Posts Tagged ‘love’

Love, Proposals and Fish With Blue Lips

February 26, 2010 - 10:12 pm 6 Comments

Valentine’s Omens

Last year on Valentine’s Day,  Randy and I found this rock on the edge of a brook.  We thought it was great sign that we found a heart on valentine’s day, when we were newly in love and planning our wedding.

This year we found another sign on Valentine’s Day.  Ironically, it more of a “domestic” sign.  We through our vegetable scraps out under a tree in our backyard to compost.  On Valentine’s Day, I was taking a picture of some squirrels when I found this onion scrap.

We were pretty excited.  We are wondering if we’ll find a heart sign every year on Valentine’s Day.

Woodpecker, More Love, and Fish

This guy has been in our yard several days over the past week.  I don’t know if you can tell from the picture, but the hole he is working on is huge!  When I took this picture, he had been out there about two hours.  They are so beautiful!

Last Sunday my stepson, Tyler, proposed to his girlfriend at the Oklahoma Aquarium.  It was so cute.  I took her to the aquarium under false pretenses.  He got there early and dressed up in a shark suit.  When he got to the part of the aquarium where he was, I asked her to have her picture taken with the shark and he pulled the costume head off, got on one knee and proposed.  It was so neat, and she was soo sooo shocked!!

Since we were at the aquarium anyway, we took in the sights.  My favorite was this fish that appears to have on blue lipstick.  I just want to paint his (her?) portrait!!

Art I’ve Done Lately

A while back I saw this multi-post tutorial at An Artist Journal on what she calls intuitive collage.  It’s a good tutorial and I thought it would be cool to try it.  I had fun, and want to try again, but I only got two 5 x 7 collages out of a large sheet of watercolor paper.   I know that doesn’t make sense, but the idea is to paint and glue things on a large paper then find the smaller collages within that and cut them out.  Here are the two I liked of mine.

xxx

This heart is something I did after watching some youtube videos of an artist named Carla van den Berg.  She does these awesome paintings using grout, eggshells and something called chicken grit.  So much texture!!  Just beautiful.   So I did the background then used a heart stencil and filled it in with grout.  This was practice so it’s not that great, but I learned that the grout does work and you can play with the texture because it takes a long time to dry.  I have an idea for a larger one I want to do.  I’m thinking about entering an art show here in April.  If I can get this technique to work as I want, I might enter it.


One more heart.  I love this one!!  I just slapped coats of paint and lots of gesso on this canvas in many layers, then scratched the heart with an icepick.  It’s simple but I like the look of pristine white over something that apprears to have weathered many storms.

Best of 09 Blog Challenge

December 9, 2009 - 11:05 pm 4 Comments

I haven’t been keeping up with this blog challenge very well.  Even though it’s late I’m posting a response to today’s prompt, which is:

Challenge. Something that really made you grow this year. That made you go to your edge and then some. What made it the best challenge of the year for you?”

Reflecting back over the year, there were several challenges but the most challenging situation I found myself in was a not so pleasant one.  I lived upstairs from my sister and brother-on-law. My sister was out of town and called me to see if I would go check on her husband because he wasn’t answering the phone.   She was still on the phone when I went downstairs, taking the phone with me.  When I found my brother-in-law, he has passed away.  I believe the hardest thing I”ve ever had to do was tell my sister that her husband had died.

A million things went through my mind during those seconds that passed before I spoke.  She was keeping her three grandchildren, one of whom was just a few months old.  I worried if she would be able to care from them once she heard the news.  Finally, I realized that I had to tell her because she’s on the phone waiting to talk to him.  There was nothing I could say except the truth.  Strangely enough, I went out into the hallway, and sort of whispered to her, “Judy, he’s dead.”  I’m not sure why I was so secretive about it.

The next several hours that followed continued to be challenging.  I called the police and they came soon with the paramedics.  They questioned me over and over about what had happened, and informed me that it was a crime scene and would remain so until the determined what had happened.  My brother-in-law was like my dad.  My parents  died when I was young and he and my sister basically raised me from the time I was 16.  So, I was devastated that he was gone, and yet had to maintain my composure to answer their questions and make sure I did what was necessary, in my sister’s absence.

Their daughter came right away, and later that evening my sister flew back home.  I knew I had to be supportive for them and did my best to have the strength I needed to help them through this tragedy.  But the thought of  my brother-in-law lying there wouldn’t leave my mind.

I wondered why it had happened the way it did.  As the weeks passed, little answers came to me.  There are many gifts that came from that event.  Not the least of which was that I saw the peace on his face.  I knew without a doubt that he had laid down and fallen asleep and just not awakened.  I had the gift of telling that to his family.  My sister felt guilt about being gone when he died.  But she was able to let go of the guilt when I described to her how peaceful he looked.  I knew she was imagining that he had suffered and that if she had been there, she might have been able to keep him from suffering.  Being the one to give her the truth and alleviate her guilt was a huge blessing to us both.

Challenges are not something most of us welcome, but if we  look for the gifts within them, they are nearly always there.  I feel so honored that God chose me to be there when my brother-in-law died.  I feel that he and I shared a moment that is so spiritual it can’t be explained in mere words.  The hardest moment of my life turned out to be one of the most special.

As My Wedding Day Approaches

October 21, 2009 - 9:17 am 2 Comments

On Saturday I will marry the man of my dreams.  I am blessed beyond belief to have met him and be able to spend the rest of my life with him.  In anticipation of our wedding,  I want to express my feelings through this beautiful poem:frame3

Hold my hand and I’m yours,
And your heart will stay close to mine,
For I know the sun must rise with the dawn,
And at night the stars must shine.

And the wind must wander the ocean
And sing with the waves of the sea;
Just so, I know, I’ll be by your side,
And you will be wedded to me.

And you will be wedded to me, my love,
And I will be wedded to you;
For I know the tide must turn with the moon,
And the spring must return ever new.

And the sky must weep that the hillsides
May laugh in the green of their joy;
And the leaves must turn red, brown, and gold
That the earth might their riches employ.

And love like a mad, swollen hunger,
And love like an unending song,
And love like the silent pull of the Earth
Shall be with us all our lives long, my love,
Shall be with us all our lives long.

(c) Nicholas Gordon

Love

February 14, 2009 - 7:00 am 2 Comments

vntgcard

Love

Love
It isn’t definable
and is the subject of many

Writers
try to corral love
and make sense of it with

Words
cannot explain a heart
that has emotions so

Deep
is the place of
true love that lasts

Forever
is a long time
for something so wonderful as

Love
can’t be explained
people who write about it are

Silly

What Can Love Conquer?

January 16, 2009 - 11:39 am 4 Comments

christmas4

Who said “Love conquers all?”  I sometimes get slapped in the face with the reality that love can’t stop pain.  When I see my kids and grandkids suffer I wish love could conquer it and make everything okay.  I am glad that I believe something bigger than me is in control, because if I felt like I was in charge it would be scary.

My four year old grandson, Gus, was diagnosed with scoliosis this week.  It is unusual for it to be noticable when a child is this young, so that’s a blessing that they’ve already found it.  And since he’s so young, the treatment will likely be more effective.

Another blessing is that they live in Dallas where the Scottish Rite hospital is.  I went to occupational therapy school in Dallas and worked with Scottish Rite, so I know it’s a top-notch place for any type of orthopedic problem in children.  And it’s free!  Gus has an appointment there on Feb 4th.

The hard part is thinking about how tough it’s going to be for him to understand what’s going on.  He will likely have to wear some sort of apparatus that restrains him in some way.   He’s a boy full of curiosity and wonder and is constantly on the move, so he’s not going to do well with anything that slows him down.  I hope that none of the treatment is painful for him or too scary.

His mom and dad are so involved with their (4) children and they are both so tender and caring that I know this will be hard on them too.  I know there are parents and grandparents dealing with more serious conditions in their little ones.  So I am focusing on all we have to be grateful for in this situation.  Yet, my heart aches a little at the struggles that lie ahead for my kids and little Gus.

Keep Gus and his mommy and daddy in your thoughts and prayers if you will.

mar-08-087

Healing Through Looking at the Past

June 26, 2008 - 8:20 am 4 Comments

“The world breaks everyone, and afterward, some are strong at the broken places.”
~Ernest Hemingway

I believe that it’s important to look into our past to find clues that will help us live better today.  Finding the causes of some of our behaviors gives us information we need in order to change those behaviors.   Understanding how I adapted to my environment as a child has given me valuable insight and allowed me to choose how I respond in most areas of my life as an adult.

But where is the fine line between using the past as a tool for growth, and dwelling in the past?  The key difference is whether we are living in the past or just visiting it long enough to get what we need to heal.  Recognizing patterns in our responses requires that we find the first time we had that response.  Taking that trip back to childhood is necessary but we don’t have to pack a trunk and make it an extended stay.

If I can tell you how my childhood affected me in some way that I don’t like, and I can also tell you how I’ve used this knowledge to be closer to who I want to become then I’m healing the broken places and becoming stronger.  But if I just want to tell you how hard I had it, that’s not helpful to me or you in any way.  It actual weakens us to relive, over and over, the hurts we’ve suffered.

Forgiveness of those who hurt us, and of ourselves, as well as gratitude are the best tools for living in the here and now.  This is what makes us able to be strong in the broken places.  Resentment, self pity and staying in the role of victim hold us in the past, rob us of our joy and prevent us from spreading love.

Journaling about past hurts is a wonderful tool to help us move from resentment and anger into forgiveness and release.  Try writing about a past hurt when you feel ready.  Write all the details you need to write until it’s all out.  Only then should you move to work on forgiveness.  It may take a whole journal to get it all out, but once you start you are on your way to becoming stronger.

Beautiful love

April 8, 2008 - 9:39 pm 2 Comments

The joint suicide of André Gorz, the French philosopher and founder of the magazine Le Nouvel Observateur, and his British-born wife Dorine, who was suffering from a fatal disease, has turned the love letter that he wrote to her into a surprise bestseller.

Here is an excerpt from his letter:

‘I took a photo of you, from behind: you are walking with your feet in the water on the beach of La Jolla. You are 52. You are amazing. It’s one of the images of you that I like best.

I looked at that photo for a long while after we got back home, when you told me you wondered if you didn’t have some sort of cancer. You’d already wondered that before we left for the United States but hadn’t wanted to say anything to me. Why not? ‘If I have to die, I wanted to see California beforehand,’ you told me calmly.

Your endometrial cancer hadn’t been picked up in your annual checkup. Once the diagnosis was made and the date of the operation set, we went to spend a week in the house you’d designed. I carved your name in the stone with a chisel. That house was magic. All the spaces had a trapezoidal shape. The bedroom windows looked out over the treetops.

The first night, we didn’t sleep. We were both listening to each other breathing. Then a nightingale started singing and a second one, further away, started answering. We said very little to each other. I spent the day digging and looked up from time to time at the bedroom window. You were standing there, motionless, staring into the distance. I am sure you were practising taming death in order to fight it without fear. You were so beautiful and so determined in your silence that I couldn’t imagine you giving up living.

I took time off from Le Nouvel Observateur and shared your room at the clinic. The first night, through the open window, I heard all of Schubert’s Ninth Symphony. It is etched in me, every note. I remember every moment spent at the clinic. Pierre, our doctor friend from the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), who came to hear your latest news every morning, said to me: ‘You are going through moments of exceptional intensity. You’ll remember this always.’ I wanted to know what chances the oncol-ogist gave you of surviving five years. Pierre brought me the answer: ‘50-50.’

When you came out of the clinic we went back to our house. Your spirit thrilled me and reassured me. You’d escaped death and life took on a new meaning and a new value. A friend immediately understood this when you saw him at a party. He stared into your eyes for a long time and he said to you: ‘You’ve seen the other side.’ I don’t know how you responded or what else you said. But these are the words he said to me, straight afterwards: ‘Those eyes! Now I understand what she means to you.’

You had seen ‘the other side’; you’d come back from the land no one comes back from. This changed your perspective. We made the same resolution without consulting each other. An English Romantic once summed it up in a sentence: ‘There is no wealth but life.’

During the months you were convalescing, I decided to take my retirement at 60. I started counting the weeks till I could pack up. I took pleasure in cooking, in tracking down organic produce that would help you get your strength back, in ordering the specially tailored medications that a homeopath had recommended you take.

Ecology became a way of life and a daily practice without ceasing to imply the requirement of a completely different civilisation. I’d reached the age where you ask yourself what you’ve done with your life, what you would like to have done with it. I had the impression of not having lived my life, of having always observed it at a distance, of having developed only one side of myself and being poor as a person. You were, and always had been, richer than I was. You’d blossomed and grown in every dimension. You were at home in your life; whereas I’d always been in a hurry to move on to the next task, as though our life would only really begin later.

I asked myself what was the inessential that I needed to give up in order to concentrate on the essential. I told myself that, to grasp the reach of the upheavals that were looming in every domain, there had to be more space and time for reflection than the full-time exercise of my profession as a journalist allowed.

I was amazed that my leaving the journal, after 20 years of collaboration, was neither painful to myself nor to others. I remember having written that, at the end of the day, only one thing was essential to me: to be with you. I can’t imagine continuing to write, if you no longer are. You are the essential without which all the rest, no matter how important it seems to me when you are there, loses its meaning and its importance. I told you that in the dedication of my last work.

Twenty-three years have gone by since we went off to live in the country, first in ‘your’ house, which radiated a sense of meditative harmony. A harmony we enjoyed for only three years. They started building a nuclear power station nearby and that drove us away. We found another house, very old, cool in summer, warm in winter, with huge grounds. It was a place where you could be happy.

Where there was only a meadow you created a garden of hedges and shrubs. I planted 200 trees there. For a few years we still did a bit of travelling; but all the vibrating and jolting around involved in any means of transport, no matter what, triggers headaches and pain through your whole body. Arach-noiditis has forced you, little by little, to abandon most of your favourite activities. You hide your suffering. Our friends think you’re ‘in great shape’. You’ve never stopped encouraging me to write. Over the 23 years we’ve spent in our house, I’ve published six books and hundreds of articles and interviews.

We’ve had dozens of visitors from every corner of the globe and I’ve given dozens of interviews. I surely have not lived up to the resolution made 30 years ago: to live completely at home in the present, mindful above all of the richness that is our shared life. I’m now reliving the instants when I made that resolution with a sense of urgency. I don’t have any major work in the pipeline. I don’t want ‘to put off living till later’ – in Georges Bataille’s phrase – any longer.

I am as mindful of your presence now as in the early days and would like to make you feel that. You’ve given me all of your life and all of you; I’d like to be able to give you all of me in the time we have left.

You’ve just turned 82. You are still beautiful, graceful and desirable. We’ve lived together now for 58 years and I love you more than ever. Lately I’ve fallen in love with you all over again and I once more carry inside me a gnawing emptiness that can only be filled by your body snuggled up against mine.

At night I sometimes see the figure of a man, on an empty road in a deserted landscape, walking behind a hearse. I am that man. It’s you the hearse is carrying away. I don’t want to be there for your cremation; I don’t want to be given an urn with your ashes in it. I hear the voice of Kathleen Ferrier singing, ‘Die Welt ist leer, Ich will nicht leben mehr’ and I wake up. I check your breathing, my hand brushes over you.

Each of us would like not to survive the other’s death. We’ve often said to ourselves that if, by some miracle, we were to have a second life, we’d like to spend it together. ’

Extracted from Lettre à D. Histoire d’un Amour by André Gorz. Translated by Julie Rose

Valentine’s Thoughts

February 11, 2008 - 7:43 pm 4 Comments

heartbranches1.jpg

“Follow your heart, but be quiet for a while first. Ask questions, then feel the answer. Learn to trust your heart.”
-Unknown

As Valentine’s Day approaches, I get sentimental. My wedding anniversary was on Valentine’s Day. I made it through 24 anniversaries before the marriage ended.

It’s hard to learn to trust your heart after you experience a failure in love.  I have not mastered the smooth art of trusting.  It is my nature to be very trusting, and it angers me that the world is not set up so that we can just trust without getting hurt.  I have to make a conscious effort to not be so trusting.

So, I am trying to ask questions, without being angry that I need to ask questions.  And to let myself take risks and trust a little at a time.  I hope that someday I learn the balance of trust so that I can risk trusting my heart to someone again.