Friday, July 25, 2008

A P for all



From the NZ Herald:

$135m drug bust: six stand trial

New Zealand's largest drugs bust foils a plot to flood the country with enough methamphetamine to supply a hit for every person in Auckland...

I remember my teachers always said, if you are going to suck on a lolly in class, be sure to have enough for the rest of the class.

The kids and I just wanna say, thanks for the thought, guys, but you didn't really need to.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Melissa


As an infant, my older sister Melissa was scooting about the kitchen in a walker one day, when she reached up and pulled the cord that was hanging down from the kettle. Boiling hot water coursed down her face, over her shoulders and across her chest and back. My mother, Rae risked drowning her in order to save Melissa’s face, but third degree burns scarred her neck, shoulders, and upper torso. Her skin literally melted under the heat of the water and in time became pale, gnarled, and shiny.

She has a scar on her hip from where a skin graft was attempted at Middlemore hospital. She was nil by mouth for the procedure, and woke up hungry. She must have burrowed her way into her bandages as she was discovered chewing on her newly grafted skin.

As children we would stroke each other’s back and I remember liking the feeling of her silky smooth, yet uneven skin that swirled beneath my fingertips. To me, she and her burns were beautiful, but to some other children, the burns made her a monster. She never had the freedom to run around in her togs as a child. She always covered her shoulders, and wore her hair down to disguise the scarring on her neck.

Melissa also has a large scar on her chest. She was born with a hole and a murmur in her heart, and when she was 18 months old she had open heart surgery. In the days before keyhole surgery, her chest was cut down the middle, her ribs broken and spread apart, and her heart operated on. I never appreciated how harrowing these events must have been for my parents until I had kids of my own. I look at their tiny little bodies, and cannot comprehend something so traumatic happening to them.

Fortunately, Melissa’s scarring did not dampen her popularity with other kids. She had (and has) a lucky combination of being full of charisma, having the gift of the gab, and being beautiful. Her presence is felt in a room. Unsurprisingly, Melissa always had a good-looking boyfriend on the go. I remember one of them being particularly crushed when she jilted him. I could not comprehend why she would dump a guy so gorgeous…so out of my league. I was her younger, smaller, paler, and mousier sister, who elicited barely a glimmer of interest from boys.

Oddly, I don’t recall ever being jealous of her popularity. On the contrary, I puffed up with pride that this amazing person was related to little, boring old me. I probably thought that if people realised I was her sister, some of the glow of popularity would rub off. I don’t think it ever did, but it was of no consequence - I was more than happy with my small group of friends, and quite terrified at the thought of ever having to kiss a boy.

Melissa made the mistake of making a star pose wearing just three grapevine leaves as a child, long enough for my mother to take a photo. At the time it must have seemed hilariously cute. Unfortunately, my mother tortured my sister with it once she became a teenager. Whenever a new flame, or prospect was to drop by, Rae would threaten to bring it out and humiliate her. Whether she was really that cruel or just astonishingly ignorant, it is hard to tell, but my mother inflicted a lot of pain on my sister that way. For a teenager, a semi-nude child photo is embarrassing enough, but for a young person with scarring, it is unthinkable that another young person may see it.

The morning of Melissa’s final school exam, Rae “confessed” to her that she didn’t love her. Melissa, distraught, never made it to that exam, but still scraped through with a University Entrance from her other subjects. It was her misfortune that Rae had a propensity for inserting herself into the pivotal life events of her children and causing as much damage as she could.

Lacking support and encouragement, Melissa drifted away from formal education, and entered the workforce full time. She was a talented sales person, no surprises there, and did well for herself, but she had some rough years as a young woman, left home early (although drifted back from time to time) and struggled with her past.

Outwardly, Melissa and I had an adversarial relationship. She was always trying to shake me off. I was four years younger than her, a bit of a nerd, and must have been a pain in the arse, trying to hang around her and her friends. By the time I was seventeen, things between us changed. We had lived in separate households for three years by then and the separation, and the fact I was no longer a kid, allowed us to build a new kind of relationship. We became good friends.

Eventually she settled down with a loving, caring, sensitive and committed man. Together they established a family of their own – two kiddies and one on the way. He made some money from professional rugby in Japan, and now, back in NZ they run a small business together, have a beautiful home, and are very comfortably off.

I am grateful for happy endings.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

I am hostage to a cold virus. A particularly nasty one. I am fine, but the kids caught it, one after the other. So it has been looong days at home, contemplating the state of kids TV. While channel surfing to appease my sniffly youngest child, I happened upon an animated show about walking, talking piñatas - Viva Piñata

I can kind of see how we got to having walking talking piñatas on the telly - it is apparently based on an Xbox game (we have not yet been dragged into the income sucking vortex of games consoles) - but for the most part, I am baffled. I am trying to imagine how the pitch to the network went:

Steve: So Todd, hit me with your team's ideas for kids TV next season.

Todd: Well, Steve, first up we have Tiffany's idea for an animated soft porn series based on a forbidden love between dolphin and father of four, Kevin, and his sea urchin mistress, Pinky. Our working title is "The Prickly Adventures of Kevin and Pinky". We kinda figure that pornography is the new frontier for kids TV, now that we have pushed the boundaries with animated violence. It should ruffle a few feathers, Steve, but give it a few years and I think it will be the Pokemon of this generation.

Steve: Hmmm, anything else?

Todd: Gary has drawn up some fantastic storyboards for a musical series based on the real life experiences of tax auditors, actuaries and file clerks. We imagine this will be aspirational programming for white middle class kids who watch American Idol, but who also want to grow up to be just like daddy. We see feature potential in this one.

Steve: Anything else on the boards?

Todd: Well, Microsoft have approached us about a game they have in production featuring walking, talking piñatas...

Steve: Let's go with the piñatas.


PS: If you are looking another installment of my childhood stories, it is in production...with hopefully more funny, and less grim.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Internet Service Providings

In NZ we are lucky to be relatively advanced in terms of service technology (I am thinking of banks and online services), probably because we are a small country with low(er) levels of bureaucratic inertia, and quick uptake. So it is frustrating that competition has only just been introduced for broadband, following unbundling of the local loop network (after the government wedgied Telecom, then threatened it with a chinese burn, then got fed up and passed legislation). Presumably because it was omnipotent, Telecom kept a pretty crappy network, so speeds were (and are) quite slow compared to other OECD countries.

Now that we have competition, we have something new to whinge about. At home we have an unlisted number to put off those pesky telemarketers. Unfortunately, this cannot stop the door knockers who come by shaking their tins, exhorting us to switch ISP - usually while I am cooking dinner and fending off hungry toddlers. They use all manner of tactics, but my favourite is the "I can offer you this package today only" approach. Yes, YOU can only offer me this package today only, but the exact package is still available from someone in your call centre anytime. Oh! The cheek!

And all this boring trivia I have been blathering on about, is why I find this fonejacker stunt so pants-wettingly funny:

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

I am trying to think of a way to open this post that does not involve this atheist giving a shout out to that big pretend man in the sky. A Christian has the luxury of calling out "Jesus!" in exasperation. An agnostic may venture an "Oh Gawd!" An evangelical Christian will say something totally lame like "Oh my Gosh!". An apostolic friend of mine wouldn't even say "Golly" because she believed that all you are really doing is swallowing your desire to use the Lord's name in vain (but his name is Jehovah according to another door knocking friend, which just confuses things, sorry).

Richard Dawkins likened the belief in God to believing in something equally ridiculous like the Great Teapot in the sky (in fact I think he said it was somewhere in the solar system - look it up if you must). What I feel like saying (because my mother cried it out a few times a day) is "God Almighty!", but perhaps I should say "Oh, Great Teapot!", or "Gene Simmons!" or something else totally ridiculous.

OK, here goes...

Gene Simmons! I have been a bit po-faced in my posts in the last couple of months. So let's talk about sex (tee hee, snort). My old school friends and I had our first weekend together since...we first started having sex (not with each other, silly). Back then we talked it out the door, down the street, and all around the neighbourhood. After years of reading Cosmo, we couldn't get enough of the sex talk, having had REAL sex. I had recently been jilted by my boyfriend so I told them that his penis was the size of an asthma inhaler (ha! The ultimate revenge!). Poor guy. They probably erroneously think that to this day. I am married to him now. Sorry love.

You know what? During the weekend with my friends, a couple of wines and we were back to the sex talk, albeit with a twist now a few of us have kids. We discussed how often and how long we waited after giving birth. We gave sympathetic nods while discussing pedestrian "making a baby sex". Then there were the war stories - women's bits that look like they have been hit by a cluster bomb after a third degree tear, big saggy boobs, small saggy boobs, infrequent sex post marriage, post baby, post 30.

But my favourite part was the common feeling that our men had lost the art of seduction. There is something stultifyingly unsexy about your man asking for sex. Like when you are in the middle of slathering moisturiser all over your face while toothpaste foam is dripping down your chin because you are also busy with the electric toothbrush, and you hear a meek voice call out from the bedroom, "Can we have sex tonight?" My friend's husband will nonchalantly ask her while reading the paper, or surfing the internet. If she says, "No", he carries on reading as if she had turned down a cup of tea, or passed comment on the exchange rate.

It's not like this stuff is terribly important to us, we are just a bunch of old perverts who like to have a good "snort your wine out your nose" laugh after a couple of drinks.

Monday, July 07, 2008

What about Arnie?

Sometime near the end of Arnie's relationship with my mother, Rae, my father had a brush with him at the Birdcage pub in Auckland City. Dad was enjoying a drink with a colleague, when Arnie approached, 24 stone, 6 foot something, moustachioed and intimidating. He glared down at Dad, who was seated, and spat out “You’re an arsehole.” Dad looked up at him, and said, “No mate, you’re the arsehole.” Dad’s friend started kicking him furiously under the table. “Anyone who comes up to someone they don’t know and says “You’re an arsehole”, must be an arsehole”, Dad continued. His friend persisted in kicking Dad’s legs energetically. Dad asked Arnie who he was, and he indicated that he was with Rae, who lingered further back in the pub.

Rae would have told Arnie the usual stories she told all her boyfriends, actually anyone who would listen - that she was a victim of physical abuse and marital rape at the hands of my Dad, and that to rub salt in the wound, he had indulged in various indiscretions. Rae was prodigious in her efforts to inform the world of a past that I suspect was a product of her own imaginings, and that over time became more real to her than the truth. She was particularly fond of dramatic public statements. One day, she vandalised her own home in order to publicise her tale of woe to the neighbourhood.

Soon after the break up with Dad, I returned home from school to discover my mother had spray painted his name in big blue letters, followed by the words "is a RAPIST" on the dark brown block work at the bottom of our house. I froze at the top of the driveway, my legs felt disembodied, my heart pounded in my chest, and an ache radiated out from my stomach. Her graffiti was clearly visible from the street. I fretted for my father. I didn't know what a rapist was exactly, but I understood they were not far off murderers. Was my father a rapist? I couldn't reconcile my experience of him as a funny and caring person with this dark word. Not for the first, or last time, I pushed aside my confusion. It was quickly replaced by deep embarrassment at the thought of the kids I knew who often walked by. They would see it, and they would read it. Their parents would see it, and they would read it. Perhaps they would know what a rapist was, and believe that my dear father was a bad, bad man, and that I must be a bad, bad girl. Up until this point, life experience had buffeted my innocence and worn it down. But this was a gale force wind precipitating a landslip. I questioned who my father was, and what that made me. But in short time it was the question of who my mother was that troubled me the most. I quickly learned to distrust her.

Whether my father raped my mother I could not say categorically. If it were true, it would be a great surprise to me. Whether he assaulted my mother, I don't believe so. I never witnessed such a thing, and neither did my siblings. The funny thing is, we only recall Dad acting in self-defence. We were witness to the numerous attacks Rae made on Dad for some real or perceived slight. She hurled crockery and pans of boiling water, lunged at him with a meat tenderiser, and threatened to the children that she would take his life while he slept.

As for the indiscretions, my father is an outrageous flirt, which I presume he was in those days, but he maintains he was never a philanderer and I have no reason to think otherwise. The only evidence of cheating came from Rae's quarter.

“Rae has obviously been feeding you rubbish.” Dad told Arnie. “Why don’t you listen to my side of the story?” My father then enquired about where Arnie worked (he laid paving) and said that he would pay a visit to the work site the next day. Arnie turned and left.

Dad turned to his friend. “Why were you kicking me?”.

“You didn’t know who that was?” asked his friend. “He’s ex-Hell’s Angels. He’s been in jail for manslaughter.”

Dad had no idea of the man’s past, but his friend thought Dad was very brave, all the same. Then Dad explained, “I had my palms under the table the whole time. If he lunged at me, I was going to flip the table and run for my life.”

Dad turned up at the work site the next morning, but Arnie wasn’t there. Perhaps my father was courageous after all. Or perhaps he was a touch a foolhardy.

I think it all ended with Arnie when Rae accused him of an indiscretion with a client. She told me that she confronted Arnie at a work site. I also recall her threatening to contact a client to tell her that Arnie had probably been stealing from her house while on the job. By then he had lavished my mother with money and gifts, including two silk outfits and a gold and opal ring. My mother gave it to me years ago, soon after she met her second husband. “It’s probably stolen”, she told me. I don’t wear it.

Sunday, July 06, 2008

For better and for worse, till infidelity do us part - Part Three

Near the end of the marriage, Dad began to suspect that my mother was being unfaithful. His sense of unease intensified one Friday, late in 1984, when he received a strange call from her while he was at work. “You better not be home late tonight”, she warned, “I’m going away for the weekend. I won’t be here when you get home.”

Dad returned home to find Rae gone, and Melissa and I looking after our baby sister. It wasn’t the last time she would leave us alone together, and I never ceased to find it terrifying. The weekend passed without Dad knowing where his wife was, until she phoned him on Sunday night. She said she had had car problems, was stuck in Wellsford, and would have to stay in a motel. Dad then discovered (by means he cannot remember) that Rae had been away with one of Rhys’ friends, Peter. Although Dad did not know it, Melissa had previously discovered our mother and Peter on the couch in an embrace. Rae paid Melissa ten dollars to keep her mouth shut. While Melissa didn't get paid the second time she caught them, she still kept it to herself.

Rae returned on Monday morning, as Dad rushed out for work, with no time to confront her. But that night he told her that he had made an appointment with a lawyer for Thursday - the marriage was over. The day before the appointment, Dad was at work in a boardroom meeting when he heard a commotion in the office. Dad walked out to find two suitcases full of his clothes on the floor. A secretary told him Rae had stormed in and dumped the cases, shouting “Tell that fucking asshole not to come home!” In a masterful move, my mother took the high ground, creating ambiguity around the real reasons for the separation. But my father’s colleagues probably knew enough for Dad to not be in danger of losing friends and support.

As of that moment, my father had moved out for good. When my mother announced that Dad had left ‘us’, not her, but ‘us’, I felt abandoned and deeply hurt. “What had I done”, I wondered, “to make him want to leave?” I struggled with chest pangs that I now identify as grief. At school I burned with the shame of a child who came from a ‘broken home’. I had been demoted, in my own mind, to a lower rank of child, just above the bastards, but well below the legions of children from stable homes.

My mother must have had regrets. Soon after the suitcase debacle, she called Dad. There was a prowler at night, she told him, and the girls were scared. (Over the years, she repeated the prowler story. She was unfortunately frank with us about her fears that somewhere out there lurked a man, waiting to peep through our window, or break in and harm us and I was often paralysed by the fear of what stirred outside the window.) Dad agreed to come and stay a couple of nights. What she told her children was, “Daddy’s coming home”. I was buoyed, hopeful, cautiously elated.

When Dad came home, Rae tried to seduce him. What ensued was heated, but not reconciliation - they argued vociferously over a phone call Rae had made to Dad’s cousin, accusing the man of meddling in her marriage. Dad left.

Oblivious to what had just passed, I ran home from school that day, desperate not to waste precious time that could be spent welcoming him. Dad’s car was not in the driveway. I ran a bit faster. The front door was wide open. I tore up the stairs, calling out to him, and paused. It was quiet. Why hadn’t he called back? Where was he? A sense of dread crept up from my stomach. I searched every room. I found my mother in a bedroom in the far reaches of the house, draped over some cushions on the floor, sobbing.

“Where’s Daddy?”

“He’s not coming home.”

“Why?”

“We had a fight about your uncle.”

For a long time I believed it was that argument that ended their marriage, and I would go over it again and again in my mind. Everything was going great, why give up after one silly argument? What about my uncle could they possibly have to argue about? I found it intensely frustrating. I felt powerless and useless. When they were together, Melissa would always attempt to play peacemaker when they quarreled. She bargained and pleaded with them. She inserted herself to remind them that there were children to consider. I always felt a bit useless then too. I didn’t have her words or confidence. The best I could do was attempt to cry like she did, but I had to fight for those tears. I felt like a spectator. I was remote, and my parents seemed far away. The space around me shrank and pressed against me.

When my mother told me there was not going to be a happy ending, I felt numb, and mildly sick. I can’t remember whether I cried, I probably did, but I do remember thinking that my happy life was over. I had a sense that life was going to get particularly hard from that moment. And it did.
For better and for worse, till infidelity do us part - Part Two

My mother was a hairdresser before she met my father, but by 1984 she was a full time mother of a 12 year old girl, Melissa, an 8 year old girl, me, and an 8 month old baby, Jane. Rhys was 18, and while no longer legally dependent, he drifted in and out of home. My parents had been married 14 years, the last eight of which had been spent living in a 1940s weatherboard home in Campbells Bay, in the East Coast Bays of Auckland’s North Shore.

In the early 1980s, the East Coast Bays was not buzzing with diversity and excitement. In the preceding years, the area had attracted a lot of young, white families, presumably drawn in by attainable real estate and the beach lifestyle. There were few Maori or Polynesian children at any of my schools, but that tiny few still outnumbered any ethnicity other than Pakeha.

We lived in a suburb of commuters. During the working day, mums would busy themselves with childcare, housework, shopping, the school and kindy run, or the occasional coffee group. There wasn’t a thriving restaurant or café culture, and there were few pubs. For teenagers there was not much to do other than linger at the beach, or throw out of control parties when Mum and Dad were not home.

In the early days of her marriage, my mother seemed to make a go of living the life of a suburban housewife. We were dressed nicely, the house was relatively clean and tidy, breakfasts were usually cooked rather than cold, and dinners were always tasty. She assisted with Melissa’s school outings, and was the fun mum who shouted the children an ice block at the end of the trip. Wednesday was shopping day, and as a special treat we would visit the market gardens in Albany for our produce. My mother would sometimes take us down to the rock pools at the beach, take photos of us playing with our many pets, or bake biscuits for our school lunches.

My mother was also creative, a competent painter and sketcher who collected shells, and made intricate dioramas for Melissa’s school assignments. She still socialised with her more eccentric and artistic friends from her former life, and our house was filled with the paintings, sculpture, and pottery she bought over time from local artists.

If this all sounds like a recipe for an ideal childhood, I am probably leading you astray. I don’t think the life of the suburban housewife suited my mother’s temperament, and the cracks showed from the start, going by my father’s realisation eight weeks into the marriage that marrying her was a mistake. My mother was host to a wild beast that she let out for air periodically. She had a temper that could set damp wood on fire, and would fly into a jealous rage quicker than you could say, “Watch out Dad, the crockery’s airborne”.

There was a night when it got a bit dangerous for my father. I was only three, so my account is based on his recollections, and those of Melissa. On one of the car-less days, my father’s ride in the carpool lingered after work and returned dad home late. That evening, my mother had fueled up on wine, and worked herself into a lather over his tardiness. By the time Dad’s ride pulled up, she was in the lounge chanting “I am going to stick him with this knife” while slipping a Wiltshire knife in and out of its sharpening sleeve. A sharpening sleeve isn’t quite so dramatic or intimidating as a sharpening steel, but you make do with what you have to hand. And it terrified us sufficiently.

Melissa and I scuttled out of the house and up the drive. “She’s got a knife, and she said she’s going to kill you!” Melissa screamed. We begged him not to go inside, but Dad told us not to worry for he hadn’t done anything wrong. He boldly made his way into the house and into the kitchen. Before he could get out an explanation my mother hurled a bottle of wine at him. He dodged it, and it made a hole in the wall. Immediately, she lunged at him with a metal meat tenderiser that she had held in her other hand. She raised it above her head, and brought it down towards his, with force. He grabbed her wrist and twisted it out of her hand, leaving a bruise. The following day she went to the doctor to get the “abuse” on record.

Alcohol was my mother’s drug of choice, and was usually involved in her more erratic and abusive behaviour. She also smoked marijuana and even, she once told my brother-in-law, tried LSD when she was pregnant with me. She never shared this with me, but she did confess, like a teenage boy tallying his can tabs, that she drank a bottle of beer a day throughout that pregnancy. It didn’t sound like much until I realised she was talking in quarts, not stubbies. My father also recalls her falling down drunk at a pub in Albany while six months pregnant with Melissa. The advice regarding alcohol and pregnancy was not so stringent then as it is now, but even so, I suspect drinking to the point of passing out while pregnant was not within the recommended guidelines.

Despite all the drama, my parents had their special moments. Rae once told me that early in their marriage she was opening the fridge when Dad came up behind her and held her tenderly. At that instant, a potent wind threatened to escape her. She desperately told him to move away, before he felt its power. But he refused to move. “I love you so much”, he said, “that I will get down on my knees and smell your fart”. So he did, and ended up on the floor dry retching and exclaiming that he had never smelt anything quite so vile in his life.

There were also the numerous occasions when, in the middle of the day, my parents would barricade the bedroom door with an ottoman. Rhys would knowingly chuckle and tell me to get away from the door as I stood on the other ottoman, straining to find out what was going on through the keyhole.

Passion aside, what maintained that marriage for a long 14 years largely remained a mystery to me. My father is an accountant. For me that summed up why a union with a creative eccentric was a Bad Idea, but I will add that he adored weekend sport, and was prisoner to the weekend paper. In those days he was also particularly preoccupied by home maintenance. He can’t have been great adult company after a week of looking after children. As for my mother, I know from first hand experience that she is high on the list of ‘Difficult and Unstable People To Live With’.

But if I think on it harder, there are some clues as to what kept this marriage going so long - a strong sexual connection; my mother’s need to be provided for; a desire to hold things together for the children; and the moral weight of my father’s catholic upbringing. My father is also obstinate, yet conflict averse, and this may go some way to explaining why he flogged that dead horse. Maybe he didn’t want to admit to his family that he had made a mistake. Maybe he was afraid of creating even more drama. But if Dad was looking for a catalyst for divorce, he found it one day, late in 1984.

Saturday, July 05, 2008

Rae’s mythology

My mother had something in her nature that made her the way she was, but her less than ideal childhood must have fuelled whatever strangeness lurked there. I cannot be sure of the facts, as I have found that her memory can be inventive, however this is how I understand it. She has said many times that she was raped when she was five, by a family friend. It apparently happened while she sat on the man’s lap in the back seat of a car that her father was driving. He put a stop to it when became aware of what was happening. I feel guilty and disloyal to admit that over the years, aspects of this story have troubled me. The violation would have been difficult and excruciating for a small child, probably evoking screams of pain and terror. How did the man progress to actually rape her? My mother has a habit of depicting herself as The Victim, The Raped, The Violated, The Abused, and The Betrayed. I am sure this man did something to her, but whether it was rape is hard to know. The story, of course, may be devastatingly true. If so, considering the tragedy of the rape never being resolved, and to the best of my knowledge, no charges ever being laid, I would consider it a possible cause, rather than product, of her victim’s mentality. In any case, it has become a part of her mythology.

Her parents must have had a tough relationship. They lived in Whangarei, north of Auckland (my mother was born further south, in Waipawa). Her father, Les, was as an accountant. He was an unusual man. My father thought him quite mad, with somewhat of a mean streak. Grandma did not want a lot of children, but Les believed that contraception was a woman’s responsibility and refused to use a condom. These were the days before the contraceptive pill, so unsurprisingly; Grandma brought seven children into the world – one boy followed by six girls. My mother was the second girl out.

An Aunt recalls that my mother was a particularly difficult child, so much so that her grandparents refused to look after Rae when her parents went away. The only solution was for my mother to accompany her parents on holiday while the others were left behind with the grandparents. Apparently my mother read this special treatment as evidence of the special place she held in the hearts of her parents, above that of the other children. If it was a misunderstanding, at least it was a happy one. But I have a niggling feeling that it was an early foray into spin. Had she not spent the prime of her life on the Domestic Purposes Benefit, she could have cut it in PR.

The family was quite well to do by standards of the day. They were even the first family on the street with a refrigerator. But their relative affluence was short-lived. My mother relates the story of being handed the local paper by a classmate at school one day. In it she found out that her father had been sentenced to seven years’ prison for embezzlement. Sometime after, her mother, Helen, shacked up with another man (and had no more children so presumably he was of the opinion that contraception was his responsibility.) My mother alleges that this man then molested her and other girls in the family.

Sometime during her father’s incarceration, the youngest five children (including my mother) were sent to a brethren children’s home in Marton ‘for the weekend’. When their mother never returned for them, they realised that their stay was permanent. In the home, according to my mother, discipline was harsh, food was meagre, and bullying was rife. She told me that one day, fed up with being beaten so readily, she wrenched the leather strap from the hands of the home’s patriarch, and turned it on him.

My mother left the home at sixteen, and went to stay with her mother. This was a short-lived arrangement. According to Rae, she told her mother that she had been molested by her mother’s partner, and was promptly kicked out.

When she was 20 and living in Auckland, she became pregnant to a man about town called Peter. He didn’t stick around, but Rae kept her baby boy, Rhys. In 1966 it must have been tough being a single parent. There was no state assistance, so she had to find a way of supporting the two of them from moment he was a tiny baby. I know that she was a hairdresser, and provided domestic duties in return for board. There were also rumours of another form of income, but I will give her the benefit of the doubt. And if those rumours were true, well I can’t imagine she had many options.

My mother told me that at some point when Rhys was a baby, they spent a night sleeping in a digger on a building site. Like so many other stories, it is hard to know what is truth, and what is dramatic license. Perhaps there was an alternative on offer, but not packaged in a way she liked, so she decided to sleep rough in a martyr –like gesture. I know this is horrible to suppose – for all I know she was desperate and there was no alternative – but I also know her ways. She is cunning. Whatever the truth of the circumstances that led to that night, it pains me to think of my brother as a baby, sleeping out in that digger.

For the following five years my brother, a gorgeous wee boy, saw a lot that a young child should never see. My mother still liked to party, and men came and went. It must have been such a relief for him when my father introduced stability to his transient world.

My mother’s parents did not live long lives. Her father went on to marry a woman called Jill, who he treated poorly by accounts. She was young and a drug user. She died suddenly one day, of heart failure. The police questioned my grandfather following her death, but I do not know why. He died of a heart attack in his fifties, but I was only two so I have no recollection of him. My grandmother smoked heavily and died of lung cancer in her early sixties. I was seven when I was ushered in to her room to view her on her back in her deathbed the morning after she died. The sight of her face, contorted and coloured orange and purple, terrified and haunted me. For years I would never go to sleep on my back for fear that like her, I would never wake up.