On boredom

‘Nothing so consumes a person as meaningless exertion’ Haruki Murakami

Boredom, pure and simple but Murakami refers to something else, meaningless exertion, day after day of doing the same thing without understanding its significance. 

There were days in my childhood when life took on a colourless tone, where every move felt laboured under the weight of not knowing what to do, days when my father forced us out of our house into the safety of my brother’s place, semi-detached in red brick in a side street that led through an alley way and countless other streets to the Auburn railway station. 

The house is still there, not far from where I live today, and when I walk past with dogs on their leads, as they sniff around the grass under lamp posts on the narrow nature strip, I check out its proportions against my memory. 

The way it sat there banged up against its identical partner, concrete pathway to the front door which was tucked to one side and invisible from the street. The square of lawn consisted of little more than a patch of green bordered by flower beds of begonia and geranium. The stock standard flowers of my childhood. They looked after themselves.

My brother lived in this house with his young wife, a woman who eclipsed us all with her foreign beauty. Her clean round face free of the blemishes that beset me as a soon-to-be teenager. She dressed in an elegance that spoke to serious care and she helped my brother to rise above the dishevelled state of his own youthful neglect into something better, while the rest of us, my sisters and his younger brothers languished behind layers of dirt and disinterest in all but our schoolwork. 

Schoolwork was all I enjoyed, but on one such day in my brother’s house even my schoolwork could not help me. We were bang smack in the middle of holidays and no one had homework then.

During holidays you were meant to play, have fun, go to new places, with your parents, take trips into the city with friends like some of the popular girls at my school, or make time for activities like ice skating at St Mauritz in St Kilda.

Such experiences needed money and parental supervision, none of which we had in those days when my mother took herself off to work to raise what little money she could, and my father floated at home on yet another bender. We four kids in the middle made do at my brother’s house trying to keep the place tidy in the same way my brother and his young bride left it once they too took themselves off to work. 

One of the younger brothers lost himself in books, another took himself into the garden to explore the insect life. My sisters were young enough to make up imaginary games with dolls or other pleasurable preoccupations while I looked out the window onto a rain-soaked street and nursed my boredom like a broken arm.

There’s a television series doing the rounds that features a sensory deprivation tent. The character in the movie who enters the tent then enters new worlds. What fun. 

When I was a kid in my own version of a sensory deprivation tent, I could not kick start my imagination into anything other than boredom eked out of every moment and stretched to kill time. 

I walked over to the kitchen sink and wiped it shiny clean so that it sparkled the way my sister in law left it in the morning before work. I marvelled that she could keep her kitchen so clean. Nothing left behind on the bench beyond the toaster. And bread bin. An empty bread bin which made my stomach rumble at the left-over smells as I lifted the lid and looked for crumbs. 

We ate the last slices toasted at breakfast and my brother said we’d need to wait till he came home with something for dinner. He did not want us to cook anything from the cupboard for fear of the mess we might make in his kitchen, his new wife’s domain and so that one obvious activity – the preparation of food – became another activity denied in my sensory deprivation tent.

At such times it’s hard to form memories. Memories come from events that are loaded with feelings. On this day I looked down on my knees and marvelled at the shape of bones as they turned the corner to the rest of my legs to my sandshoes below. 

I wore a woollen skirt, a hand me down from my elder sister. Tight now, it bunched around my hips, and I needed to straighten it so that it sat comfortably. Otherwise, the wool scratched. I wore long socks that covered my legs to the nape of my knees. The gap in between where the cold air grabbed was annoying, as if there was a draft in my deprivation tent where sensations could sneak through. I wanted to numb myself to all sensation so that time might pass, and the day end and I could be somewhere else that held meaning, some promise in this otherwise drab world in my brother’s house where I dared not imagine life.

In moments like these it was hard to locate myself. To feel the contours of my mind and body. To sense myself as a person who had reason for being and could go on being. I was as transparent and ephemeral as the daddy long legs that crawled across the carpet to its hole in the corner of the lounge. 

My sister-in-law would be displeased at the sight of such a creature, and I had the impulse to swat it, but I also had a sense that this creature carried a soul and heart. This creature should live. 

So, I let it be and watched the knobbles on its long legs, the place which I imagined were its knees. as it sidled along the wall to the darkest corner and a crack in the sideboard where it finally disappeared. 

When you’re young and bored, when life offers you no sense of amusement or purpose, when you are helpless to the endless ticking of the clock and the inertia that comes from having nothing to do and no one to tell you where to go or how to spend your hours, you enter a limbo state in which your arms become sludge. It gets hard to stir yourself, to engage with the world. 

I was in the in-between state of early childhood like my two younger sisters stooped over their dolls in one corner of the lounge room in contrast to my older brothers who made a point of action into books or the outside world, while even my imagination let me down, and I tried to enter my tent of sensory deprivation to create a numbness akin to how it feels when you’re dead.

Only I was not yet dead. 

Mother guilt

I can’t say how long I left her crying. It was winter and cold. The woman in the restaurant suggested if I did not want my baby to fuss in the bustle and smoke of the high-ceilinged restaurant, I could leave her a door away in the storage room, dry and quiet and she would stay warm under her baby blankets in the white bassinet we used in those days. 

A wicker basket, round edges and rectangular. You carried it on the backseat of your car and covered the baby tucked inside under a fishnet roughly fitted at each side. The idea was the baby would stay in the basket if you needed to stop abruptly or had an accident. I doubt they were safe even in those days but better than the baby seated on your lap as you drove along. 

A better form of infant care while travelling today.

There was not much open space in the storage room, but I found two flat boxes of equal height on which to rest the bassinet. I fed my baby once more in the dark and cold quiet of the room, burped her, then rested her back in her bed.

She did not fuss when I laid her down. A baby who was predictable in her patterns even at three months, or predictable in that unpredictable way of new babies, from one week to the next. Just as you thought you’d entered a new phase and could anticipate what might happen next, it shifted.

From waking once each night to waking several times; from settling for the night at seven to not letting me say a proper goodnight till nine; from waking at six to sleeping till eight. 

This time she closed her eyes and was asleep within minutes, enough to leave her there in the dark, cold, quiet and go back to the glare of the restaurant where my friends were enjoying their first glasses of wine and the chatter of hospitality infused the room.

A chatter so inviting, so enveloping I almost forgot my baby. But she was there in the back of my mind lost and safe in sleep. 

Our main meals were arriving when I went to check on her. The cry hit me as soon as I opened the door. A cry of abandonment and despair and I swept her into my arms to soothe and caress. 

The baby settled quickly but the rest of the evening in the restaurant moved in a blur of tension. I could not settle myself even as my daughter had slipped back into sleep.

This time I did not close the door on the storage room and retured to check every five minutes. An abandoned baby left to cry her way back to sleep or into the land of alone was unbearable.

Mother guilt they call it. Some inbuilt system, some bond of attachment that registers those cries and cannot walk away. A bond so great the sound of such cries even from some other mother’s baby hits something visceral inside and my own baby self is awakened with a pain so great I cannot walk away.


When I hear this cry in a supermarket or shopping centre I feel a tug of desperation, and hope there is a mother for that baby who can find it within to hold the baby close. To take away the despair of abandonment.

It was no surprise then when we took to our sleeping bags that night in the sad shack my husband called a hut. A place I had imagined would be warm and comfortable with an open fire and space to heat water for coffee and tea. A place when we arrived that shocked me for its simplicity. As if we had gone back two hundred years.

It was the old shepherd’s hut on his uncle’s property, abandoned now, and used mainly for grain storage. His uncle left it open day and night and the sheep wandered in and out. They left their droppings in every corner. Black pebbles hardened with time. And a stench to beat a neglected campsite lavatory on a summer’s day.

We swept first before we brought in our luggage and sleeping gear. My friends had agreed to stay there for the night but when they saw inside I guessed they might have wished they’d spent extra money on staying in the town’s hotel. Mansfield boasts a couple of hotels and the posh restaurant just outside the main drag. We could have been comfortable there. 

Once cleaned out and after a full dinner with plenty to drink none of us felt bothered by the hard wood floor on which to sleep. My husband built a fire and put aside a pile of thick logs which he planned to replenish throughout the night. 

The baby slept deeply by then in one corner of the shack not far from where we had rested our sleeping bags in readiness for our uncomfortable sleep.

We didn’t last long chatting over the fire, the women with steaming cups of coffee in our hands. The men on cold beers. After the kerosine lamps faded, we chose darkness, fractured by the red glow of flames from the fireplace licking at the logs. 

All was quiet, alongside the soft murmur of the sleepers, a quiet so great I suspect it reminded my baby of the aloneness of the storage room. Out of nowhere, she let out a wail and before I could get out of my sleeping bag and take her in my arms her sobs were loud and desperate. 

No one complained, but my guilt for my abandoned baby shifted onto guilt over my friends. How much their sleep would be disrupted if I could not settle her into silence.

I cradled her, rocked her, fed her again even though I knew she could not be hungry. I fumbled for a fresh nappy in the dark and worried that the pins might enter my thumbs, as I stopped their points from piercing my baby’s skin. 

She settled in my arms but any attempts to lay her down, even after she had closed her eyes and given an appearance of sleep, was useless. As soon as my arms reached out to release her she cried out. As if she knew she was about to be abandoned once more. 

I cannot say how many minutes or hours I held her that night, caught between my desperate need for sleep and her need to be held. I looked into the flames and worried they might frighten my baby every time she cracked open an eye to check I was still there. 

I had put too much upon this tiny form. This tiny person whose own predictability hinged on mine. And here we were taking her away from the comfort of her warm familiar cradle into the cold discomfort of a shack.

All of it in the name of pleasure. Our throwback to those days when we could leave the city on weekends and take off in tents or hotel rooms or even outside under stars, when we were free agents. 

We were not free anymore and this small person in my arms reminded me yet again of the pains of being tiny, the helplessness. Two arms, two legs, a body, and head in between. But still no sense of how to coordinate these, nor of how to make her brain work such she could form words to ask for the things she needed.

We had to understand her through the fog of uncertainly that is any baby’s life. and we had failed. At least this time.