point at which I wrote the words, ‘the otherness of others’.

I was twenty years old and it was a revelation to me that people could be different from one another in meaningful ways and that this might be a good thing. An endless source of curiosity about how differently we can view the world.

Growing up in a Catholic household with migrant parents from the Netherlands, my mother embraced her Catholicism as if it was an overcoat for warmth she tried to stretch around her children. 

One by one, we wriggled free, but not before we had been acculturated, at least for a time, in the exceptionalism of that religion, as all religions harbour an exceptionalism, that excludes others. 

Catholicism was the one true religion, the priests and nuns taught. Our beliefs were the one sure way we might access Heaven after we die. The only way to live a good, pure and moral life was through the church’s teaching, augmented by the bible, but more importantly the Catechism, the rule book of the missal, and all the sacraments. 

We learned it in song:  

When on my head baptismal water poured, 

I became a child of God and brother of Our Lord. 

God lives in me ‘cos I’ve been baptised 

In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost.

I have a hymnbook of songs in my library section dealing with religion. I visit these days, awed by the extent to which I once believed as gospel. And when you look at these ideas from the vantage point of years and doubt, you see it all so differently, which is the point of a library, to gather alternative perspectives, the otherness of others.

I have never entered a library that did not fill me with awe. All these words and ideas. In childhood, the library on Canterbury Road near the park, in a house which seems small now and has been adapted as an infant welfare centre. The library moved elsewhere and swallowed up in other suburbs of Boroondara. In those days Canterbury. 

It was in weatherboard and you entered via a ramp. In these days late returns were fined by the day and to borrow books which was a treat could soon become a torture if said books disappeared under beds or unwashed clothes of my childhood home. This was easy enough a d my mother who assumed responsibilities for all her children’s borrowings must have had a hell of a time rounding up boos, when each of us chose a mountain within limitations permitted to take home with us.

My memories of the Cheltenham library are less convivial. A brick veneer building not far from the Southland shopping centre and flanked by the Nepean Highway and the shops nearby. It never held the charm of my first library encounter in Camberwell. And then we moved for a year to Parkdale and the library there, simpler than Cheltenham stretched along a main road not far from the railway line. But in every one of these establishments books lined the walls in promising display begging me to read more and never stop,.

But still I did by the time I hit university and could only read for the purposes of passing exams. Even in the English department which I joined for my first year at university, reading became an academic chore and no longer held the pleasures of my school days.

In the section of my library called literary analysis I go back to the archies to find notes on Leavis. The literary critic whose views on how to read books left me cold, so cold I could not enter his terrain. I wanted to read then as I read now into a view if what I take from a book, irrespective of what a writer might be saying or how others might interpret. I wanted my own encounter with the words to help me understand more about how other people live, but also to meet their otherness with my own.

All these lot possibilities. If I went back now, I’d blitz my subjects but then it was as much as I could do to pass. Besides the life of the world, of my world outside the library seemed more compelling and I wanted to engage with people away from books.

Not simply to hide away in the safety of a library where books can be read, can be opened and then shut, can be pushed aside or carried around like an infant. I wanted my life to operate as though I had a body, arms and legs, and not just words on the page. I wanted to live.

But now as I age the lustre of the library like a siren calls me back and hopefully unlike the sirens it will not leave me dashed against rocks, shipwrecked but reopen to the lost possibilities of my past. 

Running from love

‘Human behaviour is dictated by need not logic,’ writes Clare Kilroy in her novel Soldier Sailor while, her chief character’s observation as she coaxes her toddler into taking medication against pain. 

I’d add, not only by logic, but also by desire. 

Need might come first but how close on its heels, trots our wish for comfort, for pleasure, for relief.  Our desire. 

I do not need that glass of wine I enjoy each evening with my meals. A glass that might rise to two. I do not need it, but I want it. Pleasure and relief follow the taste and the lifting of spirits that comes with every sip, predicated not so much on need as desire. 

But need can couch desire and the other way around. Even as logic tells me the wine is not good for me, something else drives me to pursue the comfort of my desire. And so, it is for so many things in life, not all of them malignant.

Take my desire to write. It can also feel like a deep need emerging from some habit formed long ago when I first found comfort in expressing myself on the page. This comfort helped me gain some deeper equilibrium. Without it I find myself feeling slightly unhinged, as if I’ve forgotten to brush my teeth, or left home without my wallet or these days my phone. 

I do not need my telephone. I can survive without it but the impulse to carry it everywhere becomes so great because I have formed another habit of attachment whereby without my phone nearby I feel a great hole.

And an absence, at least of the deepest type, as Winnicott tells us, becomes a malignant presence. Not just a void but the presence of something so painful we will do anything to avoid it.

Too much absence in infancy can lead a person to breakdown in later life when triggered to madness as a defence against the breakdown that never happened. This breakdown could not have happened when we were tiny and helpless hell-bent on survival but as we grow, we find ways of the great antidote to all this pain of loss and absence is love. 

And love can be so hard won, so hard to come by that when we feel a snippet of it we can suffer extraordinary pain. The painful thawing from a frozen or paralysed state. It hurts to come back to life. The opposite of Jonie Mitcell’s words in her song Big Yellow Taxi,

‘Don’t it always seem to go that you don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone.’ 

It’s opposite when you know what you’ve got, for the first time a taste of real love and care it can feel so excruciating given its past long absence for the best part of your life that all you want to do is run away from it.

Many a damaged soul has pushed away the warm care and love of another because it feels too much. Too much because like a person deprived of food for far too long, we need to reintroduce food slowly otherwise their gut will seize up in pain.

In running from love, as in running from pain we get locked inside the pain of the non-requited.

But let me lighten the mood here. My words feel heavy and do not reflect the state of mid I’m in retesting new gasses that unfortunately slip too easily off my nose and need adjustment.

My husband reads the newspaper each morning, the old-fashioned way in full spreadsheet form. He reads from start to finish, bypassing only the advertisements and some of the sporting results. He reads with the intensity of a person determined to understand better what goes on in the world. Unlike me, who tends to skim world events online and only when a subject holds my interest do I read the entire article.

Yesterday onto his second cup of tea, he looked up briefly chuckling. And read out loud to me from Monty Python’s Holy Grail. King Arthur approaching the castle of a French man and asking for food and shelter in their search for the holy grail. 

The French knight argues he already has a grail withno need of another. Then show it to us. The Frenchman refuses Arthur’s threats, ‘You don’t frighten us you English pig dog… I fart on your general direction. Your mother was a hamster. Your father smelt of elderberries.’

A term of delightful derision that makes my heart sing.

Such clunky words put together to enlist outrage in the other while we the audience laugh our hearts out at the ludicrousness of it all.

Love and loss, life and death. You can’t have one without the other writes Julia Samuels and if you block out he pain you also block out the joy. You lose your sense of humour as you squash your desires, but if you refuse to recognise your actual needs and replace them only with whims and desires then you also get into reverse trouble. 

Like a junkie hooked on heroin. Your own natural capacity to find joy in life is slowly eroded and you find you need more of whatever it is you’re addicted to as a replacement for the stuff that lubricates your body and mind. 

So again, the philosophers are right when they espouse moderation in all things, with occasional outbursts to spice up the flavour of our lives, like salt on a hard-boiled egg, strangely one of my favourite foods. 

Must be a throw back to childhood when eggs were such a novelty we were only allowed one each Sunday for breakfast.

Wowserism is as dangerous as excess. Let’s hear it for the boring middle road with occasional digressions into glorious lookouts over great joy and love notwithstanding the inevitable ruts in the road and moments when the firm ground turns to mud or sand. 

Life is never even but it can be manageable if we share the load with others. Seek out their help when needed and offer it back at other times when other folks’ needs might supersede our own.