Category Archives: Gunnas-Masters

MAGIC CARPET BAG – Melanie Pitulej

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

What a surreal day. Motivational and dare I say, potentially transformational.

Today was one of those days that gives you the wake-up call and the kick up the arse you know you’ve needed for a long time.

A day spent in a room full of bright-eyed, fabulous folk willing to open up and share.

A day full of laughs and stories (and coffee and food).

I was excited and admittedly a little nervous once I booked into the Gunnas Masterclass. A dear friend suggested I go and then threw in the babysitting for good measure – sorted.

Not usually known for my punctuality (with the exception of flying/going to the theatre/any event where you will literally be locked out or left behind if you are late), I made a concerted effort to arrive an impressive (for me, anyway) ten minutes early. Off to a great start.

We settled in to some getting to know you stuff before we knuckled down to our first five minute writing exercise – the rule being our pen could not leave the page. Here’s an excerpt of my first literal brain dump:

“So here we are in the city on a Saturday where I have a whole six hours to myself with the bloody amazing Catherine Deveny and about 15 other lovely humans. We’ve just spent the last two hours introducing ourselves. What has struck me so far is how everyone is layered like an onion and the stories that have been coming out have been blowing my mind. We meet people in everyday life and exchange platitudes (God I hate small talk!) but today it’s been like Devs has snuck some truth serum in the coffee as we’ve all been spewing forth these fabulous, juicy stories – we’ve been peeling onions.”

That was just the beginning. As the rest of the day unfolded, Catherine revealed tools and tricks to help us stop fucking around and start writing. Everything from shower caps to tomato kitchen timers came out of the magic carpet bag. Note to self – invest in a button that shrieks “NO!” “NO!” “NO!” every time I entertain a procrastinating thought.

I have a hard deadline of 10pm to get this done by and I’m taking it to the wire. Nothing like your laptop deciding tonight’s the night to give you a very inconvenient, very uncooperative System32\config\systemprofile blah blah error when you’re trying to write! I was starting to think the universe was conspiring against me and it was all too hard. However I decided that if I learnt anything today, it’s that bullshit excuses must henceforth be banished. And I somehow managed to fix the nasty error. Go me.

I’m looking forward to sitting down with my spotty shower cap on this week to crank out some words. Having been anointed with Catherine’s wisdom, I now know it’s of no consequence if what comes out is good, bad or fucking ugly, it just needs to come out.

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I Really Am – Donna Carman

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

I’m Gunna write.
I really am.
With new frameworks,
hot coffee
and toast with jam.
SUBMIT that article
No! Thats’ too bland.
Deliver that article
To the publisher’s hand.
An ill equipped room away from home,
No computer or Microsoft word.
Just ‘Pages’ on iPad
Where the saving function eludes me.
With docs lining up
Full of words that I’ve written
Spewed out at times
When there was no stopping my mission.
When feeling brave and
When feeling bravado
to manifest dreams
I write and I write
Into any old screen.
I’ll send this to Catherine
With deadline today
10pm looming
Excuses delay….
One more go at saving
with ‘Pages’ on iPad
Or back up my plan with
iPhone 5 in my hand.
Into Gmail my desperate words will go
Onto screen that flicks round
and does it’s own thing.
God damn it technology’s
Glitches and bitches
It’s all done on purpose,
Testing commitment.
But this time I won’t let it
Stop the words flow.
A fellow Gunnas stands
At the lights on the Terrace
As we both head away
Feeling vibrantly dazed.
“Use your Gmail on iPad”
She says on the breeze,
“Oh gee, yes of course”.
Excuses stop now
New frameworks in place,
Commit to that keyboard
Pour the wine, move around
And type into space.
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THE KETTLE – Ali Rose

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

It was brilliant.  It was better than that it was bloody brilliant.  Bonza even. He couldn’t believe his luck.  What were the chances that when he picked up the mangled brown suitcase on the side of the road, the one that looked like it had weathered many days outdoors and been deliberately abandoned, that when he opened it he would find $25,000? The timing couldn’t be better.  The bills were piled sky high and shoved to the corner of one of the laminex benches in the kitchen of his 1950s 2 bedroom weatherboard home.  Sandwiched between the yellowing bread bin with the peeling flower motifs and the Tupperware container holding the cake from his neighbour Mrs Watson.  He hated cake so he’d have to wait a polite amount of time then return the container and proclaim that that was the best cake he had ever had. The man never could quite just throw the bills in the bin but at the same time couldn’t just put them neatly in a to do pile either.   Instead they sat in half opened jagged window faced envelopes between that bread bin and the tupperware. The man didn’t really need either pile to remind him they were still outstanding.  He woke with that nagging feeling every day.

***

This day felt different though.  As he woke and the early morning heat of January streamed through his partially lifted blind he felt that something had shifted.  That something different or special or unusual was going to happen that day.  He didn’t know what but he knew it was going to change things.  He pondered on that idea as he flicked on the gas of the stove for the kettle and placed dog biscuits in the bowl outside for Bob.  Bob stirred a little as the hard morsels rattled into the metal bowl.  Bob was old now and spent most of his days sleeping on the mound of hessian bags that the man had collected from one of his recent trips to the tip.   He still managed to look up at the man and his tail flicked a few times to say thank you.  Once a upon of time he would have jumped high and wolfed the biscuits but those days were gone.

You’re a good boy Bob the man said as he half knelt to pat him on the head.

Ooops there’s the kettle boy, you stay there, the man said.

The kettle whistled.  The man still had one of those old kettles that whistled.  He knew it was old fashioned but he couldn’t bring himself to throw it out.  It was his mothers.

He poured the hot water on the teabag and left it to brew staring aimlessly out the window and down the street.  He could hear the kids next door with their early morning school holiday chatter.  He could see Fred across the road just starting to mow his front lawn.  Marian was just making her way out her front door with Jack her Scottish terrier – he knew they were on their usual morning walk to the park 3 streets away.  The scent of honeysuckle had started to make its way through the open window and the smell of freshly cut grass was lingering on the edge threatening to take over.  January in Australia, he thought, seriously how good is Australia in summer.

The infusion of the smells and the sounds reminded the man of his mother.  He knew he missed her, she was his biological family after all, but really it was this here and now, the sights, those smells, the familiar sounds that made today, these surroundings, his logical family. This is what he knew, what he felt comfortable with and in.  This, made sense. He loved his mother but she had driven him mad.  When she died he took less than 4 days to gather everything up and take to the tip.  That’s when he found the hessian bags for Bob. Everything went. Every thing except that bloody kettle. He couldn’t bring himself to throw out that kettle.

The man felt different living in this house now.

Why he thought?  I used to live in this house, but now I REALLY live in this house.

But that was enough.  The past was the past and there was work to be done. No use lingering. The man poured the last of his tea down the sink and shot a glance at the kettle as he made his way to the back door.  That bloody kettle.

Cmon boy we gotta make it up to Macca’s place this morning….he wants that fencing finished up today.  The man held the back flywire door open so Bob could come into the kitchen.  Ill just get me boots on boy and then we are on our way.  Bob shuffled to the front door his nails clicking on the floor boards as he went, he knew the man would put his socks on sitting at the kitchen table and then go to the front porch to put his boots on out there.  It was the same every day.

Whew its gettin hot already Bob the man said as he let the front door slam behind him and signaled for Bob to go towards the car. Best we get a move on so we can finish up early today, he said.

As Bob and the man jumped in the ute neither of them knew just how much their day was about to change…..

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I was always gunna write – Camille Carroll

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

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See You Next Tuesday! Quitting the toxic boss – Jennifer Lim

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

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Denise – Annie Fitzsimons

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

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White Horse – Peta Swarbrick

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

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Leaving on a Jet Plane – Anni Moss

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

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What I wrote today – Amanda Wilson

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

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Fire – Lisa Joy

Another brilliant piece from a GUNNAS WRITING MASTERCLASS WRITER

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