How the ‘DEDICATION’ came about

BELOW is a video reading by me, of this chapter.  So you can read the chapter, or allow me to read it to you… :)  Thank you for coming by.

Daniel had never experienced a barbecue before, so it was with a lot of delight that I met my now married school friend, Kathy, for just exactly that Aussie tradition of a meal.  In her back yard, with a dog running circles around Daniel’s stroller, to his delight, we enjoyed a feast of sausages, steak, salad and drinks.  Like my sisters but in a different way, I never felt intimately close to Kathy as we waded through our school years.  But we had sufficient connection to hang out together, and considering my otherwise troubled state, that was good enough for me.

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Throughout my teens, living with dad, I felt genuinely ‘not of this Earth’.  I felt alien:  literally, not figuratively.  I didn’t know where I was from, but I knew for certain I was not connected to my family.  Lana was gone off into the world, unreachable and unrelatable; Deana developed schizophrenia, which gave her to ‘see’ Angels, and ‘hear’ them singing in the clouds grey, overhead our back yard.

“See?” she had once exclaimed to me, about 15, as we stood on the back steps of dad’s house.  Our faces were upturned to the rumbling threat of more darkness in our lives – thunder clouds – but I could not see.  I wanted to.  I believed it possible Angels could come to remind Deana and me both that if we just held on, coped as best we could, life would become good for us.

“Where?”, I begged her, as splinters of rain broke from Nature’s hold and spat in our faces.  “There”, she strained to have me see – “There!  Oh…their voices…”  And for moments long, and unfair, Deana saw Angels in the skies above us.  I looked, and I looked, but all I could see was grey and black rumbling clouds.  Why I wasn’t special enough to be given hope, too, I cried inside to understand.  I so, so wanted to see.

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When a crack of lightening flared before us and the spittle became thick splats of rain, we opened the wire door and returned inside our cold concrete house.  Dad had an oil heater in his room with a timer, so that when he woke on cold Melbourne mornings, he rose to like a comforting womb.  It was the only heater in the house but we were not allowed to use it, hence dared not.  So with fingers numb, I worked the axe on our front porch to chop kindling, thicker chunks and blocks of wood.  I made a fire for Deana and me and when we sat on the thin ember-pocked carpet before its hearty roar, mesmerized by the flames, I wanted to ask her again about the Angels – had she really seen them? how many? did they notice me at all?  But she was then quietened, and lost somehow.  So we sat in silence.  Who knew what time dad would be back that night, whether he would bring food, would be drunk, would bring back ogling, salivating bleary-eyed mates.

.

One thing I do now know, though, is that I am glad I did not see or hear Angels that day, no matter how desperately I had wished to, standing on our back steps.  I am glad that all I have had to suffer is depression, bulimia, self-sabotage, self-abuse, suicidal wills extreme – for none is delusion, all too real.  Me, I have only had to wrestle with what beasts roamed within my oxen being, escaped the zoo of my mind and charged the potential for happiness in my soul.   Like rhinocerouses stamping out fires inside my heart, the beasts of my troubled psyche have run rampant and unchecked for decades.  But no matter how many times they darkened the rooms and passages of my existence, I have always managed to strike the flint of my greater will against my perseverance bolstered by undying hope – in a life worthy, spiritually achieved, and spent in service of one I loved; that I might discover, at my dying breath, one I loved included me. That would be an enormous turnaround of events, this lifetime:  to love me.

.

Daniel babbled delightfully at the barbecue, with me interpreting his intonations for Kathy and her husband.  His mind flow through verbal tinkled with a promising eloquence, and I loved the sound of him, nuances of expression, the thinking clearly wiring through his mind.  Matt the dog sat patiently nearby Daniel, knowing that he would lose focus at some point and the sauce splattered sausage would loosen in his hold by tiny fingers.  Alternatively, if he looked pitiful enough, his big eyes engaging Daniel’s, his eyebrows quirking that way dogs do, Daniel may even volunteer his meal to Matt, and he would chomp the Aussie icon with all the illustrious spirit of a family pet loved and kept.

.

I contemplated:  only when Daniel was born did I realize Love.  It was amazing.  And frightening.  That I loved Daniel, meant he had the power to hurt me – by rejection.  Would Daniel reject me when he grew old enough to see me not as his Mother provider, giver of food and fun, guide, but when he saw me with all my human flaws?  My greatest flaw, I determined, was my depressions – my incapability of maintaining the social façade; the one which smiled at work on Monday mornings and told coworkers all was fine and I had had a great weekend, when really, I had been abused by Man again, at my invitation, and I drank again, and I felt irrepairably separated from my sisters, estranged from my father.

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Kathy began clearing the table.  “That was a quick shot of you,” her husband Kevin said.  She brushed past the camera.  “Noel, could you just grab the door?” she asked me and I left the table to assist her.  Daniel watched us.  Matt watched Daniel.

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It was time later, when we were having coffee indoors, that I realized within myself how reassured I was that I loved Daniel.  I had felt before he was born that I could not love anybody.  I had felt numb for decades.  It wasn’t just my sisters I did not love, or favourite cousin, or self, or my husband though he accepted that (believing I did love him but just wouldn’t admit it).  And dad: as I did not love my father, he could no longer hurt me.  Dad’s rejection and assault of me in profession of love of me were actions seasoned by the same tears he had wept at Mum’s grave, claiming he loved her too.

.

“I don’t want you to declare love on me,” I had once told a man of interest during my three years of single life post-marriage pre Daniel.  His name was Russel – with one ‘L’, I can never forget.  He had looked at me so quizzically, I hoped he would not ask me to explain.  And he did not.  He simply, quietly, slowly advanced me, then embraced me so that I was held within his secured, manly arms and in our moment suspended in warmth, peace and connection, a sob broke from deep within, which I reactively swallowed and pretended had never surfaced.  I left Russel soon after.

.

I ‘should’ love my sisters, I knew, even if just for their very fact of birth in the same stream of Time along which I was being swept.  But when Time cascaded over the rocks and through the troughs of our childhood, while we ought have held hands and huddled together as one carriage, we  rather each went tumbling through the years independently, spluttering, hands reaching out to nowhere, no-one.  Our scrapes and scars from the turbulence of the years were various, and the bruises we each suffered in our abuses were bleeds internal that when we looked into each others’ eyes we knew existed, but where exactly within, each, we did not know.

.

Matt leapt in and devoured a sausage Daniel had let slip from his grip, watching Kathy and I carry plates from the table to indoors.  I looked at him, 11 months infant, and decided I would one day write about his Mum all the things I couldn’t speak to other humans, and I would dedicate the book to him, which would read:

Dedicated

to my son

DANIEL,

who taught me love.

.

What Daniel had given to me in his brief time on this Earth thus far, was momentous in the heart of Me.  I owed him greatly, God knows.
.
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Copyright Noeleen&Daniel 50/50

32 thoughts on “How the ‘DEDICATION’ came about

  1. amira

    you have such a great gift of writing.
    and your story touches my heart. i can relate to it in some ways and it brings back memories … waiting to read more

    Reply
  2. viveka

    Never get tired listen to your voice and accent – you know that … such a touching story and video so professionally done. And what a beautiful baby Daniel was .. bet he are heart breaker today. *smile Always a pleasure to be here.

    Reply
    1. WordsFallFromMyEyes Post author

      Hey, Viveka – thank you :) I’m glad you like my voice. It’s really a pleasure to read a chapter every now and then, it is. Maybe I can even sell audio copies of the book – read by the author!! I can imagine blind people would like that. I would.

      Daniel is pretty handsome, I’ve got to admit, Viveka – Polish genes, Asian, Irish. Thing is, he’s a bit of a ‘nut’, meaning he’s got the crazy gene which I too possess. He makes funny films, has a great sense of humour, has his makes in fits with his nonsense. Mercy me, just hoping he feels more direction in life than I did.

      Reply
      1. viveka

        My friend is losing her sight and she has book e-books now – on her ipod – your voice will be great for reading books for blind.
        You have a voice of an actor really.
        Great thing for a young man to have the looks and have humor, the girls must be crazy about him.

        It so wonderful to read how proud you are over him .. and I tell he are proud over his mum too.

        Reply
  3. Amy

    Wow, Noeleen! How far you have traveled from the cold, hungry, love-starved girl to the empowered woman who knows how to love adn is loved by Daniel.

    Reply
    1. WordsFallFromMyEyes Post author

      Amy, true so true. And I NEVER wanted to have a baby. I was scared to. For 9 years, I was with my husband (7 being marriage) and patient he was, as I said ‘No, I can’t be a mother’ as his mother waited patiently too. Then in my single years, diagnosed with premature menopause and hence infertile – lo! it’s a miracle! AAAAAAAARGHHHHHHH!!!!!! I did go at the time! :)

      Yet in retrospect, I thank the Gods for forcing this on me – forcing me to brave it. Fate, or whatever it were. Thank you for your continued interest, Amy, I am really honoured you come by.

      Reply
  4. carolynpageabc

    Loved the video and listening to your voice, well done..!
    Infants, because they are so innocent, have that ability to bring us back to ‘calm’. You portrayed that so well….

    Reply
  5. Yaz

    I thin the story-telling with the video images is so much nicer than script, Noeleen…the images give another dimension to the words. As for Deana’s angel’s, schizophrenia or not, I still believe she saw them. And I don’t believe for a minute that we should love family members because they are family. Sometimes people are too horrible to love in a human way. Thanks Noeleen!

    Reply
    1. WordsFallFromMyEyes Post author

      You know, Yaz, I think schizophrenia or not it is possible too – I mean, I did at the time believe it entirely possible Angels were there in the sky that Deana was ‘enabled’ to see, and I not. And even now, all these decades later, I do still think it’s possible, schizophrenia or not.

      I can never forget reading of an ‘energy worker’ – I can’t remember what kind – who had visited a mental hospital & could SEE the dark spirits & energies pressing down on the mentally ill. It was really horrific to imagine … and thought provoking.

      Thank you for reading, Yaz :) Re the family comment : indeed. Alas.

      Reply
  6. writingfeemail

    A mother’s love is indeed the strongest, deepest, fiercest. Maybe not in every case, but for most of us anyway. Isn’t it good to know that you have such a firm bond with your child?

    Reply
    1. WordsFallFromMyEyes Post author

      It’s precious, WritingFreemail, & something I have so so not known before. It is extraordinary – no, extraordinarily wonderful, to know of such love; and that it should be within me.

      Reply
      1. WordsFallFromMyEyes Post author

        Thank you, Ray’s Mom. I appreciate you coming by. I just stopped by your space & read that article on the girl who poisoned her father. Wow, is all I can say – a perfect crime, yes, foiled by a more perfect conscience.

        Reply
        1. Ray's Mom

          True, she did have a conscience. Baruim is the chemical that poisoned my son Ray, the reason for the web site and blog; to persuade the politically elected, unqualified coroner to do a death investigation.

          Reply
  7. Chatter Master

    Our children teach us more about love than we ever expected.
    I get lost in your story, in each chapter. I could envision the sausage in Daniel’s little hand, the sauce, the dog Matt. And I could see you with your sister looking at the skies. How clearly you made that moment appear.

    Reply
    1. WordsFallFromMyEyes Post author

      Heya Renx :) Thank you! I used to read the newspaper aloud on my bed, in my teens, pretending I was a news presenter. I very much willed to be a news presenter for very long, but didn’t know how to make it ‘happen’.

      As for an actor – wanted to do that too, & you might remember from my scribings that I approached an agency when I was 16 & they were okay to take me on but needed dad’s OK – at which he said I was ‘precious enough as it is’ and ‘no way’. I didn’t follow up that dream until my husband & me moved from his home town of Brisbane to Perth, & I took the opportunity to audition (never done anything before!) & at audition said I had been very involved in theatre “over east” Australia – to make me look experienced, then they would view my AUDITION as if I were experienced…. & that’s how I got the part of Daisy Hannigan in Biloxi Blues, on stage – & I went on from there :)

      Reply
  8. Phil

    Beautiful words for such a touching story. The prose (and narration of your voice) takes on a dreamy, trance-like nature. At the conscious level there is the barbeque and all that is taking place, but your words allow the mind to wander into your subconscious persona where another conversation and story are being told in a different time and place.

    Well done Noeleen.

    Reply
    1. WordsFallFromMyEyes Post author

      Wow Phil, your comments are always so thoughtful of my writing. I really appreciate that, Phil. Thank you so dearly :)
      It’s just a little awesome to me that people think so well of my words, for truly I was brought up to not only believe in my uselessness & lack of talent, but to also be convinced of my lack of potential!! So truly: my thanks :)

      Reply

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