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Baby’s leg

May 5th, 2015
baby legs are fabulous

baby legs are fabulous

Today I saw a mom looking for art supplies while carrying her six month old cherub in an ergonamically correct backpack.  I flashed back to when I used to do that, not so long ago.

Where does the time go?  Time crawls and then is gone so quickly. It didn’t seem to be a big deal, like I was forever going to walk my baby through an art store.  I gently reached out and touched the baby’s chubby leg and he didn’t even notice.  So many memories of love and miracle flashed back.

That little leg gave me hope.  Someday he would crawl, and then would be a toddler.  My mother in-law used to say her child rearing days were “the best days of her life” and she really loved her boys.  She was a great mom, and her strapping men are noble, with deep integrity.  I hope my sons are as good as hers.

Something about the mom reminded me of when I made CINDY in 1995. Cindy was one of my most important sculptures up to that time. Here’s the story:

Continue reading “Baby’s leg” »

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Getting along

April 28th, 2015
joey teaching

joey teaching

I have a long history of talking.  My grade school teachers put ‘not working up to her potential’ as a report card comment, because I was busy talking to my neighbor, passing triangle folded notes to kids across from me, and looking out the window at life beyond my classroom.

In high school, my senior class gave me ‘the easiest to talk to’ award, because I chatted it up with any breathing person around me.  Talking is the best, and I used it as a tool for distraction from doing or feeling unpleasant things, like facing life’s consequences. Continue reading “Getting along” »

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honest kindness

April 14th, 2015
waiting for ice cream

waiting for ice cream

I traveled to Havana, Cuba ten years ago as one of several chaperones for Tamalpais High School’s Art and Music students.  The trip gave students a chance to learn Cuban music.  We went to university ballet and folk dancing events, and visited art schools for painting and drawing.  Students had a great itinerary of activities during the nine day trip.

I had free time, and walked around the Havana Vedado district to La Coppelia’s lush covered park and flying saucer-shaped building between Calles 23 and 21. Continue reading “honest kindness” »

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I’m trying to be kind

April 7th, 2015
images

it comes down to communication

I’m trying to be kind, and it’s not easy.  I don’t think I’m an egomaniac who always wants things to go her way, but my family members have seen me like that.  They complain when I bring up stuff they don’t want to discuss, like what needs to be done, or when I mention problems they don’t want to solve.  I really annoy them.  My irritating habits of saying things they don’t want to hear seems a personal defect.

I’m trying to be kind.  That starts by listening more closely to what people complain about, and not judging every behavior by what I expect.  I’m working to keep my mouth shut when it’s not my business, but that’s almost impossible.

Since I consider myself a Christian, I try to strip down to the core, and practice tolerance.  I love people.  I act polite to strangers, don’t steal or try to get something for nothing.  I practice the golden rule as my creed.  I wish I really believed it.  But I try and act like I believe it. Continue reading “I’m trying to be kind” »

I believe

March 31st, 2015

the potential of life

I believe when I close my eyes I leave my body

I’m inside wind blown eucalyptus rustling drapers of bark strips

 

I believe yesterday creates today

because what I saw that night when Redwood Giants Varsity Football

ran onto Brentwood’s  lighted heritage stadium

my son became a man

 

 

I believe my love of three husbands created

what I understand about hard won dignity

Saturday’s hope forges memories when it was good

 

most of the bubbles float up to surface and pop

paper narcissus bulbs take root and blossom before New Year’s day

 

I believe Ginsberg’s Molak sought truthful San Francisco rooftops for his drunken friends

breathing life back from

double-paned windows of that psychiatric building

where his mother, Naomi couldn’t recognize her son

there’s a howl

 

I believe my chihuahua smiles at me when I tuck him under my arm

once in awhile I’m  grateful I can still walk

and my old phone number has a new ring to it

 

I was young with my second husband and we fished

off  St. John’s Island in Alaska’s Gulf

drawing a sixteen horsepower engine through green water

 

 

 

 

burn the stack

March 17th, 2015

fire can heal

Other people can sometimes be a problem for me.  I have had occasional encounters with family members and acquaintances, who let me know how much they disagree with my life and what I am doing with my time.  Or they let me know how much they don’t like me.

So why do I sit and listen to their criticism?  Am I trying to keep an open mind, or do I deserve punishment for not being perfect?

Continue reading “burn the stack” »

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does this grab your attention?

February 24th, 2015
synopsis_pru_mother

nobody noticed her burns

My mother was five years-old when she set herself on fire sitting on the edge of the bathtub.  Her seven year-old sister was there, behind a closed bathroom door on the second floor of a Virginia farmhouse.  Setting a match to a self-rolled toilet paper cigarette loosely filled with pipe tobacco, flecks dropped onto her dress.  My mother burst into flames while her sister watched and screamed.

My Grandfather Hudson heard my mother screaming near her death and bolted up a flight of stairs, broke down the door, picked up his burning daughter, and smothered her flaming skin in the hallway’s Persian rug.

For eighteen years, my grandfather took my mother by train up to New York’s Presbyterian hospital, so that his college fraternity brother, ‘Uncle Dan,’ could miraculously transform her burns, by growing new skin in sausages for future grafts.

I didn’t know why my mother carried her photograph as a burn victim taken by her doctor in her wallet, inside her black leather bag.  I was nine years old when I found the black and white picture, as I was ripping off her change.  My hand held her wallet, wrapped up with rubber banded notes and errands she needed to do.  I saw the bent edges of a photograph.

It was a photograph of my mother as a child, with bleary eyes filled with pain far beyond her five years, like a resigned war victim.  The camera showed third degree burns, her chin melted to her chest, mouth gaping open like a hideous monster.

I froze and stopped breathing. Everything got small. My worst nightmares could not have conjured the disfiguring severity of what my mother did to herself before I was born.  She had previously warned me, ”Don’t play with matches” and I thought, ”Blah Blah Yakety Yak.” So what was the big deal?

About a month after I saw the photograph, my mother and I got around to talking about the horrible photograph.  She confided to me that she had only recently received it with her late mother’s belongings from Virginia. My mother had never seen that picture before, and was so devastated by seeing the photograph that she kept it with her for months before she could finally put it away.

I grew up in a house without mirrors, except for our tiny bathroom one.  The only full-length mirror view I had of myself was looking out the plate glass living room windows into the dark. My mother wasn’t into her reflection in the mirror.

Sweet Remembrance

February 17th, 2015
frosting

frosting meant more than sugar

Tracy and I were in the fourth grade when cake frosting in plastic containers became part of supermarket landscapes.  We walked through the alley to our local store and into the bakery section, and bought a container.  We brought it back to my house.  My friend and I climbed inside my bedroom closet  and slid the door shut so that it was pitch black inside.   We sat side by side with our backs against the wall and each had plastic spoons. Both of us took turns dipping spoonfulls of frosting straight out of the container and into our mouths. We didn’t talk, a quiet communion with sugar. We were both searching for sweetness in our lives. Continue reading “Sweet Remembrance” »

Swimming for life

February 3rd, 2015

seal 4My mom had a cigar box full of swimming medals she earned as a champion of three states, if you call Washington DC a state, along with Virginia and Maryland. Her mother kept loads of newspaper clippings of her wins during adolescence. People said she swam like a bullet. Then she went away from swimming, but she had confidence from those years in the pool.

I learned how to swim during summers at Tam High School in Mill Valley, and spent hours playing ‘tea party,’ diving off the high dive into twelve-feet, so deep I wanted to hold onto the side.

I decided to join the swim team in High School, after my sophomore Biology teacher showed the class two lung slices,  one who smoked, and a non-smoker, I was so grossed out I stopped smoking cigarettes (after six years at that point). Talk about bathing suits we wore, ordered to wear by our coaches, black tanks with straps in back and saggy butts. Five days a week workouts, for at least two hours. We shared lanes and did all the strokes, back, free, breast and butterfly. Kickboards were a big part, too, over and over. Continue reading “Swimming for life” »

What did she want to do?

January 20th, 2015
she can't help it

she can’t help it

If you’ve read any of my blogs, you might recall one I wrote earlier about trying to be a better listener.  I made that commitment, which took me in a very unexpected direction the other day.

I know a woman who drank alcohol after twenty-nine years of not drinking.  She simply picked up a glass and started drinking tequila three years ago.  From time to time I run into her in town.  We recently chatted in downtown Jackson, CA. last weekend.  How was her life was going?  I knew she started drinking after years and years.  I told her that her drinking was none of my business, I just wanted to know how she was doing.  The woman started opening up, confiding about her drinking. Continue reading “What did she want to do?” »

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