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Pills by Kiet Phan (12 to 15 years)

When people look at the photos on the wall, they see a ‘happy family’ - me, my brother, my mum and my dad - but they never look close enough to notice the bruises peeking out from under my sleeves. 

      Often, I’d imagine what it feels like to have a normal life like my Australian friends, without coming to school each day with a brand new bruise on my body, without having to replace the worn-out duct tape holding my shoes together each day when I come home. 

     The feeling of the cane against my wrist, sending the paralysing pain throughout my whole body, leaving the bright red line tattooed on my skin. The helpless feeling of knowing that I can only stand there taking in the pain whilst holding back the tears. The feeling of divergence, knowing that I am in this alone. But the aspect that hurts the most is that my dad would never even attempt to apologise after.

   Sometimes, I can predict when the attacks are coming, but that anticipation is worse than the sudden unprovoked assaults. Opening the door most afternoons to the stale aroma of exhaled alcohol that sticks to your lungs and stings your vision, greeted by my dad’s menacing sulk or his ice-cold eyes glaring at my every movement with a brooding, glowering anger. 

     But sometimes there were no signs that an attack was coming.

   That day at school, my friends told stories of their dads taking them on holidays. Taking them to BBQ’s. Having fun playing with them at the beach - and all I can do is sit quietly, lightly brushing over the bruises covered by my sleeves, imagining what it would feel like to be a typical Australian.

     “Gia đình mình không giống h,” my dad's voice echoed in my mind, reminding me:  we’re not like other families.

Although he is a violent person, we still do have ‘family’ dinners and ‘family’ gatherings. But they never go as planned. They always end with me gaining another bruise, another scar.

     Family dinners go through in oppressive silence. I keep my head down, dolefully eating my food as I can feel my dad’s glare, searching me for anything he can scream at me about. 

     “Ăn cho đàng hoàng, không là coi chng,” he would always say, warning us to eat without spilling or we would get punished.

Family gatherings go great...for him.

     “Tôi biết cách làm cho nó nghe li,” he announced as he shows off to all his friends - I know how to teach my kids.

   “Con ca anh ngoan nh!” his friends exclaim - He obeys you! - as they observed me ruefully observing my dad.

     “Ch vì con b đánh thôi,” - he beats me if I don’t - I whisper quietly, and the crowd explodes into laughter as if I had told a joke, not a secret. I knew I’d get punished for that.

          “Lúc b đánh con b đau hơn,” he would always say, telling me that when he hits me, it hurts him way more. But is he the one limping to school the next day? Is he the one that receives the brand new bruises? 

      That night he lectured me, drunkenly addressing space in the middle distance, somewhere between him and I, telling me the best way to educate your kids is by force, is by violence. The way that our ancestors taught their kids. But he doesn’t know that it’s different now. Our society has grown while he has stayed the same. Like a boulder still standing sturdy as the years go by. He is still trapped in the Vietnamese way of living many years ago. He, and his trauma, is what defines me. His backwardness defines my Australian way of life.

       Limping home each day like an injured soldier, I cross the Harbour Bridge staring dejectedly into the distance at the glowing Opera House with each tile reflecting the warm rays of sunlight. But even with the warm beams of light shining on to me… I still feel cold. 

        During these long walks home, I often have strange thoughts. Wondering whether I would ever be able to escape the constant assaults. End all the pain. End all the loud words that are spat at me when the alcohol consumes my dad. To be, or not to be...

        That’s when I glance at all the trucks speeding pass me across the bridge, wondering if they are moving fast enough. Or peeking over the edge of the bridge, wondering if the water is far enough below. Or taking out the bottle of pills I bought a long time ago, now buried deep within my drawer, and examining the bright red capsules, looking for the courage to open the cap each day.

      These thoughts are felt often. Mostly whenever the attacks happen, when the red line on my skin slowly turns purple, developing into a bruise. 

   His hands are clenched around the cane when I get home. The flame in his eyes rages furiously as if making the stale aroma of alcohol more intense. He spits the staggering words at me, like a snake spitting its venom. 

“TI SAO CON ĐƯỢC ĐIM THP VY?!” he shouts, blustering me about my B grade in Maths, shaking my report card furiously in his left hand. 

       He doesn’t know or care that I achieved the highest in my class. The frustration brings tears to my eyes as I storm into my room, shutting the door loudly behind me as if trying to block him out. I allow the streams of tears to cascade now. Now that no one is watching. I open my drawer, digging through the piles of ripped shirts as I search for the bright red bottle through the curtain of tears... I have almost gained enough courage now, all my anger and hatred slowly melts into sorrow and melancholy driving my hand towards the bottle.       

  Taking one long breath and wiping the tears away, I open the cap… probably not taking them tonight, but knowing that that day is getting nearer.

    Knowing that one day, when people look at the ‘happy family’ photos on the wall - they’ll only see my brother, my mum, and my dad.

Vegemite by Zoe Hamra (16 to 18 years)

Inspired by the theme of alienation in T.S. Eliot’s The Wasteland. 

“Vegemite?” Dad asks, holding up two white squares. “Vegemite,” we answer, nodding. Max jitters the foot I’m trying to lock into his greying leather shoe. “I’m cold”, his small voice whispers to me. I tell him that I’ll pull up our bedroom blinds when I’ve finished his laces. He likes to sit there, cross-legged, in the patch of sun that hits around seven fifteen, lining up his four chipped Pokemon figurines the same way other boys organise their shiny ones. Dad and I keep warm by singing about gravy and Christmas for the rest of the morning, twirling past the cracks in the living room and over the ones in the floor, until he has to go to work and Max and I have to go to school. 

I make three cards from the stuff in the craft box at lunch - one for dad, one for Max, one for Ms Kelly. Ben and his group don’t do craft cause they’re too busy arguing about which houses Santa would skip if he runs out of time on Christmas Eve. They reckon he’d still visit their houses but the big brick buildings across Illawarra Rd wouldn’t make the cut because “they’re smelly and dirty and Santa wouldn’t wanna give presents to litterbugs anyway!” Ms Kelly knows I live there so she tells them not to be rude, but she doesn’t stop them any more than that and I can tell she secretly thinks the same. I concentrate on colouring in the last star on Ms Kelly’s card. 

On Friday afternoon, Max and I walk home through the park where those little fig things squish under your feet. Then I go to Jessica H’s place to make Milo cupcakes with her and Sarah Lang. Dad says we always have to bring something when we go to someone’s place, ‘cause, sunshine, that’s very good manners’, so I bring a half-full punnet of strawberries from our fridge to put on the cupcakes. 

Jessica H and Sarah Lang recite all the things on their wishlists while we’re waiting for the brown circles to rise in the oven. It takes them a long time. I tell them that all their things are on my list too. It gets hard to keep pretending I know all the YouTubers Jessica H and Sarah Lang talk about though, and I don’t want to leave Max home alone much longer because he’s only six, so when Jessica H’s mum, Cecelia, asks us to stay for dinner, I say “I think I should go home”. Cecelia says she’ll drive me and goes to get her sunnies.

Shiny leather squeaks underneath me even as I sit very still in the seat behind Cecelia. The normal colours of the houses outside have gotten darker, I think by a combination of the funny windows that this car has and the red button. Nan says that God has a remote for the world and that he clicks the red button every night to make it dark so we can sleep, and, even though Dad, Max and I don’t believe in God, I like the remote story. It makes me think we're all in a TV show, and then I can pretend I’m famous and that I have lots of things and live in a really big house with a green garden and a lake out the back. 

I realise that I need to get out of the car before we get to my street. 

After I’ve shut the front door behind me, my shoulders release their grip on my neck. I eat Max’s chips lying on the pile of saggy rectangular pillows that dad calls a sofa but which I call a pile of saggy rectangular pillows. My mind starts to get fuzzier and fuzzier. 

“Sola! Sohhh-la! Look! SOLA!” Max calls out and gets rid of the fuzziness really quickly. He’s staring through a gap in our bedroom blinds and doesn’t even peel his head away as I kneel next to him. He points to a huge silver Holden pulling into our building’s carpark. Max loves those cars.

We watch the silver giant as it just sits there with its engine running, puffing fuel clouds. Max wants to know who's inside and what they’re doing and why they’re here and when they’re gonna get out of the car, but I don’t know so I just tell him to keep watching. 

The driver’s door opens.

Then I flinch, because the woman with big sunnies and white jeans that the silver giant just spat out is Cecelia. And, when I squint really hard to see through the darkness, I can see she’s holding my water bottle. The old one with my name and address sticker on it. I could kick myself.

“What?” Max asks, “what Sola? Who is it?” I shush him and don’t breathe out as I watch her heels crunching through the sea of gravel, towards our building’s red door. Cecelia stops when she gets to the concrete path Donnie was standing on last night when he was yelling at Jean. Donnie and Jean used to live together in the apartment beneath us, but now only Jean lives there and she has big locks on her door. Cecelia lifts her sunnies onto her head and her eyes dart around, taking in the shadowy milk crates and the big black tarp and the landings with shirts and undies still hanging over them even though the sun disappeared hours ago.

It looks like she’s gonna knock. Maybe she’ll come in and ask where our parents are, and, since now she knows we live here anyway, maybe we’ll tell her how Dad doesn’t get back from the factory until nine. Then maybe she’ll stay and make us dinner and become friends with Dad and give him his favourite bottle of grown-up Ribena for Christmas so he gets more than just cards drawn with textas. 

But Cecelia suddenly bends down. She leaves my water bottle on the doorstep, puts her sunnies back on and hurries back to the silver giant. The car’s gone in the blink of an eye and it’s as if she was never here. 

“Aww” Max falls back from the window and lies on the floor. I get off my knees and rub them, trying to make the redness that comes from leaning on old carpet for too long go away. I breathe out and look down at Max, whose head is upside-down from where I stand. His gaze shifts from the ceiling to my face. “Toast for dinner?” I ask. “Yeah,” he replies. 

“Vegemite?” 

“Vegemite.”

Soft Touch by LiLy Cameron (19 to 24 years)

1. Over the past few years, I have developed an obsession with hands. I don’t seek them out consciously, but they come into my life all the same, images that grasp and don’t let go. In her book Bluets,

Maggie Nelson writes, “We don’t get to choose what or whom we love… We just don’t get to choose.” I asked a friend to design a tattoo for me: a right hand gently posing in port de bras, adorned with silkworm moths. I had it inked onto my arm. My partner gave me a ring that grasps me with its own tiny silver fingers. It’s not lost on me that I carry these images around, hold them close, closer than my skin. 

2. Over the years my mum has collected countless hand totems, her house is littered with them: candle holders, incense burners, a votive necklace, a terracotta sculpture which split across the fingers, leaving a mark like a scar. Some I’ve given back to her, an attempt to solidify this connection between us.

3. I’m sitting at home with my phone pressed to my ear. From over 100 kilometres away, I try to tell my mum exactly what happens when I see hands in films or in paintings, even when I read about them. “It’s like staring into the sun,” I say. “The hands just linger in the back of my eyes, and my mind will keep returning to that image again and again. No matter what I do I keep seeing them.” I ask her what it is that attracts her to hands, what has kept her collecting things in their image. “I don’t know, Lil,” she says. “I don’t remember why it started. I don’t remember what was first.” She seems a little put on the spot, flustered that I would pose this question to her out of the blue. “It just became a part of my body—part of my life,” she says. 

4. Hands started taking over my small apartment, appearing in prints on my walls, cut out from magazines and collaged in notebooks. I would fixate on people’s fingers as they talked, watching words manifest in gestures. That feeling persisted, the shadow of the sun, the hands in my eyes.

5. We don’t get to choose what we love. Jean Baptiste-Lamarck is best remembered for being wrong; about genetic inheritance, heredity, and giraffes. An offshoot of Lamarckian evolutionary theory—the controversial science of epigenetics—proposes that in fact acquired traits can be, and are, passed down. 

6. Epigenetics research often focuses on the traumatic. In the 1990s, researcher Lars Olov Bygren studied women who were born during or just following a famine. He found that several generations later, these women’s descendants were at a greater risk than the general population of dying from heart disease. 

7. Another epigenetics researcher, Michael Skinner, conducted experiments on mice during the early 2000s that involved exposing them to acetophenone, a chemical which smells like almonds or cherries, depending on who you ask. In conjunction with the release of this scent, Skinner would shock the mice until they began to associate acetophenone with pain, with fear. The pups of these lab-mice were born sensitive to the scent as well, as were their pups. I try to imagine what it’s like, smelling marzipan and thinking pain. A jar of maraschinos making me flinch.

8. We were nervous, I remember that. My mum had never been tattooed, and was a little apprehensive about the pain. I was worried about the finality of it all, whether having an image of a body part permanently on your body was some strange form of cannibalism, and, if I’m being honest, about seeming dorky for matching. We caught the 433, found our way to the artist’s Airbnb, paid her $200 cash, and had the stencils put on our skin. I went first: a design of hands cradling each other, waiting to hold something, put on the back of my arm. Mum got the opposite: an illustration of palms faced down, placed just below the crook of her elbow. 

9. She became obsessed with how her hands seemed to be ageing a few years ago. She bought white cotton gloves and a night cream, applied both before going to bed. I’m offered a product called Tough Hands every time I visit, a viscous kind of liquid that promises visible effects after five days. 

10. She told me that when she was a child, her mother instructed her to always put sunscreen on the back of her hands, that’s where women show their age. She instructed me to do the same. 

11. Much like advice, mitochondrial DNA is passed down to children through their mother’s sides, and continued by daughters. Mitochondria live in the cytoplasm of cells, working to convert energy from food into a form that cells can use. A small amount of DNA lives within these little ovoid bodies, about 16,500 base pairs, a minuscule number when compared to the 200 million plus base pairs that are contained in the nucleus of cells. Mitochondrial DNA doesn’t change much, if at all, when passed from mother to child; my mitochondrial DNA is probably almost identical to my maternal ancestors’ from tens of generations ago. 

12. I put sunscreen on every day.

13. Carl Zimmer quotes biologist Robert Martienssen—who is in turn quoting 19th Century plant-breeder Luther Burbank—in his book She Has Her Mother’s Laugh: The Powers, Perversions, and Potential of Heredity.

He says, “Heredity is only the sum of all past environment.” I picture a mother moulding a baby out of clay, shaping it with her fingers and leaving it to dry in the sun, the baby’s palm cracking into wrinkles as the clay bakes. 

14. It feels like a middle-aged white man thing to do, trace one’s ancestry, take note of the marriages and death and property, but I catch myself doing it every once in a while when I tote a washing basket on my hip and some strange sense memory is activated by the pressure on the bone. I feel the weight of those women’s labour, the clothes they would have carried, the water, the babies. Some kind of maternal remembering, or perhaps past life.

15. The last names of women before me are largely lost. There was Thacker and McInerney and Newman and Ballantine and Kelly and Herden long before there was me. I carry these women’s names with mine, in the base pairs that live in my mitochondria, in every cell, and on my hip, where they used to carry babies. 

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Page last updated: 13 May 2021