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Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Road Trip


Sometimes, for no apparent reason, we take an unexpected road trip down memory lane. Now, depending on where your memories lead you, this can be good or bad. It is interesting to think about what triggers one of these excursions. It might be a passage from a good book. Or, it could be the way a breeze causes curtains to flutter while sunlight filters through in muted patterns. Maybe it's a line from an old song, or a gathering of friends and family while thinking about days gone by and loved ones lost.

Whatever the reason, memories are a mixed blessing. While my short term memory is admittedly less than ideal, my long term memory is bright and I have what sometimes seems like total recall of every minute detail since very early childhood. Why do I remember exactly what an Otter Pop tastes like (when I haven't had one in over thirty years), but I can never find my keys? How can it be that I recall with vivid detail my mother's silver pumps and purse, the texture, the scent of leather, the satin lining with absolute recall? I wore those shoes and carried the purse on my scrawny little arm with nothing else on but a pair of flowered panties and a smile while I paraded up and down the sidewalk in front of our house when I was five (at dawn's first light no less). We lived in California then (one of several moves there) and the sun was shining brightly. I also remember I was supposed to be cleaning my mess of a room that day. Not only that, but I can see just as clear as day the look on Mom's face when she found me outside in all my..ahem...glory. Boy was she embarrassed! She hustled me in the house so fast it was like the midnight scene in Cinderella's ball - one shoe on and one shoe forlornly teetering on the edge of the steps to the house, left behind in haste. Alas, Prince Charming never came to bring that shoe back and find me as the perfect fit. But that's a story for another day.

Ahhh, memories. Those little snippets of time we like to occasionally re-visit. Sometimes memories are all we have left of a person or place in time. Loved ones who have gone on to the next life can remain with us as long as we remember. Memories of my mother are my most precious possession. There was no one like her and there will never be another. The things I can recall about Mom are too numerous to mention, but delightful to delve into on a rather regular basis. Sometimes I dream about her. My dreams are particularly vivid. I recall smells and colors and minute details that make them seem so real. As much as I might not want to admit this, there have been several occasions where dreams were as ordinary as Mom and I having a conversation while sipping iced tea on a well worn couch. The not wanting to admit part comes in when I confess that it can take as long as several hours later for me to realize it was just a dream and not something that happened just yesterday. I have went so far as to reach for the phone to call her and discuss something else, when the forceful blow of reality hits and I realize that it was a dream - that she is nowhere that I can reach by phone. Then the pain of her passing hits me all over again as if it just happened. My feelings are mixed and bittersweet about instances such as those. One the one hand, for a few precious moments, I have my mother back, alive, and reachable. On the other hand, the carefully constructed scab of numbness gets ripped open and the wound becomes fresh again. Still, I cherish whatever I can still have with my mother, real or not.

Memories often bind a family together. Generation gaps can be bridged with the juicy tale of Grandma's ride on one of the first Harleys made. The image alone, while looking at that demure, cookie-wielding senior citizen is enough to capture the fancy of the most cynical teenage imagination. I know, I've been there. Sweet memories also bring back a child now fully grown. A first smile, first word, first step, first sentence....any one of these can bring back times that seem so long ago. What mother doesn't love that baby powder, baby lotion smell? It sure beats stinky socks in a gym bag! When times get tough and your teenager suddenly seems like he's from another planet, one in which civility was never learned and breaking your mother's heart is the standard, memories are sweet relief from the realities of the day. I often wonder if the mistakes I made (and there were many) as a daughter are coming back to haunt me as I struggle in my relationship with my wayward son. It might sound like a silly thought, but I truly do wonder at times. Each time I feel that pang of dismay at something my son has said or done, I think of things I did to my own mother and wonder if she felt the same. And the thought that she did breaks my heart. I guess that is what comes with being a parent.

The last time I spoke with my mother, I apologized for not being better. I cried as I lay with her on her bed and thought of all the things I wished I could take back or could have done differently. I did make a lot of mistakes. I burned a lot of bridges, but Mom always forgave me with open arms and a big warm hug. Her last words to me? "You were a good daughter", said with a smile and a pat of my hands with her frail ones. That's another memory I'll never forget.

All in all I think memories are a good thing,
even the bad ones. We would never know how far we've come or what lessons we've learned if it weren't for them. The thought of all the things I've gone through, endured, and survived is pretty mind blowing. The fact that I am still here sometimes amazes me. Thank you, memory. Thank you for being an old friend (and sometimes foe). Thank you for letting me visit with people long gone. Thank you for letting me be a child again whenever I want. And thank you for sometimes altering just the slightest bit, to make things a little better than they might really have been. Those kinds of memories are the road trip I like to take best. It doesn't matter how broke you are, you can always afford the journey. Baggage...optional. It's a destination vacation of the sweetest kind. In fact I think I'm leaving right now. I'll let you know when I get back.





Monday, July 12, 2010

Dream a Little Dream



Gypsy Spirit - Bohemian Heart
by Theresa Wiza


Restless she wanders
No place she calls home
No place she finds comfort
She wanders She roams

Looking for "something"
She's easily bored
Flouncing, she travels
Her wanderlust scorned


By daily transactions
By bills she can't pay
By mundane activities
That keep her at bay


As thoughts of her gypsy
Who lingers and sighs
With impatience, fidgeting,
And unrealized

Dreams that appear
then tempt with a start
That beating inside
Her Bohemian Heart

(The gorgeous picture above was used with permission by Ciro Marchetti and all copyrights are held by him. You can check out more of his fabulous work by clicking here: Ciro Marchetti
)

I found this lovely poem that sums me up pretty well. At least I think so. Even if it doesn't, it's just danged good. Now back to our previously scheduled programming.

I have always loved, and been daunted by, a blank page. Whether it be a crisp bit of linen stationary, a wonderfully textured sheet of watercolor paper, or a glaring white blog text box waiting to be filled, there is something exciting about a surface waiting to be filled.

In art, there are many things that happen before the first brush, or pencil stroke is laid down. You have to have some idea (usually) of what you want to convey with your creation. Then there is the choice of color, spacial relationships between objects and a host of other factors you might take into consideration.

On the other hand, there is something to be said for simply letting things flow as they will. The same goes for writing. You can plan out your presentation, make an outline, research, rehearse, etc. Or you can just start typing and let the words decide the journey's outcome as it goes. I guess that's what I'm doing here.

I've been on such an incredible journey thus far in my life, and it is difficult to figure out where to begin. At 43, I'm starting a new chapter in my life, or chapters as the case may be. I'm at the highest, and lowest points in my life at the same time. It might sound confusing but it's really quite simple when it comes down to it. I am optimistic and hopeful for the future, concerned about the present and sometimes dragged down by my past.

I am technically unemployed, but about to start and finish school for graphic design - something I started way back in 1989. I'm in the worst physical shape I've ever been in, in my life. I don't weigh the most I've ever weighed, but the health issues I now deal with make this a life or death situation. For some reason I can never wrap my mind around the reality of that statement. I live with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and probably bi-polar related depression. I've been told more than once that if I don't get my health under control I'm going to die. There is no maybe about it. Yet I have sat day in and day out eating badly, refusing to exercise on any regular basis, and closing my eyes to the mess my body has become.

I aim to change that today. I want to be accountable for my actions. I want to prove to myself and others that I'm not a hopeless cause. I want to feel better, look better, and act better. It's a tall order, but someone has to do it! Let that someone be me. That is both a plea and a prayer. Did I mention I was saved a few weeks ago? I gave my life to God and have been given a new lease on life. There are things to be done, and I can't do them if I can't get up out of a chair. If I lose my legs, my sight, my life, then all is lost. I don't ever want anyone to say "What a terrible shame, what a waste of potential she was".

Inside I have always had a free spirit. I might not have acted on my impulses (thank God!) but they have always been there. Inside I run barefoot through the grass in gauzy layers of gypsy-worthy, bell laden scarves, my hair free flowing behind me and laughter wafting through the air. Inside, my heart swells with love and laughter and joy of life. Inside I'm like a butterfly flitting here and there, going from one grand adventure to the next, without ever leaving a true imprint on any place I've stopped.

I used to imagine myself living a bohemian life. I fancied myself one of those 'artsy' types you see in movies. In reality I'm pretty boring. But that's okay. Maybe someday I'll find a happy medium. In the meantime, I'm going to work on the outside. I never do things in half measure. It's all or nothing. Unfortunately most of the time the nothing side wins. I think it's high time the all part took over.

Anyhow, I suppose this meandering of the mind is typical of what you are going to find if you stop by my blog. If you've read this far, I'm impressed. If you haven't, well then you won't be reading this, will you?