That dangerous place…

‘That dangerous place, the family home’. Adrienne Rich.

One twilight, as my brother and I walked towards the church for Saturday evening Mass, the thought crossed my mind, I might not be safe with him. 

The church was a good half hour walk from where we lived, up Cox Street to Robross and then through to Centre Dandenong Road. My brother walked close by, close enough for me to smell his sweat against the neighbouring roses that were heavy with the scent of late spring. 

My brother knew things. Lots of things. He read books on Teilhard de Chardin’s palaeontologic explorations. He knew all there was to know about the Greek and Roman gods. He knew about numbers. 

We did not talk about feelings. We did not talk about our life at home with an unpredictable father who might at any moment lash out. We spoke of the things that existed in the past or across the sea in countries I could only imagine or saw in images from the pile of National Geographics my mother collected from the Old Peoples home where she worked. 

I looked to the ground as we walked. To keep an eye on any bumps in the ridges between pavers that ran across every footpath. Not that I feared tripping but there was a rhythm to our footsteps, a rhythm to the steps we took one after the other that held me. 

My brother told me the story of a Cyclops with his one giant eye, and the way the only chance Odysseus had of getting past him was to take a sharp stick and poke it straight through. 

I saw the blood red wound in my mind’s eye and something of the horror of that moment left me unsteady on my feet. Fearful of the unknown. 

Could my brother become as unpredictable as my father? Could he decide on a whim to grab hold of me and push me into the bushes. Could he decide to treat me like an object there to give him pleasure? 

I did not know how, only that men preyed upon the bodies of women to feed their lustful appetites, or so the nuns taught us. And as women, we needed to be careful not to lead them on. 

But this was my brother, and brothers and sisters were different. We had a sacred bond. We left each other’s bodies alone. We did not even notice one another’s bodies, though my older brothers had taken to calling my older sister fat. They called her ‘compost heap’, as if she was full of all the rubbish people threw out to rot in piles and in time feed to their gardens. 

I saw my sister likewise, as fat, not because she was but because her body was changing, much as my own was firming up. The dresses I wore in grade six were too tight around my waist and I grew worried about my increasing height. I was taller than my mother by then and feared I might become a freak and grow as tall as my tallest brother and people would peer at me, at this unsightly thing, a tall girl whom no one would ever want to marry. 

There were girls taller than me in my class at school, but their height matched their shapes and they held themselves well, as though they knew they were ready for the world and would not grow any taller. They would stop then and prepare themselves for womanhood, while I was still a scrawny though thickening insect and my brother in my imagination had become a lizard with a long tongue who might soon swallow me whole.

Such thoughts when they slipped into my mind were troubling for their ferocity, for the way they left me breathless, as if they were accurate, even as I knew my imagination had travelled into overload.

On the cusp of summer, the twilight extended through to our arrival at church. As we walked through the door, I saw shadows on the wall as the sinking sun behind us left pink smears across the skyline. 

Everything was infused with the celestial light of in between times, between darkness and light and we were shifting from that space of seeing things with clarity into blurred images of uncertainty. 

I knew nothing in those days about the unconscious or the way things might sneak into our awareness. ‘Beta elements’ as the analyst Wilfred Bion describes, unprocessed experience from past trauma that sits inside a person’s mind and can erupt at unpredictable times. 

I cannot say for sure now why those times were so unpredictable, only they were, as unpredictable as when a person drinks too much alcohol and their usually steady mind slips into a fug of paranoia and delusion. They no longer feel safe and trusting and can lash out at the ones around them, the safe targets, like wife and children, as in the case of my father.

And these beta elements exist in all of us. Usually, we keep them in check. But there are times – in between times when twilight descends, or when the moon is full and there is too much brightness on an otherwise dark night, or when a person alters their brain chemistry with alcohol or drugs, or grief or rage or an excess of emotion – when those undigested elements are shot into the atmosphere. 

And any small and vulnerable creatures in their sights are swallowed whole. 

He died too soon

Ralph our dog died three days ago and ever since I’ve wandered around the house and spotted him underfoot in the kitchen as I grated parmesan for our pasta or found him curled up in his grey bed near the piano. 

I’ve hesitated to open the front door without checking the screen door is in place, in case Ralph races out onto the street as he has done for most of his life.

I now interpret pain in every moping gesture of our other dog, a decade younger than Ralph, and therefore hopefully with many years ahead of her.

She misses him. 

I wasn’t at home when Ralph let out a sudden yelp of pain. My husband who sat nearby on his chair was first on the scene and my daughter and her boyfriend both upstairs, working remotely under Covid restrictions, rushed downstairs. 

My daughter drove the car and her boyfriend carried Ralph into the vet’s where they tried to resuscitate him. 

For me, his death happened between phone calls. My daughter rang in tears to say Ralph had suffered an episode and the vet might need to put him down. They were doing their best, she said. Half an hour later, she rang again. ‘He’s gone,’ she sobbed into the phone. 

I could not cry. Even now I cannot cry. Tears are behind my eyes but something frozen inside tells me to hold back.

Not that I’m not sad, but somehow, I cannot let myself give way to the deep torrents of emotion I saw in both my daughters, the ones who first brought Ralph into our household all those years ago. They who were hell bent on getting a dog after all the years of parental resistance.

When Kevin Rudd offered a stimulus payment to encourage spending in 2008, the older of the two, used some of her $900.00 bonus from the government – she was a student at the time, working part-time and therefore on a low enough income for the government to include her in its generosity. She bought Ralph, a cross between Cavalier and Maltese along with something else and our lives changed. 

A dog is a dog, my husband said whenever we first thought to introduce comforts into Ralph’s life.

My husband grew up on a farm. They had farm dogs who slept outside in the shed. Working dogs who were given names but came and went were not treated as part of the family, not in the way we treat our domestic dogs today. 

At first, my husband insisted Ralph be an outdoor dog, and Ralph sat outside the kitchen window desperate to join us. In no time, we relented and kept him confined while still a puppy in a corner section of the kitchen. We were told this is containing for puppies. 

Over the years Ralph took over the house. So by the time the other dog came along, no part of the back of the house was dog-free.

Once upon a time, I would have been appalled at the idea of a dog sleeping on my bed, but these days who cares?

Who cares if the dog sleeps all night on your finest doona? Who cares as long as your dog is not wet?

I like to measure the process whereby my hard-hearted attitudes towards pets have softened over the years.

How the dogs got me out walking again. How the dogs taught me a new language – the language of a dog lover. The language of those we meet in the park who study the attributes of their canines with much dedication, not unlike the mothers of small children. 

Maybe it was not possible for me when my children were small and my life so full of the demands of family life to take on anything extra, or so I reasoned then. 

Cats and rabbits, even green tree frogs were okay. They asked for little by way of attention, but dogs, like children, need a level of affection my once overwhelmed mind could not take on. 

I still hold back tears at losing Ralph. I did not want him to die. I hoped he would stay around for many years to come, until he was old and infirm and in need of constant care such it would be a kindness to let him go. I never expected him to go so suddenly. 

Was he surprised when his ending came? The yelp he let out alerted my family to the fact something was wrong. It’s not something they ever want to hear again. A pain too great for any creature to endure. 

Ralph’s past it now. And only his spirit remains in memory, along with his ashes which we will collect next week before deciding where to scatter them, so that, in our minds at least, Ralph can roam freely forevermore.