A lion in my dreams

Fear comes to me in the form of unexpected loud noises, sudden raised voices, a series of inexplicable sirens in the street outside my house, one after the other, as if they’re rushing to a crisis not far away. 

Fear comes at the sight on blood on a small child’s lip after a fall, or the loud wail, again of a small child, who has fallen from a height. Fear comes from the gush of blood that spurted from my daughter’s foot thirty years ago after she had caught it in the spokes of an exercise bike. A severed artery, I imagined, not knowing where significant arteries exist on the body. 

Fear comes in not knowing how to make sense of events happening around me as in the secrecy that surrounded the analytic training. We were not to discuss it. Certainly not with our teachers. 

Fear comes on days when the temperature climbs steadily and beyond forty degrees centigrade under a cruel and relentless sun. Contrariwise, when the wind picks up on bleak days and the branches on the pin oak in our garden are about to shear off and fall onto the roof.

Fear is my father. The sound of his footfall in the hallway at 6.00 pm, end of his workday and we children scurrying from the lounge room away from the lure of the television to respective bedrooms where we might be safe. 

In my dream the other night, a lion took my hand into its mouth and gripped on tight. I could feel the point of its teeth against my flesh, but it did not bite. 

Another lion dream and I have many. Lions and wild cats in my dreams, threatening to break in, to break skin, to terrify and destroy. Mrs Milanova said the lion was a part of me, signifying hunger in some instances, rage in others, and always a desperation that spoke of untold terrors, as much of myself as of others.

Do unto others, as you would have them do to you…Turn the other cheek…Love thy neighbour… Biblical injunctions writ large in my memory as statements without qualification. Even when I first heard them as a small child I resisted their lure. 

Fear comes in the form of getting caught.

My mother bought groceries from Mr Broekhoff’s store on the corner of Wentworth Avenue and Canterbury Road. Two houses down from us. It was a wide-open store from memory, with wooden floors and in every corner, sacks of sugar, grain, rice, and dried beans, which he sold by weight in brown paper bags. This, before biscuits were contained in bright coloured wrappers, though these came later and Mr Brockhoff lined them on shelves behind his head along with fly spray in squirt cans, corned beef and baked beans. Tinned beans and peas.

The corned beef came in round edged tins with a key attached two thirds up. My mother turned the key to one side and the tin came away to reveal a slab of cooked pink meat, without any blood or skin. Bits of orange/yellow jelly flecked its sides, and we ate it sliced on white bread for picnic lunches when my mother could afford. 

Mr Brockhoff sold Arnott’s biscuits, sweet and dry/savoury, from tins the height of upright shoe boxes but wider. This was the cheapest way. Biscuits by the pound. Even cheaper to buy the broken ones, which my mother bought for us kids, but for visitors she insisted on the unbroken biscuits, which she arranged on plates to accompany the endless cups of tea she offered my aunts and uncles on Sundays when they rocked up to our house with their several children. 

My mother’s face glowed with pleasure. My father, sober by then and unable to get any more alcohol when nothing stayed open on Sundays, except for milk bars which stocked only necessities. Lollies, cigarettes, milk, and bread. My father tried to join in but conversation was not his happy place, unlike my mother who might as well have been back in Holland. Her joy transparent. 

After our visitors left and the six o’clock news came onto the television, my father soaked in tea and a hangover, sat silent and surly in the corner. I took my spot behind the single lounge chair that flanked a side wall near the door and hid there out of view to watch television through the gap between chair and wall. 

From time to time during advertisement breaks I snuck into the kitchen and lifted a stash of biscuits from its brown paper bag. On good days there were double deckers: Monte Carlos, custard creams, and orange slice. Two for the joy of one. And I piled them into my pockets unseen, then slid behind my chair as the television droned on into the Sunday evening movie. No one noticed me and my hoard of sweetness, which I nibbled biscuit after biscuit. 

‘They’re for visitors,’ my mother said whenever we pleaded with her to open one of the biscuit packets she had bought from Mr Brockhoff. On a whim because they signified opulence and luxury, something she longed for. The war had made people hungry, she told me. For sweets, for butter and sugar. 

To compensate, my mother taught us to make butter biscuits. A simple affair of flour, and sugar in equal quantifies and half a stick of butter. You mixed the flour and sugar together in a bowl, made a well in the centre, then poured in the butter melted in a pot over the stove. I loved to watch the gold river catch at the sides of flour with its silver glint of sugar grains, and then force the lot together with her hands. Dexterous as the ratio of butter to dry called for vigour. 

When it was well mixed she formed small balls in her hands, the size of golf balls then flattened them on a well-greased tray with a fork indentation in the middle for decoration. Then she baked them in a moderate oven. When cooled the biscuits were crisp and brittle. Strangely delicious given their basic composition. 

This is the stuff of childhood. How easily satisfied with foods that contain little by way of taste and complexity beyond the sweet or salty. To this end, I mixed cocoa powder with white sugar in the bottom of a cup and stirred them together then sat in another secret corner, this time in the kitchen or my bedroom, spooning cocoa sugar into my mouth. This in the days when no one had told me how sugar ate at the enamel on your teeth and caused decay. 

I ate my cocoa sugar with impunity, the way a small child might dip into a pot of honey and eat it with a spoon. Sweet and simple, an antidote to fear. 

Not the staying type

“Like sexual desire, memory never stops. It pairs the dead with the living, real with imaginary beings, dreams with history’ Annie Ernaux

Unlike sexual desire, which is capped by pleasure, memory has its devastating moments when we trawl through the past and rediscover our pain. The dead paired with the living.

In her book, The Years, Ernaux reminds us, over time we will be forgotten. This erasure involves pitching into the future to a time, as in the past, when we did not exist. A sobering thought.

In the January of 1972, my nineteenth year on earth, my sister Claire, and her friend Kris, whom we nicknamed Honey, moved into the back section of a spacious brick Edwardian house in Caulfield near what was then known as the Caulfield Institute of Technology. The section we rented backed onto Royal Parade at the end of a narrow walkway. 

We moved in during the warmth of summer with no idea of how cold the place would get once winter kicked in. We moved there as an escape from life at 336 Warrigal Road in Cheltenham, where my sister and I lived. A double fronted, cream brick veneer, my mother loved because it was brand new and held every promise, for her at least, of a better life. 

As in most stories, this better life did not follow, and my sister and I could not wait to get out once my sister finished her final school year and knew her fate tertiary-study wise.

I was already at university on a cadetship to the health department. They paid me $12.00 a week during my four years of study, on condition I repay them by working for at least two years in a health department facility, most likely a hospital.

The prospect didn’t faze me then. Like the place we rented in the summer when we had no idea of how intolerable winter’s cold could become when a single kerosene heater that stung your eyes and made them water was all we could afford for heat. 

I had no idea a hospital social worker’s life could be so grim, any more than my mother realised within almost minutes of moving into our new home in Cheltenham when my father’s drinking escalated to the point we spent many weekends bunkered down with relatives to protect us from his rages.

Life has a way of turning out differently from how we expect. In the two-bedroom section of our new home on Royal Parade, my sister and I shared the larger bedroom with its one window facing the side footpath and one wardrobe. At night I watched stars through the scrim curtain. 

The shower recess, at the end of a corridor onto which our bedroom backed, led to a broom-cupboard sized bedroom, which Honey occupied. Beyond the corridor, as you made your way to the only exit, you moved through a dark windowless room, which we used as our living area. 

In the centre, we plonked an old blue couch, a hand me down from some friends. Beyond this door the kitchen consisted of a single sink and stove, and room enough for a tiny table and three chairs. Its windows, row upon row of frosted slats. The type you find in toilets which you flicked up in summer for whatever breeze they offered. But the place never became too hot, hidden under the bushes of an ancient garden that must have been there for at least one hundred years. 

Despite its raw ugliness, like the outhouse or woodshed of a grand house, our place became the go-to of all our friends, most of whom still lived at home with their parents.

We spent the night of the election-to-end-all-elections in 1972 when Gough Whitlam finally because our first Labor Prime Minister, stretched across the living room floor on mattresses and inflated Li-los people had brought from home for the long night of celebration.

Those were the times when the young men in our midst, Jack, Neil, Mick, Hurry, Pete, Ernie and Kevin, to name a few, all Saint Bernard’s boys downed beer by the dozen, while we girls guzzled on cheap port mixed with lemonade, or those who were less inclined to sweetness or more health conscious, brought litres of orange juice to mix with vodka. 

I did not have a political bone in my body then but picked up on the fervour of my friends for the Labor Party and for reform for a way beyond the born to rule mentality of those who backed people like Billy McMahon. I followed their lead but could never take on their passion for football. 

Memories come back with all the resilience of the past however much it disappears almost the minute it’s lived. Memories skitter, like the time we watched a football game in Collingwood and later ate pizza in South Yarra, my first taste of pizza beyond an earlier genuine version with my first ever official boyfriend from university. Alex.

Alex sat at a table among a group of his cronies from another Catholic boy’s school somewhere in Preston where he lived with his mother and father. His father ran a concreting business.

A success story. His family lived in a double storey house with a concrete front and back garden. Alex was tall and skinny and to my mind he was gawky. Gomer Pyle gawky. But he liked me. And given no other boy took an interest in me I went along with him to visit his parents, to parties at the Italian Club in Brunswick, to gatherings of his cousins.

Alex introduced me to pizza, thick with a thin topping of tomatoes, basil, and olive oil. Napolitano style, he told me. I disliked its stodge, and lack of topping. 

Alex studied applied engineering and lived in a world so different from my own. But he drove his own car, a grey Falcon and was prepared to travel all the way from Preston to Cheltenham to pick me up for events and to take me home after late nights studying at university. 

Alex was good to me, but I was not so to him. I was dismissive of his overtures and although sexual desire rumbled underneath and Alex and I tried furtive manoeuvres in his car outside my home late at night, we never moved beyond what people described as funny business. 

We wagged university one day on the pretext of travelling to study in the Monash University library and parked in the back of someone’s parking lot where there were plenty of trees and no one to be seen. Alex tried again to offer sexual satisfaction as we listened to Carol King on the radio. The earth did not move under my feet. It stuttered to a halt. 

I disliked Alex’s desperate attempts to pleasure me. His other overtures. He sent me poems, handwritten on paper torn from lined note pads, with his awkward attempts at illustrations. Someone else’s words, because Alex could never find the right ones. 

By the end of that summer Paul returned into my life, fresh from his sojourn to Tocumwal where he had worked in a hotel to get a handle on his future. After a short spell with his parents in Edithvale, Paul moved into an apartment with a friend Ivan. They rented a second floor flat in brown brick where the two men shared cooking and cleaning.

Ivan called me aside at a party one day, ‘He’s not the staying type,’ he said of Paul and for a minute I believed him. 

It was not Paul in the end who was not the staying type, nor Alex. It was me who wandered away from what seemed to me in those days when I could not predict what the future might hold, a grim future ahead with either of these men. 

Sexual desire and memories clash between the living and the dead, to jumble Ernaux’s words, and all we have left are scattered images across the tapestry of our lives.