Archive for January, 2010

Do You Work?

January 29, 2010

Oh, the cliche.  A stay-at-home-mom gets asked that question.

Today, at the bank drive-through:

teller:  Hello, welcome to Blahblahblah Bank.

me:  Hi, I’d just like to cash this check, and I need a pen, please.

teller:  Do you work?

awkward, prolonged silence

me: Excuse me?

teller: Do you work.  Are you e m p l o y e d.  (clearly and loudly, as if suddenly I was non-English-speaking and hearing-impaired)

me (lasers shooting from my eyes):  No.

teller: Oh.  Well, that’s OK.  That’s fine, I just . . . if you worked . . . there is a Work Perks program . . . and I would send it to you . . .  and rewards . . . and . . . if . . . but you don’t . . . so . . .

me (exposing canines):  grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrowl.

She didn’t even send a fucking sucker in the tube.

 

I will save you the bitchy yeah-I-too-was-once-a teller-when-i-was-EIGHTEEN-and-I’d-take-that-stupid-job-again-any-day rant.  After the growling, I smiled and am now completely “over it.”  I guess I was a little sensitive to the at-home mama stigma today.  Just before the bank, a fellow RN-turned-SAHM and I had been waxing nostalgic about our old jobs in which we used to make life and death decisions.  And exercise our actual brain cells.  And get lots of money for it.

But then there was this,

TAF_1542

. . . and of the brain-cell using full-time working mamas of young kids, I thought:  suckers.

“STOP!  THIS FRIVOLOUS!  NONSENSE!”

This is how it began, my mild obsession with those two words, hearing them shouted in a strained voice by Mrs. Blue.  Actually, she did not shout.  Ever.  It was more of a slight and painful elevation of her perpetually monotone speaking voice.  Those of you who remember her, who were also students in her English class, or who knew her as my ex-boyfriend’s mother, know exactly what I’m talking about.  (You also know that she has a different last name, but I’m trying to be somewhat coy here, people.)

The poor woman.  She was probably trying to inspire us with Shakespeare or Camus or Emerson or Thoreau, forgoodnesssake.  What kind of numbskulls could remain uninspired by such genius?  A bunch of stupid teenagers, that’s who.  I was passing a note, someone was making pretend obscene noises, and someone else was farting for real, and she snapped.  God!  I would have, too!  Except my f-word would not have been “frivolous.”  Hers was. 

“Stop this frivolous nonsense!” she cried said.  Oh, the poor dear.  It really pains me now to think about it.  I feel guilty, of course.  But mostly, I feel, as I felt then, pity.  I remember the silence that fell over the room.  I remember thinking, I hope I am never ever as miserable as that woman.  I also remember thinking, what the heck does “frivolous” mean?

 friv-o-lous [friv-uh-l uh s] : –adjective 1.  characterized by lack of seriousness or sense: frivolous conduct.  2. self-indulgently carefree; unconcerned about or lacking any serious purpose.  3. (of a person) given to trifling or undue levity: a frivolous, empty-headed person. 4. of little or no weight, worth, or importance; not worthy of serious notice: a frivolous suggestion.

So I looked it up, and decided that frivolous actually was important.  I decided that if I did not include plenty of frivolity in my life, I’d end up as miserable as Mrs. Blue (who, by the way, made the most delicious rhubarb pie, was the first person to really encourage my writing, and was a genuinely beautiful person beneath all that monotone).

I fight with that conclusion, with my love affair with all things frivolous.  I talk to myself when it comes up (which is often).  Why are you crocheting a doily?   Because it is fun.  But you have more serious things to do.  True Art is serious and important and has a capital A.  But, look!  It’s turquoise!  It is still a fucking doily.  What if we call it a mandala?  Because it goes in circles?  Loser.  Stop this frivolous nonsense.

And, so, aha!  There you have it.  There is this young bratty kid inside me that comes to poke around when big important philosophical intellectual spiritual Artiste is around.  And she’s like, wheee!  Let’s do something pointless.  And so sometimes, I do.  I don’t know if it is the wrong thing to do, an evil distraction from some grand vision.  But I simply cannot take myself so seriously when there is this inner wild child bouncing around, begging for frivolous nonsense.

And so I honor that inner brat by making this frivolous print my first etsy listing.  Also, it is yours if you contributed to this frivolity.

Wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! 

wildx

nevermind

January 26, 2010

well

whatever

nevermind

(Nirvana)

tri-x in mamiya tlr

tri-x in mamiya tlr on a foggy day in November

I think I promised something in that last post.  Well, whatever, nevermind.  I meant the next one.

I shot several frames of play equipment on this roll of film.  Looking at all of them made me think about how much fun kids have going around and around and up and down and back and forth . . . and that they’re OK doing the same thing emotionally. 

That’s all.

frivolous nonsense the first

January 24, 2010

 I’ve just crocheted a fucking doily.

TAF_1532x

A doily!  If that fact does not inspire you to conclude that there is something  s e r i o u s l y  wrong with me, then I’m sorry, but there is something  s e r i o u s l y  wrong with you.  And, I mean, I didn’t even do it well.  But here is the worst part.  Oh, I don’t even know if I can say it.  Here I go.  Letting it out.  Confessing . . .

I liked it.

OHMYGOD !!!  The shock and horror.  I, too, am gasping aloud.  It is just shameful.  I am ashamed. 

In my next post, I am going to try to desperately salvage my honor from the bottom of this stinking pile of shame.  I’m going to tell you the story of “frivolous nonsense.”  Perhaps, then, you will understand my compulsive desire to frequently do nonsensical things.  Perhaps, then, you will forgive me.

But since we are on the subject of frivolous nonsense, check this out.  Have you heard of formspring?  Pretty please ask me a question.  It will be fun, in a frivolous-nonsensical way.  Maybe.

Also, I am going to start replying to comments via email.  “That’s all I have to say about that.”  (Not in a big-dramatic-I-can’t-say-anything-dot-dot-dot sort of way, but in a I-really-just-have-nothing-else-to-say-regarding-that-subject sort of . . . way.)

Also, I did not forget about you brave warriors who contributed to that failure of a New Year’s story we tried to write.  I’ve finally decided what I’m going to send you and I’ll show you with the next post.  But I need your addresses!

Happy Monday, or Happy Last Few Hours of Sunday, whichever applies.

(ohandbythewayiamgoingtostarttakingclientsagainandalsoimopeninganetsystorebutillgettothatlaterokbye)

Moving On?

January 22, 2010

I’m just sayin’.

It could be summer now, if it wanted to be.

I’d be O.K. with that.

img456x

holga tri-x early fall '09

boo (as in boo-hoo)

January 20, 2010

Have I told you that my family has abandoned me?  My mom, dad, grandma, aunt, uncle, brother, and sister all moved to Arizona over the course of a few years.  Julie found a mister there, and now my little nephew and niece have both betrayed me by being born Arizonians.

Julie and this gorgeous yiddo beebee came for a little visit this past weekend.  It was wonderful, but then, go figure, they left.  Look at these pictures and tell me I should be OK with how very far away they live.

TAF_1499x

layla

Yeah.  I didn’t think so.

It kills me.

 

img767x

 

 

 from my moleskine today:

{yes. there are dishes and there is laundry and there is the floor, which Karen Maezen would suggest attending to attentively.  and zen . . . . . “meditation” according to the man in orange robes is “doing what needs to be done joyfully mindfully etcetera” but it always seems like this is the thing that “needs” to be done and so then what is the other stuff?}

just some crayons in the mud

January 18, 2010
dude.  my last few posts have been wordy.
workin’ on some stuff this week.
that’s all.
crayonsx

plus-x film scan, mamiya 645af

can’t sleep

January 15, 2010

 

I woke up the morning of the 2004 Tsunami in the Indian Ocean having dreamt about it as it was happening.

I sat up in bed, processing the strange dream.  In my limited international knowledge, I was perplexed by the image of the dark-skinned Asian people that lingered in my dream-memory.  Were there even dark-skinned Asian people?  I honestly wondered if my imagination had made that up.  (I now cringe, of course, at my ignorance.)

The dream:  Hercules and I were on a rocky cliff overlooking the ocean.  We climbed down the dark brown rocks and met a group of teen-aged boys who were hanging out in a sort of cove.  He was introducing me to them, some of his lively high school students, he said.  Suddenly one shouted something I couldn’t understand, and pointed out at the ocean.  I looked, and noticed the subtle swelling of water approaching the beach in waves.  Each one began to appear larger than the last, and I felt dizzy.  The boys started panicking.  We turned to the land, where we saw the water was rising rapidly, and we all took off running. 

We followed them up the beach, and into a maze of white buildings and courtyards.  People everywhere were running from the water that was pouring onto the beach.  The waves were growing in the distance, and soon, the water began crashing at the foot of the buildings.  The current was strong, and people were losing their footing.  We ran to a tall white hotel building with large open windows and balconies.  Up was our only option.  “To the sixth floor!” I shouted.  The stairwell was congested, and once or twice, we ran into an open room to watch what was happening outside.  Everything was chaos and water and fear, and I simply could not comprehend it.

It was not at all the first time I had had a disaster dream.  I used to dream of tornadoes and war quite often.  But this was different, vivid.  I was shaken as I began the lazy, post-Christmas day, but soon I blamed the dream on my pregnancy hormones (Mowgli) and let it go.  Later, Hercules was watching TV in the living room, and he mentioned something about a tidal wave.  I thought of an old Nintendo surfing game, and pictured one monstrous, white-capped wave.  I was not terribly interested in the news, but I sat next to him on the couch and watched. 

There was water everywhere, and tall white buildings, and dark-skinned people, and chaos.  I did not even know what the word “tsunami” meant.  I did not even know which continent I was looking at.  But it was as if my dream had been recorded, and was playing a continual loop on CNN. 

At first, I didn’t cry.  I was only shocked and terrified by the incredible connection; it was like seeing a unicorn walking down the street.  I gasped and stared in disbelief, my hands over my mouth, my skin pricking with waves of chill.  I tried to talk sense into myself, to find ways that this was all a silly coincidence, but I coudn’t.  Somehow, a part of me had been there.  And that was my body floating in the water, and that was me screaming for my dead child, and that was me homeless and injured and sick and alone.

Whatever it is, scientific or spiritual or mental or coincidental, there is a connection between us all.  Not once since that dream have I doubted that.  Forgotten, maybe, but never doubted.

I’ve tried really hard to remain ignorant about the recent Haiti disaster.  I don’t watch TV or read the newspaper.  I don’t read the news online, and have been purposely avoiding the blogs about Haiti.  I donated my $10, and felt appropriately ineffective.  But then, dammit, I looked at some pictures.  I watched one news story.  I looked at more pictures.  And it is as I had tried to deny: there are mothers and fathers and sons and daughters there, experiencing devastation upon devastation upon devastation.  And I can hardly bear it.  I can’t stop crying.

I can’t reverse it, Mother Nature’s betrayal.  I can’t lift the rubble.  I can’t scoop up a few orphaned babies and just take them home with me.  (Why is that not an option?  Are there not millions of warm, empty beds in this country?)  I can’t even give that dad in the picture—the one who had just discovered his 10-month-old in a sea of dead bodies—a hug.  And it overwhelms me.  What can I do?

Tonight, I felt my sleeping Mowgli’s heart drumming against his chest for a long moment.  I held Dimples during a night terror, then walked him back to bed.  I rubbed Kiki’s back, who was up too late and overtired.  I snuggled with Shortcake when she woke up crying, and smelled the top of her head with each inhale.  I thought about connection.

I am overwhelmed.

 

friend + baby, film neg scan

friend + baby, film neg scan

I should let you know straight out that I’m going to talk about tarot cards.

And that this post, once again, contains tube socks.

Are you still with me?

Heh . . . lo?

So this drawing / painting / sketch /whateverthehellyoucallit was supposed to be about patience.  I was thinking about natural intuition, reception—patiently waiting for that small, directive voice in the stillness.  I was deep breathing and feeling all openness and attentiveness and patiennnnnce-ommmmmm.  But then her hair got out of control, and before I knew it, it was all wildness.  And then her face took on an impatient scowl.  And then the restful, crossed arms became tense and ready to burst.

And I saw, not patience, but impatience.  More than a simple restlessness, I saw a woman attempting to restrain herself, trying desperately—and almost sorrowfully—to keep her wildness under wraps, betrayed by her crazy hair. 

 

img748x

watercolor, arches hot press paper

It perplexed me, as those frequently-occurring paradoxes do.  (I!  AM!  ALL!  PARADOX!  It isn’t just me, is it?  Aren’t we all?)  And, to further complicate things (I just said that two blogs ago), my feelings regarding this paradox itself are split.  It is the eight of swords vs. the red shoes.

Are you still with me?

Heh . . . lo?

Journey with me, if you will, into my soul.  Oh, come on, it’ll be fun!  Does this restlessness-emerging-from-patience-piece point to this or that?

The eight of swords.  (this)

Tarot cards are, despite what you might think, not about fortune-telling, but about inner journey.  I am a visual person (obviously?), and the images on the cards can really assist me in finding psychological, philosophical, and spiritual clarity.  They mirror aspects of nature and of soul, which, perhaps, are one and the same anyway.

I first saw the card years ago, when Dimples was a baby, and I was in the depths of some Postpartum Depression / darkness / soulcraft-ish descent.  My cousin Amy and I would play with tarot cards, then she would babysit as I went crying to my therapist.  The eight of swords came up in a reading for me, and I considered the image: a blindfolded woman, arms loosely bound behind her back, standing in the center of eight swords (go figure!) that had been thrust into the ground around her like a cage. 

Yes!  I thought.  This is me!  Bound and constrained by motherhood and culture and circumstance, unable to fulfill my potential!  But when we studied the card further, we realized that the woman was not so terribly constrained.  She could easily escape the “cage,” and could free her hands and eyes with little effort.  Instead of relief, I felt offended.  If I were not a victim of my circumstances, if I could simply remove my blindfold and carry on . . .  Well, that was quite a lot of responsibility.  “Victim” was so much easier.

So “this” is one thought that came as I considered the drawing.  Have I given myself a new mental straight jacket?  Is there something inside me (some creativity, project, wildness) that is screaming to get out, and am I holding it back for some unnecessary and imaginary purpose?

–OR–

The red shoes.  (that)

To further encourage the eye-rolling of my most cynical readers, I will now, once again, allude to a story in the book Women Who Run With The Wolves.

Heh . . . lo?

The tale of the red shoes is, in short, about a resourceful little peasant girl who fashions for herself a  pair of red shoes.  One day, a rich old civilized lady takes the girl to live with her, gives her new clothes and shoes, and burns her old things.  The old red shoes had been so special to the little girl, that she tricks the old woman into buying her a new pair of (scandalous!) red shoes.  The girl becomes obsessed with these new shoes, and even when she has had a taste of their power (they magically cause her feet to dance, taking control), she craves them.  In the end, the shoes take over, dancing wildly and threatening, essentially, to kill her with exhaustion.  She is unable to remove them, and so, desperate, she asks a woodsman to chop off her feet.

The author (Clarissa Pinkola Estes) compares the little girl to a feral woman—originally and naturally wild (handmade red peasant shoes), but confined like a depressed animal at the zoo (shoes/wildness burned, child civilized).  Sighting the new red shoes is similar to when that caged animal (or woman!) snaps, remembering that bit of wildness that remains within.  But instead of having the knowledge or opportunity to reincorporate the natural way of being, she latches desperately onto anything wild-ish, even at the risk of losing complete control.  The girl dancing like a lunatic in pretty red shoes, the snarling tiger who suddenly turns and attacks the loyal zookeeper, the well-behaved mother who suddenly loses her mind, or becomes addicted to something dangerous, or abandons her family for the cruise ship attendant. 

I mean, not that I have a cruise planned anytime soon.  But you know what I mean.  (Do you know what I mean?)

And so in this light, restraint can be a good, natural, healthy thing.  It can be having the patience to ignore the flashy red shoes and holding out for what you intuitively know to be your thAng, or just hanging on to your old handmade shoes in the first place.  And so is it “that” that I’m seeing here?  Sort of an alert patience?

–OR–

None of the above, it was just a millimeter of a stray brushstroke on her eyes, or the espresso. 

 

(Now all of this passed through my conscious thoughts in approximately 15 seconds—-Eight of swords?  The red shoes?  Espresso?—-but it took, like a billion hours to write.  It would be so much easier if you could just understand my thought processes next time.  Thank you.)