Published in Overland Issue · Teaser Singing us home Beth Spencer In a kitchen three of us sit sharing tea and talking about dislocation how hard we find it to feel really here, to feel we belong. Each of us an unplanned baby. (An accident, or a surprise if you’re being nice.) Never felt that sense of unequivocal right-to-be, to take up space. Margaret (from Aotearoa) says in Maori culture a child is sung in, called into being by her family. We sit in silence pondering this. She pours more tea and tells us about her grandmother saying one day in exasperation ‘You will never feel at home until you understand this – Tūrangawaewae. ‘My home is where I stand.’ A soft breeze enters and lifts the hairs on my arms. Suddenly the room is filled with the most beautiful singing like whale sounds as Margaret sings us in. We sit there tears streaming down our faces and come home. Beth Spencer Beth Spencer has a new verse memoir, Vagabondage, published by UWA Press. Previous books are Things in a Glass Box (poetry) and How to Conceive of a Girl (fiction). A bilingual selected poems, called The Party of Life, will be published in 2015 by ASM/Flying Islands. More by Beth Spencer › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays