Feb 29, 2020

Welcome March.




This is the end of  February.  

I had an unusual winter. No depression. (I got off pills. I was happy. I was not ill.) And I stayed active. Good thing, because I have gained ten pounds since last August and I have to lose that weight plus ten more pounds from previous winter.  Laughing. But I am all right. Sure, I am frustrated and unhappy with my body but I still love myself.  However, this is way too much weight for someone as short and small as I am. I have learned this the hard way, and I don't want my weight to go any higher. I guess I just ate my anxieties in 2019. Hell, I don't know. It was the year that I began to move back into society, after losing Johnny. Lots of eating out and going places and I just didn't take notice of my eating habits. I probably ate out more than I ever have in the past. I ate more breakfast food. OMG. I was never a breakfast person at all. I skipped it. But no, I ate eggs and sausage and biscuits. I baked too much. And now I am paying for it. Also, I ate a lot of chocolate, which someone said was my way of dealing with moods. Could be true!  However, right now it doesn't matter. I have to watch what I eat and exercise more. Cook more. No sweets in the house. Normal things you do when you want to drop several pounds.

My writing is going good. I love my story, my writing is stronger than ever, and I'm confident that I know what the hell I am doing. It's just slow work. Big novels are difficult because of the time needed to write a very complex structure that is outside my comfort zone. I only average about 4 pages a day when working and I don't write on the novel every day anymore.  Five pages when working is the limit. I actually stop when I achieve that, which is a new way of writing for me. No matter how I feel or how exciting the writing is going, I stop at five pages and I go do something else. I get out of the chair and out of my head and out of the story. This is a new way of thinking about writing and work. But it's been so awesome for me as a person. It is something that has eliminated backaches, headaches, carpal tunnel, spinning thoughts, exhaustion, and increased anxiety cycles. I'd like to thank my therapist for telling me that I needed to write slow and careful. Laughing. I never count words at all and I do not draft loosely. It's never been helpful for me to write a shitty draft and all that. That way of writing has never worked for me. Drafts like that I never end up using. Those drafts just seem to be a way of thinking a story out and they are lost as I write a whole new draft. And then that shitty draft cycle is repeated as my thoughts change and the story develops. What a mess!  Just years of nothing. I now do a lot of work along the way, and I revel in the slow motion of that gorgeous process. Oh, live and learn....


I still consider myself a widow who is grieving a lost friend, lover, and husband. I think it's forever unless I fall in love again or get involved in a new relationship, two things I am not seeking. I was married for a very long time and now I just want to paint, garden, and finish some stories. But it's not easy being alone, doing everything yourself, and keeping yourself out of sour and low moods.  I tend to go into depressions easy. But I've had therapy and realize how quick my moods can go flat. I no longer take antidepressants, something I did for almost two decades. I live drug free now. I guess that might help explain some of the weight gain, because depression and Prozac killed my appetite.  Winters are usually very hard on me emotionally. I dislike winter. But I have had the best winter since before my father died in early January of 2007.  I feel enlightened in a way, that I am so aware of  how mentally to stay healthy now. This probably has a lot to do with Buddhism and meditation, something I became interested in a long time ago and now practice daily. I feel really good about where I am at in my life. But I do miss Johnny. He was an incredible person. But he's gone, and I understand how precious life is and how truly wonderful every day can be.  There is value to suffering. It gives you perspective, a view far from your personal privilege. I've known a lot of it. But I am not undone by it.

I didn't make goals on the New Year. I never do anymore.  I wait till February is over before I start thinking about new things. March is really spring in the South.  I now start working in the yard, thinking about my flowers and other plants. I exercise a lot more. I am out of my head a lot, which is a very good thing. My goals are really not too impressive this year. I just want to write a really good draft of this novel in 2020, one that I can actually revise and feel like it's going to be finished soon. That's all. I want to write new poems and revise some very old ones. I have a lot of paintings to finish and many art projects, so that is where my head is. I think overall, I just want to stay healthy, keep doing the things I enjoy, and be content.

And lose this weight! Smiling.

Feb 26, 2020

Johnny


I dreamt we spoke, I dreamt we spoke again
It'd been so long, it'd been so long my mind filled in the blanks
I dreamt we spoke, I dreamt we spoke again
It'd been so long, it'd been so long, your voice was like a ghost
In my head
In my head
Only in, yes, only in a dream
Is anything, is anything the way it used to be?
I dreamt we spoke, I dreamt we spoke again
But when I awoke, when I awoke I could not remember
Anything you said
Anything you said
Anything you said
Anything you said

by Death Cab For Cutie

Feb 20, 2020

For many, I remain a mystery.

“But above all, in order to be, never try to seem.” 
                     ― Albert Camus

Feb 15, 2020

Unicorn Angela Carter

So I conceal my armoury
Yours is all on view
You think you are possessing me
But I’ve got my teeth in you.

                           —Angela Carter, from Unicorn

Feb 14, 2020

Happy Valentine's Day

More precious was the light in your eyes than all the roses in the world. 

                           —Edna St. Vincent Millay

Feb 8, 2020

David Bowie and Freddy Burretti 1971



Freddy Burretti & David Bowie from the 1971 magazine CURIOUS. 

The Lights Will Stay On by The Walkabouts




This is the first time I ever heard the phrase "The City of Crows" which was the original title for the very first (and now very defunct)  draft of the Fairy tale Novel.  It's a beautiful song and it reminded me of how folklore can look and sound without being overwhelming. It also carries a theme that I now use in all my writing. This video is a very important piece of art which has greatly influenced my own art and yes, my life. It's transformative. 

Feb 6, 2020

Mark Hollis and Talk Talk


   Talk Talk, left to right: Paul Webb, Mark Hollis and Lee Harris in 1984. Photograph: Rob Verhorst/Redferns

There's no denying that Mark Hollis was always one of my favorite songwriters. It was his music and band that always grabbed my attention during some very busy times for me. I have to say that my music was really at the bottom of the list of what got played around my house. Occasionally when I was alone, I'd put in a CD and dance with myself. 

I never had a Talk Talk CD. I had a cassette tape and you know how that goes. They were fragile things to own.

Hollis was really magical, a dreamy songwriter with a gorgeous voice that just oozed longing. He was self-taught, difficult at times, and he had a very ambivalent relationship with his fame and with the music industry itself. These are things I can identify with strongly. I was very sad when I heard he was not going to play anymore music and then long after he died.

But this songs remain some of my favorites. I recently bought  Natural History, The Very Best of Talk Talk to play on my record player and a CD to play in the car.

Here is a beautiful essay written about Mark Hollis.

https://www.theguardian.com/music/2019/feb/26/mark-hollis-talk-talk-singer

Feb 2, 2020

Talk Talk - Living in Another World (Live at Montreaux 1986)




Mark Hollis was one of the greatest songwriters of his generation. He was a musical genius, all self taught. From what I have read, he was guarded and closed-off, but a very good soul and man. Living in Another World is one of my top ten songs. I recently bought an album by Talk Talk. I am thinking I only had cassette tapes for this band. Will have to look.

(This performance gives me chills.)

Reflection Early 2020

Well, I've made "The Shift" as I call it. The Shift is going from being a widow to someone who has decided how she wants to live the rest of her life. I really resisted this moment, hoping to play awhile longer, just float some more and I probably would have done so if not for some unfortunate and perhaps ridiculous circumstances. For people who know me, particularly my family, I am considered a closed-off person, someone who can be cold, indifferent, distant. In the company of people I know, I can be warm but I am not very very giving. I've lived most of my life with one person, John, with books, with paintings, in my garden, alone, doing only what I wanted. The last couple of years I've tried to be more social and have failed miserably. I don't know how to be with people. Laughing. I can be with them in work, in books, in my garden. I'm a good person, but at times, I am naive. I guess this is due to the fact that I expect people to have manners and civility.  I grew up in a household where manners were totally necessary. But in the world outside my world, people are not like this. And I have been foolish.

But I never repeat the same mistake.


And I have moved on.  


All of this online mess I've made has prompted me to go ahead and do what I need to do. Just quit playing, procrastinating, floating in and out. I don't make these big shifts often but when I do, people get confused. They wonder what happened to me. I made one around 2006, and another another one around 2012.  This is probably the most severe shift I have ever made, since I was a very young woman. It's been coming, slowly but surely.  But there are only a few moments in life where we are faced with rebuilding our lives, our goals, deciding how we want to live.


I know how I want to live the rest of my life, and it's not online, in the middle of clusters with people I don't really know. I just can't be there for people I'll never really know. And I don't want to be just a widow anymore. I want to move on and live a rich and full life, to do things and be with my children and grandchildren, my flowers, and my books, and yes, my writing. I want to finish a novel. 


So, I am making online changes. Making it a smaller part of my daily life. 


I am going to write a big novel and then another one. And I am going to smile while doing it.

The Shift in Direction is Completed.

“There is nothing else in magic but the wild thought of the bird as it casts itself into the void. There is no creature upon the earth with such potential for magic. Even the least of them may fly straight out of this world and come by chance to the Other Lands. Where does the wind come from that blows upon your face, that fans the pages of your book? Where the harum-scarum magic of small wild creatures meets the magic of Man, where the language of the wind and the rain and the trees can be understood, there we will find the Raven King.” 


Susanna Clarke, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell