Excerpt for No One Told Us It Would Be Like This by Wesley Gleeson, available in its entirety at Smashwords

No One Told Us It Would Be Like This


A Collection of Writing by


Wesley Gleeson


One dollar from every sale of this title will be donated to www.beyondblue.org.au the national depression initiative.


Published in paperback and e-book by English St Press

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First published by English Street Press, January 2011


English Street Press

PO Box 7025

Wagga Wagga NSW 2650


http://englishst.com


Copyright © 2011 Wesley Gleeson.


All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage or retrieval system without permission in writing from the publisher.


Cover photograph - Arthur's Pass, New Zealand. Wesley Gleeson


National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry


Author: Gleeson, Wesley.

Title: No one told us it would be like this : a collection of writing by Wesley Gleeson / Wesley Gleeson.

Edition: 1st ed.

ISBN: 9780987065209 (pbk.) 9780987065216  (e-book)

Subjects: Duncum, W. A. Wesley, Charles, 1707-1788. Mental illness. Christianity. Australia--Social life and customs.

Dewey Number: A828.4

Preface


I gave myself a vague challenge to publish my first book before I turned 30. As I stare down the milestone with steely determination, or perhaps some great inevitability, I have bitten the proverbial bullet. I’ve regularly put the project off, deciding for one reason or another that it lacked merit. I wanted to make some sort of meaningful contribution, a ground-breaking tome which would be consulted as a master-text for years to come. The eternal problem was, what subject to base my text on.


I confess to being a master of no trade, and although I am an enthusiast of many worthy topics and pursuits, I have not the knowledge, nor the insights to produce my required grand opus. There is time yet.


Alas, I present a more humble collection. I will not guarantee the quality of the contents of this publication. What follows is a collection of my writing: good, bad and ugly. The very ugly, and there are volumes, has been tucked away, hopefully never to be seen again, but what is here is a representation of 15 or so years of writing in various forms (sorry for the cussing, Mum!).


If you are reading this, and you are not me, then I sincerely hope that you will excuse my self-indulgence and that you enjoy my small collection. If I know you, and you are not mentioned anywhere in this collection, it’s not necessarily because I don’t like you.


Since the middle of 2005, I have been, along with approximately four million Australians, living with depression. These five years have often been dark and challenging, not only for me, but also for my family. Most of the work that follows was composed during this period of my life, and therefore many of the themes seem quite morbid and dark. I cannot, and will not apologise for this, it is a chapter in my life that I’ve done my best to hide in reality, but not here.


This stage of my life has seen many great changes. When diagnosed, I was training for Christian ministry and have at many times felt betrayed by my church. I have lost faith in the idea of church, and cling tentatively, yet desperately to faith in God.


I’m sure I’ve come across to people who have met and worked with me during this time as a little distant and unengaging, a little inconsistent and rarely sociable; at least this is how I have felt. Holding on to any enthusiasm and passion in the workplace for longer than a month or two has been almost impossible and shared hobbies and social interaction has been virtually non-existent.


The ‘revolutionary’ social networking tool Twitter has allowed me to build up some electronic friendships without the awkward expectations of being reliable and cheerful necessary for face-to-face relationships, while being addictive enough to ensure that I do communicate with those who I am not related to! A heartfelt thanks to my persistent ‘followers’! I promise, I have tried to use proper grammar and spelling at all times...


To the love of my life, my wife, Susie, I am deeply indebted. She loves me, and although I don't think she always understands me or what is going on, she shows patience and generosity well beyond what I deserve. I honestly can't believe she still talks to me!


I do look forward to being healthy again, to riding my bike, to spending Saturday afternoons with a bunch of smelly blokes on a cricket pitch, to caring about how the garden looks, and how I look for that matter. I look forward to being a better husband, son, brother, uncle and perhaps, one day, father. I look forward to being able to properly recognise the beauty in myself and in others and to appreciate and use the gifts I have more enjoyably.


Wesley Gleeson

October, 2010

Part 1: The Shorter Form

Unconscious


So much to do

So much to say

Life yet begun

Innocence yet undone


Expectations exceeding

Life, boy, is for succeeding

Unborn brain could explode

Under this overload


So much to do

So much to say

Bright lights of birth

the noise, it all hurts



Unconscious Reprise


So much to do

So much to say

No time to spend

but bills still to pay


So much to do

So much to say

You’re too long retired

to get your arse fired


Expectations always exceeding

life – your wounds are still bleeding

common brains would explode

under all the load

BANG


So much to do

So much to say

What was it worth?

1915


Tell Mum I won't be home for Christmas

Whatever happens, it won't take long

Troop ship is out tomorrow

We're finally off to see the world


We are setting up camp somewhere in Egypt

Start off friendly fighting between our ranks

I'll bring you back part of the pyramids

& I'll skim a stone across the Nile


Been told to prepare for battle

Sea landing, Turkey, Palestine?

I'm not feeling the best, don't tell Mum

The market girls gave me something to remember


There was fire in the hills

Movement to my left and right

Jack didn't make it off the boat

Tell Mum I'm alive, some cuts that's all


The light in our eyes was extinguished that day

No one told us it would be like this

Love and hate forged in bloody sacrifice

I'm coming home


They’re pulling us off Gallipoli

Four bloody months and we’ve barely made an inch

Reassigned to fight on the Western Front

Not back to the promised land.


I don't know what we are fighting for

Not for the motherland

But bonded each to the other

We plunge into no-mans-land


Born Corowa, 1898

Killed in action, Pozieres, 1916

Lest We Forget

Lest... We... Forget...

Quiet Streets


We went to war in 1915

She was barely a girl back then

She was baptised on ANZAC Day

As troops died at Gallipoli

40,000 Australians died

As she started the fight of her life

In the quiet streets of Granville


He worked a dropforge

Moved metal in industrial Clyde

He rode his bike for hours to work

But he had on his mind

Spending some time

With a girl from Membrey St

In the quiet streets of Granville


They starved through the depression

His family lived in a cave

But soon enough they were married

And moved to Leylands Parade

They started their small family

& served the Methodist Church


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