When my sister Lynn was born, I
loved her as fiercely and profoundly as a two-and-a-half year old was capable
of loving. I cannot remember life
before Lynn; in my earliest memory, I am folding a diaphanous cloth nappy with
my chubby fingers and handing it to my mother, who navigates a safety pin
around Lynn’s kicking legs.
Lynn and I shared tricycles and
tracksuits, picked fussily at the same meals, took turns thumping out ‘Three
Blind Mice’ on our Yamaha piano, and comforted each other if one of us awoke
from a nightmare.
We were a tiny team tethered
together by our hands and hearts. If
our mother smacked one of us, the other wept. When she was five, Lynn was cradling an armful of stuffed
toys when she tumbled down two steps and snapped her humerus. I cried for the whole drive to the
hospital and, on our arrival at Emergency, the nurses were confused as to which
of the wailing children needed medical attention.
When I learned to drive, Lynn was
laughing in the backseat as I manoeuvred my shuddering hatchback emblazoned
with L-plates into a bay in an empty car park. After I passed my driving test, I got Lynn a job at a Chinese
take away place, where we donned grease-stained aprons and squashed honey
chicken into plastic containers.
One summer evening, when crickets
stalked the streets and a sultry breeze meandered through fragrant eucalypts, I
bought Lynn her first gin and tonic.
We swirled the ice in our tumblers as we watched men leering at tanned
girls in billowing maxi-dresses. From
first drinks to first hangovers and boyfriends to breakups, my sister and I
have rubbed each other’s backs, offered tissues, shared tubs of mint choc chip
ice cream and huddled under blankets to watch Love Actually.
When Lynn told our parents she
was gay, I was sitting beside her at our parents’ dining table. Our flustered father spilled a whole
tin of panda-shaped biscuits, leapt wordlessly from his seat and locked himself
in the bathroom.
The church-sanctioned petitions
about marriage laws that land in my inbox, the inflammatory news headlines I
read and the robust dinner party debates about ‘gay rights’ I hear do not change
these two truths in my life: I love Jesus and I love my sister.
I want my sister to be happy like
I want to take my next breath. If
Lynn’s visions for her future include exchanging vows with someone, pushing a
pram, reading Hairy McClarey picture books and volunteering at the school
canteen, then that is what I want for her. In the meantime, our lives remain entangled like dreadlocks
on an old hippie. I laugh when she
recounts giving driving lessons to her girlfriend, who, in return, suppresses
her vegetarian sensibilities to cook lamb for Lynn. They hold hands on Ferris wheels and help each other to assemble
Ikea bed frames. They are too entranced
watching Disney’s Beauty and the Beast together to be (as some may suggest)
threatening the moral fabric of society.
People sometimes seem to think
that being a Christian means I can only love part of my sister:
But I think that God is bigger than our prejudices, fears and misunderstandings.
2 comments:
Beautifully written! I too love my gay sister who has been nothing but a proactive, decent member of society and the best sister in the world.
Love your stories, Tse Chee. We love Lynn all the same. Your story of The Child Bride moves me. Keep on writing. Love, uncle eric from wollongong
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