About Fiona

I'm a freelance writer based in Melbourne, Australia.

AQUARENA, INDOOR SWIMMING POOL

Watching swimming lessons as though underwater fully clothed in a large chamber of blue. An oppressive, audio soup that defies concentration, the mind sinks in steamy air strewn with hypnotic blue and white flickering. Splashes, children shouting, teachers shouting, parents shouting, crying, squealing. It’s a warm, sloppy, sleepy place intended for the undressed. Which is why most of the mother’s perched on the long bench seats around the toddler pools resort to child rearing banter, day care fact swapping, and toilet training tips, all higher cognitive function is suppressed, or maybe that’s just motherhood.
The three pools a constant chaos of reflected broken light, stretched with royal blue lane ropes, everything unnatural toned to aqua. There’s a paddle pool, an oblong kids pool about 90cm deep and a 25 metre pool with lap-lanes and ramp access. The huge circular lights above are unneeded today in the ambient yellow of a warm spring day that comes in from three walls of windows. The high roof curves in architecturally metaphoric waves, no doubt intentional.
Outside the 50 metre pool attracts the serious, the lappers, the one piece brigade, caps and aerodynamic goggles. The landscaped lawns are crisping the prickles nicely for summer. The café chairs on the deck lean at half-mast to drain the dew while inside a group of grey haired women occupy five tables for morning tea having aerobised in the pool.
A primary-school tsunami, forty strong surges in, overwhelming anything stationary in its path. Children strip while in constant movement, chattering, comparing costumes and technique, pile their bags and move on like locusts to form rows as though iron filings compelled by unseen forces.
Multicoloured goggles bob up and down on wet round heads, kick boards flick out of the water like frightened fish. Large prams are parked along the narrow edge, mobiles chirp, babies breast-feed or sleep.
“Rainbow arms.”
“Safety entry”
“Kick, kick, kick, that’s it, straight legs.”
“Head down.”
Toddlers and their mums take their first swim lessons, scrambling over floating rubber mats with glowing faces, going ‘shopping’ for floating toys and doing the hokey pokey.
A bored life guard stares into space while around him the confident, physically-fit stride, the overweight waddle, and the gestating move with aching slowness. A group of retired men gossip in the spa, alternating with the stream room, bathers too small for public display.
Bits of rice cracker expand in a puddle by my feet. My head beats to the doff doff doff of a child churning water with their feet.

Aquarena Aquatic and Leisure Centre, 139-153 Williamsons Road Doncaster
61 3 9848 1300
http://www.aquarena.ymca.org.au/home.aspx

Excuses

Well, almost a year has gone by and I haven’t updated this blog. It’s been that sort of year. 2007: the year of health and hospitals. I always thought I would write a lot about my health problems but when it came down to it, it was too close, too hard. But in retrospect I might be able to write something.
In summary, I was diagnosed with the kidney disease, IgA nephropathy in 1997 and over the following ten years my kidney function has slowly deteriorated. In March this year my results showed I was heading into the steep part of the exponential curve that kidney deterioration generally follows and my specialist expected I’d need dialysis before the end of the year, possibly even by June. We lived from month to month after that, watching the numbers go up, down and bounce around. I had a fistula operation in late April that failed because my veins were just too small, and then in June my mother suggested she be tested to see if she could be a donor. By July I was trying to mentally prepare myself for PD dialysis (I’d attended information sessions at the hospital and at the home dialysis service) or a transplant not knowing which would come first. Then in August it was confirmed that my Mum was a suitable donor and the operation was arranged. Six weeks ago we both underwent our operations at the Royal Melbourne Private Hospital and the transplant was successful. Everything is going extremely well. After ten years of wondering and certainly six months of preparing, I skipped needing dialysis completely. I have a new kidney, a renewed energy and a new perspective. So much for excuses, I hereby promise to post more.

Introductions

Welcome to fionamackrell.com.
This site will look like its going through one of those make-over shows over the next few weeks as I try to get a handle on how to make the best use of my blog in an over blogged world.
I am the mum of a three year old, a wife, a student, a freelance writer and muse. I live in Melbourne, Australia and my burning ambition is to finish the novel I’ve been writing and make it something worth reading and publishing.
On this site I will show some of my work from very short stories to novel extracts and feature articles, as well as rabbit on from time to time on the oddities of modern living, ethics, politics and economics that catch my attention. As a keen cook and aspirant travel writer I will also share reviews and comments. I hope if you stumble in here you’ll find something to enjoy, giggle at or feel moved by and that it will inspire you to visit again.