I got on the New Democracy Jury panel by accident
. My partner Grant who likes that
sort of thing had sent back the invite with my name on it as well as his and
was well pleased to find he had been selected only it turned out it wasn’t him
but me and was non negotiable.
I should have said no, I thought, as I built a fire in
the stove. It’s not my sort of
thing at all. Apart from the odd
demonstration I avoid groups and parties and stick to one on one human contact
or better still solitude. But that
First World War poster with a finger pointing came to mind and I thought, yes
Julia the time has come to do your duty.
Eurobodalla needs you. And
retired as you are, what other justification do you have for consuming your
daily bread?
I sat back with a glass of red and thought about death
as one sometimes does at my age (70).
Would I have the courage to do it nicely when my turn came? My mother had courage when she died at
age 98 but had not been specially nice.
She’d laughed wickedly and said “Crocodiles are my favourite
animals. They are fierce and they
bite” Those were her last words
and were oddly comforting to me at that point. The New Democracy Forum was by no means as fearsome as
facing death and I’d got to stop being such a sook about it.
I began to realise at this point that perhaps I was
not alone in my little house.
There were the usual noises the fire makes – the bang of the iron
chimney as it heats up and the whisper of the kindling as it tumbles to ash
under the logs. But there was a new sound – an arhythmic tapping and dragging. I saw something dark on the edge of my
vision – there and gone. Perhaps
madness and the beginning of blindness would be good enough reasons to abandon
my jury role I thought hopefully’.
Then it came out, confident and investigative – a big
black rat. It nosed its way
towards me as I sat still and fascinated by my visitor. It looked at my patchwork and sauntered
off to under to potato and onion rack.
I was a bit indignant. This was my house, not terra nullius. And it was clean too.
At that point my son Eddy rang unexpectedly from Japan
and I told him about the rat. He’s
lived in all sorts of strange places.
“You’re not going to like this mum, but if it’s a clever one like they are in Vietnam there’s
only one way….He went on to describe a method involving a deadly sticky paper
trap and waiting for the squealing and then using a brick. I had no idea that my gentle son had it
in him. “They nibble the wires and
cause fires in Vietnam” he added apologetically.
I might have to face the forum tomorrow and no doubt
death will come in its own time but as for killing a rat with a brick I
definitely don’t have it in me to do that.
I slept fitfully waking to rat noises and dreaming of
being in a group of scornful knowledgeable people and not being able to hear a
word they said.
I got to Tuross Heads and suddenly am glad I’ve
come. It is spring and the country
is so beautiful. I’m glad I’m on
my own and have to drive myself for once and I’ve finally sussed which gear is
which and the running is smooth.
We are registered and sort ourselves into tables. Of the older ones like me, men tend to
stick with men and women with women in an old fashioned way. I wonder why.
Our facilitators tell us what a good experience this
will be and the old elephant and the blind men story is told. “Everyone sees things differently” we
are advised. Looking around it seems unnecessary to warn us of this. We are all so different. Old, young,
grey haired, fat and thin. One
long beard and a nice flamboyant woman with piercings, one in her tongue too.
My thoughts stray to the elephant scenario. What does the elephant think about all
these impertinent blind people prodding it in perhaps private places. I wonder if the elephantine council is
going to be impatient with us blind citizens pontificating on things we know
nothing of. At least it can’t
tread on us if it doesn’t like it.
Three people come in the morning and talk to us about
really interesting things. A
farmer talks about potential for recycling amongst other things, a remarkable
young man talks eloquently about youth issues. After lunch we have more people – a hotel manager who wants
a think tank on innovations that will reinvigorate our three big towns, a man
who really makes the issue of paths interesting. Gradually the complexity of the council’s job becomes
apparent and we get lots of statistics – the balance of young and old, the
extraordinary tide of people that swells the population in the holiday season,
the need for tourism and work for the young, the need to cherish what we
have.
We learn that Eurobodalla has an over four percent
indigenous population – more than most places, and a woman called Ros comes
to talk to us.
It seems to me we are lucky to have so many aboriginal
people in the shire and surely their culture could be a huge asset for
attracting visitors. So many people, especially overseas visitors, want to know
about the aboriginal world and its spiritual take on life.
But it’s
not easy. Already, Ros says the
new signage has not taken the opportunity to acknowledge the original owners of
the shire and asks why there isn’t an aboriginal member of the jury. Someone asks if one would come if
invited and she says probably not as her people don’t feel comfortable in such
settings. There are obviously deep
issues not easily addressed.
When I visited Ceduna on a trip across the Nullarbor
there was a wonderful gallery and
book shop run by kind and proud women who cheerfully dealt with the huge
problems that their people faced in the town as well as running the gallery
with its resident artists. I
wonder why it’s different here.
There is so much I don’t know.
Our skilled facilitators make us mix ourselves up and
talk in circles to the visitors and note our questions. What more do we need to know to have
useful discussions? I suddenly
realise how much I’ve learnt in just one day and I begin to see that this
process can turn a mixed bunch of informed and uninformed into a potentially
useful body. A lot of people know
lots about things already and tell us, who don’t, all about them. Our naivety alerts them to the need to
share what they know.
Driving home I realise I am looking at the shire in
quite a different way. I stop for
a toilet in one of the slightly dark and sinister seeming rest spots beside the
highway. Before I would have
assumed it had sprung up, a bit like a mushroom by itself. Now I gratefully think how good it was
that it was proposed and discussed and funded by our lovely council. And I see everything else in the same
way – the signs, the barriers that stop us veering across the road. All the little facilities and
protections that I used to take for granted. I think how rarely one is grateful and not grumbling about
council doings
Home again by my stove I slurp up a packet of noodles
and my rat comes out. I wish there
was a way we could solve our cohabitation problem without violence and
murder. I can perfectly see it
from the rat’s point of view. No blind men and elephant issues here. But are there not some conflicts of
interest that no amount of sweet reasonableness can resolve?
The proof will, as they say, be in the pudding as the
next five meetings of our jury come and go. May the force be with us.
Great story as usual, thanks for the laughs.
ReplyDeleteJo, from rainy London.
That was brilliant!! I love your umbrage at the free-loading rodent with no respect for your home, hearth, or potato and onion bin.
ReplyDeleteI built a cat enclosure and, for a time, a small group of determined mice attempted colonisation of it.
The first time Abbey brought me a mouse she dropped it, undamaged, on the living room floor.
"WAH! I need to catch it to get it outside!". What ensued was worthy of Peter Sellers. And it was unsuccessful.
"Oh no! Now Abbey's wounded it! I need to find a container to take it to the after hours vet!".
Ordinarily there is a veritable cornucopia of containers. During a panic, however, there is a complete dearth of them. Suddenly the house is a Wonderland-esqe comedy, identical to my home in every way - save for the crippling lack of containers.
Got one!
Too late. Abbey ate the mouse.
Other "Lucy and the Mouse" stories involve me punching myself in the eye in a field, and me waving to a new group of neighbours for the first time wearing a balaclava, thigh-high ugg boots, and brandishing a machete.
Invading rodents. They make fools of us all.