In Bed with Jocasta (11 page)

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Authors: Richard Glover

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The Fall Guy

F
riends can be cruel. At Jocasta’s birthday party, they’d all combined to buy her a folding wooden chair, a lovely thing, which she could use when sitting outside in the sun, dreaming of what her life might have been. And so she sat on the chair and laughed at how great it was, and the friends smiled and drank her health, and then, yes, I too was invited to sit, and relaxed into the slatted frame, my drink held high.

Which is the point at which the whole thing collapsed. Not just broke. Shattered. From Elegant Chair to Pile of Splintered Firewood, it made its journey in half a second, leaving me sprawled on the floor, limbs akimbo, the drink flung from my hand, the friends caught between horror and laughter.

It was Jeff who broke the silence with a droll whisper: ‘Meet Richard, the Man Mountain.’

A few of them laughed, which instantly warmed Jeff, a natural show-off, to his theme. The chair was made in Vietnam, and as I staggered to my feet he was busy painting a word picture of the moment of its construction — the villagers summoning the fattest man in the district to test the thing out, perhaps perching a child or two on his lap, the timbers taking the enormous weight without complaint, the package being stamped for export.

‘They’d have never dreamt of a bloke with an arse like yours,’ Jeff said with a quiet, sad shrug. ‘Not in their wildest dreams.’

It was most unfair. Later, after they’d all had their fun and left with their cheeks aching from laughter, I reconstructed the shattered mess as best I could. Obviously, this was not a case of an overweight passenger, but of inadequate gluing and poor design.

Yet still I have to face Jocasta, as she examines the almost inconceivable collapse — not so much that of the chair, as that of her husband’s once-svelte body.

What’s worse? Is it the way she weeps over the broken present, or the way she now flinches each time I lower myself into a chair, expecting the engineering to be unequal to its task? The standard of Vietnamese glue has a lot to answer for.

In an effort to save my battered dignity, I begin a campaign: all modern furniture is made of the thinnest pieces of wood and plastic, and all of it is portion-controlled and miserly. To prove my point, I take Jocasta on a tour of the flat-pack, build-yourself, furniture which we bought just months ago at Cheap and Nasty World — all of it already trashed, the melamine peeling, the drawers sagging, the chipboard swelling. Other people’s surfaces may be distressed; ours are merely distressing.

And that’s aside from the trauma I went through putting the stuff together, connecting Bolt A to Sprocket B via Nervous Breakdown C.

Suddenly, in the middle of Batboy’s bedroom, staring at his stricken bedside table, I come over all philosophical — wondering why nothing’s built to last, how we’re increasingly living in a world built of lattice and Gyprock, of melamine and plastic drawer-runners, and how the throwaway society has finally engulfed our furniture and even our architecture.

My heart was full, my buttocks a-quiver, and I said it all. Jocasta endured the full oration, an eyebrow cocked in amusement. ‘Maybe you should hop down off your soapbox, now,’ she said finally, ‘before it splinters under your weight.’

This is what I get these days, my friends lying in wait to make some cheap joke; some one-liner about the killer bum; the man of the mighty beam, striding through life, making furniture-owners everywhere tremble.

‘Sit down, Richard,’ they’ll say, ‘we need some firewood.’

Or, ‘Richard’s coming over, better reinforce the porch.’

Or, ‘Just perch on the bed, mate — I’m trying to convert it into a futon.’

And so I dream of that glorious prelapsarian time, the time before my bottom became literally the butt of jokes. Back then, before the Fall.

Backyard Cricket

T
here’s a moment in the development of every great sport when the rules are written down and formalised, and surely that time has arrived for the game of backyard cricket.

The Rules of Backyard Cricket

  1. There shall be no golden ducks. Here, if nowhere else in life, you always get a second go.

  2. The wicket shall be constructed of any material, yet tradition prefers a garbage tin. It is noted: the arrival of the wheelie bin in the suburbs is already creating a new generation of bowlers — ones who’ll forever believe the stumps are shoulder height, and a good metre wide.

  3. The pitch shall vary between 33 yards and 11, depending on the intoxication of those marking it out.

  4. A batsman shall be deemed ‘Not Out’ if the ball hits the top of the garbage bin.

  5. Younger players, defined as under eight years, will be permitted to weep upon getting out. They should then refuse to give back the bat, running haphazardly away, as their father chases angrily after them, shouting entreaties. This is known as the on-field entertainment.

  6. The game shall consist of ‘hit-and-run’ — once the bat touches the ball, you’ve got to run. We haven’t got all day for this game: there’s still stuff to eat in the Esky.

  7. The middle-aged uncle who was once the glory of the school cricket team is permitted one full-speed, lairy bowl during the afternoon — smashing the wickets of his eleven-year-old nephew — just to show he’s still got it.

  8. The middle-aged uncle should not be criticised for this behaviour. Tomorrow’s herniated disc will be deemed punishment enough.

  9. A ball bouncing off a roof must be caught one-handed. Fielders may wish to equip themselves with a plastic cup of riesling, held in the left hand, as protection from inadvertently breaking this rule.

  10. Nanna, while fierce with a bat, shall be permitted to utilise a runner, chosen from the younger members of the group. Thus is speed combined with wisdom.

  11. It shall be permitted for the bowler to soak the tennis ball in a nearby puddle in order to add both speed and drama, particularly when employing a Bodyline strategy.

  12. Should a seven-year-old score more than twenty runs it is permitted to distract the child, claiming the sound of a Mr Whippy van can he heard in the middle distance.

  13. If the ball is driven into a wire fence, becoming stuck, fielders may remove it one-handed for the ‘Out’. Who ever said life was fair?

  14. Over the fence is ‘Six — and Out’. If the batter cannot locate the ball, he may be derided as a lair and a show-off by all present.

  15. When playing with limited numbers, the system of ‘Automatic Slips’ may be instituted, in which any ball hit towards the slips will be deemed caught.

  16. Some players believe ‘Automatic Slips’ removes human error from the game. Such players may prefer to play ‘English Team Rules’ in which every ball hit towards the slips is deemed dropped.

  17. Balls which become stuck in trees are deemed caught. By Joel Garner if the tree is tall.

  18. In games with limited fieldsmen, and a single, difficult-to-defeat batter, one may institute the system of ‘electric wickets’, meaning they can be run-out by hitting either wicket, and not just the one towards which they are running.

  19. Any on-field mistake shall be greeted with the dismissive chorus from all players: ‘Can’t bowl, can’t field.’ Players who are incompetent, and miss every ball, should insist they are in the pay of Salim Malik and are intentionally ‘throwing the game’.

  20. It’s acknowledged that backyard cricket is an excellent guide to a person’s basic character. Will the sixteen-year-old give the ball a sweet nudge towards the great-grandparent fielding at silly point? Or go the full lobotomy shot in the hope of an early inheritance? Only backyard cricket will tell.

  21. Suspect bowling actions will be frowned upon, in particular those made without a can of beer in one hand. As Shoaib Akhtar might put it: ‘There’s plenty of scope for chucking later in the night.’

  22. Runs will be subtracted for hitting the ball into the wood pile (due to fear of snakes); or into Uncle Terry’s new car (due to fear of Uncle Terry).

  23. The dog will be considered an act of God — his actions bringing a much-needed measure of pure luck to a game too long mired in skill.

  24. The intelligent son-in-law will unaccountably ‘miss’ the bails several times during Pa’s innings. He shall remember that Christmas is close, and that Pa’s traditional gift of red wine may be selected from the Over $15 section, or from the Under $5.

  25. After the sixteen-year-old has achieved twenty-five runs, he may be openly mocked and derided, and forced to hit a dolly towards Nanna, which she will catch with a long, dramatic, but ultimately bone-cracking dive towards silly leg.

Backyard cricket again reveals the family secret: those idiotically competitive genes came from someplace.

Stark Staring

I
t was Batboy who had the insight. The grand moment of vision. We’d gone to the Art Gallery, attracted by the new gallery of traditional painting. But first, we thought, we should head downstairs and introduce Batboy to some contemporary art. In particular those rocks they’ve got on the ground floor, all hanging in a circle from the ceiling.

Whenever you look at contemporary art, there’s always someone in the background mumbling that ‘a child could do better’, so this was the perfect opportunity to see whether an actual young person agreed.

Batboy, as it happens, adjudged himself quite unable to do any better and was very admiring of the circle of hanging rocks — especially its capacity to be used as a weapon. But the interesting moment happened when we clambered towards the traditional paintings, and Batboy made his announcement: compared with that sensible modern stuff downstairs, this lot was, well, kind of weird.

Jocasta and I examined the paintings, and you could see his point. The joint is full of the odder outpourings of the pre-modern mind: unicorns, nymphs, crucifixes, men with animal bodies, severed heads on trays, and a veritable plague of stags and lutes. Traditional painters are very big on lutes.

There’s all this moaning about the weirdness of modern art, but when you finally open your eyes, you find a striking and beautiful circle of stones. Not weird at all.

Meanwhile, upstairs, is your typical traditional painting, and it will feature a bloke with goat legs, suckling a devil with his engorged breast (oh, didn’t I mention the breasts?) while somebody in the background has his head hacked off with a sword. Batboy is right. It’s sicko stuff. Enter it in the Biennale and they’d be denouncing you as a typical sybaritic modernist.

And then I notice this other thing about the galleries of traditional art. All the women are in the nude. You’ll have these groups of people, doing something quite ordinary, like cooking a meal or hacking the festering head off a succubus, and all the men will be in full ceremonial dress while the women, whoops, they’ve somehow forgotten to put on their shirts.

Oddest of all, they don’t even bother explaining why the women are naked. They just are. On principle.

At least today’s film-makers contrive a storyline to get their female stars naked (‘Scene Five: Sharon decides her turtle-neck sweater is so hot she’d best remove it.’) But not these people. They can be painting a woman welding the back axle of her oxcart, and they’ll think: ‘Just as easy to make her starkers.’

It’s like the famous painting by Manet,
Le Dejeuner sur l’Herbe.
Here’s a group of friends; they’ve decided to have a picnic; they’ve spread out the rug; the blokes are dressed to kill, and everybody’s getting stuck right into the King Island brie and the Rosemount chardonnay.

And what does the woman in the picture decide to do? Naturally, she elects to strip off and plonk herself starkers right there among the plastic plates, happy as Larry.

We blokes have seen the painting at school. We have studied the poster on kitchen walls. And we’ve gone on about 4 000 picnics ever since, always with that vague sense of hope.

Our conclusion? Manet must have been running with a crowd of sheilas somewhat different to the ones who attend our picnics.

Or take another example — the famous Sid Long painting of the pink flamingos. It’s got two women and they are watching a glorious flock of pink flamingos, and so what do they do to increase their viewing pleasure? Off come the duds. Stark naked is the only way to get a good viewing of a flamingo, and why don’t all the zoo’s female patrons realise it?

Surely, the good news is the popularity of artists such as Robert Mapplethorpe, in whose work it is almost always the men who are walking around naked. Men oiling up their bodies and flexing with pride. Men removing their clothes at the slightest provocation. Men staring at themselves in the mirror and going: ‘Um, not bad.’

It’s taken centuries to get here. But at least some art seems to be recording the day-to-day realities of your typical Australian suburban home.

The Scapie

O
ccasionally, while cooking, I’m forced to ask the odd question. For instance: ‘Who the bloody hell has hidden the garlic crusher, since it’s supposed to be right here in the second drawer?’ In response, Jocasta usually points out there are only two people who use the garlic crusher. Her. And me. Which means my question is not a question at all. But rather a thinly veiled accusation.

Jocasta reckons men are always asking these sort of ‘questions’ — questions like ‘Who’s lost my keys?’, ‘Who’s moved my bag?’ and ‘Who’s broken the washing machine?’ Questions to which the men clearly feel they already have the answer. We might believe we are launching a speculative inquiry, but all Jocasta sees is a nation of Emile Zolas, shouting
‘J’accuse’
over the kitchen bench.

Take last week, when we were finishing off the new bathroom. I’d climbed down the ladder, tripped over my open tool box and was busy being catapulted head-first towards the still-talking toilet. Naturally, as I came to rest on the ground, I put the question. ‘Who,’ I said, ‘put my bloody tool box right at the foot of the bloody ladder?’

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