Posts Tagged ‘Louise’

wisconZEN

July 23, 2010

See what I did there?  That was me, attempting to be clever.  I have tried this a few times, this wisconZEN joke, and nobody has laughed.  Nobody has acknowledged it, even.  So, you know.  If someone could please just take note of it?  Even, like, with a roll of the eyes?  That would be great.  Thank you.

 Now, listen, you Wisconsinites.  And even you Minnesotans and Illinoisians (how do you way that?  Illini?)  I want you to drop everything and get thee to YogAsylum in Brookfield on Saturday, August 21st from 2-4 pm.  Karen Maezen Miller is going to be there (seeshe said so herself.), and this is a woman that you do not want to miss encountering.  Believe me.  She is a Buddhist priest, mother, author of the books Hand Wash Cold and Momma Zen, and the blog Cheerio Road.  If you have read either, you are likely dying to find the link to register for the program.  Well, breathe, for goodness’ sake.  Then click HERE!  HERE IT IS!  (scroll to the bottom, click on the link below “Extraordinary Ordinary.”)  Send me an email if you have questions.

Why in the world is she coming here?  Because we asked.  That’s why.

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mosaic

June 16, 2010

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This is worth pondering. Does nature in her wisdom intentionally produce nonconformists, or find a use for them, enlisting their disparate talents in her service. Is there a place for everybody, a reason for everything, and we fail to understand some underlying cosmic logic?

Do acts that appear the most senseless to us have a rationale that we fail to appreciate? Are what we consider errors and mistakes really part of the grand design? How encompassing and integrated is the mosaic of life? Just how big and complex is this world that we define so freely and understand so poorly?

The Queen Must Die, And Other Affairs of Bees and Man – William Longgood

(thanks for the words, Lisa, and for the model, Julie!)

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This past weekend, Louise and I went to investigate the theory that online people are actually real people.  On a whim.  To . . . Kansas.

from deb's polaroid camera when we said goodbye at the airport.
from deb’s polaroid camera when we said goodbye at the airport.

It turns out—get this—they are!  Real people, that is.  Real-person Deb invited us into her home for the weekend, without agenda, without purpose (oh shit!  I can do things for no reason!).  Just . . . for fun.  She caffeinated us and fed us and entertained us and photographed us (oh shit!  i have a face!) and even let us borrow her super-cute real-person husband as, oh, you know, our own personal pilot (oh shit!  i can choose to fly!).  Just . . . for fun.  Real-person Aimee met us on Saturday and helped us drink a bottle of wine and splurge on a few items of over-priced clothing at Anthropologie (oh, shit!  i can buy an apple shirt! because who does not want a shirt with apples all over it?).  Just for . . . well, you get the idea.

holga fisheye, amy + me

aimee + me, holga fisheye

 It was a weekend full of frivolous nonsense.  It was not rational in the least.  And it was absolutely wonderful.

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me + deb + rock music

It was incredible to spend time with all of these three women, so full of vitality and wisdom and beauty.  One thing that struck me about them was the connection they have to their own power.  It is not an I-have-something-to-prove sort of thing, but a certain inner knowing and acceptance and manifestation of their own unique gifts.  I am so inspired by them all, by their power and joy and authenticity and the bravery to challenge the concepts of “easy” and “safe” in order to live their own fabulous truths.  Lately, I’ve been remembering:  (oh, shit!)  I am a real person with my own real talents and my own real choices and my own real place in the story.  There is the balance between 1., knowing  that you are enough, that “all you had to do was be born,” and 2., being connected to that truth and purpose that you were born with, and living.  It’s all about the mojo, y’awl.  (Oh shit!  That mojo is powerful, though.  So watch out, when it hits you.)

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julie (louise) + me (thelma) + deb (superstar)

 AND P.S., HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!  (please do sing.)

 

i could not color

between the lines, so i burned

the damn col’ring book

 
Louise the third and her ever-present bikini.  (digital)

Louise the fourth and her ever-present bikini. it was like, below zero, i swear. (digital)

stories

February 24, 2010
(tri-x 400 mamiya 645af)

(tri-x 400 mamiya 645af)

 (wrote this last night, so today actually means yesterday, and tomorrow means today, and whoa.  trippy.)

Julie.  The Louise to my Thelma.  Julie so kindly got naked for me the other day so I could mess with some ideas I’ve got regarding this little tube sock problem obsession interest.  Some stay-at-home-moms go to scheduled playgroups.  You know, whatever, to each their own.  I’ve still got some rolls to develop from this day, and some more ideas to play around with, and I wasn’t planning on sharing this right now, but . . .

the things I meant to do right now aren’t workiiiiiiing!!!  None of them.  Wonky ink in the printer and an empty bottle of developer and a guitar that won’t arrive until tomorrow and a twitchy brain.  So, here it is.

STORIES!!!!

is the word of the day (week?) on the blog.  I feel like I keep coming up with keywords.  “Threshold” and “Illusion” and now, “Stories.”  That’s so fucking annoying.  (Ooooh, hoo hoo!  I’m in one of those moo-hooods!)  But annoying or not, that’s the way of it.  (And now I’m going to picture Pee Wee Herman doing his word-of-the-day thing that he did.  Great.  Thanks a lot.)

Julie makes me think of the word “stories.”  The woman has got.  stories.  And they just keep coming!  I’ve begun to think that either she is lying about all of her adventures, or that she really is that much older than me (heh heh), or that she has clones that go out live and then come back to report to her regularly. 

Besides being wildly entertaining, it inspires me.  It makes me think about how I live this life that is presented to me, every moment raw and teeming with opportunity.  Do I devour it?  Savour both the illusion (there I go again!) and the clarity?  Drink in the true experiences, despite their threat to this farce of stability and normalcy?

Now, I don’t think that living your life as a good story means actively looking for trouble,  but it does make me reconsider my definition of “mistake.”  It seems that the Great Stories of my life (and others) have been those times when Life has presented us with something, and we’ve accepted the offer, ignoring the fear of a possible mistake.  Otherwise, it is a sad story ruled by empty routine and fear. 

Also, I think, those mundane everyday things, like the whirlwind of snow-globe-like snow blowing today, or the trip to the grocery store in which the strange happy-lovey force between everyone was palpable, or the millisecond-prolonged glance, or the star-shaped center of the apple, or the laundry, can be a Great Stories when they are lived attentively.  And then of course, there are the Great Stories told by nature—childbirth, tragedy, love, death—that sometimes give us no choice in the matter of attention.

What’s your story?

Use Your Illusion

February 19, 2010
Illusions are art, for the feeling person, and it is by art that you live, if you do.  (Elizabeth Bowen)
tri-x film in mamiya 645af.  mowgli and a girlie friend.

tri-x film in mamiya 645af. mowgli and a girlie friend.

Today I’m thinking about illusions.  The illusions of vision, of art, of social role, of relationship, of should, of connection, of separation, of possession, of acceptance, of proper, of religion, of comfort, of security, of emotion, of praise, of beauty, of insult.  Hey!  Another one of those lists.  I haven’t gone all there-is-no-spoon yet, but I do think I’ll go on a quantum physics kick, now that you mention it.

I’m thinking about how we can become so governed by those illusions, and about what would happen if we . . . weren’t.  If we accepted their function when appropriate, loved the illusions for what they were, and then gratefully let them go in due time.  “Arigato Zaisho,” if you know what I mean

I’m thinking, and letting go of a few other . . . thinkings.  Oooh, I have a lot more to say here, but I’m operating under the illusion of time, so I must go.

Have the illusion of a happy weekend!

(Destruction and) Renewal

January 5, 2010
watercolor on arches hot press, ink/digital

watercolor on arches hot press, destroyed with ink/digital

And so, apparently, my muse is pregnant.  And hott.  And she wears tube socks.  I can’t shake the tube socks.  But she is unable to tell me how to stop ruining everything. 

I began my routine of late-night art Mondays last night.  I developed a crappy roll of film–an entire roll of images I knew I didn’t need to take; began a beautiful ink drawing, but screwed it up by ignoring my intuition to just stop; then made this watercolor and destroyed her, too.  This one I “destroyed” by getting crazy with the ink. 

What you see here is my desperate attempts on photoshop to cover the ink mess.  Desperate attempts=digitally making most of the inky crap black.  I think I made it even worse.  It looked really good when it was all white.  Sort of unfinished, but in a good, wispy way.  And then, as I had just done with the ink drawing, I ignored that little voice that said “that is enough,” and assaulted it with black ink.

I am on a “ruin everything” mission, it seems.  Yesterday, I forgot to add salt to the bread, and ruined it, which, in turn, ruined the cinnamon rolls I made with the same dough.  And there was last night’s mess of an art session.  And today I ruined what should have been a really good curry dish for lunch.  I mean, Julie ate it.  And had seconds.  But it was RUINED!  RUINED, I TELL YOU!

I’m reading Women Who Run With The Wolves (a title that Hercules had a hard time checking out from the library for me), and I’ve just read a tale about a girl who, essentially, carried a magical doll in her pocket that told her what to do: turn left, turn right, stop talking.  I’ve got that magical doll, we all have that intuition.  I think my current task is to remember how to listen to her.

I think I get it.  I do think I hear her (so many voices up in here).  I do think that I can decipher between internal and external.  But I tend to disobey.

The Illustration Friday prompt is “Renewal.”  I had read that a couple days ago, and remembered it as “Rebirth.”  Close enough, right?  My intuition tells me “yes.”

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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.