What I Know About Love

Here’s what I know about love.

Love is patient. Love is kind. Love is pain. Love is suffering. Love is knocking on the door in the pouring rain, sobbing, and hoping against hope that the arms on the other side will enfold you and hold you close and tell you everything is going to be okay. Love is hurt. Love is betrayal. Love is calling and asking ‘where’s the money?’, knowing full well where it’s up his nose and down the drain and still hoping it’s not true anyway. Love is waiting. Waiting for them to call, waiting for them to show up. Waiting for them to tell the truth. Waiting for them to give to you what they have promised, waiting beyond all possible reasonable hope, waiting, waiting, waiting because what else is there to do.

Molly

I close my eyes and see her.

Tottering on chubby legs, brown curls bouncing in the breeze, she runs in dappled sunlight under Moreton Bay figs towards me. Laughing, both of us, I scoop her up into my arms and swing her around, the sun and sky and clouds a blur behind her as I focus on her beautiful face — button nose, rosebud lips and big blue eyes not unlike my own.

“More Mama!” she cries, her tiny hands taking a firmer grip on my arms. She is confident and calm in my embrace, the world a place of adventure and joy. I twirl around one more time and place her sandaled feet gently, but firmly, on the soft green grass. I squat down so we can be face to face. She solemnly puts her hands on my hands.

“I have something to tell you.”
I take her hands in mine. “Really, what is it?”
She pauses, and I watch her formulate her thoughts, the soft rise and fall of her chest the only passage of time.
“I love you Mama,” and my heart falls out and swells a hundred times its size and encompasses us both in that moment.

This tiny child, so cherished, so beloved, so wanted from before the moment she was conceived — for years and years — is there in front of me, whimsical and serious and so damn beautiful, and every day I feel like my body is flying apart and being put back together anew in this shape called ‘mother’ so I can contain all the love I never knew I could express.

All the hopes and dreams I have for this tiny being coalesce and disentangle like breathing. She will be a writer. She will be an artist. She will be a lawyer. She will be a dancer. She will be an economist. She will be a therapist. She will be a doctor. She will be a mother. She will be an athlete. In and out, in and out, in each breath her future changes as she responds to the world around her.

For sure she will be a feminist, my little mop-haired feminist child, seeing the world for what it is and ready to challenge it. Not cowed or afraid or angry, just prepared. She will be fascinated by people, and the way they think and feel. She will be a helper, I’m sure, always looking for a way to make someone else happier, or feel better, or less bad. She will love art and music and theatre, and will surprise me by loving something intensely physical, like sprinting or hockey or taekwondo. She will reach out to the world and give it the best of her but also, I hope, know when to save the best for herself.

She will be loved. So loved. My family — her family — will encircle her so tightly she will never know what it feels like to not have a soft place to land. Her aunt and uncles will dote on her, each sharing with her the parts of themselves that mean the most — theatre, movies, outdoors, games. Without realising, they will show her who they are, and she will adore them. Her grandparents will be stunned by her, and they will gently guide her towards the values that formed me. Our extended family will welcome her into the fold, and she will run around with cousins and second cousins and great cousins and cousins once removed, belonging. Her godmother, my best friend — will give her light and love and passion, and a place to go when she can’t talk to me. And the rest of my chosen family will orbit her, coming in and out of view, showing her all the ways love can present.

“You know what?” I say, smoothing her curls, caressing her face.
“What?” she replies, her head tilted slightly, eyes curious.
“I love you too.”
She smiles and I stand and we hold hands, walking into the sunshine.

I open my eyes and come back to myself, remembering that it will never be. If she’s in some cosmic waiting room, someone else must call her name.

Molly.

Equality: Formal vs Substantive & Why it Matters

Equality: Formal vs Substantive & Why it Matters

You might be familiar with this image, which is a diagrammatic explanation of equality.*  You might even have instinctually understood it.  But the funny thing about equality is that we all think we know what someone is talking about when they talk about it, but it’s actually a complex concept with a number of perspectives that many people have never really thought about.

Before taking a subject on international human rights law and women as part of my Masters, I didn’t realise there were different types of equality, and wouldn’t have described myself as a radical feminist. In fact, I wouldn’t really have described myself as much of a feminist at all.

Equality is all well and good, but haven't we achieved it?  We have all these laws which say that men and women need to be treated equally, and you can't discriminate against someone because of their gender, sex or marital status.  What more is there?

When it's not enough to be your own beloved

For five years now I’ve been single. Really single. Not like the last time, where I fell in and out of love a thousand unrequited times with the same person, always believing that the perfect relationship was just around the corner.

I’ve been single in the sense that I haven’t dated. I’ve been single in the sense that I haven’t even tried to date. I’ve been single in the sense that I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve had romantic thoughts about another (real live) person.

The first year or two were hard, but necessary. I was done pandering to men, doing whatever I thought they wanted in order to win their attention. I was done defining myself by whether I was loveable or fuckable by another person. I was done trying to build a white picket fence life in an overgrown garden of a world that I’d only just begun to explore.

It got easier. I became my own beloved, caring for and supporting myself, creating a wonderful, vibrant, dream of a life. The idea of being in a relationship like I had experienced in the past was laughable. Why would I settle for a relationship when loving myself was the happiest I’d ever been?

The cost of apathy

I’ve been steadfastly refusing to engage with the stories about refugees in the media for some time now.  Child abuse and rape on Manus and Nauru, bribing boats to turn around, the ‘Cambodia Deal’, boats which have apparently miraculously stopped. I saw the headlines, I saw the stories, but I couldn’t bring myself to engage. Even yesterday, when photos of a tiny child washed up on a beach were circulating, I resolutely closed my eyes and scrolled past.

Am I a cold-hearted, unfeeling monster? Do I not care about the plight of millions of people around the world, and many in my own backyard, suffering and dying trying to exercise their fundamental human right to seek asylum or refuge?

The Ocean

The Ocean

If you stand on the beach long enough, after a while all you can hear is the ocean.

Your ears will strain for a sound other than her mighty whisper, her gentle roar.  You will long for the distraction of a passing car, a bird overhead, the wind in the trees, but all else has died away.  There is nothing but her.  She surrounds you and folds you into her.  You become her.  And she becomes you.

The ocean has been here from the beginning.  She will outlive you and your children and your children’s children.  Wave after wave crashes onto the beach, and somehow the sound washes you clean.  Close your eyes or open them – it’s all the same.  She will continue to wear into you, into your soul, into your very core.

EVK's top 5 tips for improving yourselfie

Despite what you might think, I didn’t just wake up like this. I take myselfie very seriously, and I’m sharing with you now my secret wisdom to help you improve yourselfie.

1.  Embrace the vain.

When you face up to the camera, how many shots are you taking?  Two?  Three?  I take anywhere from ten to thirty shots every single time I selfie.  This means I have a bunch to choose from and don't need to settle for something I'm not 100% happy with.

2.  Give face.

Make faces — you never know which expression is going to be the one that captures how you’re feeling on the day. Pout, scrunch, duck face, smile, grin, smoulder — give them all a try!

 

3. Look away.

Having a day where you can’t face the camera? Set up the shot like you normally would, then look down and press capture. For every pose here I usually take three shots — one looking left, one looking right and one looking down. This means if I’m bug-eyed looking in one direction, I’ve usually got the shot looking in the other direction.

4. Techno-facie.

Get to know the editing suite in your fave app or in-camera suite. Try this on your next selfie:
• Boost highlights to 10
• Reduce shadows by 10
• Increase contrast by 10
• Increase saturation by 10
Instant drama!

My fave photo apps (other than Instagram, obvi) are: A Colour Story, Prisma, PicMonkey, Facetune and DianaApp(for double exposures).

5. Let there be light

Embrace the light, the light is your friend. Nothing says ‘I love my face’ better than bathing it in beautiful light. Next time you’re about to give face to the camera, turn around (every now and then I fall apart) and watch your face in the camera, checking out which direction highlights your gorgeous features. You might be surprised. Once you’ve got the hang of it, play around with it a bit. Turn around (bright eyes) and catch a solar flare off the lens, or from behind.

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