Read 'The Boundaries of Connectedness' Here

Read 'The Boundaries of Connectedness' Here

The top of the wardrobe is home to three large, colourful woven baskets from

Ghana in Africa. They are my market baskets. I also have a special collection

of Buka baskets from Papua New Guinea. These are a link to my precious past

and they are not to be used, so instead have taken pride of place on a shelf in

my lounge room. The inside of my wardrobe contains only a few items of

clothing; brightly printed tops, skirts and dresses and a few wraps and

ponchos for winter. I don’t subscribe to a particular style, but rather choose

my clothing in a haphazard way with no conditions other than I like tribal

prints. I’ve walked out of my bedroom ready to go out with one of my

daughters, only to be spun on my heel with, “Nope. No, Mother. Too many

prints!” I see this bossiness as a type of familial connectedness, bound by my

forgiveness. They don’t think much of my market baskets either. I’m not sure

why I favour the large baskets. I’ve always grown organic vegetables, so there

isn’t much I want to buy apart from organic seedlings. And even then I prefer

to plant my own seeds and nurture them into being.

 

The local farmers’ market is a meeting place for hipsters and old hippies who

shun conventional values, but after going there for three years I’m still met

with a tentative smile of acknowledgement and polite conversation about the

weather. That’s mostly an exchange with the barista, or the flirty guy from the

orchard who also happens to sell free-range eggs. It’s not that I’m

unfriendly. I consider myself a kind, approachable person. My son wrote a

poem at school when he was little boy entitled: “Even babies turn to smile at 

my Mum.” As odd as that sounds, it’s true. I smile to connect with strangers,

because smiles encourage and warm the heart. But I admit this

connectedness feels bound by my distance. Several people have told me over

the years that I’m an introvert and I agree. I’m shy in gatherings, hovering

spectator-like on the fringes. I don’t wonder if sometimes I mutter to myself,

probably from spending so much time alone. There are some large

ornamental rocks on the perimeter of the market that I sit on when I drink my

coffee. From there I have an engaging view of the entire goings-on.

 

The mysterious gypsy-barista with the golden ear gauge has often chatted to a

man named Cam. Cam has salt and peppery wizard-like hair, which is usually

left to fly away in the wind with his long beard, but on a recent visit his hair

was knotted at the nape of his neck, the wild wispy bits hidden underneath a

soiled panama hat. He almost looked respectable when he nodded at me on

his way past my perch, the wafting smell of the weed he’d just smoked

explaining his curious demeanour. Lilting in his loafers, his thin frame floated

across the grass as he wove in and out of the tents and tables, the silver stripes

on his fabric bag caught the sun on his hip in a sparkle. Spread across his

outstretched left palm was a dead butterfly, its transience, his topic du jour

and the perfect prop from which to eke out his mystery. I decided to name

Cam the Butterfly-man. And I delighted in his interaction with the little ones

who gazed wide-eyed. Some tentatively lifted a chubby hand to stroke a

fragile wing with a small pointed finger and as they did, Butterfly-man

revealed his long stained teeth in a broad grin. It was a sight to behold. He

squatted. And the children crowded in. And he told them a mystical tale 

about the butterfly’s fleeting journey through the world. I held my breath at

the sight of such magic, my inner child’s eyes glistening with tears.

 

Despite the extraordinary exchange with the little ones Butterfly-man was not

welcomed with a demonstrative pat on the back like I’d noticed their parents

welcome one another many times before. For all the effort they put into their

image of being the inclusive hipster and hippie altruists, they had boundaries

of exclusivity around their connectedness. It was a clique! The most poignant

aspect of this observation was that in his inner world, joyous Butterfly-man

was oblivious. He smiled while being ostracized by a group of people he felt

akin to. The gathering might have been a field of lavender in bloom the way

his lively eyes surveyed them. Everything was beautiful in his mind.

 

I knew people like Butterfly-man when I was a child growing up in Papua New

Guinea. Bringers of magic, shamans, you might say. Our house was a big

white Queenslander-style home cut into the green steamy jungle of Mt

Tuaguba Hill. Shrubs and vines lined the deep stairs that reached upward

from the road and had been carved into the clay. Various materials bolstered

the steps to stop erosion from the torrential rain that might occur daily. And

the trek to and from the house was steep and strenuous even for a warrior-like

Chimbu from the highlands. Banana, coconut and mango trees featured

around the perimeter of the garden before the greenery thickened into

impenetrable cover. The stairs continued up to the top of Mt Tuaguba hill,

and might have been a location out of a Tolkien novel.

 

I can still see my mother’s skeletal frame through the crack between the

slightly ajar bedroom door and its surround, her long tanned legs stretched

along the baby-blue chenille bedspread, the rhythmic ticking sound of the

overhead fan in time with the chocolate wisps of her hair blowing ever so

gently. She was beautiful. And I may have fallen asleep right there on the

floor on occasion. The narrow view through that crack was connectedness

bound by forbidden contact. But it was enough.

 

The meris would come to the house regularly because Wima, our beloved

home helper had shared that my mother had been ill with malaria for a long time.

“Olgeta wantaim i wokabout nau,” Narmuk would say to me in Tok

Pisin. Meaning she and her friends were going out.

“Mama bilong yu, emi lik die.”

I usually nodded at this point, my mind lingering on the word die, before I

asked them to wait. I ran one last time to press my eye to the crack in the

doorway. Mama belong me had her eyes closed and yes, she did look like she

had died, although ‘emi lik die’ really meant Mama was very ill.

“Mi save kam bak long tri kilok. Lukim!

That meant we’d be back around three. Wima patted me on the head as I

went out the door with the women.

Narmuk and the meris were very protective. One would hold my hand and I’d

tell them, “Me happy true,” which would set them off giggling, but it was close

enough in Tok Pisin to mean, ‘I’m very happy’. They’d stroke or plait my long

strawberry blonde hair as we went. The contrasting pattern of their lap-lap 

and muumuu was a bright sight to behold, like a bunch of exotic flowers being

blown along a well-worn windy track through the tall kunai grass.

 

The market itself was nearby a wharf with a spreading structure built out of

wooden poles and a thatched palm leaf roof. Only a third of the vendors

would manage to secure a place out of the sun, the rest were strewed out like a

vivid chunky mosaic. There were no tables, with the produce displayed on

woven matting or in wide Buka baskets. There were as many goings-on at the

market as there were aromas. Bartering and laughter exploded from the

conversations. The meris would fill their billums with fish, yams and fruits. It

wasn’t uncommon for one to carry a live duck or chicken home, wrapped

under one arm, the other arm waving about animatedly as they

talked. Sometimes, I was lucky enough to hold the bird for a little while,

disquiet deep in my heart that its neck was soon for the chopping block. I’d

stroke it and hope it didn’t peck at me while I tried to give it as much love as

possible in the short life it had left. We’d wend our way around the market of

grinning vendors, whose teeth were stained red from chewing Buai; their

bodies warmed by the affect into a lively conviviality. Everything was

beautiful in my mind. I believe it is in that cliqueless world, connected by

guilelessness, that a soul like Butterfly-man belongs.

 

The busker paused between songs and I heard Butterfly-man’s voice drift over

the shifting sounds of the marketplace. I’m amazed that his dead butterfly

didn’t fly out of his hand drawing gasps from the youngsters the way his wild

arm movements coincided with his enthusiastic exclamations, “It’s all an

illusion” and “the world is a massive hologram we project onto nature.” 

He wandered on to the bare-foot-florist, whose hands hitched up his shorts

and moved to his hips. I reckon I saw the florist prime his lips with his tongue

about five times in thirty seconds for a swear word that never made its way

past the frustration in his choked up throat. There stood two men, their

connectedness bound by prejudice.

 

There are many different ways connectedness has boundaries. For example,

my son, Finn, was born with congenital heart disease that could bring his life

to an end any day. He’s twenty-five. I believe he and I are connected by the

sounds of our broken hearts beating. Mine pounds a rhythmic despair at

somehow giving him this curse and his fibrillates despair that I am wracked by

guilt. That’s a type of connectedness bound by being mother and son.

 

“You know what that’s called, don’t you?” I heard Finn say from behind

me just the other day. I was busy apologising to a tomato plant for pruning it.

“I dunno, madness maybe?” I muttered.

“Animism,” he continued enthusiastically, pausing only long enough

for me to look up and open my mouth to speak again.

“It’s the belief that all living things have sentience and it goes all the

way back to hunter gatherer days. But you knew that, right?”

I stood upright, my hands immediately rubbing at the creaking arch of my

back, and I turned to look at him.

“You know that your childhood is why you think like this, don’t you,

Ma,” he continued, and he picked up the pot with the sorry looking bare stalk

and headed to the hothouse. “You gave that to us kids, like a gift,” he called,

quite pleased with himself.

“It’s hard to hold on to that idea, though, Finn,” I answered, thinking

about what else I’d given him. But he’d already gone and my voice was really

only a whisper. And then something clicked inside me. There was an unlikely

shaman who gave me that very same gift.

 

The Reverend Battersby used to pick me up and carry me sometimes during

our excursions into the jungle. On one particular excursion he rushed me over

the deepest part of the creek. I was five, slight in build and easy to tuck under

one arm, a bit like one of those chickens or ducks. I giggled as I hung there,

and let my arms dangle with my long hair watching the Reverend’s boots

splosh into the water. The stream was rocky and noisy in parts and smooth

and quiet in others. This was a typical Sunday School morning. The Reverend

reached the other side and plonked me on the soft sandy bank with some of

the older kids, telling me to stay put until he came back with another

youngster. Some of the adolescents were impatiently inching ahead. Today’s

lesson was about wet quicksand and how an underground spring had caused

the sand to become waterlogged.

“We are like those grains of sand,” the Reverend said mysteriously and

often after that. “Each of us separate, suspended, yet supporting one another.

All of the world is sacred. And we are connected to every bit of it.”

 

I lived that moment of awe again and again as I grew up. When I collected

baby toads and tried to keep them as pets, or when I swam in the black lagoon

and felt the eels kiss my feet. I lived it when I sat alone with a fishing rod on

the rocky groyne reaching into a turquoise low tide. I caught fish, only to put

them back because, well, just because; or when I gazed up at Mt Tuaguba and

 

those forbidding stairs that sometimes reached into the low lying clouds of the

Reverend Battersby’s heaven. I lived it in the lively meris and the wise old

men chewing Buai, and in my mother, distant and dying. I live it in my son

and our reciprocating broken hearts. Just as the Butterfly-man lives it when

he walks through that market stoned off his rocker. He’s right, I think, that

Butterfly-man. Perhaps the gypsy-barista had called ‘Sam’ but I misheard,

Cam. Whoever he really is, he isn’t crazy. What we think we know, really is an

illusion. Connectedness is all there is. Boundaries are simply the way we filter

the experience.

Names have been changed to protect people’s privacy.

** Tok Pisin is a form of creole widely spoken in Papua New Guinea.  

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