Friday, January 6, 2012

Reasons to be writing - Part 1

I think I have bloggers' block or at least chronic lack of originality. The only ideas I've had have in the past couple of weeks have already been comprehensively covered by someone else. One, influenced by the unveiling of the newly cleaned Central Station clock tower, was to be about clocks on public buildings. David Marr wrote on this subject in his article Their Number's Up in the Sydney Morning Herald on 2 January particularly looking at stopped clocks and their effect on those who may rely on them.


The other was  to be about the ludicrous way menstruation is treated by advertisers. However two highly enjoyable blogs I found while surfing the crimson topic on the net, Ayshfi and Southern Belle Feminist, already have good, comprehensive posts about menstruation - I recommend them. Gruen Planet (nee Transfer) has had lots of good stuff on absurd adverts for 'sanitary products', as tampons and pads are euphemistically known, and I'm sure will revisit the topic if only for some gorgeous Jane Caro eye rolling or withering looks to use in the promos.



I did find lots of  great imagery and links to funny videos on the 'net, including, on YouTube, a clip from  that wonderful episode of Red Dwarf when Kryten enjoins Kochanski to Have a Fantastic Period.

The 'angle' I had intended to take on the subject was the love/hate attitude society's have had, and still have, to this aspect of  'womanliness', assigning to menstruating women  magical powers or judging them unclean and not fit to worship or take part in other social activities. What got me thinking about the subject this time was a friend posting on Facebook a link to a Sydney Morning Herald article Drag Queen Tampon Ad is 'Transphobic'  about outrage at a  Libra tampon commercial that contrasts the 'manufactured' femininity of a drag queen/ tranny with the 'real' article, a tampon wielding young woman! I suppose it turns penis envy on its head but I think we did that while ago, didn't we?


Of course menstruation does preoccupy most women quite regularly  and ironically, contraception, while liberating us from serial pregnancies has condemned us to a lifetime of more periods than all our foresisters! The folklore and superstition around periods just goes on evolving, in India in some sects women wear a red neckerchief when they're having a period and in the 1990s western women were encouraged to wear all white outfits or swimsuits and frolic around a lot! At school in the 1970s an 'educational' booklet (published by Tampax I think) was distributed that told us (seriously) to avoid washing our hair when we were menstruating! Any way the fact I have now filled 3 paragraphs about how I'm not going to write about menstruation shows what an all but inexhaustible subject it is (to me at any rate).

All creative writing classes though, remind us to 'write what you know'. So maybe if I want to avoid being derivative or gazumped I should stick to writing about stuff  that is unique to me and my world. In which case watch this space for:
  1. My precocious acting brilliance as manifested in my accurate impressions of a cat and Cliff Richard at childhood birthday parties.
  2. Visiting service centres on the M6 motorway in the 1960s and why I associate them with chicken manure.
  3. Developments in Sydney suburban retail in the 1970s and 80s with a particular focus on commercial cake types available in Caringbah, Pru Acton and Pot-O-Gloss cosmetics and cheese shops run by Christians/sporting legends.
  4. Footwear & underwear - the sensible vs  fashionable dilemma - my own lived tragi-farce.
  5. Why although Charlie Chaplin and Pablo Picasso are acknowledged geniuses and creatively (including genetically) prolific I don't actually like very much of their work.
  6. People I wish had been my father, or at least an uncle, including Eric Morecombe, Michael Gambon and Peter Sallis.
  7. Where are they now? Ursula Andress, George Lazenby, Clive Robertson, Jimmy Carter and Muffin the Mule.
  8. My own experiences of pareidolia* contrasted with those of Pooh and Christopher Robin and examples offered for sale on eBay.
  9. My answer to Dr John Clarke's best seller, 'Working with Monsters' which is about psycopaths in organisations, 'Working with Saddos' a history of working with peculiar people in the public sector.
  10. The collected doggerel verse and song parodies of my family over 5 decades including 'The Lagamorph School Song', 'The Lovely Dog/Schöner Hund Song' and 'The Essex Carol' (that sounds only a bit like the theme music from Softly, Softly') - they're really very good, truly!
*seeing faces in things