My Moon is Always in Retrograde. I Mean, It is *I* that am Retrograde. Whatever.

I’m not stuck in the past. I just revisit it in my heart with great constancy. I’m not a hopeless romantic. (I’m remarkably hopeful, in fact.) But yeah, I’m as squishy on the inside as they come. The upshot of living with this particular combo of symptoms is that I revert with incredible regularity to making very old-school, gooey, straight-up-rhyming poems on beyond-perennial–millennial?–themes. I fall back on making Pretty pictures and comfort-laden images. I’m very girly like that, very old-lady.

Just another bit of my naturally silly bent, don’t you know.

leafy shade photos + text

. . . so I let the treacle trickle . . .

Truth is, I don’t think niceness and sugariness are inherently awful. I know that there are a large contingent of folk, especially arty persons, that get one whiff of this kind of stuff and, well, immediately start to have a reverse-peristaltic episode. The very idea of brushing against the edge of soft-and-cuddly fills many hearts with repulsion. It certainly skates dangerously close to spitting in the face of serious art criticism. Ask John Singer Sargent and Norman Rockwell and, you know, anybody else whose technical prowess and ability to connect both with their clients (yikes! The dreaded commercial success!) and audiences (ewww, what’s with these guys making conventionally attractive artworks and the general populace falling all over themselves liking the stuff??).

And I have to confess to being an outspoken critic of some practitioners famed for precisely the kind of glutinous old-fashioned stuff that I happily turn around and perpetrate myself. The bottom line is not “I don’t know anything about art, but I know what I like”–it’s just “I know what I like”, period. Because one fan’s treasure is another fan’s trash. When I’m producing creative work of any kind, if it isn’t for a specific commission–in which case, it is my desire as well as my contractual duty to produce something that pleases and meets the needs of the client as agreed upon for the occasion–then I’m doing what I feel like doing and can’t be much bothered with whether anybody else will be attracted to it. When I’m making gushy and flowery things, accolades and smooches from the art establishment is far, far from my otherwise cheerily occupied mind.

hosta photos + text

. . . so I just lie back in my cozy little hammock and indulge all of my candy-coated urges . . .

You may have noticed I have virtually no self-restraint; I’m so very not interested in being appropriate and meeting the Exacting Standards of those in the inner circle of the aforementioned establishment. Who, by the way, seem to me to feel a deep compulsion to Not Like stuff on principle if it emits the teensiest odeur of safeness and comfy likeability. Yeah, I’m that backward. There’s a healthy dose of the upstart pipsqueak in me. Nothing I like better than living my life in the shadow of the really important artists out there, secure in the knowledge that my obscurity gives me license to just do what I jolly well please and make photos and poems and stories and drawings and paintings that just give me personal entertainment and amusement and a very traditional sense of happiness. And then I pop up out of the shady tall grass and make a silly squirrelly smirk at the more elegant and impressive real world.

garden, swans and squirrel

Here's laughing at you, kids . . .

Sound Advice for the Voiceless

watercolor birds x 2

Singing our little hearts out . . .

I have spoken about having Spasmodic Dysphonia. That in itself, when in the aural forum and not (as in yesterday’s blog post) just the printed format of the internet, is a fine thing in my estimation. It means that having SD hasn’t rendered me either mute or unwilling to let my sometimes goofy sounding voice be heard. It could conceivably be argued that it would be good if I would actually shut up occasionally, or at least not be quite so outlandishly talkative as I can get. I consider that other people’s problem. Egotistical, I know, and I’m not really exaggerating when I say that. What you hear is what you get.

Being fortunate enough to retain the power of speech, I prefer not to stop using it. SD has meant getting over any vanity I may have had about the sound or quality of my voice. Having been flattered by many in my younger years as a strong and clear and pleasant speaker and encouraged to take singing lessons, to consider radio work, to be a lector and to speak at public events, I now have a different sense of my voice and what I do and don’t trust it to do than I did then.

So I find it less comfortable both physically and psychologically to sing, and certainly have no desire to show off my resulting lack of confidence and practice publicly. I was always a nervous Nellie when it came to singing in any group smaller than a chamber choir (Yikes! Someone might hear me!), but even singing along with a crowd is not the same fun it once was. It has in no way diminished my delight in hearing others sing, however; quite the contrary, it transformed my understanding of what it means to be able to sing, and to do so with skill and fluidity and grace. Working on proper vocal technique will help me continue being able to speak, but my own sense of music has been shifted rather firmly into listening to and appreciating and being moved by others’ mastery of their instruments. My own musical endeavor now sits much more comfortably in the realm of written and spoken language and of trying to capture the marvels of rhythm and pattern and color and sound in the confined refinements of print and speech. The potential is perhaps equally profound and potent, but simply takes an entirely different route through the senses in some significant ways.

Just to be crystal clear on this, I say this without any sense of loss or privation. I’m not suffering! Indeed, I consider myself incredibly fortunate. I’m neither summarized by nor limited to a description of my anomalies any more than I am defined by the ways in which I conform to any norms. SD is something I have or experience, not who I am or what I’m capable of doing. I could go through the list of potentially problematic quirks that help to shape my daily experience and my present self and sound like either a professional victim or a hypochondriac, or I can find–as I most decidedly do–that while each of those oddities has enough effect on my health and capabilities to be worthy of treatment or accommodation of some sort, each brings awareness of deeper gifts and the drive to overcome not only the irksome ills themselves but anything else I might be letting hold me back.

Yes, I am a lily-livered scaredy-pants of the first order as well as a lollygagging and procrastinating and self-sabotaging ignoramus, able to match pretty much any other arguably normal person around in those foolish and unhealthy arts. But at the same time I am so gifted as to understand that my true limitations are all self-imposed and even self-created, and that not only do people with far greater difficulties and far fewer resources live far more impressive and productive lives than I, I can grow up and into a better version of myself by taking notes on how they do it. Being a somewhat lazy and under-motivated student, I have to actively counter the urge to hide behind the couch until all inspirations and moments of willing effort pass, but on certain miraculous occasions I find that, well, I actually get up and do something.

When I do manage to pull myself up by my nearly invisible bootstraps, I find that despite having familial tremor (mainly in my hands) since who-knows-when, I can draw a straight line or a pretty fine freehand circle when I’m focused enough to make art. When I’m not, I have learned to hold my drinking glass with both hands if need be, or to keep kettle and bowl nearly overlapping when ladling soup. When all else fails, spill cloths and laundry detergent are mighty handy things. I may chill easily, thanks to my slightly off-kilter thyroid, but I’ve got layered-clothing styles down to a -40 Edmontonian nine-layer art form that I can still pack in my carry-on baggage. Wanna learn how to do nearly any basic survival task without an inner compass? I have virtually every dyslexic and perceptually dysfunctional talent I’ve ever heard tell of, from the ever popular reading-related visual chaos to spatial, directional, numerical and probably even temporal displacement. So without even knowing or trying to do it, I learned most of the affected skills upside down, backwards and sideways, doing everything with my own inevitably inimitable flair. Once I started treatment for them, my clinical depression and anxiety stopped holding me back and instead informed more of my interaction with other people as well as with my art. My lack of physical stamina and athleticism may have prevented my becoming a famous basketball player or dancer or a three-meter platform diving star, but I figured out early that leverage and a little logical logistical ingenuity could make up for a largish quantity of strength and skill in things physically challenging. Blazing alternative trails isn’t glamorous work but it’s done useful things in my life, and gives me an appreciative slant on those whose achievements outshine mine.

And when it comes right down to it, my ‘substitute’ versions of reality have served me quite nicely. I don’t sing in the way of the magnificent-voiced soloists and choral artists whose offerings have so richly embellished my existence, but there’s nothing stopping me from using the alternate voice I have in words and images to sing in my own way, and mainly for sheer happiness.

spring green flora + text

There are so many ways — and so many reasons — to sing . . .

When the Heat is Oppressive, Think Wintry Thoughts

A creature of habit to the point of predictability, I still may be able to surprise folk on the rare occasion simply because I’m also prone to veer off at tangents unexpectedly, spout non-sequiturs and be the mockingbird perpetually distracted by “Oh! Shiny Things!” This post probably fits into both categories, as one of the tangential zippings that might in fact be truly predictable in me is that one where I am tired of harping on the same topic–say, the seemingly interminable hot weather–and so decide to go, at least mentally, as far from it as I can. So today I am thinking chilly thoughts, so as to stave off heat stroke, and given my nature-lady bent, they lead me to what breaks the Winter’s back as well.

yellow photo collage

Warmth, when it is welcome again . . .

Seeking Persephone

Under earth, Persephone

cries out and wills that help should come,

but silent Death with stony clay

fills up her mouth to strike her dumb,

and while the icy silence reigns

and pressing, weights her underground,

only a whispered hope remains,

the faint insistence of the sound

an icicle makes as it melts,

and drop by plangent drop is found

power enough to break the freeze

and wake the sleeping, mordant earth,

wash cold Persephone’s shut eyes

awake, to tantalize rebirth

in pomegranate seed, in soil,

in root and heart held in suspense,

’til all rise up and re-commence

their dance and bloom and so uncoil

the bonds that bounded her in death,

revive Persephone with breath,

’til spring with brilliance flowers the earth.

Sometimes Tears of Joy, Sometimes Tears of Relief

It rained.

We’ve been waiting for it a rather long time. No shocking records set here: there have indeed been worse droughts in history, not just in the fabled devastation of those parts of the world we in the United States tend to think of ever after as expanses of desert and the lost worlds of the permanently starved and impoverished, but even in the annals of the region here, where there have been longer and more immediately cruel periods of dry-roasting. Endless iterations of “hot enough for ya?” aside, there are certainly serious consequences already being seen and felt from the current drought: the desiccated crops, the herds being thinned or entirely liquidated, and yes, farms and ranches closing. So many aspects of the damage will only be seen and felt over a very long stretch to follow.

Now, it has rained.

agave and colocasia photos

Desert. Dessert.

It hasn’t rained a whole lot. There’s nothing “cured” in a true drought by a couple of sparkling, sprinkly moments of respite. Much remains to be salved and salvaged and, hopefully, soaked–but not too much, I beg you. An excess of water is so clearly as dangerous and terrible as being horrifically parched, and following the remaking of the region into a vast basin of concrete, there’s plenty of danger that whatever rain does come will be unable to find a safe way into its intended locales.

But still, there’s that welcome urge to join the sky in a little cathartic crying when the unwilling skies finally relent and shower a little love on us. I am ever so glad and grateful that our Gaia, our lovely Mother Nature, has seen fit to grant us this kindness and am ever hopeful of still more. Call me a cry-eyed optimist.

text only

Rain, love, hope . . .

draped sculpture

Be ever with us!

What is that Thing Called Night?

Edmonton photo + text

Nocturne the first . . .

There is no season, dram of nature, age of human development or corner of the soul that hasn’t been parsed and versed and calibrated and celebrated in song and art and poem. Nothing new under the sun, so I’m told. But it seems to my rather casual observations that in the imagery devoted to the light and dark hours, night wins hearts and minds and invokes artists’ worship more frequently and passionately than daytime. If true, this may be horribly unfair given that daytime has so many glories and mysteries of its own. Still. I readily admit that I’m a frequent-flyer on the lovely-is-darkness magic carpet too. There’s the romantic edge, sure, but more than that there’s some inexplicable allure that I get sucked into just like everyone else. Yep, I like it. Serious or not, deep or shallow, I’ll keep jumping in. I love the night.

poem

I'm faithful to the night as well . . .

. . . and while I love the day with equal fervor, I can also say that I’m far less inclined to celebrate it in my art, and one of the things I suspect is that it’s partly pure graphic sense. Darkness, lighted with any small source, provides a much more dramatic and lurid instant contrast than most daytime settings do, in the strictly visual sense, and we all tend, on that, to imbue the world of night (or day) with metaphorical and imagined contrasts that reflect the world of the seen.

park pond in moonlight + text

Sing a song of nighttime? Yes, I will again. And again, and again . . .

So I reiterate the old refrain that I, er, always repeat myself. Obsessive? Stuck in a rut? Not so much so that it worries me–my actual concern has more to do with losing interest in finding something new to say about the old, learning how to follow the fruitful tangents that emerge, letting the new supplant the old when it needs to do so. Learning how to let go of the repetitious if it’s sucked dry, or if it’s sucking me dry. But I cannot imagine ever finding so little to love or so little to make new unless night becomes something it isn’t, or stops being the amazing, bizarre, ineffable, haunting, happy, wild-and-woolly things it is.

Good night, my friends, goodnight.

Just This

poem text

Ah, true love never dies . . .

Be Still and Listen, Thou Big Dope

run-down beauties

It's there, if you use your six senses . . .

Just because I believe that inspiration and the skill to fulfill it are best bought with persistent and focused labor doesn’t mean I don’t think it lies all around for the taking, too. There’s just so much astounding and strange and beautiful and fun stuff in every imaginable cranny of the world that the real charge here must be to keep all senses twitching at all times, not least of all the antennae of intuition. And I also lean toward the ‘it’s all been done already’ theory of creative endeavor, wherein pretty much every grand idea in history has very possibly already been had and it’s our pleasure and somewhat difficult responsibility to somehow recombine the DNA of our arts into something new and wonderful that’s now our own. So I have no hesitation about going shopping amongst all kinds of artworks extant for a better chance of gathering useful inspirations from them to move me toward my own next project.

When I go to an art exhibition I’m not only basking in the inherent attractions of the works hanging on the walls and filling up the galleries but also filing away molecules of inspiring marvels and, not least of all, building up a slight head of steam that makes me antsy to get into the studio again myself. When I attend a concert, dance, play or other performance, I’m absorbing whatever tremendous artistry, craft, skill, design, and magic came together to make the moments possible, and on the side, I’m mentally revising, redesigning, rehashing and reinventing on my terms every aspect I can imagine, making it mine. It need not diminish my admiration for the work in hand, but rather tends to let it bloom in every direction as an expanding universe of potential artistry. Granted, I am no dancer, haven’t acted since high school (unless you count acting competent, or like I’m not scared, when the occasion requires), and I’m certainly no great shakes as a musician of any sort. But I’ve attempted each just enough of each to appreciate the fineness of what I’m seeing when I sit at the feet of masters.

Even when I dine, the food and its preparation and context can provide a wild cornucopia of not only tasty satisfaction and belly filling sustenance but also another source of artful inspiration of every sensory variety. It might lead to more food (a grand enough goal, to be sure), might lead instead to some seemingly unrelated object’s invention.

Most directly of all, reading stuff that makes me shiver with happiness or shock or reverie or any other sort of appreciation has a strong tendency to get the creative juices flowing–specifically, toward my pen point.

Boston photos + text

Now let me lie between the pages of a fine book . . .

It’s all, and always, research as it happens. Right down to the purposeful hours I spend staring into nebulous space after the fact, looking for that miraculous confluence of thought word and deed that will combine all of my life’s experience into the right synchronous process of art-making to produce my next inspired work. Luck, be thou a true lady . . . tonight, tomorrow, forevermore. Muse, approach.

Senility isn’t a Second Childhood If You Never Left the First One

It’s pretty simple, really. I’m planning to carry on a long tradition (I won’t name names) of remaining not just childlike but completely immature in every way possible. That way no one will catch on as I slide on down into full dementia.

One of the things that makes this so wonderfully easy for me is artistic license, naturally. But another is simply that I’ve never shaken the innocence of the young and naive twerp and am happy to continuously wallow in my ignorance and the fantasies it engenders. I’ll try to be a realist as far as required, sure, when it comes to stuff like keeping my teeth brushed and taxes paid and not subsisting entirely on quiescently frozen treats, no matter how alluring that may be. Beyond that, no promises.

photos + text

What good can come of being overly adult when there's still so much mischief to make?

I can pull up the ol’ Big Kid Underpants with the best of ’em, but much of the time I don’t really see the point. Far preferable to frolic the halcyon meadows of silliness for as long as I can get away with it.

parakeets in car + text

If you're not ready to just jump in and hit the road, step aside!

Too responsible or distracted by Real Life to get on board with that? See you later, pal!

Storytime must Never End

If we are to maintain our liveliness and sense of adventure at all, we’d better be sure to keep listening in on storytellers and manufacturing plenty of good yarns ourselves. Living some great yarns is the best option, since then the story hour emerges naturally from merely answering “how was your day?” or having an ordinary session of reminiscence with friends. However it flies, keep finding the next installment of your serial epic whether by living it or by inventing it or by having it spoon-fed to you by experts. Here are a few mini episodes just to get you started. I’m helpful that way.

Creamy flowers & text

Be prepared! Wherever the adventures take you, you might as well be ready for them . . .

murder mystery collage

If you happen to get bumped off, it's especially important to present yourself in your best light--someone will comment!

squirrels & text

No matter how nutty you are, the world will remember you as The One with the Great Stories. Gotta like that!

Happy Place

 

MDW's landscape, composited

Matins to Evensong

When the world is showing its extra cruel side, it’s time to find the peaceful center of my personal universe. I will keep mourning the lives and loves lost, the battles still raging, the injustices not yet righted, and the imperfection of a reality where children still starve, books are still burned, and toxic waste is still piling up around our midriffs.

Solace isn’t a solution, but it’s a balm that eases the troubled spirit. And what is my solace? A quiet moment calming my thoughts. The love of my nearest and dearest ones drawing me close, or building a safe perimeter around me when I need one. Music, music of almost any kind, has enormous palliative power. Writing a little something or a little nothing. Making a photograph, a drawing or a painting or a mixed media concoction of some sort: while the end product may have some measure of use in righting my inverted innermost, it’s the process that matters. The practice. The act of making–creating, bringing newness into being, starting afresh. That’s what carries the healing and renewing power. What carries me through the cold hard world when it’s not catering to my taste.

For such resources I’m endlessly grateful.