Archive for October, 2009

 

For all my talk of darkness and descent, I do so love the Summer.  And I miss it.  One of my absolute favorite summer-things is sidewalk chalk.  We had what was likely our last warm, sunny day of the year a few days ago, and my first impulse was to get out the chalk.  I searched desperately through the garage, but could not find any.  I even searched the neighbors’ lawns.  It was a little reminiscent of that damn silver cord (which I still have not found). 

 
So today, as the year turns toward it’s darker half, the day before I plunge myself into introversion, myth, and archetype, I’m thinking of sidewalk chalk.
Shortcake and her fabulous legs.  A digital shot, from my sister's front patio this summer.
Shortcake and her fabulous legs. A digital shot, from my sister’s front patio this summer.
 

 

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on our sidewalk

addendum

October 28, 2009

…to this post.

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I said, “No, no!  Don’t put your head in the…  wait.  Freeze.  Don’t move.” 

(click)

To Fall…

October 26, 2009

 

tri-x negative scan

tri-x negative scan, Mamiya C330 TLR

How surely gravity’s law,
strong as an ocean current,
takes hold of even the strongest thing
and pulls it toward the heart of the world.
 
Each thing -
each stone, blossom, child -
is held in place.
Only we, in our arrogance,
push out beyond what we belong to
for some empty freedom.
 
If we surrendered
to earth’s intelligence
we could rise up rooted, like trees.
 
Instead we entangle ourselves
in knots of our own making
and struggle, lonely and confused.
 
So, like children, we begin again
to learn from the things,
because they are in God’s heart;
they have never left him.
 
This is what the things can teach us:
to fall,
patiently to trust our heaviness.
Even a bird has to do that
before he can fly.
 
~ Rainer Maria Rilke ~

 

I feel the pull of the seasons, the invitation to the darkness and repose of Winter.  I am gathering my acorns, and feeling naturally melancholy.

I know you feel it, too.  I am reading it on blogs, hearing it in our conversations: talk of Seasonal Affect Disorder, of happy drugs and of happy light boxes.  And I’m there.  I get it.  Or, at least, I’ve been there.

But instead of fighting it, consider this: “to fall, patiently to trust our heaviness.”  I think that too often, we miss this.  We are in high-production mode, and a natural lean toward withdrawal (hey, now.) and silence is not on the agenda.  Or the to-do list.  Or the goal-setting-super-duper-achievement-software.  But what if?  What if we followed nature’s lead, nature’s schedule,  and remembered how to retreat into the silent darkness?  Have you ever wondered what treasures you might find?

 You are not dead yet. It is not too late
to open your depths by plunging into them
and drink in the life
that reveals itself quietly there

~Rainer Maria Rilke

This is me, plunging.  I’ve done it before, and I’ll do it again.  It is cyclical.  Natural, like the rise and fall of the sun, the wax and wane of the moon, the death and rebirth of the year.  I’ve got some things to gestate, some life to drink in, and this time, the darkness does not scare me.  I welcome it.  I mean, as long as there is chocolate available.  At all times.  Preferably dark chocolate (no pun intended).

and coffee.

 

and wine.

p.s.  the Rilke thing.  I’m sorry, but I am so drenched in the fabulousness of these words (thanks, in part, to picking up this book again), that I can’t help but share them here.  One more.  Yum.

 Everything is gestation and then birthing. To let each impression and each embryo of a feeling come to completion, entirely in itself, in the dark, in the unsayable, the unconscious, beyond the reach of one’s own understanding, and with deep humility and patience to wait for the hour when a new clarity is born: this alone is what it means to live as an artist: in understanding as in creating.  ~Rainer Maria Rilke  (from Letters To A Young Poet) 

 

 

 

TGIF and F stands for…

October 23, 2009

 

I tell you, we are here on earth to fart around, and don’t let anybody tell you different.

(Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.)

Is that not one of the best quotes you’ve ever read?  Ooh, I love it.  When it comes to farting around, this kid, this little Mowgli of mine, has got it down.  Here are a few recent digital shots of him doing  just that.  I hope it inspires a weekend of farting around for you.

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DSC_0710x

digital

 

This last shot was from a corn maze (or as Crumpet says, a “maize maze,” har har) this past weekend.  I love how he is off the ground in this one.  I had a hard time, though, releasing the shutter at all because a) Hercules was yelling “no running!”; and b) I could not help but think of fellow film photographer Suzanne Revy.  (Click here to see her iconic-to-me photo blogged.)

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Poppy and Shortcake are the best of buddies.

 

Walk with me, Suzy Lee
through the park and by the tree
. . .

I can tell that we are going to be friends

I can tell that we are going to be friends

-The White Stripes

(covered nicely by Jack Johnson)

 

My parents—NeeNee and Poppy—are here, visiting from Arizona, for the week.   They are old and weak fragile, and need constant supervision, so I’m a little too busy to be blogging right now.

Just kidding.  My mom is training for a marathon here, despite the frost (her nemesis) on the ground while she runs, and my dad has essentially taken over all the childcare of Shortcake.  Plus, they are cooking and cleaning and paying for things.  Yeah.  It’s tough.

 

 

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I snuck this snapshot inside an incredible, still, sitting room in the convent just off the main corridor. The subtle light and energy here was sublime, and the room was filled with Madonna statuettes.

 

Pay attention. Attention is love. And love without attention is just a word.

~Karen Maezen Miller

 

Despite my little problem with overconfidence (ha!), I find that I am wildly, hatefully, pathetically envious of posts in which the blogger brags about the fabulous person that she met and you didn’t, and just obviously wants to rub it in that she went to some fabulous retreat and you didn’t, or that she’s friends now with all the super-awesome and fabulous women in the world and you’re not, and blah blah blah Squam, and blah blah blah soul sister, and blah blah blah i miss you, and blah blah blah bleahhh…

So, if you are as immature as I am, you might want to look away.  (Unless, of course, you travel and dine and enjoy child-free-dom and befriend super-cool chicks frequently, then stay, and we will pity one another.)

No, really look away now.

Before I tell you about my weekend.

On Friday, Thelma (that’s me!) and Louise, each of us RNs-turned-stay-at-home mothers to four young children, got to sit in a car together for a total of more than nine hours.  By ourselves.  Without children.  With incredible (uninterrupted!) conversation.  Not once did I think of the radio.  But several times, I thought, soul sister.

Do you know what?  I warned you.

Then we checked into a hotel, strolled the streets of downtown Rochester, MN, and dined at a lovely Italian restaurant.  (You know the bread scene in Ratatouille?  When she listens in ecstasy to the crispy bread crust?  It was like that, the bread.  I had to suppress an outburst of “Oh, sweet symphony…”)  We played with tarot cards on hotel beds and laughed and cried and pumped (yep) and slept (!) without kids to wake us.

I love Louise.

On Saturday, I met a woman who is part Tinkerbell, part Yoda, part my Aunt Jeannine, and completely wonderful.  She led the retreat, the “Mother’s Autumn Plunge.”  She is Karen, though I feel tentatively compelled to call her Maezen, her ordained Buddhist name.  She is a mother, a Buddhist priest, and the author of Momma Zen: Walking the Crooked Path of Motherhood, and the blog Cheerio Road. 

Not only did I get to soak in her wisdom, watch her animated movements, and hear her boisterous laughter, I got to hug her.  (Shoot.  I’m gushing.)

One thing that Maezen said early in the day was an apologetic something like “you already know all this.”  And it’s true.  everything she said, every exercise she led us in, was not information; it was a reminder.  A day of refreshing, beautiful, deep remembering: breath, attention, forgiveness, connection, trust, beauty, love.  It was affirming, enlightening, magical, empowering, and practical.  But my favorite part was just sharing her space.  Her most effective way of teaching was just being.  It was impossible to miss the authentic, beautiful, joyful energy that just oozed out of her.

Thelma and Louise made it home eventually, and loved all over those eight children, but I can’t help but think that the missed exits and detours were subconsciously motivated.

exhale.

Just Like Artax

October 13, 2009

I’m so damn tired.

And I’m so damn tired of being so damn tired.  (Is that a country song?) 

I’m also so damn tired of complaining about being so damn tired.

So instead of a complaint, let met tell you the funny thing Shortcake did today at 1:30 AM.  I had tried for the bajillionth time to put her down in her crib.  She lay there whimpering for a few moments, then stopped.  “I’m crying.”  She informed me.  Like, hello!

This afternoon, I used the tried and true drive-around-so-they-fall-asleep strategy.  It was not so true to me today:  Fail.  The ink bottles and the brushes and the little jar of water and the clipboard and the hot press watercolor paper all stared at me with puppy dog eyes from the passenger seat.  I tried to ignore them. 

I made up a haiku, and recited it out loud:

Forest of rainbows

White car with purple headlights

I am so tired

 

The kids did not at all enjoy it.  They told me to go home and make them chocolate chip cookies.  And so I did.

 Thanks for noticing me,

Eeyore Terri

 

p.s. I have written a braggy post all about my fabulous weekend, but I am much too deep in the Swamps of Sadness today for that.  And if Atreyu had saved Artax, he never would’ve met Falcor.  And if you don’t know what I’m talking about, you’re like Gmork.

 

Is Terri. . . O. K.?

October 8, 2009

“Is Terri. . .  O. K.?”

Hercules was asked this the other day, by a very concerned someone who recently read a few recent blog entries.  I’m assuming he meant, more specifically, ”Is Terri. . .

. . .mentally ill?”

. . .attending anger management classes?”

. . .having a pre-midlife crisis?”

. . .doing drugs?”

. . .leaving you for a woman that she met on the internet?”

 So:

Dear concerned someone:

I am doing very well, actually.  Thank you for asking.  To tell you the truth, I have never felt happier.  If, in fact, I am mentally ill; or if someone is secretly baking something into my brownies; or if this is midlife (does that mean I will be dying at 64?); then so be it.  I like it this way.

Love,

Terri

p.s. Speaking of crazy, this is the moment, the sparkly beads moving around with the Lucky Duckies, that made me snap last week.  I videotaped it, said “whoa… trippy, dude,” and planned on sharing the experience here.  But, I could not find the silver cord that connects the video camera to the computer, and spent like 900 hours obsessing over finding it. 

Ob.  Freakin.  Sessing.

And then I got over it, especially when I realized it was less Lucy-In-The-Sky-With-Diamonds, than it was Baby-Einstein-Mozart.

Imagine moving and sparkling (and quacking):

p.p.s.  i just don't DO digital color.  Somebody please give me a photoshop action.  Or take away my DSLR.
p.p.s. i just don’t DO digital color. Somebody please give me a photoshop action. Or just take away my DSLR.

one decade post impact

October 5, 2009

 Why didn’t any woman tell me?  Why didn’t they tell me it would be like a fuckin’ bomb exploding?  Why didn’t anyone tell me the truth?  (Fiona Place)

tri-x negative scan, Mamiya 645 af.  My friend and her son.  If I remember correctly, Mowgli had just hit his friend before this capture.
tri-x negative scan, Mamiya 645 af. My hottie friend and her son (Mowgli’s buddy). If I remember correctly, he was upset because Mowgli had punched him or something. . . 

It’s like this: The bird that smacks into your living room window.

Or like this: Frannie and the screen door. . .

There was wine, there was food, there were all of our collective children chasing and laughing and playing.  The adults were sitting at the patio table, discussing politics or religion.  Frannie ran by at full speed, likely wearing a superhero cape or something.  And, at full speed, she slammed into the screen door.  It acted like a trampoline–Boing!–and sent her flying backward onto the brick patio.  Splat!

I have never tried so hard to hide a laugh. 

I failed, and it came out of my nose, but not before I spun around to hide my face.  It was shameful, this scene.  Eight or so grown adults—parents!—all folded in on themselves, red-faced and suffocating, horrified at our involuntary response to this poor child’s misfortune.  She was fine.  She was fine!  And her mother attended to her immediately.  She lay there for a moment, then slowly sat up.  And just like a cartoon character, she shook her head (I imagined circling birdies), took a deep breath, stood, and moved on.  This time, she opened the screen door.

It was two or three years ago, and to this day, I still laugh every time I remember it.  It was ridiculous, like slapstick. 

This is the moment I thought of when recently, feeling all a-whole-decade-ago nostalgic, I was trying to process what it felt like to first become a mother.  Full speed into the trampoline-like screen door is what.  Run-boing-splat!  I never saw it coming.  And by it, I mean everything.  All of it.  

Childbirth.  Child!  Birth!  The incredible life force that overcomes a laboring woman’s body, dragging and steamrolling it far beyond comprehensible pain.  The emotional extremes of motherhood: knowing true elation and joy and fulfillment, but also heartache, helplessness, and terror.  The sleep deprivation (I am writing this at 1:30 AM with Shortcake on my lap).  The loss of identity.  The absolute upheaval of routines and priorities and …everything.  The cliches came bustling to life, and I slammed into their screen, at full speed. 

For a long time, I lay flat on my proverbial back, bewildered and, quite frankly, pissed.  I don’t actually want to be doing this.  This is not how I had imagined it.  None of this was even planned. 

How schizophrenic is it, then, to say that I accept it?  Welcome it?  Am truly grateful for the experience of being knocked down?

I’ve been feeling, lately, that the birdies that were circling my head are fading.  And I think that maybe, I can stand up.  This time, though, I’m gonna open the fucking screen door.

p.s.  you are singing that tubthumpers song now, aren’t you?

on this harvest moon

October 4, 2009

Mowgli and I drew this together the other day.  I had no clue that he was copying me, and when I asked what he had drawn, he looked at me like I had betrayed him.  He pointed at his page, then mine, then his,. . .  “Of course!”  I said,  “I see the curve now!  And the spirals!”

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So, this is posted as the Harvest Moon rises.  In college, my friend Carmela taught me to play the first three cords of Neil Young’s “Harvest Moon” on the guitar.  I’ve since forgotten how, but I think of it every year.  It is a good night to watch this video–and, look!  There’s a close-up of the riff!  I will practice tonight on Kiki’s guitar.

P.S.  I want to be a rock star.