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September 2004
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November 2004

App0143This painting is another in the series of Kitchen Art, or I'm Too Busy to Go Anywhere & Paint series. It's fun to go into the kitchen and drag out some interesting packages. It really gives you an appreciation for graphic design.

I just watched Alton Brown on The Food Channel do a whole show in chocolate ganache. I know I'll be making something chocolate before this day ends. I'm thinking about trying to make my Aunt Anita's black and white angel food cake, which she iced with buttercream milk chocolate and walnuts. I could easily have eaten the whole cake whenever she made it. And angel food cake is very low in fat - yeah, that's the ticket!

I wish I was a good baker, but I can honestly say it is an art that eludes me. My sisters, Maria and Marietta, are very good bakers. My mother is also, but she rarely baked anything other than a cheesecake on the holidays. She didn't need to really since her sister would provide the apple pies for Thanksgiving, the gingerbread cookies at Christmas, and the cannoli at Easter.

I love the whole romance of baking on occasion. I enjoy lugging out the Kitchen Aid, breaking the eggs, even the mess of flouring the pans. I plop some flour into a buttered pan, hold it on its side, and twirl it while gently tapping the back, tap, tap, tap, and the interior of the pan turns snowy white. The other night I made a yellow cake with buttercream coconut frosting and the family thought it must be for someone else because when was the last time I baked a cake after work? Let's see, would that be - never? Yes.

However, in the process of satisfying some domestic fit brought on by the early darkness of fall, . I discovered that my oven is out of whack. It's gas and it's too hot on the right side and anything I bake burns on that side even with the rack in the middle or higher. I don't know if it's something that can be adjusted, but since we just paid over a hundred dollars to have the thermostat fixed, I'm pretty sure we're not buying a new oven anytime soon.

So what's a girl to do? Why go to the bakery of course! Here in New York we are blessed with amazing bakeries. Italian, Polish, whatever your choice, you can find it here. There's no excuse for buying a big ol' warehouse store cake when you can find a beautiful cake within blocks at a neighborhood bakery. When the kids were little, we lived near a fantastic bakery that specialized in Napolean cakes and chocolate mousse cakes, and we ordered either for special events like first birthdays and christenings. The Napoleon cake was essentially a huge Napolean, and the chocolate mousse came with a hard chocolate shell.

Ah, lovely cake memories....must go see if there's a scrap of that coconut cake left for breakfast.....happy sweets eating this Halloween weekend.


App0141_1
Ah, Thursday night, a night almost as special as Friday night, my favorite night of the week. Thursday night is the eve of the last day of work. Nothing too, too horrible can happen on Friday. Unless of course you have to work the weekend.

Last night I was browsing through my saved documents on the laptop, trying to find something that could be on one of two computers. I didn't find it, but in browsing through my docs, I read a few pieces I'd done and never developed. I had forgotten about this piece I'd written for an essay contest. I'd written it very quickly, almost like a freewrite. I haven't read it since I submitted it and most of it was not up to par, but the last few paragraphs were good. Really good. Good enough to be the premise of a novel. A character was born without me noticing her, not until I reread it 4 months after I wrote it.

I'm eager to get to know this character better. She's been quietly waiting for me, confident that I would discover her while I searched all everywhere else for inspiration. Once more I learn that the best ideas come when I'm not ready for them. I continually have to be reminded of this. Although this text was in my computer, it started in my journal, and I discovery again and again that my journal is THE most important creativity tool that I have. A gift to myself.

Autumn's bounty from seeds planted in early summer.


App0142
I am working, working, working, or so it seems. It's that point in the year when litigation heats up and work becomes an all-consuming furnace. We are stretched so thin at our office that every day is a full court calendar that gets me back to the office in mid afternoon and leaves me with just enough time to get ready for the next day. In the meanwhile, there are reports and mail piling up and no time to get to them.

I'm familiar with this drill: long hours at work, flopping into bed when I get home, too much take out to feed the family, and little to no writing or artwork going on. I am struggling to put together a post here every day, feeling like I am wringing myself like a sponge to even get a few words of creativity to drip onto the keyboard. Even the knitting is not going well. Last night I ripped out row after row as I made sloppy mistakes and couldn't find a stitch that I dropped.

I'm dropping a lot of stitches these days. I think I'm going along fine, then discover I missed this and that. I defrost food to cook when I come home, then can't bear to spend another hour standing up and we order a pizza. I intend to do a load of wash, and then can't imagine going down to the basement to put it in and it piles up and turns into Marathon Wash as my husband calls it.

But all these things are manageable and eventually get done. By the weekend I'll make some great meal and everyone will be full. The laundry gets done, the cleaning gets picked up, the bills eventually get paid. It feels ridiculous to complain about any of it while my husband goes to work in pain every day and still manages, on the whole, to maintain his good-natured demeanor, and keep up with his routine twelve hour days.

But despite my guilt about whining about artwork, I see the seasons changing and realize how little I got accomplished this year. My writing sinks deeper and deeper into my subconscious. The trail of the novels are overgrown with bushes covered with thorns of everyday problems and branches thick with life issues. I retreat into reading, enjoying the prose of others, hoping it will jog a few ideas in my brain. Right now I'm reading Endless Feasts, a collection of 60 years of writing from Gourmet magazine. The collection is marvelous in its breadth, with essays from such luminaries standards as MFK Fisher to others you don't think of as food writers, such as Pat Conroy writing about the markets of Umbria. I love food writing because those drawn to writing it are sensualists whose prose is filled with the vivid particulars of color, taste, smell, and texture. My "in court" book to read is The Book of Salt, a novel I started over the summer and never got into. The writing is also very sensual and is a delightful escape from the monotony of the calendar call.

I'll be riding out this particular wave of daily grind by diving into books and continuing to knit. The days are sunny and cool and the rides to and from court are filled with the gorgeous trees of Westchester County in full autumnal blaze.

This wave will peak and crash and I'll tumble to the surface again, a little beat up but gasping for some creative air. Through me a lifeline or just wave from the shore.


App0138I spent 30 minutes this morning before work scanning in a whole file of drawings from the lat month. I was almost done when my scanner "burped" and I lost it all. I didn't have time to rescan them all, so my shoes survived and here they are. One of these days I will follow up on my idea to draw all my shoes and bags~just for fun, no other reason needed.

It's hard getting up this week. It's almost dark when the alarm goes off. Next week is daylight savings time and although the days will be shorter, the sun will return and slant into the French doors of my bedroom and wake me up. I haven't used an alarm clock to wake up in years. My body naturally wakes up with the sun and my biorhtymn is so adjusted that my eyes pop open at 6:54 each morning. It's a blessing and a curse as it's hard to get back to sleep sometimes on weekends.

I spent so much time doing the aborted scans, that I don't have time to develop a good post, so have a good day and I'll check in later.


A quiet Sunday morning. I've read the newspapers and watched Sunday Morning when I surf the internet. It's is grey today but through my window I can see a faux sun streaming through the trees in the form of yellowing leaves. We are having a respite from The Beast, the pain that threatens to engulf my husband's life and ours. I've learned not to question while the relief is here, but to just accept it as relief and not look beyond the day to wonder whether The Beast has been vanquished or is just taking a nap.

The Princess came down this weekend to visit friends home from their colleges. She's been home a lot this semester, dealing with some health issues of her own. I invited her boyfriend over for a Saturday night dinner, like the kind I remember my mother cooking when I was dating my husband. This means a tradition of roast beef and mashed potatoes followed by a rich dessert. It is my daughter's most requested meal, served for birthdays or any occasion when she wants a comfort or a celebration.

She has become much more domestic since she moved off campus into an apartment. Suddenly she calls me with a request for how to make roasted potatoes or lasagna, and applied for a discount card for the grocery store and pharmacy. This is a big change for The Princess who assumed meals came prepared on the dining room table when she was hungry and was more brand name conscious than any other member of the family.

It was the perfect weekend to entertain. I like to do a small dinner party early in the fall as a warm up to holiday entertaining. I spent the afternon rearranging furniture on an impulse, straining my arm and hip in the process, but the results of pulling the chest into the living room and the tilt top table into the dining room was worth it. Stan spent the afternoon lying down, not resting, but with his head in the fireplace, trying to replace some transformer or other electronic part that had failed and prevented the gas fireplace from igniting.

I watched him working, listening to the occasional swearing and grunts and groans as he got up and down for this tool or that. He ignored my furniture moving, involved in his own project. I winced each time I saw him sitting cross-legged on the floor, sure that tonight would bring waves of pain and another sleepless night. I couldn't stand it anymore and disappeared into the kitchen to peel the potatoes for dinner. No one was home but the two of us and it was a new companionable silence in which we worked, husband and wife, partners for many years, repositories of memories, secrets, and dreams, each for the other.

Sometimes I think if I can just let go of how I think it should be, it would just become what it should be. We spend so much energy into pretending that our lives are the same as everyone else's that we are always exhausted. It takes every ounce of his strength to go to work in pain every day. The wekeends are spent recuperating, lying down and resting, giving the nerves a chance to hea. We watch too much TV, eat too much junk food, and get on each other's nerves in little fits and starts while we pretend that everything is all right and neither of us is bitter, sad, and scared out of our minds.

This latest interruption in our lives has hit me with a deeper sadness than ever before. I've always had a hope that it would end someday, that we would finally be over "it" and we'd just leave a life as normal as anyone else. I remember driving up the parkway from my parents house to ours about 15 years ago, crying my head off in the car, berating God for giving us this burden, and calming myself by looking ahead to two, three, five years from now when he'd be better and it would all be behind us.

Now I know it's never going to happen, that his spine problems will only get worse as he ages instead of better. I've reached the point in my life when I can't stand waiting for the other shoe to drop. We are in such a precarious financial state, that I think I'd rather sell it all and move into a rental apartment in exchange for allowing him to quit work and be stable. Yet I know that he'd see it as the biggest failure of his life and would never recover emotionally from it.

A while later, my husband came into the kitchen where I was still peeling potatoes and carrots. I didn't ask if he fixed the fireplace, figuring he hadn't since he wasn't saying anything. He washed his hands and turned to me and playfully wiped my cheek with the wet papertowel as the potato peeling were pared onto the cutting board. I smiled at him, still wordless, afraid to break the spell of an ordinary afternoon of husband and wife being domestic , involved in all things ordinary and sacred.

When the potatoes were peeled and soaking in a bath of cold water and kosher salt, I went into the living room and found him in his Morris chair, next to a blazing fire. I lit the two pillar candles on the coffee table, the dish of tiny pumpkin candles, and turned on the stereo. My knitting was right where I left it but I was exhausted from all the work. Stan brought me a blanket and I ended up napping while he watched TV.

It was a very ordinary afternoon. Sacred ordinary.


2A free weekend looms in front of me~I'm almost scared to face it because it's been so long since I've had two days free that I'm afraid I'll waste it.

That must be a peculiarly American mindset, the idea of "wasting" free time. I think other cultures understand the need to lay fallow, to putter around the house, and to do nothing more than eat and read. The weather is nicely chilly and gloomy enough to make me drop my American work ethic and just light the fire and candles and finally make a dent in Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norell. Has anyone out there read this and gotten past the first 300 pages? I think I may have bought a very expensive paperweight.

Tonight, however, is a night for revelry. If you're twelve years old, that is. My niece is having a Halloween party and I am one of the appointed chaperones. The Little One said she wouldn't go if I did, so I told her to stay home. Of course, she's going. Scary thing is not her costume this year, but her choice of costume. Years past, she's always worn something bloody, ripped, ugly, and frightening, even when she was five years old. This year she went with her cousins to the party store and came back with a mini dress that is half angel/half devil and fishnet stockings. I kid you not! My husband and I tried to close our mouths and complimented her on how cute she looked.

Life as I now know it is over. My athletic, tomboy, baggy clothes wearing daughter has discovered boys.

We're looking for a house on an island in Maine.


Alice3Like Alice down the rabbit hole, I am topsy turvy from days away and lonely for family and tired of black as white and white as black.

In other words, enough with this bonding with coworkers, I wanna go home. Really, Dilbert couldn't write a better cartoon than the antics of my office workers while we all participate in a metaphorical "group hug" for 3 days.

I'm exhausted from staying up too late and admit to more than a passing familiarity with some shot glasses of tequila. I'm back home, watching the opening of West Wing. I will recoup and be back with scans Meanwhile, I have to hold my husband's hand so he doesn't put it through a door while we watch the Yankee game. Sigh. It just isn't our year.


1a_1
I'm relaxing in my room waiting for room service to bring my breakfast. I decided to treat myself to breakfast in bed because this is the only morning I don't have to be up for breakfast meetings. I'm pretty tired from running around all weekend, but the sun is shining and, from my window, I can see lovely, old brick buildings surrounded by trees blazing scarlet and yellow. I plan to eat, shower, and go for a long walk along Broadway and window shop.

I need to window shop only because yesterday my cousin took me to Saratoga Needle Arts and my wallet imploded. Suffice to say that the store did not fail to meet my expectations. The "OHMYGOD" factor was near a 10. Mystery Man was very sweet and took his 5 year old cousin, Tess, to the toy store while her mother and I went a little crazy in the aisles of angora, mohair, and tweeds.

Now if only I can learn how to knit something other than scarves. I'm not a sock knitter - too much work for too little return. No one in the family wears hats except in a blizzard and the same goes for mittens. Mystery Man requested a scarf and a sweater, but as I explained, I don't do sweaters. Maybe someday. Right now I just like the process of knitting and not thinking. Last night I begged off from a night of drinking with several of my younger coworkers and watched reruns of Sex and the City on HBO while I knitted. Could I get any older??

If the feeling comes back into my hands today, I'll be sketching the beautiful old buildings here. And yes, I admit it, I haven't been drawing due to the knitting obsession. Bad, very bad!

I would have liked to sketch my cousin's old farmhouse but we weren't there very long (knitting store closed at four; we have our priorities). The farmhouse was restored by an artist, which is one of the reasons, I'm sure, that my cousin fell in love with it since she is an artist also. The house has hand-hewn beams and wide plank floors that are painted cream. The windows are tall and elegant and the walls are softened by dusky shades of blue and green. We sat in her kitchen around a large pine table made from an antique door and warmed ourselves from the rainy drizzle outside by her wood burning stove that gives off enough heat to warm the entire little house. It's a very romantic home, perfectly suited to M. and her musician husband and I wish them years of happiness in their house in the country.

Mystery Man could not have been more entertaining and good-natured this weekend. We got him up early every day and he was usually ready. Even after being up all night with his buddies, he was patient as we hung out in the knitting store. After I drove him nuts making him pick out wool after wool for his scarf (I'll knit anything for anybody, but it has to be a yarn I want to work with), he finally said quietly, "Mom, I've about had it", and it was time to go. He got into my cousin's car, agreeing to drive so she could knit (it is an obsession, but she is also have luck selling scarves at her school) and we kissed good bye. I was exhausted and anxious to check into my hotel and chill, but after a rest, I felt lonely and missed him.

Now I have to switch gears totally and go meet my coworkers for 3 days of meet and greet. People are here from the home office (when I type the words "home office", I hear the thunderous chords of Beethoven's 5th in my head) and other dignitaries and we all have to be Excellent Lawyers Who Love Our Firm. So with that I must go and shower, find something that is not wrinkled that qualifies as "Business Casual" (What the hell is that? My wardrobe has two modes: suits and jeans. Do I have to wear Dockers to qualify as business casual? Yuck.)

I'm off to sketch for an hour, hoping I don't run into anyone from my office because I'll never hear the end of it if they see me drawing. It's hard to have two lives - but a lot more fun than only having one.


Live from Autumn in New York

MiraclesI am away from my scanner and unable to upload the glorious foliage of upstate New York in Autumn. I thought my artist book inspired by Mexican folk art captured the same colors, textures, and feelings of wonder that I am experiencing on my weekend away.

Stan's back is too screwed up to come to Parents Weekend, so am soloing here with Mystery Man, enjoying his company, visiting with the cousins that we vacationed with in Cape Cod. Their children are just adorable, funny little creatures who spend the entire evening climbing, tickling, punching, and generally treating Mystery Man like a giant toy made just for them to play with. We had a noisy, lively evening watching the Yankees cream the Red Sox (sorry Boston readers) and eating chicken wings and pizza.

Today we are driving further upstate to visit another cousin who just bought a 200 year old farmhouse that was restored by an artist. I haven't even gotten there yet and I'm planning on househunting! Mystery Man begged off spending the night at the hotel with me even though we had booked a large suite when we thought the whole family was coming. I understood, it was Saturday night after all, and he had to get back to the dorm to harass all the Red Sox fansto play video games all night. He and his roommate are good friends, and are well-suited because they are both slobs avid game players.

I can't remember the last time I drove a several hours completely by myself. The time passed quickly as I zipped up the Thruway and admired the landscape in striking russet and green shades. I wish I had the talent to capture the nuances of color on canvas that nature is able to produce with seemingly little effort.

I was nervous about all the directions to get to campus, to the hotel, to my cousins's house, etc. Mystery Man did all the driving once I got here and I was the navigator and I'm proud that we never got lost once. (I still have to find myself back to campus in an hour by myself, however.) Driving up parkway under a sky with gray leaden clouds providing the perfect foil for brilliant foliage, and I was undeniably happier than I've been since our vacation. I felt the stress of the last six weeks leaving me, and although I had twinges of guilt, I am enjoying the weekend and Stan seems to be having a good time with the girls at home. It has turned into a different weekend than we would have liked, but we are both dealing with it and allowing each other space to be happy. Mystery Man is the linchpin to all this because he is a veyr compassionate person who understood how much his Dad would have wanted to be here and mmediately told him not to worry about it but just work on getting better.

The baby hamsters were delivered to the pet store yesterday and the Little One was relieved of the incredible responsiblity of caretaking 11 hamsters who were getting big enough to fight and bite each other. They were very cute, but we don't need a rodent menagerie with Feral the Cat prowling the house at night.

I'll be in Saratoga Springs luntil Wednesday. If the hotel has internet access, I'll be posting from there and if Mystery Man is very sweet, he may lend me his digital camera so I can upload photos for you.

Have a great Sunday!


Studiomuses1This is a collage I made for Somerset Studio a few years ago. I made it represent the phases of womanhood: toddler, child, maiden, bride, mother, crone. The photos are of my family in the following order: my mother and her sister, Anita; my grandfather's sister, Frances; my mother in high school;a distant relative (can't remember her name!); my grandmother in the 1920's; and my maternal great-grandmother.

I'm thinking about muses lately as I grapple with nailing down two seconds to do anything besides work and family caretaking. I have this collage hanging prominently in my house to remind me of the strong women who are my lineage. I need some strength, some inspiration, some role modeling. I hope to have more to say in the next few days, but I'm working late, then packing to go to my son's Parents' Weekend, and probably without the ailing husband. This means doing mounds of wash that have piled up and going to the dry cleaners, because after the weekend, I go straight to a three day conference.

I'm bringing my laptop, so I plan to be in touch. I haven't forgotten about you, I'm just not finding much time to stand still.


YarnI'm knitting these days, working my way through various colors of novelty yarns, enjoying the feel of yarn in my hands as I turn out scarves for myself and for gifts. My cousin infected us with the knitting bug over the summer and knit and purl came back to me like riding a bicycle. I made my daughter a silly scarf in shades of pinks that twirls and doodles. I made myself a soft, warm scarf in shades of denim blue, and another in chenille tweed in stripes of black and red. I’m going to knit Julia a scarf out of the thick, chunky royal blue yarn that she choose and began herself, then lost interest in a day. If I’m a very nice mother, I’ll finish up the feathery boa she started with weird colors.

Knitting fills in the chinks of the weekend. In between, I clean out my art room with my sister's help, got rid of an old clunky file cabinet with my son's help, and cooked lasagna, chicken soup, and some artichokes to feed the family. I bought baskets of different types of apples: Winesaps, Macouns, Fuji, and Honey. So far the Macouns are the best. My hands get sticky and I wash them with lavender soap in order to pick up my knitting again.

Sunday afternoon, I slowly work on a wrap from yarn made from the ends of silk yarns used for saris. The ends are spun together by women in third world countries and provides an industry to support their families. It is the color of jewels: rubies, emeralds, sapphires and lapis lazuli with flecks of gold. It is so beautiful; I don’t know whether to knit it or place the skein in a wooden bowl and just stare at it. I decide to knit it with a yarn that is like a spider web of green mohair. The knitting store lady suggests I knit it on very large needles for lacy effect, but I'm having a tough time picking up the spun silk with the clunky plastic needles that look like broom sticks.

After a frustrating half-hour I put it down for the flash of fire and wood. It is the yarn pictured in the photo, Gedifra Pelliccia, an eyelash wool in crimson red. I am knitting it on smooth, bamboo needles and the yarn slips and slides nicely over the wooden surface. Although I've been cold all day, my hands have been warmed by the scarlet flying through my fingers. I can knit and watch TV, subtly aware of the flash of fire between my hands as I cast on and off. The thread of the yarn wraps loosely around my right index finger, and I relax to keep the tension loose and smooth while my mind whirls around the events of the day.

I think about my knitting sitting on the back seat of the car while I draw some architectural details of the old train station while we wait for Mystery Man’s train. Finally, I give in and close the journal and slowly knit instead of draw. I’d like to be getting on the train with him, with no other obligation for the next two and half hours than to sit and watch the Hudson River with hands full of wool the color of autumn. I knit dreamily as I watch my daughter's softball game in the late afternoon sun, grateful for the warmth of the scarf in the chill of the afternoon. I knit furiously while I talk to my husband on the phone and he tells me how much pain he is in, glad of the distraction of keeping track of the stitches as my stomach forms its own knots. I'd like to knit while my sister drives to the stamp store, but I forget my knitting in my car and have to sit idly while we whip up the parkway past the reservoir. The scarlet of the maple trees reflected in the water reminds me of my scarf and my fingers twitch of their own accord. When we get back to her house, I knit over cups of tea and a shared black and white cookie and belly laughs about educational jargon. Finally, I knit clickety clack to take my mind off my hunger pains as she readies a dinner of turkey and stuffing and cranberry sauce, and the savory aromas make my mouth drool.

Hunger wins over knitting and I put the scarf down when my sisters says dinner is ready. My five year old nephew finishes before the rest of the family and goes into the sunroom to play. In a minute he is at my elbow, my scarf in his hand and my yarn twisted around the wheel of his micro truck. My heart skips a beat and I spend a minute untwisting the fragile threads from around the rubber wheel. He hides his face in his hands as I ask him how he managed this and that I’ll look pretty funny with a red scarf adorned with a green and white Hess truck. The yarn comes free just as I am about to resort to scissors and he leaves, redeemed.

I feel terrible about making him feel badly. It’s just knitting after all. Yarn and needles and fingers with nothing to do. It’s a big girl’s form of play, like running a microtruck over the sofa, under the pillows, onto the floor and across your aunt’s yarn. A way to pass the time, to forget yourself in minute detail, the zen of play.

Now I will knit off-handedly as I watch silly sitcoms and get ready for the work week. Sparks fly from my hands as I work my way through the garter stitch. My progress lies in my lap as it grows in length. I am the Buddha of knitting of perhaps, a sleepy Madame du Farge as I I have to rip out a few stitches to catch one I missed. I tuck it away into its little shopping bag, the one with the pretty sticker from the knitting store. I leave it on my night table so it’ll be ready for me tomorrow night when I come home, ready to play.


I'm here!

I'm still here, just swamped with office work and work at home. Thankfully, my knee calmed down after two days of Aleve because today was the final push in getting the kids' bedrooms done. The carpet guys came a half hour early, catching me in my ratty t-shirt and cut of pajamas pants. We almost had everything out of the rooms and they shoved the rest out for us. When everything was out of the rooms, we couldn't get into my bedroom or even the bathroom, which was the repository for the mattresses. They worked furiously for about one hour and then blew out, leaving us with the mess to put back in the rooms.

So one more time, the last time, we shoved the beds, dressers, bookcases, etc in and out of rooms. We sorted through more of my daughter's papers and books (we are all paper and book packrats) and she did some ingenious positioning of her furniture to give herself a little room till we get the cash to buy her a loft bed.

And Mystery Man is home! He arrived last night on Amtrak, and now that his room is carpeted and painted, he says he's not going back! He helped so much with the furniture moving, and it's just plain great to have his noisy, boisterous, messy self around this house. He's cheering up my husband, who is so down in the dumps about his back. I have a lead on a new doctor, though, and I hope I can convince him to go into the city and see him.

So finally, at midday, the month-saga of room refurbishing is OVAH as we say in Noo Yawk. AND I am home on Monday! Tomorrow is a day of cooking for Mystery Man. I have planned a meal of chicken cutlets and lasagna for the college-starved child. He's off to get new glasses since he wrecked his playing soccer, then he's going to playing with his band till dinner.

I'm slinking off to Borders to be a slug, with the blessing of my husband who feels so guilty about not being able to help with the household stuff. I'm bringing my journals and my gouache and hope to have some sketches to scan in for y'all.


Just When You Thought

Screw it all now, I've managed to mess up my knee, my good knee. I was lying in bed the night before last, turned my leg and felt a pain, clenching sensation go from my ankle into my thigh. It hurt in a dangerous way, as in, I've never felt like a pain like that before. My leg was tight but I forgot about it until I got up from a very long deposition yesterday andmy leg was very stiff. By the time I got home, it hurt, and by bedtime it was throbbing. It was hard to sleep and this morning I can't put much weight on it. I have to go to court and tomorrow I have two trials, so this should be interesting. Just what we need, another parent on the disabled list. Tea3

I am reading anew book, Five Thousand Days Like This One, by Jane Brox. It's a non-fiction account of the author's family's ownership of a farm and their emigration 100 years ago from Albania. Her writing is exquisite, and if you are all interested in New England the textile industry, you'll like this book. The best parts of the book are where she talks about her father's death and her caretaking of the farm and his estaet afterwards. It bogs down in a lot of history about the textile industry and the growth of Massachusetts along the Merrimac River. However, it's one of those books that is pushing me to take my writing to a deeper level, wring it out, edit, and make it crisp and commanding. I am most envious of authors who can write non-fiction with such lyrical style, with as much vivid imagery and compelling language as a great novel.

I've become aware of how much my laptop has displaced reading for me. It's pretty funny that I harangue the kids to get off the internet and I'm probably the biggest abuser in the family. I kid myself that I'm reading well-written blogs and surfing great art sites, but I realize that I have a growing addiction to that bright screen and I suddenly have a hard time getting into a book. So I'm limiting myself to one check of email a night, one full read of the blog roll every few days, and then the laptop has to be put away - and not on the floor next to the bed! No, it has to be removed from my grubby hands and put all the way in the art studio so I can't just lean down and pick it up before I go to sleep.

Off to limp to work - enjoy this gorgeous autumn weather!


Bear With Me While I Adjust My Channels

My apologies for a post without any illustration - and this blog a member of the illustrated blogs! For shame! But in order to upload an image, I'd have to scan some new ones in, and that would require two things:
1. being able to get at the scanner that is under the rubble of cleaning out the bedroom in prep for painting; and 2., having any images to upload! I've been so busy with work and the house that my journal has disappeared into the detritus of the art room (probably on the scanner) and I haven't drawn a damn thingin about a month.

This is another post in the catergbory of: work sucks.

More to follow, if I ever clear off the giant pile of files on my desk, all waiting for reports. It's not enough that they keep us out of the office until after 3:00 every day, then we get to go back, get ready for the next day and somehow find time to do all the reports on what we did that day.

And what's the alternative? Me griping that I don't have a job. It's been a bad week. Hubby getting worse, MRI doesn't show anything, job in jeopardy,

Calgon take me away!


App0125Grandma has been on mind a lot lately. She and Aunt Anita pop into my mind at unexpected times. Standing by the kitchen window and peeling carrots and parsnips, I wonder if they cooked with parsnips themselves. Putting apples into the bowl on the hutch, I remember Anita’s pies and her disapproval of me heating her Thanksgiving apple pie before serving because the apples filling oozed out from the heat. These are the types of memories that most people have of their loved ones, memories evoked by a dish or a smell, by the slant of light across the floor, or the breeze through the porch screens.

My feelings have been more intense lately. I have to stop myself from asking my mother how my grandmother is, or whether she’s spoken to my aunt, both gone from this earth. Maybe it is just the turn of seasons, the approach of the holidays, and the earth turning away from the light, forcing me to become introspective and sometimes sad.

Or may it’s turning 49. I have a small black and white photo of my grandmother seated at the kitchen table with a birthday cake in front of her. You can see a peek of it on the bottom right of the collage above. On the back of the photo, is her written in her handwriting, “49 – a half a century - Ugh!” It echoes my sentiments exactly. How can I be almsot half a century? How can I ever be as old as my grandmother?

My grandmother had many masks. She was a strong mother and wife, and vocal in her opinions. She was tough and ruthless at times, and also rampant with anxieties. She was everything a grandmother should be, always loving but outspoken in her disapproval of new ventures, anything risky, anything strange. She was a controlling mother, never fair in her allotment of love, allowing intimacy with my aunt in exchange for a life of servitude, holding my mother at arm’s length, allowing the older uncle to be in charge, treating the youngest like a child all his life.

But today I just miss them, plain and simple. I miss entering their dark, overly large, Victorian house with the huge oak door filled with a massive pane of glass and gathered curtains, the green glass chandelier, and the smell of mustiness and cleaning products. I miss the living room, the big green chair you sank into and the ottoman for your feet. I miss knowing that the collection of paperweights would always remain on the cocktail table and the photo display of wedding parties, my own included, always grace the top of the baby grand piano. I miss knowing where the cookies were kept and the smell of raisins and Chiclets when you opened the dishtowel drawer. I miss the way life came to a screeching halt when you walked in to their house and the minutiae of aches and pains and recipes and squirrels in the attic were the focus of their lives.

Last night I was talking to my mother on the phone. It was Saturday night and with neither of us having a place to go or anything to do, she was in a garrulous mood. We somehow started talking about the state of our freezers and how crammed they were, a conversation only a mother and daughter would share. I admitted to buying a piece of steak at the store because I forgot to defrost the one I had, one of probably three in my freezer. She recounted a story of how my grandmother used to do the same thing, ending up once, after defrosting the freezer, with a count of 56 pork chops in the freezer. The upstairs freezer. The story was cute, but as my mother spoke, I was somewhere in outer space, viewing us with a third eye, hearing my mother’s voice talking about Cleveland Court and her family, and I was seized with the loss of her, with the knowledge that at 79 I could probably count her remaining years, and my stomach clenched and my voice thickened and all I can respond was “uh-huh”.

I don’t mind being who I am. Age is just a number, and whatever complaints I have are due to disregard of my health, not from growing older. What I miss is having several generations of older people around me. I miss most of all having the voices of the elderly, silly and piquant, the very voices that alternately bored me and soothed me when I was young. Especially older men. Where have they all gone? I have no older male relatives left, waiting to pinch my cheek, call me by a made up name, and hand me a dollar on the sly. I miss hearing the laughter and squabbles of my great aunts and uncles and my grandparents around a table filled with the remains of dinner and cups of tea and rich cakes baked by their hands. I miss their lapses in Italian when the talk turns to divorce or money, and then the way my grandmother’s cheeks flush when she enjoys a risqué joke.

And I miss that solid, established wall of middle-aged men, resplendent in ties and suits, my parents’ friends and relatives, the ones who wore the mantle of their professions so gravely on their shoulders: doctors, lawyers, salesmen, clerks, it didn’t matter. Their solidity and responsibility drew me in. Nothing terrible could happen to me when they were in control, even on New Year’s Eve when my oldest sister thought someone was in the backyard, and my parents and all their friends came home with baseball bats to roust the enigma of an intruder. I long to see them again all dressed up, the women in skirts that flared and embroidered sweaters, their hair freshly done and hardened into place with Aqua-Net. I miss my father coming downstairs, dressed up in his suit and tie, shoes shined, and in a good mood with a whistle on his lips for my mother.

There are few generations left between myself and mortality. There are no older men in shoulder-padded suits and red silk ties that I can turn to. The elderly at my table have dwindled to two. My children’s great aunts and uncles are seen infrequently, guests at weddings and graduation parties. They are busy with their children and grandchildren and I don’t think they carry singles in their breast pockets for tipping little kids. There’s no one left to call when the storm drains back up, no one left to call for advice when a cake doesn’t rise, no one left to teach me how to crochet.

Instead there is a noisy, fussy bunch of children underfoot. Little knots of grubby hands and loud voices and the aroma of Play-do and adolescent angst fill my rooms at the holidays rather than Jean Nate and Tigress. I miss the balance of the generations, but I realize that my sisters and I have become “the aunts”, the sometimes crotchety, sometimes indulgent, older relatives who cook and bake and spout unasked for advice. Our husbands are the suits, the towers of strength and dynamos who come home from work and can tickle a kid into submission. We are the extended family, the givers of holidays and bakers of cookies, the houses to escape to when our own are over crowded, too noisy, or parents too mean. I remind myself of that when the children are sulking on the floor because they wouldn’t willingly give up their chairs to an adult. I remind myself of that when they all disappear upstairs when it’s time to clear the table and wash the dishes. I remind myself of that when they all hover us, stand between us while we try to talk, run through the room one too many times, and in general make a nuisance of themselves when my sisters and I just want a half hour alone to drink a cup of tea and gossip. It’s then that I wish we had all learned Italian. It is then that I remember my grandmother and my aunt scolding us for not helping my mother after Thanksgiving dinner. It is then that I remember them standing at the sink for hours washing the dishes. It is then that I see the continuum of life and the span of generations touching hands. It is then that I remind myself to get some singles at the bank.


I've spent the weekend the same as the last two: cleaning out rooms in preparation for having them painted. I've pushed and shoved and grunted and groaned as I've pushed dressers and beds from room to room and excavated crap from under desks and shelves. I cleaned out twelve bags of junk from my son's room and several more from Julia's. Still the upstairs is in complete disarray because we're buying carpeting for Julia's room and we're not moving her stuff back into her room until it's installed.

In between, I ran errands, cooked a dinner of lamb chops and roasted vegetables, and then escaped to my bedroom to write. Soon, however, Stan was there and Julia followed. We spent the evening on the family bed, as I call it. I tried to write in between phone calls, watching TV, talking to Julia, having Stan read stuff out of the paper to me, and eating cake. He still isn't feeling well and took a pain pill. When he began to snore, I gently suggested he sleep in one of the spare bedrooms. Then I suggested it not so gently when he began to snore and toss and turn and throw the covers on and off. Before he could do so, I had to move the twelve bags of trash so he wouldn't trip in the middle of the night. So now it's almost 11:00 and I'm finally finished with the article and emailed off to my editor.

So now I'm beat and haven't much else to say, except happy Sunday. I just bought Best Food Writing 2004 and intend to read some before bed. Tomorrow is another busy day, concluding with me wading through two files I know nothing about but were assigned at 4:00 Friday for Monday hearings. What can you say? Work sucks.