Auburn Falls

Loss, love and connection

Featured in

  • Published 20241105
  • ISBN: 978-1-923213-01-2
  • Extent: 196 pp
  • Paperback, ebook, PDF

Trigger warning: loss of a child, discussion of miscarriages

This piece was written with the permission of my sister and mother, though neither wants to read it. Our grief flows through us, always. Any errors are mine. I need to let my family and community members and other First Nations peoples know: please do not read if you are struggling with loss or are unable to read about those who’ve passed. With love and respect, Lee.

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

If you are an educator or student wishing to access content for study purposes please contact us at griffithreview@griffith.edu.au

Share article

About the author

Lisa Fuller

Lisa Fuller is an award-­winning Murri writer living on Ngunnawal and Ngambri lands (Canberra). She’s a lecturer in Indigenous Studies at the University of...

More from this edition

Moon man

Poetry After Elizabeth Venn He circles the room five times, refusing to believe he’s resistible. I tell myself I won’t tilt  for his stained skin, his predictable footwork.  I’m...

Up for debate

In ConversationDebate emphasises different ideals. You are forced to argue for positions you don’t believe and, regardless of your stance, you learn always to consider the opposing perspective. That is quite literal: after preparing your case, you turn to a different sheet and write the four best arguments for the other side or mark up your argument for its flaws and inconsistencies. Paper and pen. That is countercultural at a time when we expect a tight nexus between speech and identity, and I think there is something to be gained from such role-­play.

Adventures in the apocalyptic style

Non-fictionIt's easy to laugh at preppers, dismissing their ideas in the process. It’s also easy to adopt the prepper worldview wholesale, and make fun of everyone else – all those sheeple – for not seeing what a mess we’re really in. It’s harder, but ultimately more productive, to see prepping as a complex, contradictory response to the multiple crises the world is facing. Prepping is more than just a freakshow, although it is that. And prepping is more than a useful instructional manual, although it is that, too. Neither wholly reasonable nor wholly ridiculous, prepping culture is a vivid and alarming reflection of a contemporary Anglophone culture that exists in a state of perma-­crisis and can find only simple answers to wicked problems.

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.