I am PRETTTYYYY pretty brave.
When planes hit turbulence, I don’t look at the cabin crew for reassurance. I’m an advocate for the catch-and-release of hand-sized huntsman spiders. And I regularly eat avocado in spite of its high fat content.
I’m a bit of a badass, really… that’s what people* have said in the past.
(*It’s me. I am people. I said that in the past.)
On an entirely unrelated note, I’m now gripped by fear each night when the sun goes down.
I’m not a toddler. Or a werewolf. I haven’t had traumatic experiences and this isn’t an irrational phobia I’ve carried all my life.
My newfound fear of the dark is COMPLETELY RATIONAL. And it started four days ago.
This is the part where I should be telling you I'm a young woman who felt vulnerable four days ago because I was walking past drunken men on a dimly lit city street at 2am and they tried to grab me and no one saw.
I should be telling you that. Because that would make sense. The would be a legitimate experience kick-starting a fear of darkness.
But I'm not telling you that. Instead I'm telling you I'm male. I'm 19. And I'm not scared of the dark because I was grabbed or abducted or leered at.
I'm scared because I've started listening to crime podcasts and there are bad people out there and when it's dark I can't see them.
Meshel Laurie speaks with Emily Webb about her research into Australia's chilling dark past: from missing persons and strange deaths, to the woman who cooked her husbands head in a pot. Post continues after audio...