How to spring in Australia

Just before summer last year, I pottered about the streetsโ€”fresh out of a shower with nothing more than a light-scented talcum powder mildly-layering my brown surface. Temperatures didnโ€™t exceed 42 degrees Celsius, and the talc was more than enough to prevent me from turning into a body of walking stink.How to spring in Australia.ย Just before summer last year, I pottered about the streetsโ€”fresh out of a shower with nothing more than a light-scented talcum powder mildly-layering my brown surface. Temperatures didnโ€™t exceed 42 degrees Celsius, and the talc was more than enough to prevent me from turning into a body of walking stink.

I was in Chennai, a south Indian city of over 6 million people. 

This time, Iโ€™m in Canberra. Itโ€™s springtime, and people smile at the sun, women gliding about in beautiful spring skirts, men waddling in khaki shorts trying to balance two beers in one hand, and more people in singlets of every colour and pattern. Iโ€™ve seen all kinds of ankles, knees, and arms. Temperature can reach up to 25 degrees now, and 42 degrees in summer.

I donโ€™t have talcum powder anymore.

Instead, 

I have sunscreen. 

Moisturiser.

Petroleum jelly, because Iโ€™m still recovering from winter dryness.

I have lip balm.

Deodorant.

And Iโ€™m nursing chapped, cracked, and chipped skin. 

Welcome to Australiaโ€”the sun loves us so much that it ripped the ozone, earthโ€™s face mask, away  so it can kiss us more fully, purely, with love as mother showers upon her 18-month baby, except more harshly.

18 degrees, an idealistic dream in Chennai, burns in Canberra. 

Normal. 

The sun has a way to hurt you, and you have a way to deal with it. What else are conglomerates for? They churn out cream after cream, all-purpose ones for efficiency and portability, and more specialised, individually focussed line of products for a more complete skin care. Variantly priced to suit your comfort.

And yet, itโ€™s not just about lining rows and rows of supermarket shelves with liquids and creams people may or may not want. Itโ€™s not the unrestrained dance of the capitalist banshee, wasteful.

Itโ€™s necessary. 

Australia has one of the worldโ€™s highest skin cancer rates. Although tanning has been huge crazy (why, Iโ€™ll never understand), our unnatural behaviour has led to natural exposure to excessive UV rays, and that keeps this country a hot bed.

No one goes out without synthetic protection hugging their skins. The more clothes you shed to cope with the rising heat, the more you need to layer up on creams. 

Iโ€™m glad I got my transition glasses just in timeโ€”my eyelids would fry otherwise.

And that, my friends, is how you spring in Australia. Wonderful time for picnics and lounging on the grass with a bookโ€”just as long as youโ€™ve got your layers on.

Whatโ€™s the value of poetry?

Ah, that primal instinct to put a price tag on everything. As a product on painted, plastic shelves with curved edges that emit fringes of varnish smell from last yearโ€™s spring cleaning, and yet, not quite strong enough to mask the sweat of high-vis employees whoโ€™ve rested many a heavy heads and brushed uniformed shoulders against.

As if what doesnโ€™t give material back doesnโ€™t warrant time or effort. As though without return on investmentโ€”solid pieces of paper and clinking disks you can trade for something else, you shouldnโ€™t bother at all. For what brings you only joy strips away precious time you can manage in other ways. Creeping seconds on a grandmother clock, hands inching from a number to anotherโ€”time, that you can do more things with, other things. Time, that you can manage efficiently, effectively in order to make something of it, of yourself, of your time on this whatโ€™s left of this round, blue pool thatโ€™s melting away in its own time.

As if poetry is another supermarket commodity. As if you can valuate bliss.ย 


Note: I was at a poetry festival, and the value of poetry was one of the panel discussions. This is my response, inspired by intriguing opinions.ย 

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โ€œAre you a poet?โ€

โ€œErโ€”โ€

I was attending Poetry on the Move, an annual festival in Canberra that celebrates poetry and poets of the world. A recognised poet asked me that inevitable question. Iโ€™d told her how much Iโ€™d enjoyed her performance the previous night, and she seemed pleased. Either that, or she was so articulate and polite to acknowledge, without betraying any of the weariness that comes with being a popular poet, with the hundreds of people telling them how great their work is. Oh well, just another day.

Then she popped the question. I was stumped.

I donโ€™t call myself a poet. When I share a piece with my writers group, I say dub it a โ€œpoemโ€ or a free-style-poetry-thing. Iโ€™ve never felt enough to call myself a poet. Or a writer.ย 

When people ask what I do for a living, I say Iโ€™m a copywriter.

Even though it triggers conversations Iโ€™d rather swivel away from, itโ€™s also a digestible way to avoid admitting the twelve hours I spend in a day on a computerโ€ฆ writing. Copy for websites, blogs, articles, ads, and whatnot, gleaning whatever time I can get to write the snappier, shorter stuff that pleases me: self-declared haiku, short stories, and the occasional โ€œpoetryโ€.

โ€œI justโ€”write stuff.โ€ย 

The poet smiled, letting it reach her slender eyes, perched elegantly on the edge of her blemish-free face. So unlike my own sunken ones.

She respected my insecurity.

However, she did mention later that weโ€™re all poets, regardless of where or how or how much work weโ€™ve published, introducing me to another as a poet, shooting a thrill down my spine. I smiled and let the statement wash over me, unregistering its impact.

Later, mulling it over, as I do everything these days, I straightened, my gut clenching, the tiniest sense of pride creeping up my face. And I fought to contain the idea lapping my heart: me a poet.ย 

Do I dare?

A milestone

When I was about 13, I decided I wanted to writeโ€”to be a published novelist.

Then life happened. Luckily, however, I still wanted to write. That’s how this blog came about, and ever since I’ve been writing plenty of self-declared short stories, opinions, random musings, and travel thoughts.

Moving to Canberra took my writing to a whole new level. I joined a writers group, and thanks to being exposed to incredible poetic talent, the embers of my poetry began to flare up. As a result, I’ve been writing and experimenting a lot with free verse poetic forms.

Now I’m super thrilled and proud to say that with the help of my incredible writers group, I’ve managed to get in on an anthology of womxn’s poetry from all over the world.

Published by Animal Heart Press, the book is called From The Ashes. It’s co-edited by Amanda McLeod and Mela Blust.

Preorder the book here

Another Country

I went for a movie last night. Not the fast-past, steamy, nail-biting, popcorn-munching kind of movie. Nopeโ€”it was the first time Iโ€™d been to a cinema theatre in Canberra and it was for a movie about Aboriginals. It was Another Country.

To put it the words of the narrator, โ€œThis film is about what happened my culture when it was interrupted by your culture.โ€

And as soon as the echoes of that resounding statement died down, the screen flared up with young Aboriginal men, dancing to rock and roll music, shaking their hips, faces contorted in concentration, and enjoying, apparently, the westernisation that had crept into their veins, pulsating through their feet.

With gut wrenching grace, the film touched upon many issues that Australian natives endured during the initial stages of colonisation. 

โ€œThen the white men came. With their cattle. If we didnโ€™t do exactly what they told us to do in our own land, they would shoot us or poison us.โ€

As I heard the unwavering voice of the narrator, gliding over emotional scars and scabs oozing with fresh blood and pain, I shuddered. It was normal. And that was scary. As the audience, every moment of revelation was a gasp of shock, while it was everyday reality for the voice that told the story.

The more I watched, the more I understood how Aboriginals have been isolated in their own land. The documentary revolves around one small town in Northern Territory, emphasising the lack of everything there. When the government built a school, a store, and basic medical facilities, Aboriginal people from neighbouring lands had to move into a single town, where they were given periodic pension money to spend on supermarket-grade food that were ferried across or flowing into from other parts of the country. Since the town was devoid of everything else, including amiable weather, adults had no jobs to earn from. They were given money to buy things that the government intended them toโ€”and as I watched kids and adults gulp down bottles of teeth-rotting Coca Cola and other carbonated, sugary drinks as if it were water, I cringed.

Alcohol is banned in the town. But soda thatโ€™s just as disastrous to health is abundant, encouraged, and in a sense, shoved upon these people. With nothing to do other than sit around, play cards, and participate in traditional celebrations, young men with a mischievous spark are punished. Possession of alcohol and kava are enough to land them in jail. About it the narrator says, โ€œThey get sent to jail, to Darwin, for doing things that other Australians are allowed to do.โ€

As if these youngsters arenโ€™t Australian at all, just because theyโ€™re Aboriginal.

It was abominable to think of it that way. But it was more shuddering to realise that thatโ€™s how the rest of the worldโ€™s treated Aboriginals all along.

What a load of rubbish we are for looking down on fellow humans that way. Rubbishโ€”the film covered that too.

When you think of it, the native people use natureโ€™s elements to make baskets, tools, and almost everything else they need for living. When these things die, they return to the earth and people make new ones. However, the outskirts of the town are lined with garbage, broken appliances, and products used no longer. As the camera panned over piles and piles of old stuff now replaced by newer, shinier stuff, you canโ€™t help but feel claustrophobic. And to imagine people living with all of that in their backyardโ€”shame on us.

โ€œWe never had rubbish. Everything comes from the bush; everything goes back to the bush. [โ€ฆ] Weโ€™re choking on rubbish. That means weโ€™re choking on your culture.โ€

This documentary was eye-opening. Itโ€™s an assertive stance against the unfairness thatโ€™s become so internalised and normal in todayโ€™s Australia. And even though millions of people try and consciously avoid harming the essence of Aboriginal culture, or be patronising, it feels as if rules that require least 3 Aboriginal students in the opera club is also a way of enforcing the western culture in them.

This movieโ€™s made me thinkโ€”whatโ€™s happened between these two cultures isnโ€™t a simple matter of right or wrong. And as we try to solve it, we will run into polarising problems. Finding the right balance will take time and and open minds. Question is, do we have that luxury?