Hello friends and fiends,
Today in the Madhouse, I'm sitting down and chatting with one of the most lovely people I've met to date: Lee Murray. Lee is a fellow horror writer and RDSP author, and every time I've had the pleasure to be in her company, I find myself forever smiling and simply being in a state of awe because of her talent, strength, and warmth. As such, I wanted to reach out to her today--from Pittsburgh, PA to New Zealand--to see how she was doing and to chat about how her writing habits and her relationship to art has changed due to the state of the world.
As always, Lee met my request with light, love, honesty, and grace, and I hope you find her essay as touching as I did.
Be safe, take care, and we'll speak more soon.
Stephanie M. Wytovich
Writing From My Bubble
by Lee Murray
In Aotearoa-New Zealand, we called them
bubbles: closed households of two or three people with whom you would protect
the vulnerable and see out the apocalypse. Because my husband had just returned
from a business trip to the US, three Murrays went into lock-down on 17 March,
getting our supermarket stock-up done before the rest of the country followed
suit a little over a week later.
in
lockdown
a
fantail flits
outside
civilians
fired
upon at the border
toilet
paper wars
In those first weeks, social isolation
felt like business as usual, since my husband and I both work from home anyway.
We didn’t need to rush-order new desks, rearrange workspace in a spare room, or
commandeer a corner of the kitchen table. No need to order in another reem of
paper. Our home internet is 900MBits/sec. We were all set. We simply switched our
pre-breakfast gym workouts for longer walks around the neighbourhood with the
dog, jumping up on banks or onto dewy grass verges to keep a suitable social
distance from any others out walking. Most neighbourhoods have a local bush
trail within handy reach, and in a town like Tauranga, there are never too many
people on the trails. In the lockdown, the streets and tracks were almost
deserted. Birds chattered. Lawn mowers hummed.
a
creek
meandering
through
autumn
We certainly weren’t minimising the threat
of the pandemic—New Zealand’s numbers were on the upswing with 256 cases
recorded on the day the lockdown went into place. The economic fall-out would
be brutal, but the lives of New Zealand’s vulnerable were at stake. There was
comfort in knowing that our precious family members were safe in their
respective bubbles. Our government had a plan. Go early and go hard. We
hunkered down and got on with the task of flattening the curve, checking in
daily for live updates from Jacinda and Dr Ashley, who provided Kiwis with
their daily report card. Strangely, in those early days, my anxious-Piglet self
was almost upbeat. We could do this. We simply had to stay the course.
rising
story arc
I’m
wondering
how
it ends
But it’s like Steinbeck said, isn’t it?
“It is not good to
want a thing too much. It sometimes drives the luck away. You must want it just
enough, and you must be very tactful with Gods or the gods.” ― John Steinbeck, The
Pearl
I wanted too much. Perhaps my hubris had angered
Whiro-te-tipua, the lord of darkness, because on May 29, New Zealand recorded
its first death. We had known it would come, and yet inside our bubbles, we
were stunned.
a
city
plague-kissed
—and
quiet
Days passed and more people died. TV
became both torture and distraction. Two billion others watched on, everyone,
everywhere consuming stories. Our vocabulary expanded to include words like
co-morbidity, immune compromised, and hydroxychloroquine. Acronyms like R95,
ICU, and PPE. We studied graphs, Ro ratios, and percentages. We
mastered Zoom, Teams, and Facetime.
under
siege
the
battle raging
my
dog snores
Too numb to write fiction, I resolved to be
productive in other ways; my speaking events and conventions had been
cancelled, so I took on new mentees, read books, wrote blurbs, signed up for a
course, and produced some webinars. Still, I couldn’t write. Nothing solid.
Nothing that worked. Nothing that would stick. There was only the weekly social
media poetry-date with my friend in Wisconsin, where, for the past year, we
have shared our observations and reflections as haiku/senryu. These tiny poems
of less than seventeen syllables have become the backbone of my pandemic
record.
camelias
social distancing
On 4 April, my mother got a call from the
rest home, and for the next week I was immune to the pandemic.
my
father
dying
the
world stills
New Zealand’s compassionate policy during Level
4 lockdown was for one family member visitor per dying non-Covid patient. In strict
quarantine. In full PPE. For a week, my mother, my sister, and I did turn about.
My brothers, living in other towns, were not so lucky. I read Dad the poems
he’d read to me when I was little. The Wreck of the Hesperus. Jabberwock.
Even giggled over some Pam Ayres. I read him a couple of poems of my own,
including the one about our midnight trips to catch eel at Pukehina creek. He
died gently, in his own time. I joked that he could at least tell me where he’d
buried the family treasure before he went. Nothing doing. Dad raised his
eyebrows in a classic Kiwi East Coast wave.
When I wasn’t with him, I wrote daily
updates for the family, doing my best to smooth the edges of words like night
and death.
eggshells,
hearts, and other fragilities
letterbox
tiny
wings struggle
in
a web
Nor was I with Dad when he died on 9
April. On 10 April, I woke up early. Or perhaps I’d barely slept. I pulled the
curtains open and watched a milky sunrise.
dawn
grey
upon grey
a
heron in flight
But I was lucky because Mum joined my
family bubble. I got to hug her, at least. For two days, we sat in the sun,
drank tea, and took phone calls from friends and family. We told stories of
Dad. There was nothing for us to plan; Level 4 health regulations meant all
bodies had to be cremated. There were no funerals. No flowers. No family
groups. No exceptions. Cart me off in a cardboard box, Dad always said.
in
the rushes
a
reed bends
unseen
The pandemic raged on. While Mum knitted
me a jersey, I went back to work, a short commute when you’re a full-time
writer working from home. Over the next few weeks, I replied to mentees, judged
an award, edited a national children’s anthology, rescheduled some local
writing meet-ups, and critiqued some work for colleagues. I read another book. I
won an award which would have made Dad proud; we celebrated with a cup of tea. In
the evenings, we turned off the news and watched the Endeavour series
from start to finish. I cuddled the dog, my son, my darling, my mum. Still the
only writing was the poems. A few words scribbled on scraps of paper. Like
breathing in tiny shallow breaths. Stabs of acute pain, while I wait for the panic
attack to pass. I imagine those same feelings are playing out in ICUs
everywhere.
On April 28, New Zealand loosened its
lockdown restrictions, moving into Alert Level 3 in a cautious contactless
reopening; Mum went home to sleep in her own bed and, I suspect, to start her
grieving.
We’re not special, and I’m not
complaining. Yes, it’s hard to lose a parent in a global pandemic. Yes, it’s
hard to be far from the people you desperately need to hug in times like these.
But it was the right thing to do. Here in New Zealand, our numbers have been
promising—just 2 new cases in the past week, with 96% of all cases recovered. Things
could have been so much worse; they might still be.
a
shoulder
draped
with privilege
her
back freezes
On 13 May, New Zealand moved to Alert
Level 2, which allows for up to ten people to meet with distancing and contact
tracing records. Our precious bubbles are popping, and it scares me. But I saw
my brother and his family yesterday. We had a family lunch. Sushi. Pasta. It
felt almost normal. Today, my daughter and her partner flew home.
I’m not sure when I’ll be able to write
again. For now, it seems the world is changing too fast. Anxious-Piglet-sorts
don’t cope well with change. I’ll try again tomorrow.
the
pestilence followed us
into
space
rampaging
rampant
in
ragged, haggard lungs
We
ejected the dead,
sent
them gentle into the night.
Imagined
the starry fireworks
glimpsed
on far-off porches.
We
saw only darkness.
Bereft,
we drifted on.
Lee Murray
is a multi-award-winning writer and editor of science fiction, fantasy, and
horror (Sir Julius Vogel, Australian Shadows) and a three-time Bram Stoker
Award® nominee. Her works include the Taine McKenna military thrillers (Severed
Press), and supernatural crime-noir series The Path of Ra, co-written with Dan
Rabarts (Raw Dog Screaming Press), as well as several books for children. She
is proud to have edited thirteen speculative works, including award-winning
titles Baby Teeth: Bite Sized Tales of Terror and At the Edge
(with Dan Rabarts), Te Kōrero Ahi Kā (with Grace Bridges and Aaron
Compton) and Hellhole: An Anthology of Subterranean Terror (Adrenaline
Press). She is the co-founder of Young New Zealand Writers, an organisation
providing development and publishing opportunities for New Zealand school
students, co-founder of the Wright-Murray Residency for Speculative Fiction
Writers, and HWA Mentor of the Year for 2019. In February 2020, Lee was made an
Honorary Literary Fellow in the New Zealand Society of Authors Waitangi Day
Honours. Lee lives over the hill from Hobbiton in New Zealand’s sunny Bay of
Plenty where she dreams up stories from her office overlooking a cow paddock.
Read more at www.leemurray.info
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