I Was Born in a Morgue

Born Into Death

I am repost­ing this sto­ry from 2008

 

This is the sto­ry of my birth and how I felt as a child. I feel it will give read­ers an idea of who I am and where I came from…..Well yeah .. a morgue…

 

I have over 350 new read­ers sub­scribed since I first post­ed this sto­ry and while it is buried in my archives I thought I would dust it all off for you to read and get a bit of insight of the per­son behind my blogs.

It is rather a mam­moth read.. but as with all my work.. it may be long but nev­er bor­ing. I hope you enjoy this sto­ry.. of how I came to be

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Post­ing.

After being asked by an edi­tor today about my unusu­al birth in a morgue, I decid­ed to revist “Tales of An adoptee” and rewrite it and pub­lish it on Orato.com
the sto­ry which is avail­able in full at the fol­low­ing link.
Born in a Morgue

Valentine’s Day 1966, the day Dec­i­mal cur­ren­cy was intro­duced to Aus­tralia dawned a love­ly day for me. Far in the out­back of NSW on the banks of the Mac­quar­ie riv­er at Dub­bo, I was con­ceived in cir­cum­stances that vary depend­ing on which par­tic­i­pat­ing par­ent one is speak­ing to at the time.

My moth­er was young and sin­gle, strong-willed and curi­ous. My father was also young with a wild and rest­less Irish streak, and togeth­er, the com­bi­na­tion did not bode well for me.

Del­la was the only daugh­ter of the six off­spring of Grand Mas­ter Mason, Ambrose Angus and the fact that his daugh­ter pre­sent­ed her­self to him preg­nant and sin­gle caused him much con­ster­na­tion.

I don’t know whether the deci­sions he made on behalf of his fam­i­ly at the time ever came back to haunt him as they did me; I nev­er met him to ask him why. Strange as it sounds, the man that had the most pro­found effect on my life and upbring­ing nev­er set eyes on me.

My grand­fa­ther soon sent his sons away to work in Queens­land for a year or so and set about hid­ing my moth­er from soci­ety when he found out about my exis­tence. It would not have been too dif­fi­cult to hide her as the fam­i­ly lived in a coun­try town and with­out the lads at the house bring­ing vis­i­tors he was able to iso­late my moth­er suc­cess­ful­ly.

As my moth­er grew in size, so did the lies and deceit, cul­mi­nat­ing with my grand­fa­ther tak­ing my moth­er down to the cap­i­tal city to await my birth. The last thing my moth­er remem­bers is walk­ing off leav­ing my grand­fa­ther sob­bing behind on a bus stop seat hold­ing his head in his hands.

I often won­der what was going through his head at the time. Was he think­ing of the shame I had bought upon his good mason­ic fam­i­ly? Was he sob­bing for the lost smiles and laugh­ter, was he sob­bing for my mother’s lost inno­cence?

 

Did he miss his “Gypsy’s” child at all…ever?

My moth­er was tak­en to a sin­gle mother’s home and made to work hard dur­ing the preg­nan­cy, scrub­bing floors and being told dai­ly by nuns what a sin it was to be sin­gle and preg­nant. Not an hour past where she would not be told how evil she was. The young women were fed food not fit for a dog and were dressed in rags. They ere con­tin­u­al­ly stood over and told how sin­ful they were and that God had for­sak­en them and they now belonged to the dev­il for sin­ning. They were hit, whipped and treat­ed appalling­ly.

Med­ical aid to them was scant, they were just cow breed­ers for oth­er child­less Chris­t­ian fam­i­lies. My moth­er was con­tin­u­al­ly told I was born into evil and the least she could do was to pass me to a good kind Chris­t­ian fam­i­ly to raise and hope that her sins would not wash off to me.

Time past and so did my time in the womb, and my moth­er went into labour with me. She was not allowed any pain relief and had no help or assis­tance and when the time came for my birth she was whipped down to the morgue and cov­ered by a sheet. The sin­gle moth­ers were kept away from the oth­er mar­ried mother’s they were sin they were shame and they wern’t allowed to con­t­a­m­i­nate the labour wards or the oth­er moth­ers. So they were tak­en down to the mogue for deliv­ery, where they could scream from lack of med­ica­tion and prop­er care with no one to hear them but the dead.

So sur­round­ed by death, where oth­ers die, I was born just after 4 a.m. on the 21st of Novem­ber 1966 and whisked away from my moth­er with­out her ever touch­ing me. She nev­er held me or stroked my baby soft skin. She nev­er nuz­zled me and nev­er told me how beau­ti­ful I was or how loved and want­ed I was.

The chance for me to search out and find the nour­ish­ment I so des­per­ate­ly need­ed was robbed from me in an instant, nev­er to be replaced.

21st of Novem­ber 1966 was a spe­cial day, the cusp of fire and water in the year of the only mutat­able Chi­nese sign, The Fire Water Horse. The fire water horse com­bi­na­tion is the rarest in the Chi­nese Zodi­ac and only hap­pens once every 60 years. A scor­pi­on no less, with enough of Sagit­tar­i­an fire in my tail to nev­er stag­nate.

My moth­er is a black Scot. A throw­back if you like to the times of Black invaders rap­ing and pil­lag­ing through the high­lands of Scot­land and the isles. She is a direct descend of Olaf The Black, King Of Man (isle of Man) and of the Torquil Macleod Linage. They say my great, great, great grand­fa­ther was heir to the Macleods of Ras­say and Lewis and that he sold his lands and immi­grat­ed to Aus­tralia hun­dreds of years ago.

My father was an Irish Rogue, Syd­ney Leo or as his name trans­lates, “the fire in the heart of the ser­pent”. He was short with typ­i­cal red hair and green Irish Eyes. He once told me that his grand­moth­er was kid­napped as a child in Ire­land, for what rea­son I nev­er did find out.

So here was me, a tiny bun­dle of sev­en pounds nine ounces, with brown hair and brown eyes, a true mix­ture of both my par­ents. I looked like them, I cried for them…I need­ed them, but they nev­er came.

Del­la was tak­en to an iso­lat­ed room where she had nuns and work­ers with her 24 hours a day.

She was not giv­en any med­ica­tion and noth­ing to dry up her milk sup­ply, Every­time a baby cried she would pour milk down her front, milk that could have nour­ished me was washed away and wast­ed.

The nuns con­tin­u­al­ly talked to her, per­suad­ing her to sign the papers to adopt me out. She refused for two days, demand­ing to see me. Stronger tac­tics were used – threats to lock her away in a men­tal insti­tu­tion and worse. After the sec­ond day nurs­es came with papers for her to sign, she was told they were papers to sign for her care in the hos­pi­tal. They were not; they were adop­tion papers.

When she demand­ed again to see me the next day, she was told it was too late and that she had will­ing­ly signed the papers the day before. She was then heav­i­ly med­icat­ed and brain­washed some more before being sent home.

Over the next few months she heard I was in Wol­lon­gong and left home to find me but she was caught by the police and tak­en back and locked away in a men­tal hos­pi­tal. By that time it was too late, the final adop­tion papers had be signed and sealed by the courts.

Mean­while in Wol­lon­gong NSW lived anoth­er fam­i­ly. Frances and Gra­ham. Frances had been sick most of her life and was the moth­er to still­born twins, who were sad­ly born at sev­en months of con­cep­tion in a toi­let.

Short­ly after, in 1963 she fell preg­nant again but unfor­tu­nate­ly in the six­ties not much was known about the rhe­sus fac­tor. Frances had neg­a­tive blood while Gra­ham had pos­i­tive blood, so when their daugh­ter Cather­ine was born on the 31st of July they both near­ly died, moth­er and baby.

Cather­ine had emer­gency blood trans­fu­sions direct­ly into her head and Frances under­went post natal surgery.

Frances was then told she had can­cer of the uterus and would be unable to have anoth­er child ever. She under­went a total hys­terec­to­my and sub­se­quent­ly a dou­ble par­tial mas­tec­to­my. This news and result broke Frances heart, as she had always want­ed and dreamed of a pigeon pair of lit­tle girls to dress up. After much dis­cus­sion they put their names on an adop­tion wait­ing list, co inci­den­tal­ly around the day of my con­cep­tion.

On the 24th of Novem­ber 1966 came the phone call came that changed their life. Three days after my birth, not straight away like most adop­tive par­ents. They were told a lit­tle girl had been born and matched with them both and were asked if they would like to come and col­lect her.

Over the moon, they rushed to Syd­ney and the first glimpse they had of me was a pair of huge hands pok­ing out through a pink bun­ny rug. I was sleep­ing, as usu­al. I was hand­ed to them, still sleep­ing and they filled out more paper­work until final­ly it was time to take me on the long ride home, still sleep­ing. They named me Mar­garet Ruth. ‘Mar­garet’ means pearl and ‘Ruth’ means vision or mir­ror. I was named after the street the adop­tion agency was in, Mar­garet Street……I do not give them any points for orig­i­nal­i­ty.

I arrived home in Wol­lon­gong, to my new home on the slopes of Mt. Keira, still sleep­ing and I was intro­duced to my big sis­ter Cather­ine. It was a time of love, I was now sur­round­ed by the love that I had lost.

For six months I was a noth­ing; I lived in no man’s land. I slept a lot

Mum often tells me of her fear every time the front door­bell went, think­ing it was the agency say­ing she had to give me back. I was nobody’s child until final­ly my birth was reg­is­tered in the next April. I am offi­cial­ly record num­ber 888 of 1967. I final­ly had par­ents and a fam­i­ly to call my own.

I was told from an ear­ly age that I was adopt­ed. I don’t ever remem­ber sit­ting down and being told one day, I just always knew. I know I always remem­bered what it meant to be adopt­ed. I had often over­heard dad’s mum com­ment­ing how they had dis­graced the fam­i­ly by bring­ing me into it with com­ments such as, “You nev­er know what gut­ter she came from.”

 

My new grand­moth­er on my father’s side was always stand­off­ish towards me. I could feel it com­ing from her in waves as I was grow­ing up that I was an extra, unwant­ed intru­sion. My grand­moth­er was a class above the rest as such. She was pres­i­dent of the state rose soci­ety, the state deaf soci­ety and the moth­er union at her church. She was knight­ed by the Queen lat­er in life for her ser­vices to soci­ety. (OAM) Grand­ma was of the firm belief that lit­tle chil­dren should be seen and not heard, in fact she often remind­ed me of that very detail.

It was dif­fer­ent with my mum’s mum – she was a sweet­heart and was anoth­er source of affec­tion for me as a child, which helped me get through some rough times grow­ing up.

Who knows the rea­sons why, but I was one wild child. I was always in trou­ble and I couldn’t under­stand why. Why couldn’t I climb that tree? Why couldn’t I play in that deli­cious look­ing mud pud­dle?

Why did I have to wear these hor­rid frilly dress­es? Why the heck do you dress me in white when you know its going to turn mud col­ored by the end of the day? I loved life and I loved explor­ing. I loved wak­ing up each day to see what nature had to offer.

As I grew I start­ed to under­stand more about what being adopt­ed meant. I start­ed won­der­ing from an ear­ly age just who I was. In some ways it’s a great tool for the imag­i­na­tion, I was a princess, kept hid­den to claim my roy­al­ty when prince charm­ing came to sweep me off my feet back to my king­dom on a shiny white horse.

Well, no knights and no hors­es, as I grew I found I was aller­gic to the crit­ters. I had a mil­lion sce­nar­ios to dream of but no truth. I asked but received no answers. I remem­ber climb­ing onto the roof of my house and wait­ing, just wait­ing for the aliens to come and get me as soon as they real­ized they had dropped me off on the wrong plan­et.

They didn’t come, either they didn’t real­ize or I was the brunt of a huge cos­mic joke.

I start­ed school at five, already sen­si­tive to the dif­fer­ences between me and oth­ers. My best friend looked just like her moth­er but had her dad’s eyes. I went and looked in the mir­ror, who did I look like? I went and searched out my sis­ter who was as usu­al ruf­fled by my appear­ance. I looked at her long and hard, there was dad’s face but mums eyes and dads shape but mum’s hair. Back to the mir­ror, noth­ing, just who was I?

At school things became more dif­fi­cult, I didn’t fit the mould.

I found myself get­ting into trou­ble for all sorts of things, I was just bored with the whole event and announced on the sec­ond day that I wasn’t going back. Imag­ine my dis­plea­sure about being told I had to endure 12 more years of it at least and then there was col­lege to think about. I climbed the figtree that after­noon to pon­der that one. From that day on I count­ed my school­ing days down.

Mum was part of a social set at the school, the typ­i­cal fete knit­ter, cook­ie bak­er and can­teen helper. She belonged. I was the out­cast, the one on the side of the group. I don’t remem­ber being awk­ward but do remem­ber every­one mak­ing it awk­ward for me.

I was “Nigel no friends.” I was the fat kid that said the wrong thing at the wrong time. I was bru­tal­ly honest…I hadn’t been taught tact at that time. One of the oth­er kids mums, Mrs. Walk­er pushed me in the pool once on hol­i­days at a Queens­land resort, so I got out and pushed her in.

No one had said it was ok for her to push me in, but not for me to do it to her. Now just because she had just got­ten all dressed in a love­ly frock and make­up all ready to go out that night doesn’t mean a thing. She did it first.

I spent my child­hood pon­der­ing, many hours spent climb­ing moun­tains, catch­ing tad­poles and adven­tur­ing around the neigh­bor­hood at my leisure. I was always alone, as the oth­er girls want­ed to play mum­mies and dad­dies which I found to be repi­ti­tous­ly bor­ing.

Why play dolls when I knew of a tree that was full of plumb mul­ber­ries and silk­worms to catch to pop into a shoe­box?

I was a read­er and devoured any­thing full of writ­ten words. I cut my teeth on Enid Bly­ton and quick­ly pro­gressed to Aleis­ter Maclean in ear­ly teens.

I was sur­round­ed by a lov­ing fam­i­ly but always felt that some­thing was missing…me. I didn’t real­ly belong here. I belonged some­where else, with some­one who looked like me and thought like me and did things I liked to do.

Dad saved my child­hood and sens­ing the wan­der­lust with­in me, he took me around Aus­tralia trav­el­ing with him as often as he could. Dad was a coach cap­tain and toured the out­back year in and year out. It was noth­ing to him to pull me out of school and take me to Ayers Rock for a few months, or a back state tour of Vic­to­ria and Queens­land.

I loved trav­el­ing with him and the trav­el may have had some­thing to do with the rea­son on why I couldn’t set­tle at school. How could I, when the week before I was shar­ing an aboriginal’s camp fire watch­ing him mak­ing song sticks at Ayers Rock? I was nine when I jour­neyed on that trip and didn’t real­ize at the time of the impact it would have on me.

It was the first time I real­ly remem­ber my eyes being opened to real­i­ty. We arrived at Ayers Rock after trav­el­ing through west­ern Queens­land for a week and pitched our camp. I helped dad with the chores then set off to explore on my own. Trav­el­ing away from the camp I came to the abo­rig­i­nal set­tle­ments. It was amaz­ing, kids with dirty blonde hair and black skin with snot­ty noses and no clothes. WOW….

here was me for years try­ing to rip my clothes off and be free and here was these kids as free as I want­ed to be. I sat down at the camp­fire of one such fam­i­ly. I could sense even way back then of much that was unspo­ken.

The man radi­at­ed strength and pur­pose and yet to what I had been brought up to believe, there was no pur­pose and no strength in liv­ing so poor­ly. His wife had a tat­ty old torn dress on with one ten­nis shoe. She was so proud of that one shoe, she showed it off to me smil­ing and chat­ter­ing in her own lan­guage.

I watched the kids play­ing, so hap­py so free and then I sat at the fire to watch him carve the sticks. He had one eye only but seemed not to miss the oth­er one. We both sat in silence as he carved a set of song sticks, when he was fin­ished he looked up and looked me straight in the eye. Two dol­lars, was all he said and he hand­ed me the sticks. I cau­tious­ly reached out for them…mine?

Wow, it was so spe­cial, I trea­sured those sticks as if they were gold. They were mine, carved for me and me only. The man kept look­ing at me as I hand­ed him the two dol­lar note. He then opened his arm out wide and spread it around the whole area as if to say what you see.

It was unspo­ken, but it was as if he was wel­com­ing me to his home­lands. I felt for once in my life that I wasn’t the extra leg, that this was my time and my place and it was spe­cial there for me.

I smiled at him and nod­ded, still to this day it is as clear as a bell ring­ing. I under­stood him and he under­stood me. He was the first being i ever came across that did under­stand.

We were both out­casts, him and me, both not quite fit­ting the box­es soci­ety had set for it’s peo­ple to be in.

The trip we were on with dad was a book­ing from Girl Guides, Dad was a very pop­u­lar tour oper­a­tor who had kind­ness, good morals and a take charge and do aura. It was a safari, so the camp­site was sprin­kled with the thick heavy can­vas bedouin look­ing tents. I was used to camp­ing in them, by then it was sec­ond nature, the stars were my hol­i­day home.

I would pitch my tent and then go and help the oth­er tour­ers pitch theirs. It was hilar­i­ous at times, some city peo­ple had no clue and would ham­mer furi­ous­ly away at sol­id rock for ages before storm­ing off in frus­tra­tion. Even after I showed them the next time we pitched camp they would still try beat moth­er nature and hit the rock areas with­out fail.

I helped around the camp in exchange for pock­et mon­ey. I was an avid play­ing card col­lec­tor and had bought a deck from every place I vis­it­ed. Of a morn­ing my favorite job which made me feel real­ly big, impor­tant and grown up would be to start dad’s coach up and keep it idling on low revs to warm the airbag sus­pen­sion up.

Dad pret­ty much let me do what I want­ed, he trust­ed me by then and I would wan­der every­where we went and explore by myself.

I wan­dered in and out of dif­fer­ent places and scenes at will and sucked up every­thing I saw and expe­ri­enced like a vac­u­um. To watch the sun­rise over dev­ils mar­bles with not a per­son in site on a crisp clear win­ter morn­ing in the desert was the ulti­mate expe­ri­ence, I felt so alive and so hap­py and free.

The Girl Guide leader on the rock trip would often try and make me stand at atten­tion and fol­low the group around but I found it all hor­rid­ly con­strain­ing. Don’t touch this don’t touch that, line up here, no way. Dad told her to leave me be after I had com­plained to him in a foot stamp­ing huff.

The day every­one was to climb the rock dawned a tad over­cast. It wasn’t rain­ing but there was no blue sky vis­i­ble. The leader, Pam, sat every­one down and had the morn­ing lec­ture. Because it wasn’t sun­ny she wasn’t going to let any­one climb the rock all the way, every­one had to stop at the end of the sec­ond chain and come back down. She looked straight at me, “and that includes you”.

I was cranky and went to see dad, noth­ing I can do about it, was his reply to me. She had com­plained about safe­ty and that was that. I wan­dered off and found mum and my a friend I had on the trip. They could tell I was cranky so kept silent as we walked to the foot of Ayers Rock. It was a long and steep climb. The begin­ning sec­tion has chains run­ning down the mid­dle to pull your­self up on.

In no time I had passed every­one else includ­ing the rather large Pam and I kept on climb­ing.

Final­ly I reached the top of the sec­ond chain and sat down to enjoy the view. Wow to this day noth­ing has come close to the feel­ing expe­ri­enced up there. Here was this rock, and I knew from my lessons that two thirds of it was still under­ground. It was in the mid­dle of the flat flat desert and in the dis­tance, 18 kilo­me­tres away sat the Olga’s, a small­er for­ma­tions of egg like rocks that i could see in the dis­tance on the plain.

I grinned to myself and got up from sit­ting down. With­out a back­ward glance I kept climb­ing, up and up. By now the chains had stopped and turned into white lines paint­ed on the rock to fol­low. I knew not to ven­ture away from them, many a per­son had made that fatal mis­take and were now remem­bered by a sim­ple gold­en inscribed plague at the foot of the rock. It didn’t seem long before I was at the very top, I looked around the full cir­cle, I felt like I was at the top of the world. Just me and nature and what she had cre­at­ed, but why?

The cre­ation of the rock intrigued me, why was it there, just popped up smack in the mid­dle of Aus­tralia? There was noth­ing around it, not even a hill or ridge, not count­ing the anthill mounds sprin­kling the desert scrub land­scape. I sat and took my sur­round­ings in for a while, but realised I had to race back down. I skipped back down the path to the top of the sec­ond chain.

Mum was sit­ting there all red-faced and tired.

She laughed when I told her that I had gone to the top; she had expect­ed that and appar­ent­ly when every­one met up at the sec­ond chain Pam had gone off her rock­er to find me miss­ing.

I didn’t care – what­ev­er pun­ish­ment I got for dis­obey­ing was well worth the expe­ri­ence. I helped mum down and we were the last ones back. The Coach was run­ning and dad winked at me as I got on silent­ly. Mum and I sat down and Pam start­ed.

She ground­ed me, I nev­er knew you could be ground­ed on hol­i­days but she did and then came time to hand out the cer­tifi­cates of the day’s achieve­ments. The cer­tifi­cates were gen­uine “Ayers Rock” with options under.

I came saw and….

1, I Climbed Ayers Rock
2, I Climbed Three Quar­ters of Ayers Rock,
3, I Climbed One Half of Ayers Rock
4, I Climbed a quar­ter of Ayers Rock
5, I Saw Ayers Rock

All the cer­tifi­cates were passed out with ticks vary­ing from three quar­ters and half down to a quar­ter and I saw. Final­ly she came to mine and called my name, I accept­ed my cer­tifi­cate and glanced down at it.

I climbed Ayers rock, it said, all signed, wit­nessed and stamped. The only one on the tour. I grinned to myself as I returned to my seat, nobody and noth­ing could ever take that away. It was an expe­ri­ence that I often drew on lat­er in life.

mayet

Author:

Mirror Mirror on the wall, Who is the Faerest of us all? The Truth are we in the skies you see, The Balance of Fire And Water is Elektricity.

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