Showing posts with label me. Show all posts
Showing posts with label me. Show all posts

Monday, January 2, 2012

try, try again


I could be setting myself up for it, but I'm going to try this again.

Hello, internet.

Okay, so I haven't really done too much to spruce up, but I did change the masthead.  Maybe I'll get wacky and try to change it monthly.  Its so darn easy to do.  The truth is, I like it here, writing posts that I'm not sure if anyone will ever read, organizing my thoughts and finding a reason to bring it together, reaching some sort of synthesis when sometimes things just don't make sense.  And they usually don't seem to make much sense.

Perhaps that's what happened over these many months.  Everything backed up on me, and nothing ceased to make much sense.  I was working way too much, I'm supervising an intern, my own supervisor has retired, my caseload has exploded and I'm finding myself to be fairly in demand with a terrible case of unable-to-say-no's.  The pace has become ridiculous, like running on a treadmill that has gone haywire.  But I feel clear today, I feel caught up, things are clean, I've been making art.  And I will return to work tomorrow and just know it will all disappear again despite my best intentions.

Well, let's give a moment to the best intentions - there is something about putting something in writing that may make it more likely to become so.

I'm continuing to read a book a week, and plan to make one small piece of art a week.  I'm in the process of creating a book to house the project.  The optimist in me thinks I should create a post with pictures to show you.  I've updated some of my art journal, and we finally got a scanner so I can hopefully bring this up to date.  I still have oodles left to do in it though.  And I did the 21 Secrets Workshop, but didn't even get to watch the videos for some of them.  Sigh, oh well, I will keep working on that too.  I unearthed these two sketch books that I had been keeping, and have put them in an accessible place.  In one, I wrote:
I'm supposed to be
Doing something-
But I don't know
What;
And I am too
Afraid to do it.
I can't help but look back at where I left off, and notice that its purely fear that got in my way.  I had stepped forward into joining an ever growing artist community, and that left me bare and up for critique.  I couldn't handle it.  So I withdrew into my work, as it is a great source of blame and allows me some measure of distance as I get to hide behind professionalism.  And as I write that, I wonder, why can't I be professional about my art, and give myself the same allowances?  I also wrote:
A secret, shy image may have surfaced only to be scared away by the viciousness of those staring in its quiet face.
I am sad at the number of shy images I may have scared away over these past many months.  Images that may have helped me understand or grow.  But growing is scary.  Then I have to take on what I am perhaps not ready for.  I guess it doesn't matter - it seeks us out anyway.  And I need to create like I need to breathe.

So here it is, I try again.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Jet Lag - Or, How I Hallucinated Napa Valley (11/3)

I set the alarm for 6:00 am CA time, forced my husband and I out of bed and into our running clothes.  My logic was that we could stay on east coast time, and that running would help with the jet lag.  Ha.  We jogged around the Capital building, ate some breakfast, and headed over to the conference center to register for the American Art Therapy Conference.   

Oooh, I hummed with anticipation as we checked out the rooms and began searching through my conference booklet.  So glad I did this.  More about that tomorrow.

























Today was all about Napa Valley.  


 Napa Valley is about a one and a half hour drive from Sacramento.  Sacramento is flat, flat, flat.  
But as you drive from the city, the view quickly changes into rolling mountains and sprawling farms.  
There was a glowing quality of light that made everything richly golden, like if you touched the air it would reverberate, sending concentric ripples across the sky.  The air smelled like earth, mature grapes and drying vines.  

I thrust my head out of the window and breathed in, catching a hint of smoke from a nearby fire and staring into the liquidity of a twilight that seemed to stretch on forever.  Time ceased to move.  My senses began to grow confused.  The air seemed tangible, as if you could scoop it up and pour it from your hands like sand.


We stopped in the town of Napa, where I wandered into a yarn store - like a real live only-sells-yarn yarn store.  The owner asked me if I was looking for something in particular, and I realized that I had my hands out in front of me to touch the yarn, my palms sensing the soft before they even made contact.  I had almost ceased seeing, having already taken in all the colors and commanding my brain to 'touch'.   All of my senses felt cranked up and yet useless, and I began to feel disconnected, like what I was seeing was not real.


 It was about lunch time that we started to feel really strange.  The sun was supposed to be moving lower in the sky, and yet it was straight above and bright.  The light didn't seem right, and we felt hungry and weak, and lightheaded.  This is jet lag, and it feels crazy.  You tell yourself that you should be okay, but you are most definitely not.  My brain began to feel like it was taking in incorrect information and began growing confused.  It felt like I was hallucinating.


In our off-state, we felt that the natural response to our situation was to find the oddest tourist spots we could find and enjoy their absurd ridiculousness.  And also take in some natural wonders, of course.

These gems are completely trapped in the seventies, with signs still sporting their old school fantastic fonts.  Displays haven't been changed for years, featuring articles written in 1969 and black and white photographs with women wearing gloves and cat eye glasses and men still in suits. 


This one is the Old Faithful Geyser of California.  It erupted faithfully every fourteen minutes.  I was feeling really strange about here.  My brain was so confused by the concept of time that it couldn't possibly comprehend a geyser, a rainbow, mountains and palm trees.  And llamas.  Llamas.  I felt like I was walking through air thick as water, my body heavy and cumbersome, and I felt disrupted by the constant eruptions.









Next stop was the Petrified Forest.  These trees are now rocks, felled by a tremendous volcanic explosion and steadily replaced by silt many moons ago.


The petrified trees lay where they were found and exposed, along a loop reaching up a hill and back around to the main lodge.  It felt good to walk, and the air here smelled rich with pine and sunshine.  My addled brain struggled with the concept of time - this seemed so long ago, and my life seemed so small and short in comparison.  I felt insignificant and replaceable.  And feeling untethered, I felt okay with that.  I began to surrender to California, and jet lag, and leaving work behind.  I also felt mournful and euphoric, with this odd sensation of wanting to eat my experience, taste it like a baby who puts everything it needs to learn about in its mouth.


 And with this, you may be wondering if we stopped at any wineries.  The truth is, not really.  My designated driver doesn't drink and I was so loopy, I didn't need anything else to make my head spin.   Hopefully you are reading this, and shaking your head in firm, firm agreement.  The bummer is, we would have loved to take a tour but it costs a bit of money to do because it includes tastings.  We stopped at one place and everyone was sloshed.  It was all so discombobulating.  So we kept on keeping on.


 We began driving back towards Sacramento with the setting sun, eating honey crisp apples and cheese sticks, sticky sweet crisp on lips and soft yielding milky on tongue.  The fields glowed in a way that we felt in our bodies, and tried desperately to breathe in and be connected to.  I couldn't take it all in fast enough.  I couldn't take enough pictures, I couldn't set them up correctly.  All I could do was breathe and be, but I itched inside because this was not enough. 


The day felt dosed by synesthesia, where because our ability to perceive time was completely disturbed, our other senses grew confused and crossed into one another, creating this odd sensation of being connected and unconnected, one and not-one.  We could no longer trust our bodies and yet, we realized that this was all we had to trust.  Our phenomenological experience was disrupted and perceived all at once.  

Our simple perception of time, our awareness of where the sun is in the sky, our body's knowledge of when food should come were all lost.  An odd feeling of imperfect surrender, of flowing along and then wading through quicksand, flawed and perfection.  The single strangest experiment is to remove oneself from one's environment, one's elemental anchor and to then experience adjusting to it.

And finally, the stability of our hotel bed, fluffy and white, with heavy down comforters and merciful sleep.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Tails California (11/2)

Many years ago, I made a mix CD for my brother, for when he was driving across country.  I found the perfect song, "Heads Carolina/Tails California" to describe his journey, because he purposely seeks to live near the ocean, the mountains, and has had the freedom to move from coast to coast.   Now, whenever I listen to it, it makes me cry, in a swelling, tight, pain-in-the-chest kind of way. 

  
Heads, Carolina Tails, California.
Somewhere greener, somewhere warmer.
Up in the mountains, down by the ocean.
Where? It don't matter, as long as we're goin'
Somewhere together. I've got a quarter.
Heads, Carolina Tails, California.


 I sing it at the top of my lungs until my heart hurts and my voice breaks.
 

This song makes me think of so many things: my brother moving, me moving, our tiny little family staying put in their tiny little town and all my assorted guilt about that...my husband and I, before we were married, all our world in a moving van, going to an apartment I'd never seen before. 


This wanderlust burning, aching below a need for stability, yearning to move, see, travel, live.  A heaping dose of jealousy.  A sense of being "willingly trapped" like the fox in the Little Prince.  Unwitting enmeshment in an impending sense of family obligation.  Conflict, ambivalence, confusion, uncertainty, responsibility, indecision, burden.


Stability is safety, expectations, roles, the known.  Wandering is living.  Hope.  Freedom.

Logan Airport, at 4 am.

Last week, we packed up our suitcases and set off for Sacramento and the American Art Therapy Association Conference.  I kept thinking "what the hell am I doing?"  

I didn't expect the trip to change the world, I was just hoping for some perspective, some time away.   I was desperately burned out, but still spent AN ENTIRE WEEKEND doing paperwork for work so that I could leave and still have a job when I got back.  Things have to change.  But I felt guilty the whole time and wishing that I could take back my vacation.  This is how skewed my thinking was.

The convention center.
Us.
























I meant to post these during my vacation, but we had terrible internet service.  And a little perspective is good.   So these next several posts are after the fact.  More for me, but having this as a place to put it all together feels very containing.

The Capital Building.

And so, Sacramento?  We flew in on an eerily quiet election day (absentee ballots in the mail), and checked into a hotel right down the street from the capital building, office of Arnold Schwarzenegger.  


Orange trees and palm trees sat along side of fall foliage, flat land.  


We wandered around the city and got trailed by a security guard after climbing up on a parking garage to take photos of a church with 5 crosses.  Delusional jet leg, our bodies protesting the existence of the sun.  Observations of poverty, homelessness, recession and mental illness. 


Trying to understand where we are.  Even as wanderers, already setting down roots and trying on a new city.  A chance to find clarity in our identities, a different direction to our journey.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Preparing

This is becoming a theme:  I'm supposed to be preparing for something or doing something, but instead I'm fooling around with something else.  This time, its a website called TiltShift.  It is supposed to make your photo look like a miniature scene, but I also found that it just did cool things to my photos.  I used to be really good at Adobe Photoshop, and want to get back into photo manipulation again.  Because its fun.  I also realized that we've been on lots of adventures this summer. 

That's my fella, walking through the Met in NYC.  Highly recommend this exhibition.

Near Castle Island in South Boston.

That's my 'hood. Hard core, right?

In South Boston, near the Institute of Contemporary Art.


 Another one from my 'hood, from the roof of our building.  I need to go up there more often. 

 Downtown Boston.  I thought it was funny this camper was navigating the little one ways.

The next two photos were taken at Waterfire in Providence, RI.  
The first one went wonky on transfer but the second one is magical.  If you live near this, I highly recommend going.  It is really an unusual, wonderful experience.


This one turned out like its "supposed" to look.  
I took on my way to the interview for the job I didn't take.


We leave early, early on Tuesday for the American Art Therapy Association conference in Sacramento.   You'd think I'd be well on my way to living the vacation dream but nooooo, mounds and mounds of paperwork must be done before I can leave.  I can't wait to step onto that plane, to make art, to re-evaluate, to be free just for one week.  And I get to see my little brother!

Happy Halloween!

Sunday, October 17, 2010

wandering

Every weekend, my husband and I go wandering around, soaking up the sunlight and enjoying the fall before it disappears into winter.   I just got used to the summer:  I love getting up early and going running, I love the sun, I love the beach.  Heading into winter is dangerous territory for me.  But this year, I'm going to keep getting heaping doses of sunshine, decrease the french fry/cookie intake and try to stay off the couch.  Although, I can't wait for a big snowstorm so we can play video games, take naps and snuggle under blankets.


As we wander around, I'm taking a lot of photos and am starting to notice my photographic style again:  something to do with colors, a bit of macro, and high contrast.  I'm trying to keep my edges clean, and I'm thinking more about composition.  Although sometimes I still just snap and hope for the best.  I haven't paid attention to all of this since college, where I started to figure it out and then lost it somewhere in the midst of criticism and the real world.  I feel like I should do something with it again, but I don't know what.  I do know that capturing images and how I capture images is an intrinsic part of me.


As for the real world, well, hmpf.  


As much as I love our adventures, I'm starting to realize that every time we go out wandering, we are avoiding everything we're supposed to be doing.  And it all desperately needs our attention.  When did we become adults with so much responsibility?  It feels like we haven't even really gotten started yet!


Take this weekend, for example:  we were "supposed" to go to open houses and look for a house.  Instead, we've been wandering around these fantastically well-to-do neighborhoods and their gorgeous parks, pretending that we belong there and knowing full well we never will.  I don't think we can afford a house.  But we're paying a fantastically high rent for a small little box, and getting creamed on our taxes.  We can't decide.  We can't compromise.  We're stuck.   


And, while I'm not quite ready to talk too much about having babies, I'm learning that my body doesn't make the right hormones.  So beyond the "are we ready yet" talk that is in constant negotiation, there is something more sobering.  I don't want to be pumped with synthetic crap.  I want to work with a doctor who is more holistically connected, find an acupuncturist, start yoga.  My goal isn't necessarily to get pregnant.  My goal is to be healthy and balanced, so that if I did get pregnant, my body would support a healthy pregnancy. 


And my job is a big problem.  I still feel good about turning down the other job, and I still like what I do.  But I am burnt out.  Paperwork sucks.  So in a few weeks, I'm traveling to Sacramento to attend the American Art Therapy Conference.  I'm hopeful it will fill me up again, that I'll get some new ideas, a big dose of self care, some space from things, community.  


I'm desperate for the next stage, but don't quite know the next step.  And I've been stuck here for way too long.  Maybe this is it, living is just this and I'm making it too much of a big deal.  Maybe things will sort themselves out.  I also think I need to set boundaries around some things and jump in and make some tough decisions.


Until then, every weekend my husband and I go wandering, taking pictures and going on adventures.  That's what its about anyway.  Not money, or career, or doing things just the right way.  Its just being together, soaking up the sunshine, observing the world, thinking, talking and wondering.  And making tough decisions.  Even when I don't want to be a grown up.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

i love my mil

Yes, I love my mother-in-law.  She is the neatest, coolest lady ever.  She runs a day care center and has a room full of art supplies.  She loves pulling out all her supplies and letting me play and doesn't care if I use things up or screw things up.  She cares a lot, about everyone.  And makes them feel as good as I feel whenever I'm around her.

Several weekends ago, she put together this crafts event as part of a week-long bicentential celebration of the little town my husband grew up in.  She put together several craft areas for kids and adults to wander around and try out fabric-based crafts.

Stop #1:  Flower Pressing
My husband and I ended up being in charge of this one for awhile.  Wow, some kids look so normal but are crazy when they have a mallet in their hands.  Limits may need to be set.  Like, don't hit yourself in the forehead with a mallet.



Take flowers, grasses and leaves from the garden.  Lay them onto a piece of muslin.  Cover with wax paper.  Beat it with a mallet.  Mount on colorful paper.  Enjoy your artwork.  



Stop #2:  Yarn Crafting
Ladies were set up at each table with mounds of yarn to teach crochet, knitting and weaving.  I kept walking around, touching piles of yarn.  Somehow I ended up teaching five lovely eight year olds how to weave on a wooden loom.  We did it by hand, but my husband created a tool to do his weaving (of course). 


The loom you can make at home with a piece of sturdy cardboard.  Cut notches at each end.  Pick a thin yarn, tape one end on the back, and then loop the yarn up, over and down (not around the back).  At the end, cut it and tape it down on the back.  Pick another yarn (the girls loved anything fuzzy, and it felt good to do).  Cut off a length, not too long.  Weave it through.  If you're working with littles, picking up the yarn whenever the yarn goes under was really helpful.  If you need to know how to finish, don't ask me.  I yelled for my mil and she finished everyone's weaving. 


Step Three:  Alpacas!
While we were working the tables, I didn't get to try spinning the alpaca wool!  Still darn cute though.  The little girl next to me called this one Whitey.  The other one was Blacky.  And if there was a gray one, he'd be called Oldey because old people have gray hair. 

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