Invisible mending (a disintegrated essay)

by Peta Murray and David Carlin

 

We have wandered and wondered into the impossibility of imagining what is to be old, following threads that have arisen through exchanges of micro-essays, emails, and conversations.

 

NOTE TO THE READER: The following is all that is left of a much longer essay (in fact, the manuscript for an entire book), which one of us—it doesn’t matter who; we take joint responsibility—left in the pocket of a garment that went through the wash and out the other side. We offer it as a warning against forgetfulness and a sincere if threadbare enquiry into how to dress for old age.

 

1.

Old age is often seen as a time of diminishing 

unfortunately, not symmetrically.     

After the verses and the chorus         

 

there is only one possible out(fit) for the end.

Amen.

 

2.

In childhood    demarcations 

Little boys 

Little girls 

the adjustments                       how much flesh                        which bits. 

          endlessly negotiating 

 

We look for all the places time has left its

        softening 

Short sleeves now unbecoming.

inevitable 

trajectory of ebbing. 

                                                                                                            Try this, you’ll feel

better. 

I’m-not-dead-yet compensations.

Mixed messages or what? 


3.

beige—

a short word 

colourless colour. 

a turning down of brown. 

Beige has to start again. 

My hand is a beautiful colour. 

cast off my inner whiteness and embrace my outer beige?

                                            

4.

Here is dour. The costume of the patriarch. 

so many men 

            forever looking away into a middle distance 

an emotional taboo that leaks

stone faced 

What a price

 

 

 A maternal grandmother

                     so ancient            you cannot countenance 

Dear drear - her bleach and her hoarding 

cut price Sao Biscuits

a sip of tea, a bite of soft bread, a sip of tea bliss.

 

A picture of a man containing dour.

 lips thin and sharp 

in the morning walking left to right and in the evening right to left, 

mistaken for something fragile, brittle, and ultimately transparent. 

 

5.

At last! 

ugg boots, trakky dacks, T-shirt, an old grey jumper, 

A cuppa tea. 

I don’t go out in my ugg boots. That is taking it too far.

 

comfiest 

My late father-in-law’s blue turtle neck jumper 

pop my head through 

I have my elders’ arms around me

Because life is harsh. 

 

All mirrors should be turned away. 

The point of comfy 

fluffy-toed sartorial oblivion 

Day wear. Night wear. Wear and tear. 

one’s hands too arthritic to fiddle at zips and buttons

And surely, with the wrinkling 

the weight of gravity and time. 

Comfy says: really?

            take the odd nip of whisky, for medicinal purposes round 6pm at night. 

 

6.

Or wear the rebellion

            spectacular shoes, or a flower in your hair

durational practice

                                    quintessence of wearer 

shorthand for personhood 

and I pass the test of being me

an artform in its own right. 

 

7.      I am going through a phase, you may have deduced

androgynous               femme                         black hair dye              Francophile                try-

to-dress-like-an-artist                    let-it-all-go-grey

Do men have                these? 

This is not        rhetorical

 

My queen and king.

Not just for the heels 

the big hair, 

not just for the frocks 

the frou-frou 

but for the wit

 of 

it, 

the sly take 

on not staying 

where 

one 

is

 

put. 

 

                     the sheer density of attention. 

when we are old, who will give us this?

  

8.

a single metal press-stud at the cusp of memory and language

my mother with her back to me, and me supposedly asleep in bed watching her at the sewing

machine, purring with her foot, cradled in the light, alone with her sorrow.

 

9.

I still long to be dapper, truth be told. 

boater hat, hatband, necktie, crisp shirt, wingtip collar. 

waistcoat, buttoned, plaid blazer, boutonnière, trousers, two-tone brogues

 complete 

my father as a young man in the city streets, mid-stride glowing with
blond youthfulness and kitted out 

he never lived to grow old,                       a romantic purity in being unrevised,

undisputed, as it were, by later looks.

10.

birthmarks, disfigurements, other signs  

I’d love to be made over, I truly would.

To be youthful is a thing.

To be “oldthful” is a word spoken by someone with their dentures out. 

 

Ha ha                                                    some old fool…

 

11.                               Every home should have a dress-up box 

let loose admirals and vamps, duchesses and nymphs        something we still contain but
seldom find chances to reveal

            escape, from the confinement of image,      prison of oneself.

It is the more that entices me

comical dressing gowns preposterous slippers.          risky business catch our eyes,

glimpse           one-part embarrassment meets two-parts gall. 

despite,

      again and again the disappointing news broken to us.                

this does not exist.      that is not how things are. 

protest inwardly, or learn to acquiesce, the suit of reality enclosing
gaps and mysteries one by one patched 

zipped 

or otherwise sealed over

from day one, squeeze into a dressed-up world, a violent, miserable pantomime 

 

12.

                                                                            a little soft shoe shuffle, as slow as she likes.
a back-of-the-auditorium grin.

 

Glamour! Approach with caution.

We, the untucked, the wizening, the chicken-winged, the spinnakered, 

Ah, the 

ancient glamours we will show you!


The book manuscript alluded to in the introduction to our essay actually exists, albeit as a work in progress. Called How to Dress for Old Age, it is a collaboration speculative in both content and the processes that have given it form. We have wandered and wondered into the impossibility of imagining what is to be old, following threads that have arisen through exchanges of micro-essays, emails, and conversations. In Invisible Mending, we take up with perverse delight the opportunity for a new phase in the experiment that has seen us shrink 40,000 words into a mere 800. Then, in keeping with domestic measures that in many ways may be seen to be counter-erasure—the mending kit, the sewing box, the iron-on patch—we endeavour to leave enough of this remnant intact to retain some trace of design and shape, while at the same time exposing our aging frames beneath the fabric of the words. 

2019 PM Headshot Credit Morri Young 2.jpg
David_Carlin_Photo by Esther Carlin.jpg

Peta Murray is a writer-performer and teacher, best known for her plays, Wallflowering and Salt.  Recent works include Missa Pro Venerabilibus: A Mass for The Ageing, and the live art-based performance piece, vigil/wake. As a Vice-Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the School of Media and Communication at RMIT University, in Melbourne, Australia, Peta’s focus is the application of transdisciplinary arts-based practices as modes of inquiry and forms of cultural activism. She is particularly interested in the application of “meaningful irreverence” as a means to navigate change. Critical writing includes contributions to Axon, Fourth Genre, New Writing, RUUKKU and TEXT.


David Carlin’s
books include The After-Normal: Brief, Alphabetical Essays on a Changing Planet (2019, with Nicole Walker), 100 Atmospheres: Studies in Scale and Wonder (2019), The Abyssinian Contortionist (2015) and Our Father Who Wasn’t There (2010), and two anthologies of new Asian and Australian writing, The Near and the Far, Vols 1&2 (2016, 2019). His award-winning essays have appeared in Griffith Review, Meanjin, Hunger Mountain, Overland, Westerly, Terrain.org, Essay Daily, TEXT Journal, and New Writing. David is Professor of Creative Writing and co-director of WrICE and the non/fictionLab at RMIT University, and the Co-President of the international NonfictioNOW Conference.