And wait. I'm rooting for America.
Tuesday, November 03, 2020
Monday, November 02, 2020
Sunday, November 01, 2020
The October Rains
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Very old school.
We had little damage but no power still after 16 hours. Looks like I may actually have clean out that fridge for real. A little old school for me is fine.
The day (and tomorrow) was blessed with his incessant energy.
I love this table. The perfect play place. Jim made several from scraps from solid wood doors. Some kind of composite that weighs a ton.
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
Tuesday, October 27, 2020
October Rain
I slept all of four hours last night. That dinner time coffee was a mistake.
Saturday, October 24, 2020
All told
There's nothing left untouched. These are outside drying. I wish I'd discovered them sooner, but who wants a warm wrap in June? There are ten.
A storm is coming. I'll get these inside but the threads will just rinse in the rain.
The last round of threads - fifty or sixty?- I lost count. All the dye is used up.
What next?
ps. I went out and grabbed up a few from the work table fearing they were going to a muddy blur. Not this time. ❤
Friday, October 23, 2020
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
A sea change
the River basket and tools will be in the closet for a while. My left thumb is acting the fool and I'm right-handed. Keyboarding is slow, pens are no problem
It feels like I've been herding rabbits with rabies. Every time I turn around, there are more of them, all sweaty and wild-eyed. The real problem--I didn't know where I was leading them.
The first book, a romance, never gave me this kind of trouble because every good romance must have a Happily Ever After. Readers demand it. Prophets Tango delivers.
This time, the story is not primarily a romance and I haven't been able to see from here to the imaginary there. The story didn't know what it was living for. Until yesterday.
After spending hours with acres of notes, I stared at the spiral of scenes, then into the void. Who owns that little voice inside my head? I didn't recognize it.
Came the voice, "How does it end?"
The question immediately reminded me of some lines from my favorite movie, "Shakespeare in Love". (Yes, Will could have had me for a scrap of paper with his ink on it.)
Lord Wessex: "How is this to end?"
Queen Elizabeth: "As stories must when love's denied. With tears and a journey."
There will be tears and a journey, but I have no intention of denying love anything it wants.
Thursday, October 15, 2020
A birthday
Celebrated in a private, solitary way. At first, I thought I'd just ignore it, but then I thought about those who didn't get this little personal milestone, another year in this beautiful life.
And so, I acknowledged it with something new and different and something old and strong.
Went ahead with my decision to take the Firmament apart.
As I looked for places to cut, I found this. A little digging in the archives revealed when and why I stopped hanging stars in the sky. I'll be happy to take them out of history and into another story.
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Spangled
There is a lot of history in this piece. I'll dig around for the original posts. Without research, nothing much is going on. Until you get close. What I intended as stars have come to life.
For all their swarming, something else has to happen with this piece. There are scissors in the future.Saturday, October 10, 2020
The Bruised Heart
Wednesday, October 07, 2020
And pearls
Sunday, October 04, 2020
the ragged shift
The change of seasons -- not much more than a dip in night temperatures here--has tripped me up this year. I feel like I've been in a maze that constantly dead-ends. Not frustrated because railing at being lost is a waste of energy. It's just that I'm on low battery.
I used to drive around with a friend who would get very agitated about being lost. I said, "We are somewhere between the Hudson River and the Atlantic Ocean. Relax." About now, I wish for a map. A paper one that crinkles and folds and has coffee stains. Maybe some red ball-point routes marked out.
It's more than enough to deal with the real. Weeds.
Finding out that the gardenia still had few things to say about summer despite being overwhelmed by a pushy vine that I allowed to take over because I've been neglectful.
It's teaching my co-pirate the insanity and majesty of language perhaps a little early. Teaching him that not all games are blood sports and how nobody wants to play with a sore loser. He's taken to jotting down Good words. High dollar words, even as I explain about positioning and strategy. Yesterday we agreed to do away with the running tally of who's winning. Word by word, we will build stories rather than empires.
We will save learning poker for later.
It's fishing around in the closet for one UFO and finding a flock of them, all reminding me of the UFO of words nipping at my dreams, sulking in the corners of my imagination. Hiding.
Their shit (and mine) as scattered as these stars.
And speaking of stars.
Throughout this national turmoil, I have refrained from standing on a chair and screaming vile curses to the four winds because this face reminds me what a gorgeous, stalwart thing Karma is.
In truth, our Karma rarely gave us the time of day she was so self-contained in her feline beauty. But this face, this look she gave me one day.
Karma will always have her due.
Tuesday, September 29, 2020
the Bruised Heart
I wasn't going to start a new piece so soon. But I just needed something to hold. Something else to focus on. Think about. Something to have a little control over.
The stitching has been effortless. It's as if the thread and cloth don't dare challenge me.
Sunday, September 27, 2020
Passing
One moment we are here, the next we are where? Snipped from this life, I like to think, to the place and in the company of our heart's desires. Refreshing in the recall of the sweetest moments of our time here. Then, in whatever time it takes to be renewed, move on to begin again.
As Jude put it so well, somehow I knew the moment she remarked on Michelle's absence from the internet.
RBG's passing hit her very hard at a time when her reserves of hope and strength were low and falling.
Michelle and I often chatted via web late into the night, while I worked and she dealt with the kind of sleeplessness that comes of long afternoon naps- one of the few remaining good things on Facebook.
A few years older than myself, we both attended the School of Visual Arts in the mid and late 60s, only blocks from where she lived. We had a cultural commonality few virtual friends can claim. Times and places shared.
It's a comfort to know she'd been to her spiritual font, her Zendo, if only virtually, in the days before she passed.
Rest, dear one. Renew, then fly on.