26.4.12

My brain's evil plight.

Music blared in the background and the fan whirred faintly. My clothes were scattered quite artistically over the floor, hiding amongst piles of magazines, an unending network of electrical cords.

I lay limp on my bed, face pressed into my pillows, one leg dangling off the edge for the murderers under my bed to freely seize. That last statement isn’t entirely exaggeration. If it were dark, I wouldn’t have dared let any part of me protrude over the safety of the bed.

* * *

Everyone has a bit of a bonding moment over the threat of what goes bump in the night. I generally struggle to find others to empathise with my fears that there’s fire encircling the house, strange men in the roof and the walls, and, somewhere out there, giant skinned rabbits in business suits coming to cut me to pieces.

I’m not a loon, honestly. Every now and then, my brain just likes to chuck me a wildcard, seeing how I react to ominous voices in my head or visions of blood on my pretentiously named Goose Egg purple walls.

The 90s heydays saw me growing up happily, with a standard two-adults-two-kids-and-two-guinea-pigs family. Pretending to be a dog was my forte, and the most exciting time of the year was when we drove down to the beach for a week, to a 3-star unit with the childhood wonders of Nickelodeon, a pool, and an ancient videogame machine that played 8-bit Sonic the Hedgehog.

Despite my carefree adolescence, I always felt as if something menacing was looming somewhere, far away, but still there. It’s a challenge to explain, but I almost anticipated that these days of plastic food, Barney and dancing to Atomic Kitten were the peak of a mountain that was soon to experience many landslides.

Life moved on. Divorce can act as a slap in the face to some people, but my parents’ separation didn’t impact me severely. Even at the meek age of 11, I knew that my family was just one of those clans that operated better with some distance between them. It was probably the most composed break up in the history of life on Earth, with my mother and father peacefully informing me and my sister, who was 14 at the time, that Dad would be moving away. They never fought; my Dad was just lazy, a toxic addition to a family run by a female perfectionist.

High school was, in a word, tragic. I awkwardly slotted in with the water polo kids, after knowing one of them from primary school. Every lunch they would natter on about last week’s training and the sassy new school togs, and every lunch I would sit silently, smiling and nodding, pleading to the gods that they would never discover I was a lumbering rhinoceros in the water.

Eventually I splashed out, pun intended, and made the effort to find some other less aquatic friends. I shifted between groups slightly, and by Grade 10 I found a cluster of similar girls. School was slowly starting to reveal its tolerable side.

Meanwhile my brain, dormant until now, decided that things were getting boring. Happy, relaxed, and contented? Unacceptable. So the sneaky bastard searched through its decks and decided to deal me the depression card.

It came on slowly, and initially unknown even to me. People started getting harder to relate to, I was less compelled to show effort, and my mother seemed to become the devil. She couldn’t comprehend why I had developed into a wicked, hateful teen tyrant.

The forces of the world decided this wasn’t quite exciting enough, so on came the bullying. I still have no idea why, but I became the in joke not just to my all-girls grammar school, but to our brother school too. Bitchy boys will be bitchy boys?

People made private groups on Facebook with the sole purpose of posting photos of me and mocking them; at parties, complete strangers would chase me, yelling out how ‘dank’ I was. I didn’t dare tell anyone but a circle of trusted friends that any of this was happening, and even they sometimes refused to believe it, or didn’t understand the scale of what was occurring.

Eventually, this concoction of depression and oppression triggered my first ‘blip’, as Mum calls them. I escaped to my neighbour’s house late at night, and we walked around until a police car picked us up. Soon after I had my first counseling session. I hated it and, lucky me, there were dozens and dozens yet to come.

The bullying continued, I slumped further, and the pressures of Year 12 grew. I managed to struggle on, keeping up fairly high grades, and with a lengthy prescription of antidepressants, I held on to my sanity by a thread.

I wasn’t getting happier though. Depression is a strange and virtually impossible to understand unless you suffer from it. The common impression is that sufferers are ‘emo’, hate life, hate people, and devise ways to kill themselves every day. While I did my fair share of bawling, I wasn’t utterly sad, and I didn’t dye my hair black. My depression manifested itself as emptiness. I didn’t feel joyful, but I didn’t feel sad. I felt nothing; draining, numbing nothing. I wasn’t suicidal, and I didn’t self harm. To me, that would accomplish nothing. To me, nothing would accomplish anything. So I just sat through life, enduring pain after pain, and not wanting or bothering to do anything about it but wait for the end of the storm.

My brain was spinning in its chair, fluffy white cat in lap. What other tricks could it unleash? Again, it searched through its files and found another crafty maneuver: anxiety.

The bullies started to scare me. Before I had just hated them, every single disgusting cell of their bodies, but now I was genuinely afraid of them and would actively avoid their stares and callous words and any mention of them. I became stressed extremely often and easily. My grades slipped, as I acquired irrational fears of my textbooks and studying. Teachers stopped scolding me for sleeping every class, and started getting worried. I wasn’t lazy, I was very ill.

Once in English class, as my teacher was passing around worksheets, she saw me in a deep slumber on my desk. Rather than wake me, she delicately placed the sheet on top of me and moved on. She was probably one of my favourite and smartest teachers, and would later go on to advise me that, “Everyone has a shit year or two. A bloody corker. You’ve just had yours early on.” I didn’t know which was more exciting, hearing that things would get better, or hearing a teacher swear.

The tempest raged on. I developed other, less obvious symptoms. If my room was messy, I would feel jittery the whole day. If I left the house with the ‘wrong’ socks on, I would feel extremely agitated and self conscious, and usually break down with fear and exhaustion once home. I whole-heartedly believed that every stranger was critically judging me and did not like what they saw. Some were even secretly plotting amongst each other to physically harm me.

That evil brain was now cackling and rolling about, loving every minute of it. But the fun was yet to begin! It was time to crack out the big guns – a nice strong dose of thrilling psychosis.

One night when my friend was over. I was talking about a girl that had turned against me after I had declined emotionally, and doctors now think that taking about such a strong stressor was poisonous to my mind. Suddenly, just while we were talking, my friend wasn’t… him. I didn’t know who this stranger on my bed was or why he was weirdly staring at me. When he asked me what was wrong, why I shaking, and to stop, I grew more afraid. He was just a pawn in someone else’s game, here to convince me I was safe, while a greater force was looming (enter: evil bunnies in suits).

In a nutshell, I thought and saw some crazy shit that night and ended up in a hospital overnight, relaying my thoughts to doctor after doctor while fighting a strong sedative they’d given me. What moron thought to sedate me and then bombard me with a press conference, I don’t know.

These episodes were recurring. The one at school was quite exciting for all involved. My twitching, nonsensical babbling and involuntary swearing at the elderly school nurse was obviously drug withdrawal, according to my charming peers. The week after, was I at home recuperating? Rubbish! It’s clear I was in rehab and suspended. Reemerging at school, I felt like I’d risen again, and come back to haunt my cohort.

Having multiple mental illnesses isn’t fun, but I don’t like to whine about it. While I wouldn’t repeat it, not for a million puppies, it’s kind of part of me. It separates me from the common folk who don’t understand and who maybe never will. I have lost many friends who have become terrified of me and what they’ve witnessed, but the few who have stuck around are dependable, and have their P’s, which is handy.

It’s important to have a sense of humour with these things. Even my mother jokes about it occasionally. I see some killer shoes in a magazine and tell Mum that, “I desperately need some retail therapy!” she’ll retort with, “No, you just desperately need therapy.” I’ll pretend to be offended but we all have a bit of a chortle, and usually go shopping anyway.

I’m fairly sure I’m not barmy, and when I am, they’re just those ‘blips’, my mother assures me. Even so, some of the most creative people in history have been those with mental illnesses, and I sure used to come up with some creative ways to avoid violin practice.

People who are prescribed medications for depression, anxiety or psychosis will often have to take them for the rest of their life, but it’s impossible to tell who they are. Anyone you pass on the street could have prophesised their death last night and had to pop some pills to calm down. I know I have!

* * *

I slowly sat up, eyes fixated on my laptop screen and the words of wisdom I’d just churned out. My story might have been a tad gloomy and intimidating, but hot damn it was factual. With a mind like mine, swirling at a million miles an hour and uprooting most logical processes, it was difficult to think of anything to write about but myself. Saving my work, and sprawling back down onto the best mattress in the world, I cracked open a Simpsons comic. Not hugely productive, but still totally necessary. It was important for me not to get stressed, after all.

18.4.12

Feeling numb, numb, nu-nu-nu-numb?

Most people enjoy talking about themselves. To a person, their own name is the single sweetest word in the English language. I think that’s why I can sit down and churn out page after page of my own ‘factual story’, also known as a depressive look into my life, with a tackily humorous twist.

While I like the 90s for what they saw – Angry Beavers, Polly Pockets and reenacting A Bug’s Life with a few decorative rocks and some guinea pig seed – I think deep down, I’m fond of them because they were the most relaxing, carefree days of my life. And while everyone says that, it’s a bit extreme in my case, as my mind doesn’t allow me much down time between stressing about everything and concocting some fun new voices for me to hear.

Maybe again why I like grunge blogs. While they don’t promote mental illness, they don’t shun it. If you were to tell the owner of a Tumblr filled with orange tween girls with vans what you’ve hallucinated about, they’d probably cry. But not the grunge kids. We take what we’ve experienced, type it in a goopy font, and whack it on a pastel background for the world to take in. No nonsense, take it or leave it. WE R WHO WE R.


 Preach it, sista


 
And while Ke$ha’s catchy hit may seem similar to Lady Gaga’s Born This Way, people with mental illnesses often aren’t born with it. It’s their environments and stressors and the people they deal with. While there’s a slightly increased risk of developing depression or anxiety if your parents had it, you’re not ‘born that way’. After all, Ke$ha used to be fat.


Eat it, sista


I think it’s worthwhile taking the time to release your inner journo and write a factual story about yourself if you haven’t. Not a whingefest, just an anecdote. In my case, the added bonus of releasing my inner turmoil (terribly dramatic) was that I completed an assignment over a week early. There’s a first for everything!

16.4.12

The ABCs of public media.

‘To serve or engage a public’ – it sounds a bit like an entertaining policeman’s mantra, but it’s the purpose of public media as I learnt in my JOUR1111 lecture today. Thanks to public media, I used to be able to watch Move It Or Lose It on a weekday morning on Briz 31, now 31 Digital, all without being bombarded with ads for the latest amazing and expensive technological gadget for toddlers.

Comprising the ABC, SBS and their respective radios, public media in Australia is mostly taxpayer supported, although we all remember the scandal and we all wept deeply when SBS brought in ads (interrupted MythBusters, the beginning of the media apocalypse).

Back in the olden days when the world was sepia, public television required license fees from viewers, and so the public service ethos and value for the public is still embedded today.

The ABC was established as a ‘nation building project’, seen to reach far and deep into Australian minds; a bit creepy, but with good intentions.



 
I’m relevant!


SBS was the shiny multicultural channel, although all I really observe when flicking past it is its trademark sex between soccer. Yay for weird late night sexy hotline ads with terrible actors and equally terrible graphics!


 
 The kind of people you usually see on these ads.



Personally, I see the ABC as the place to go for sassy British comedies, Grand Designs to keep mother dearest happy, and Tony Jones, host of Q&A, the legendary guy that always looks incredibly smug as if he’s just told the most hilarious joke in existence.
           


“And then I said, whattsamatta you?!” *hold for applause*

A key mechanism that has lead to public media’s success is news. It’s cheap, people always want to watch it, and it’s generally not something commercial media goes out of their way for (doesn’t lure in the advertisers nearly as well as Jersey Shore, aw yeahhh).

Public media’s news is serious. It’s broadsheet. It’s important. It’s considered. And it sounds like a movie tagline.

Some might argue, however, that it’s boring, elitist, poorly presented and out of touch. Out of touch? That Pendulum remix of the ABC News theme was a hit with all the hip club kids!



 We're a trendy drum and bass band, and this, is the 7 o’clock news.


According to Rupert Murdoch (never a good start to a sentence), public media is just doing TOO well. Nothing more legitimate than Murdoch logic! Public media does have more… decent challenges to face, such as a demand to provide quality, be relevant, engage with the democratic process and be informative and independent. That’s a much stricter to-do list than my usual ‘paint nails, write blog post, feed guinea pig’.

It gets complex. For instance, the ABC – which is being funded by the government – is also responsible for being the watchdog of the government. Don’t sweat it though, this is a good thing! The ABC should be disliked by the government and sit above them so they can’t be ‘held for ransom’. I found it intriguing that the government was is against the ABC, and yet can’t do much about it because it’s held in ‘common’ by the people. Up with people!

ABC journalists are briefed to avoid political bias, and it’s important to remember not everything you’re told is true; Jeremy Paxman of the UK took it one step further, asking, “Why is this lying bastard lying to me?”

And as I struggle to wittily conclude this blog post, I pose a question for you: would you rather watch the ‘Gay-BC’, or countless ads for steam mops?

10.4.12

Kurt you be any more amazing?



As April 5 marked the anniversary of the death of Kurt Cobain, perhaps one of the most influential grunge musicians of all time, I decided to do a spot of research on the talented heartthrob icon that, considering I list as one of my favourite artists, I know surprisingly little about.

Lead singer and guitarist of Nirvana, his life was cut short at just 27, although the circumstances of his death are debated and intriguing. While most supposed fans can barely list the band’s discography past “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, Nirvana released three studio albums in its brief time, with drummer Dave Grohl going on to join the post-grunge band, Foo Fighters.

Cobain was a talented wrestler in junior high school, but hated it. He would allow himself to be pinned to irritate his father; similarly, after his father signed him up to a baseball team, he would intentionally strike out.

Cobain translated his personal experiences very literally to his song writing. Arguments with his partner of the time, Tracy Marander, influenced the creation of “About A Girl”. After meeting and before dating Tobi Vail, Cobain constructed the lyric, “Love you so much it makes me sick,” in the song “Aneurysm”, as his infatuation for her and his anxiety regarding it caused him to vomit. Now that’s creative.

Images of Cobain with wife Courtney Love are well circulated, although their love story is not. For months, Love attempted to pursue Cobain but his determination to remain single prompted him to cancel dates and ignore her. By 1991, the couple had become closer, also bonding through drug use (probably not the best role models, but hey, the guy was a pure talent).

Love commented on Cobain’s first attempt at suicide. Prior to overdosing on champagne and Rohypnol, he had been admitted to a Roman hospital after diagnosis of bronchitis and severe laryngitis.

Following his admittance to a detox program is Los Angeles, he was visited by friends and showed no negative tendencies or suicidal mindset. He simply left the facility by climbing over the fence, and flew back to Seattle, being spotted in various locations.

An electrician discovered Cobain’s body on April 8, 1994, an estimated 3 days after he died. The electrician initially thought Cobain was just sleeping until he saw a gun pointing at his chin, and tests revealed a high concentration of heroin and traces of diazepam in Cobain’s body.

A public vigil saw 7000 mourners attending, on April 10, 1994. I wasn’t even born yet.

While there may be controversy about his death, his impact on the grunge scene is not debated. He featured in the 2006 list of “100 Greatest Metal Singers of All Time” by Hit Parader, as well as in MTV’s “22 Greatest Voices in Music”, among other awards.

While my pitiful contribution to his legacy involves forcing friends to listen to Nirvana’s music and reblogging Cobain’s portrait on Tumblr, I hope that he won’t be forgotten any time soon. Just as the grunge phase has repeated its 90 heydays in my teen life, maybe twenty years from now it will reemerge, with Cobain leading its rampage once again.



Bad news, everyone!

This week my JOUR1111 lecture covered the Australian media landscape, a terrain taken over by a few big names and operated however they like. It sounds pretty much like the physical Australian landscape too.

9, 7, Ten, GO and Gem are all part of the commercial team that’s bombarding our ears and eyeballs, and they themselves act as the ears and eyeballs for the advertisers. Public media comprises the ABC and SBS, which I like to refer to as the Mum and Dad channels. My mum watches Grand Designs on ABC 90% of her waking hours, and my Dad watches whatever strange programming he can find on SBS.

 I was slightly discomforted to find out that I’m not the customer; I’m just a tool to lure in the advertisers. I’ve been used this whole time, just a piece in their little game… but I’ll let the media head honchos off just this once because they’re doing well in running Simpsons repeats.

The major players utilizing you and me are:
  • News Ltd,
  • Fairfax,
  • APN and
  • Nine Entertainment Co.
 And to a lesser extent:
  • WIN,
  • Southern Cross,
  • 7 West,
  • Ten,
  • Telstra,
  • Optus,
  • Austar and
  • Macquarie.

Pretty much everything we look at, listen to, read and just generally use is owned by one of these companies. These days even your breakfast is probably brought to you by Telstra.

Luckily there are a few controls so that the form of commercial media doesn’t go haywire. Formal state requirements, legal prescription, state oversight and statutory and voluntary measures are taken, and to guarantee the functions of media, an ‘ethical wall’ exists. This public sphere is an area free for comment, debate and public opinion although overall, facts are sacred, as noted by C.P Scott, editor/owner of the Guardian.

* SHOCK HORROR!! *

“Commercial media is corrupt, lacks quality and profit over-rides social responsibility.”

Thank god John McManus, author of Market Driven Journalism (1994) is here to alert us to such an incredibly surprising fact.

The sad truth is that tabloidisation is abundant and it’s hunting down clicks from you. You’ll be dumbed down so you’re easy to please, while you’re receiving less original content. As advertising revenue for broadcast media continues to slide, the quality of the product will also decline.

It seems ironic that although more people nowadays are receiving a better education than a few decades ago (my grandma was subject of juicy gossip amongst her friends for going to university), the media we’re being fed is drivel.

Professor Farnsworth hit the nail on the head when he said he didn’t want to live on this planet anymore.

9.4.12

Being creepy.



It may have taken me 14 hours of burger selling and a nail-biting seven day wait, but finally my new love interest arrived – my grey suede creepers. While these dandy kicks adhere to my affair with grunge, they serve another crucial purpose – they make 160cm me taller. I’m almost brave enough to wear them to uni. Although they don’t break the most important rule (“Don’t wear heels to uni, you’ll look stupid” [established by my sister and several friends]), they’re just that little bit out there. I’m sure where ‘there’ is, but it’s intimidating.