Feb 22, 2023

We are made of dust and we will return to dust.

 


Before the Council of Nicaea, the followers of Jesus had formed a ritual of fasting prior to Easter which celebrated the resurrection of Jesus. Meat and alcohol were forbidden, prayers were encouraged and alms giving or charity work. 

It was a time to reflect on mortality and death.Remember, man, that thou art dust, and unto dust thou shalt return” – a translation from the medieval Latin Mass (Memento, homo, quia pulvis es, et in pulverem reverteris) 

One of the oldest symbols of the early Catholic Church was the Chi Rho (above right), the ichethys (above left) and a combination of both with the fish, the latter a symbol of the fisherman of men and souls, Jesus Christ. The metaphor is a beautiful one based on a human ideal. I often think of these early symbols and the people who made them when I am participating in Ash Wednesday which is the first day of Lent when these symbols really mean a lot. Lent last 40 days and ends on Maundy Thursday before Easter Sunday. Maundy is a day for the washing of the feet. As one can see, these are all symbols to represent the growing religion of Christianity during the early days.

I am, to other people's astonishment, an Easter Catholic. I observe Lent and Easter each year. For me it makes sense, as it is a time of self-denial, self reflection, and pondering the early Christian ideal. But I take these metaphors very seriously. Fasting is an element of many religions. So is prayer. Remembering that we are mortal, that nothing last, that our time here is limited is healthy.

The ashes to ashes. Our lives are brief and fragile.

Edit: I've given up being an Easter Catholic.

Feb 17, 2023

Choosing what to do and how to do it is just wild and I mean wild!

 

Not long after I took this photo in November 2022, the weather turned very bad indeed. Yes, I said I was not going to post any more selfies, but allow me a tiny one to show that it was a lovely day and I had been for a long walk. I was even listening to Spotify, enjoying myself, taking photos of  colorful trees, and I was very healthy, feeling like I could conquer the world. I was happy and content and working on the NANO project which I pushed up to 52,000 words in four weeks. And they were very good words. I had completed other assignments, yes, by sheer will.

Then it started raining. November 17th was the last day I bought groceries until this month which tells you something went amok in November. While things were going amok, I was focused on the writing and getting to the end of November. I did go to my son's house for Thanksgiving dinner late in the afternoon and stayed about three hours.

It started raining around the 10th of November and it did not stop really. (It hasn't stopped but for a day or two, here and there.) It was terrible storms and above average rainfall.  Water even came down the chimney once. (Hasn't since). I did not even have a chance to clean up the yard for winter for all the rain. The yard was/is soaked and I would cough a bit off and on, not enough to notice or worry. 

After NaNoWriMo was over, I began decorating for Christmas and focusing on all the good cheery stuff. I love Christmas shopping, even if I don't buy much. I just like the atmosphere, the people, looking in windows, seeing all the stuff. I am not an outrageous, obsessive consumer of anything but books, so the little shopping I did was mainly walking around big department stores and looking. I am a list and deadline person and very consistent (since John died) at my work, which is a lot of writing, sometimes for other people. I also do art projects, and read a lot. By the second week of December I was falling behind with work, all of it, my own, others, everything. The weather was terrible and every time I did go out, I would end up with a runny nose and slight congestion and a strange cough. Call it a tickle in the throat. I was also slowing down. Now I worked very hard in November because writing 52,000 GOOD words on a big novel is exhausting. I probably slept less, ate lousy, and didn't drink enough water or take enough exercise, because my last walk outside was November 8th according to my camera and this is the photo I posted. I am no "spring chicken," I don't bounce back like I used to from any illness and I felt a little concerned. 

Since I get seasonal depression, I was alarmed at how each day I did less and less. And it was moving toward Christmas. I usually have all my shopping done early, by the second week of December. I usually have gifts wrapped and under the tree. But none of that had happened. I told myself it was because I was still writing on the novel, but I noticed that I was watching a lot of TV (not me at all), that I was sleeping too much at the wrong time of day, and that I was writing things in my diary like "Felt bad. Read. Slept."  It was the 20th before I wrapped the gifts and put them under the tree. Any gift. One entry in diary says, "Woke up in the middle of night with terrible anxiety. Is it writing so much or Christmas stress or is my body trying to tell me something? I don't know. Maybe it is the winter storm that is forecasted." ( It was all of this.) I wrote one more diary entry on when the winter storm arrived on the 22nd of December and after that, most pages say one word — SICK! I was so sick on Christmas Eve, that I called my daughter-in-law at the hospital and asked her if I should go into the emergency room. She said yes, but strangely I fell asleep after suffering through the entire night. I went to the doctor, the first time, on December 27th. I had acute Bronchitis, was given an injection of "Dex," some Cipro for 14 days, and a narcotic cough medicine. This is not new for me. There are no diary entries until the 12th of January when I returned to the doctor and got the same treatment and was told to rest completely. Laughing. I had not been out of bed since before Christmas except to walk to the bathroom or kitchen. I felt well enough to write a long entry on the meaning of love, taking down decorations, and writing on the 15th of January that I had a fever. I was even posting on Twitter, but then I got Covid. Both my son and I were really sick and I could not even walk to the kitchen this time around. For four days, I struggled and then I decided, what the hell, I have to do something or die. And I was not going to die. I started writing again, on the book, in the diary, I turned on the TV to PBS and watched Jane Austen series in the background. I thought, I am to survive but what about all my well made plans. I did not recover from Covid and Bronchitis until the 8th of February when I wrote in my diary. "First day without any medication of any sort since the second week of December 2022."

Laughing. I had been sick over 8 weeks and literally two months on the calendar. But I had been going downhill since the day after my walk in November.

It is now nearly ten days later from the 8th of February, and I know that what I had once planned as work projects for 2023, will not happen, at least not how I thought. I also realize that I did work too hard last year, mostly because I had planned a vacation (that didn't happen) and had rearranged my work and it took a lot of effort and time to get that work done, along with what I wanted to do for myself. It is not the first time I had overworked, ate and slept lousy, forgot to walk or drink water. But it was the first time in years and years and I was older. The thing about getting older is that...well, I knew it and then I didn't. Example. I had to sleep more than six hours a night, I had to drink water (I suffer from easy dehydration and have to drink 60 ounces of water a day no matter what). I had to go to sleep instead of waiting on calls at 2 in the morning or watching a movie late at night after writing for six hours, or cleaning house until midnight and taking baths afterwards. All because I wanted to write and do art projects and then read psychology books. It was maddening and ironic. Terribly ironic because I knew better. I knew in December that I was winding down and then I got sick. 

So now I know I have to choose what projects I want to do and how to do them. I have to decide how much time I spend on social media and watching films or even reading good books. I have to choose between French and Latin this year. I have to choose what I want to do on Brian Molko and how. Research and data is finished. I have to choose what novel will come after this novel is finished this year and why it's the best one to follow. I have to choose how I want to work on both Francesca Woodman and John Kennedy Toole. How much gardening? What plants? What about painting the house and building a greenhouse? How much artwork on the canvas. AND IN ALL THIS. HOW. HOW. HOW. 

Artists, people like me, work all the time. If we are not working, we are thinking about how to work. Our relax times are something like reading or sketching or watching some TV, but mainly it's all related to our own ambitions. Artists are very self-absorbed people. I am a pretty happy person but push me against the wall and cause me to have to sacrifice my artistic desires, and I will push back. I will go missing if I have to. I will ghost the world. I have been like this since I was eight years old. I am not likely to change even though I do think I am a kinder, better person now because I have worked at it. I have learned to be responsible and make plans and yes, even hit the middle sometimes, in my head.

Choosing is an art form. Mainly we learn how to choose like we learn how to be decent people, from making mistakes. The saddest and yes , the wildest and most maddening thing about choosing is we have to "move ourselves into a future." I am not a person who likes to do that. Such an action is like creating a miracle. Because futures don't really exist and living under a future weight is both confusing and exhausting. But artists must do it to create and finish projects. And I want to finish projects. Some I want to finish this year. But look at what happened to me in 2022. I predicted , gambled, and lost. However, since my husband died in 2016, I have become a planner, a list maker, and a pragmatic worker. Be consistent.Be consistent. That's good advice. Don't overdo. Laughing. Do what you planned and stop. And wow, I can do that. But making plans, choosing in advance, has helped me live my life better, no matter what the child in me feels or believes or once practiced. No matter how I hate to predict or live under that weight. That said, choice is complex. It takes research, experience, and information. And because our lives are still moved by unexpected things (me deciding to do Nano; me getting both bronchitis and Covid)  bad things happen, life goes amok. And yes, I made mistakes.

However, what I once saw in my head as the end game is now unclear. My wishes have gone amok, too.

I have to make "rearranged wishes" and yes, I have to slow down.

I have to focus.

French in the garde, a List by Cause French on Tumblr

🌿 Types of gardens

  • le jardin garden
  • le patio patio garden
  • le jardin sur le toit roof garden
  • la rocaille rock garden
  • le jardin floral a flower garden
  • le jardin d'agrément an ornamental garden
  • le jardin botanique a botanical garden
  • le jardin de fruit a fruit garden
  • un verger - orchard
  • le jardin potager a vegetable garden
  • le jardin paysan cottage garden
  • le jardin d’eau water garden

🍁 Some garden objects

  • un etang à poissons fish pond
  • le parterre flowerbed
  • le pavé paving
  • l’allée path
  • la pelouse lawn
  • la haie hedge
  • le potager vegetable garden
  • la serre greenhouse
  • le tas de compost compost heap
  • la fontaine fountain
  • le sol soil
  • la terre topsoil
  • le sable sand
  • la chaux chalk
  • l’argile clay
  • les outils de jardin garden tools
  • le balai à gazon lawn rake
  • la bêche spade
  • la fourche fork
  • le râteau rake
  • la tondeuse lawnmower
  • la brouette wheelbarrow
  • le terreau compost
  • le gravier gravel
  • les gants de jardinage gardening gloves
  • le pot à fleurs flower pot
  • l’arrosage watering
  • l’arrosoir watering can
  • le tuyau d’arrosage hose
  • la pelouse lawn

💐 Verbs

  • tondre to mow (the lawn)
  • ratisser to rake
  • tailler to trim
  • semer to sow
  • bêcher to trim
  • arroser to water
  • désherber to weed
  • pailler to mulch
  • cultiver to cultivate
  • récolter to harvest
  • cueillir to pick

🌱 Types of plants

  • les plantes à fleurs flowering plants
  • les plantes plants
  • les mauvaises herbes weeds
  • le bambou bamboo
  • la fougère fern
  • l’herbe herb
  • l’arbre tree
  • la plante aquatique water plant
  • le palmier palm
  • à feuilles persistantes evergreen
  • à feuilles caduques deciduous
  • la plante grasse succulent
  • le cactus cactus
  • la plante en pot potted plant
  • la plante d’ombre shade plant
  • la plante grimpante climber
  • l’herbe grass
  • la plante rampante creeper
  • l’arbuste à fleurs flowering shrub
  • les graines seeds
  • saplings les jeunes plants d'arbres
  • plant cuttings - les boutures de plantes

🌹 Types of flowers

  • rose la rose
  • marigold le souci
  • tulip la tulipe
  • crocus le crocus
  • lily le lys
  • iris l'iris
  • sweet pea le pois de senteur
  • geranium le géranium
  • gladiolus le glaïeul
  • chrysanthemum le chrysanthème
  • sunflower le tournesol
  • zinnia le zinnia
  • aster l'aster
  • dahlia le dahlia
  • daisy la pâquerette
  • carnation l'oeillet
  • primrose le primevère
  • peony la pivoine
  • bluebell la campanule
  • begonia le bégonia
  • daffodil la jonquille
  • jasmine le jasmin
  • lavender la lavande
  • azalea l'azalée
  • orchid l'orchidée
  • water lily le nénuphar

🌲 Types of trees

  • orange tree l'oranger
  • lemon tree le citronnier
  • plum tree le prunier
  • pear tree le poirier
  • olive tree l'olivier
  • cherry tree le cerisier
  • apple tree le pommier
  • apricot tree l'abricotier
  • fig tree le figuier

Feb 16, 2023

Brian Molko can be very honest at times.

"It's difficult not to go back and feel that a lot of our early stuff was really sophomoric. It's like bad teenage poetry that you made at college."

—Brian Molko

Feb 14, 2023

This is where I sit most days aka My Writing Space.

 


My work space. This is the neatest it ever is— so, I took a "selfie" of the space where I sit most of the time and where I make magic. Books are everywhere, all over my house, so what can I say. I bought myself some pink tulips yesterday. That's my beautiful grandson in that photo to the right, and to the left is a copy of a painting of the poet Percy Shelley that I ripped out of book I bought decades ago. Everyone should have a dead white poet "thumbtacked" to their wall. It's my feeling on the proper "geometry and theology" that we need in the current writing world. Smiling.

Feb 10, 2023

Love as many things as possible is how one stays alive, content, and mentally young in a world full of anxiety and destruction.

“The brain may take advice, but not the heart, and love, having no geography, knows no boundaries: weight and sink it deep, no matter, it will rise and find the surface: and why not? any love is natural and beautiful that lies within a person's nature; only hypocrites would hold a man responsible for what he loves, emotional illiterates and those of righteous envy, who, in their agitated concern, mistake so frequently the arrow pointing to heaven for the one that leads to hell. ”

             —    Truman Capote, Other Voices, Other Rooms

Feb 8, 2023

The Walkabouts - The Light Will Stay On


What goes into good fiction by an author? How is it created? It may be a fairy tale, a fantasy, or even a horror novel, but can one find traces of the author in the their fiction? Long before the popularity of shared voices and experiences, scholars and even really good readers learned to look for aspects of writers' life in their fiction. Some call it looking for fingerprints, the tiny details left by the author that acknowledges their identity, that reveals something
personal about their experiences. Even specialists can look at their syntax and see patterns in how they construct sentences. Writers, we know, are thieves. Just look at all the quotes by Faulkner who told where he got the "stuff" for stories. An example of this process is the video I am playing now, which gave me the idea for my current WIP. Lyrics and images from this video are used over and over in my story. The truth is, all authors do this, even if they are not aware of it. Some more than others, and some in different and strange ways. "Write What You Know" may be more subtle than one thinks. Because what a writer knows, experiences, and sees in life does affect their work. There is no getting away from it. Also, what a writer pays attention to in life, shows, too. It's psychology. I call this creative process, "collecting artifacts." You are what you do, what habits you have, what you read, what you love, what you know. Even if something is set on the moon, the heart of the story, the psychology is you and the inside of your mind.