Steve Hawe

Author

Anne Hawe’s middle name was practical. And she liked simple. When she needed a new skirt, she disappeared into the sewing room. When us boys needed a smack, she whipped off her left scuff. When dad learned to drive a car, she stuck to her push-bike until skull-caps were mandated, then never rode again. In the knife and fork drawer, she kept a ten-ml spanner for the mower blades. If there was no one else, she found a ladder to do the gutters. When hubby had an affair, she stayed for her four boys. Simple.

     When Anne’s mother, brother, and mother-in law fell in a heap, she took ‘em in. When her father-in-law, eldest son and husband took to their deathbeds, she nursed them at home. Simple. When her time came, she booked a pre-paid berth next to the loved ones she’d cared for and outlived. Her only remaining son was tasked with two jobs. #1… Tend the garden (sprinkle her ashes) #2… Scratch his flat head over a suitable epitaph, and post it off to the funeral man. Simple. She even found a way to amend directive #2 from the afterlife. True!! Or so it seemed.    

   Covid was mum’s friend at her farewell. What could be simpler than a dozen mourners sweating it out on plastic seats, sharing hankies across the requisite one-metre gap? Or the fact that the delicate aroma of pink roses in bloom was already a given at the well-grassed vetting pen, Longreach Racecourse? Simpler yet, some weeks later, her ashes came in the mail. Wrapped in a saffron satin satchel, mum commenced to ash-to-ash and gather dust on top of her old piano. I’m sure she was happy. 

Four years on, I packed the urn in the old ute, and headed south of the border, it wasn’t all about mum. Near Gloucester and Kempsey, I caught up with old friends. At Armidale, I took some pics of the houses we rented, not much changed since ’68! At Tamworth, I shifted into first along the Manilla Road, and peered through the trees for sight of the place where my younger brother gassed himself in his Kingswood sedan.  

At Wingham cemetery, I tugged at the drawstring and pried the top off the urn. Nowadays, they’re plastic. Of course. Not that I noticed or cared a hoot. For just then, a biting gust caught and carried aloft a plume of greyish powder, and burned at misty eyes. To think I was last man standing before a simple headstone that celebrated five out of a family of six. Real men don’t carry hankies, not when a sleeve will do. But they do cry. And the best thing when they do? Tend the garden, just like she said. Simple. Then, hit the pub.     

Before I did, I saved the dregs (a good third by any measure) to make another nice grey cloud at the far end of the adjoining property. Sounds wacko, and I’m sure the new occupants of Mum and Dad’s old digs agreed if they stood at the kitchen window. But it was where she loved to walk amongst the grey gums with Max, their pet bully. And smile at her own half-hearted admonishments for the times when he shat and cocked a leg on the tombstones across the road.

Outside Wingham Hotel, Mum’s plastic urn made a hollow ker-lunk at the bottom of an empty wheelie-bin. I’m sure she’d approve, provided it was labelled recycle. The satchel was about to follow, until I felt and heard a papery rustle of something it the depths. With shaking hands, I reached inside for my mother’s second amendment. 

At the bar, I savoured the slow burn of OP rum, and tasted the mid-day bonhomie. The note was simple; six handwritten words in blue biro on a folded scrap of A5. ‘Steve,’ it said ‘… put me anywhere – love, Mum.’ Perhaps she read about the hike at the bowsers before she turned her attention to the daily cryptic. Perhaps she simply changed her mind. Symbolism never did much for her anyway. Whatever. Speculation vanished when the old man beside me tapped me on wrist. ‘Penny f’y thoughts young fella,’ he slurred, staring through rheumy eyes. I scribbled Mum’s epitaph beneath her second amendment, and slid it along the bar to him. ‘Got that part right,’ I said ‘… donchareckon?’.

                       OUR MOTHER, OUR ROCK. A SIMPLE LIFE, SHE SIMPLY CARED.

I reckon I did.

3 responses to “Pragmatism with a dash of ash”

  1. Graham Stokes Avatar
    Graham Stokes

    Hi mate  Well written Mums hold a bit of a special place for sons.I should be heading back to Glenariff in a couple weeks for some Mulga time. Graham 

    Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone

    1. stevehawe Avatar

      Thanks Graeme, you’ll be just in time for summer. Enjoy

  2. purbie Avatar
    purbie

    Hi Steve,

    Thanks for sharing your latest blog with me.

    My parents were both cremated and had a family plot at the local cemetery where many of my father’s relatives were buried.

    I went to the USA after my mother’s death in 2012 to bury the ashes according to their wishes. When I arrived to settle the estate, both of my sisters contested the will, and a long and very expensive lawsuit began. One sister settled out of court, but the other would not give up. She eventually lost her case, but in an act of “revenge” she refused to relinquish the ashes, which I imagine are sitting in their urns on some dusty mantelpiece.

    How are you going? I’m recovering from an operation that was done on Thursday last week to remove a few body parts that were past their “use by” date and causing trouble. I had some severe side effects from the procedure and am on heavy pain killers at the moment. Hope to be right in a few days!

    Cheers,

    Sally

Leave a Reply

Steve Hawe

Image Credit: Håkan Ludwigson‘s ‘Balls and Bulldust’

After a lifetime in the bush, Steve Hawe has worn many hats. Lately ringer, horse-breaker, farrier and fencer, and most importantly father of five (forever!), he and his partner now own grazing country west of Longreach, Qld. It was here at ‘Spring Plains’, amidst the splendour of the arid lands that he was inspired to write. To his great delight, he came to realise an authors’ hat can be any and all of the above!

At 15, on the outskirts of Young, central western NSW, a fresh-faced, skinny (hatless!) kid stopped for a moment to listen for the school hooter. It was 9 am first day back in ‘73. On his knees at ‘Wordsworth’s Strawberries’ he breathed a sigh of relief and smiled. In his mind was the classroom clamour of book-bags on mahogany desks, and a vision of the motor bike he was saving for. Brimming with the opti-cence of youth, he was blissfully unaware of the journey enjoined. Or that his stories would one day be spiced and enriched by the laughter and tears, ‘high-fives’ and train-wrecks of five decades of hard slog in the bush. From a passing parade of workmates, bosses, employees, family and friends; he would amass a precious well of snapshots of personas, wisdoms and events.

He would also learn that hats are earned, and should never be thrown away!

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

Latest News From Steve

  • Pitching to the Cows

    Yes, it’s true. It’s how I’ve been honing (stumbling through) my self-timed 5-minute pitch to then see how ‘Last Train to Menindee’ grabs screen producers… Read more…

  • Pre-orders!

    Hi everyone; family, friends, (and long-time sufferers), Just a short one this time – isn’t it strange when there’s lots happening it’s ‘hi just a… Read more…

  • FUNNY HOW THINGS WORK OUT. Yep, funny. On New Year’s Day, 2026, you promise yourself a one-way ticket (not sure if you’re allowed) mid-year sometime,… Read more…

  • 2025

    Hi, it’s that time of year again, and I don’t mean Christmas. It’s … ‘bout-time-I-blogged-again-time’, just in case my death’s exaggerated. So, lots happened this… Read more…

Discover more from Steve Hawe

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading