Category: Grounding

  • Of Lakes

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    I've been watching Lakshmi R Kanchi (aka Soul Reserve) posting about the Cockburn wetlands and all the amazing events she created when she was their poet in residence. I wanted so badly to visit this beautiful place and this morning my dream came true!

    Her husband Ro picked me up from my digs and along with the Washington State poet Laureate, Arianne True and her fiancee Liz, we headed out of town. On our way out, we drove past the Derbal Yarrigan / Swan river which is huge! After the Birrarung Mar in Naarm, I was so surprised to see this mighty river. It looks more like Sydney harbour than a river! We headed south along the coast, stopping at Cottesloe along the way to meet the Indian Ocean. Ro was a great guide telling us so many stories about the places we were driving through. 

    The wetlands centre in Cockburn is on land that was going to be cut through by a major highway but local residents and scientists banded together to save the bushland. They established the wetlands centre to educate locals, especially children about the beauty and value of the swampy area containing two unique lakes and eco systems. This idea worked because when the government again tried to develop the area, the kickback from voters was immense, stopping the roads and saving the lakes.

    On our arrival at the wetlands in Cockburn we were met by Lakshmi, Jaya Penelope and the WA Poets Micro Poet in Residence, Gillian . The centre is a beautiful building that until recently was shared by many local groups, including their oldest scout group in WA. They have just finished the display in the entrance which is filled with imagery and captions in Noongar. Ro introduced us to many of the people working in the wetlands centre, including some of those who fought to save it.

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    We then walked through the bush to the lake. As we walked along the path about twenty metres (I think, but I'm hopeless at estimating distances!), a kwenda/bandicoot, scurried across the path behind us. It's not often that you see mammals out and about in the middle of the day (except for homo. sapiens that is). As we walked, accompanied by bird song my eyes were everywhere, drinking it all in. Seeing the details, noticing the little things and the big. Trying to see what is different and what is the same. The soil was sandy and the trees were familiar but different.

    I was hoping to see some new birds but there were a lot of familiar faces. Kookaburras, fairy wrens, magpies, galahs, ravens and on the lake Eurasian coots, black swans and purple swamp hens. Walking back along the boardwalk from the lake I spotted some smaller birds in the bushes. And then later, some of the endangered black cockatoos flew over the Wetlands centre. After our walk we were treated to a traditional  Aussie BBQ cooked by the volunteers. And we met some alpine dingoes.

    It was so good to be out of the city. To be in the bush. To be walking the naked land.

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    Lakshmi's poetry residency has ended and as a farewell gift she left a poetry trail around the wetlands. these boxes contain treasures, writing prompts, waterproof pencils and notebooks so you can add your poetry to the collection. A wonderful idea and a great legacy for a remarkable year of poetry from a brilliant poet.

     

  • Poetry Explosion

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    I have just had the most incredible two day Poetry Retreat hosted by Small Giants and held at the White House (no, not that one) in St Kilda. The facilitator of the workshop was Pádraig Ó Tuama, the incredible host of the Poetry Unbound podcast. During the pandemic and Melbourne’s many lockdowns I used to escape into the back garden and listen to his voice sharing poetry and insights while I hung out the washing. Getting to spend the last two days in his presence, diving deep into the power of words and stories has been amazing. He was smart and funny and created an amazing safe space for all our stories to be heard. It was so good I didn’t want it to end.

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    It was easy to be inspired in such amazing surroundings. Small Giants put on an amazing event with fabulous food, marvellous music and gorgeous floral arrangements. Throw in Nathan’s movement, breath and yoga practices along with Van’s warmth and organisational wizardry and you have one incredible event. And of course the poetry. Can’t forget the poetry. There was so much good poetry. I was soo, so lucky to be able to take time out from the everyday and meet amazing and inspiring people. Huge shout out to Mary Freer @freerthinking for putting me on to this workshop. 

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    The retreat was carefully crafted and structured to balance the emotional and mental strain of writing and sharing poetry with the needs of the body to move, eat and rest. I didn't end up getting any pictures of the incredible food cooked with love by Slow because I was too busy stuffing my face with baked eggplant, shiitake mushrooms on rice cracker puffs and baked artichoke hearts.

    There were published poets, emerging poets as well as people who don't write poetry at the retreat. All of them were there for a shared love of the power of poetry and what words can do to console and comfort or confront and confuse. Pádraig's presence and gentle manner created a safe and welcome space for writers of all abilities to feel comfortable sharing their work with the room.

    Each of the sessions contained writing prompts as well as poetry from famous poets such as Emily Dickinson, Wallace Stevens and Marie Howe. After we read Always Under Your Breath by Kei Miller, I went home and pulled his book, The Cartographer Tries to Map a Way to Zion off the shelf. I bought it a couple of years back when I met him at Poetry on the Move in Canberra. I was blown away by his performance, got excited and bought his book only to put it in a bookcase when I got home. I tend to buy more books than I can read, it's a guilty habit!

    My favourite exercise was the one where Pádraig got us to answer eight questions. We had to write a single line in response to each question – as long as the width of our page but no longer. Once we were finished, we then numbered the lines and rearranged them to create a pantun. It was such a great way to get people who don't write poetry to write a cleverly structured poem that fells like you're being a poet. I also found it a much better way to approach the form than trying to come up with the lines and shoe-horn them into the poem. His approach felt more natural and organic.

    I also liked the way Pádraig talked about the different forms (sonnet, villanelle, pantoum) having their own flavour, qualities and attributes. He is so knowledgeable and widely read, it made me hungry to learn more. There's always so much more to know that I think I'll alway be a student!

    We were also treated to an amazing, curated cello performance by Josephine Vains. Her cello was made in 1800 and has an unusually shaped bow and ram's gut strings so the sound is scratchy and raw. She taught us about Baroque music and the language of affects as well as the meanings of the keys which she matched with her pieces. In times past, music and emotion were paired together and songs consciously created to evoke a response in an audience. My favourite piece was her version of Metallica's Nothing Else Matters.

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    Meeting your heroes is a strange thing. You feel as if you know them already and can take up a conversation where you left off. Of course you've never spoken to them before but it feels like you have. I wanted to sit down in the sun and talk to Pádraig for hours about all the things but my awkwardness and shyness holds me back in social situations. I feel as if I am only mimicking being human and need to give myself little reminders like 'smile' and 'remember to ask questions' and 'don't scare them with your enthusiasm' and 'don't be a conversation hog' because when I get excited about a subject I get carried away and overwhelm people. I see their faces glaze over and know I've gone too far. And then I don't know what to do next or how to save face or how to exit gracefully.

    Its the ultimate magic trick – how to be yourself in a crowded room full of strangers you've only just met. Forget about pulling rabbits out of a hat or sawing yourself in half, the real magic is other people and how we communicate with each other. Figure that out and you're set! If you've worked it out, please, please drop me a line and share your secret!

    I was also conscious of all the people there who were as excited as me to be meeting one of their heroes. We all wanted to have those conversations with Pádraig, to share a few pints and chew the fat. Luckily he has a huge body of work with six season of Poetry Unbound that I can go back to and listen to again. 

    There's also the feeling that your hero is their own person and that they are there doing a job. Being polite to you is part of that job and you never really know how they feel about you, even if you want them to be your new best friend. I'm not sure where I read it, but building a casual friendship apparently takes at least thirty hours and to make a good friend, 300 hours. Although a retreat can feel like a super intense experience where you've made lottos new friends, when you've left you're only halfway to making an acquaintance. Chances are your paths will never cross again. But you know, that doesn't really matter because those beautiful souls shared a beautiful moment with you. One that you all will be able to carry and look back on over the years.

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    On the flip side, I met people who knew my work and a young woman who had bought a copy of pas de deux at the Book Barn in Belgrave. She told me that my book, along with others, had helped her through a difficult patch. Little did she know that hearing those words would help me through a difficult patch. Writing is a solitary craft. We writers create our work and then send it out into the world, hoping it will meet interesting people and make new friends. But we don't always know if that will happen. So there is grief in the joy of creation, of letting go and coming home.

    And then there is the feeling of gladness when someone tells you that the work you are doing is important, that it matters, that it made a difference. Hearing that gives me the strength to go on. To keep doing the work. And it inspires me and gives me energy because I know that what I am doing is not in vain. Doubt dogs my steps and nags at every turn. For a little while now I'll be able to ignore its yelps and whines and focus on doing what I love.

    Stepping out from behind the computer screen this weekend was so affirming. I met so many incredible people, heard so many inspiring stories and witnessed what happens when people consciously come together to create. I am so blessed to have met so many lovely people who made the retreat an amazing experience. Thank you!

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    A day later, I am struck by all the conversations I had and all the ones that could have been. The faces that I smiled with or shared a look of understanding and those that remain an enigma. All those beautiful beings who shared the room and made this retreat a welcoming, safe and nurturing space. So many of us were mothers, taking time out of busy child/partner filled lives to nourish our selves so we could go back home and say, 'I am here. I can do this. I love this.'

    I love my life. I am here. I can do this.

     

  • Back On The Bike

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    I woke up this morning all groggy and fuzzy (it's both a reality and a metaphor for how I've been feeling of late). The aim of getting up early was to get some work done before the kids woke up. It was my attempt to get back into the swing of things after taking January off. But the thought of sitting down at my computer wasn't appealing at all. Once I opened the curtains and saw that the sun was just getting up my decision seemed more simple – go for a ride and see the sun rise.

    It feel so good to be back on the bike. There was so much beauty in the morning with the birds already awake and excited about the day. It's hard not to feel good when you hear them so busy and joyful all around you. I think it was the magpie I heard when I was still lying in bed that planted the seed for this adventure. Lying there under the doona, half asleep and hearing her carol in the dawn was a wonderful way to wake.

    I stoped about a million times along the way to take photos and drink in the beauty all around me. I feel like I've been asleep to all that gorgeousness for the last month while my brain went AWOL. And now, after my morning ride through beauty, I am coming into focus. 

     

  • Time For Some Perspective

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    It’s easy to get caught up in the things that don’t matter. I’ve been submitting my poetry to literary journals for publications and piling up rejection letters. It’s disheartening to say the least.

    Writing is a strange dance of hope and doubt. Every poem I write is filled with hope. I craft each one with love. Agonise over the line breaks and the exact meaning of the words. Strive to find synonyms to express what I am trying to communicate. Each time I send a new poem to a journal (or dust off an old one) I am quietly hopeful that this time, it will be good enough to be published.

    When each rejection letter arrives I have to remind myself that it is the poem being rejected and not me. Which is hard when I have poured so much of myself into my poetry and it keeps getting rejected.

    When the most recent rejection letter arrived I was filled with doubt. I doubted I could ever write a poem as good as the ones I read in the journals. As good as the ones written by my literary heroes. I doubted I had the ability to craft a poem that could leap and twirl across the page. I doubted I would ever be able to write the kind of poems I want to write. There’s a shift that happens in my favourite poems and I don’t know how to execute it. It’s like a magic trick I can’t figure out, all I hear is the magician’s patter and I’m blind to the sleight of hand.

    All of this was swirling around in my head. And then I jumped on my bike and rode here with my daughters. And suddenly, being accepted into a literary journal didn’t matter so much anymore. Not when there is this.

     

  • My Morning Routine

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    For the last month I've been getting up early before the rest of the house wakes to write a poem each day as part of the Dirty Thirty challenge run by Abdulraman Hamoud on Facebook.

    I light one of these beeswax candles and then write in this gorgeous leather journal. I made both the candles and the journal and it feels really special to sit down and use both of them. Having beautiful, handmade tools lifts my spirits. And there's a lovely sense of pride and satisfaction when you can use something you have made yourself.

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    It's become something of a peaceful ritual with which to start the day. It may not be the twenty pages of random writing as suggested by Julia Cameron in her book The Artist's Way but it is writing when my brain is still halfway between awake and asleep. It's been interesting to see what I can come up with in response to the prompts. When I've left writing a response until later in the day it has been much harder. My brain feels sluggish and there are too many distractions to concentrate fully on writing.

    Having carved out this quiet time for myself sets me up to take on the rest of the day and whatever it may throw at me. When everything goes pear-shaped as it all too often does, I have the joy of knowing I have already done something just for me. It's a priceless gift.

     

  • A Snail’s Pace

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    It's been a long time since I sat and looked at a snail. Got down on my haunches and waited patiently for it to poke it's head out if its shell. So long in fact I can't remember the last time I did it. Or ever doing it at all in fact.

    The blessing of spending time with very young children in nature is they notice the small things. All the tiny details. They are alive to all the things in the world and they are curious about them. And they have endless time in which to sit and gaze at a snail.

    Go spend some time with small children and experience endless time. Warning: side effects include increased wonder and appreciation.

     

  • Hello Sky

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    I miss living at the beach. Walking along the water's edge with scratchy sand between my toes. Hunting for shells in the high tide mark. Breathing in the salt air and dancing back from the waves eager to kiss my feet.

    Most of all I miss the beautiful sky and endless horizon. 

     

     

  • Out of My Head

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    For most of this year I've been smitten with the poetry bug. Writing it, reading it, talking it.  Dipping my toe into the beautiful world of spoken word and open mics. Having my first feature as a spoken word artist. Entering competitions and submitting to journals. It's been amazing and incredible and hectic and challenging and rewarding. All the things, all the time.

    Meanwhile, my body's been telling me I'm run down and need a break. Like all good artists, I ignored it until I couldn't any more. Some time last week I reached saturation point. To be honest, it's been coming for a while. For the last couple of months, I've felt stressed and tense. I longed for a break from the routine. I went to Bali which was wonderful but when I came home I was still carrying stress around with me.

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    What I needed to do was get out of my head and into my body. Use my hands to create something I needed. Take some time out to follow my curiosity. Give myself a day off to do whatever I felt like, even if it wasn't achieving anything on my 'to do' list. Especially if it wasn't achieving anything on my 'to do' list.

    So this weekend I did just that. Sat in the sun and read a book. Ate yummy food. Made a mess of my study then tidied it up again. Played lots of games with my girls (Citadels Deluxe, Seven Wonders and Coup if you're wondering). Made a little notebook with an eco-dyed cover. Sawed a tree branch into little counters to turn into runes. Fixed a journal for my girl. Got lost on the internet looking at growth mindset posters.

    It was so good, I want more. More of that relaxed feeling of flow. Less of the feeling of obligation and woe. (When you work for yourself, from home, it's so very easy to fall into the trap of always working and never switching off). I want to be more nurturing with gentle, nourishing acts of kindness towards myself and those I love.

    Maybe I could make a day off a week a regular thing. What do you reckon? 

     

  • Water Remedy

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    Nothing beats the post holiday blues quite like time spent in nature.

    It was so good to be back in nature this week, sitting by the creek and listening to the birds. It's spring and they're very excited. Chirping loudly, swopping across the sky joyfully, building nests and feeding young. The sun was out and there was nowhere else I had to be.

    Balm for the soul.

     

  • Feeding the Fire

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    Over the last couple of months I've been sending off my poems to publishers and competitions. Only to receive silence in return. Being a writer can be a very disheartening experience. Working away for months, pouring your soul into your poetry only to have it rejected. Last Wednesday was particularly bad. Not only did I find out my poem wasn't good enough to make the short list for a major poetry prize I also discovered that I'd missed the deadline for another competition after spending ages working on my entry.

    The cure? (Cos you know there's there's light even when all the stars go out). Spending a day at the Darebin Parklands in Alphington with my girls and a group of friends, making fire. We tried to get the fire going using a fire drill and managed to get an ember. Alas, it went out in our hastily made tinder bundle. Note to self – before starting fire remember to prepare tinder bundle and stick teepee in fire pit. 

    My thirteen year old daughter eventually got the fire going with a single match (some weeks we have used a lot of matches in our efforts to create and harness the warmth and comfort of fire). I then spent the next couple of hours feeding any dry sticks I could find into the flames. It was so therapeutic and healing to be spending the day outdoors, breathing in wood smoke.

    What do you do to comfort yourself after disappointment hits?