Thinking Some More

I like this near empty bowl. It held so many days of colorful leaves just a short while ago. Now look at it. Some leaves, a hunk of wood, some lichen and an old rusty drill bit. It is like a little short story of interesting characters that were left to keep each other company. I thought about giving them the toss but am not ready. Not yet.

More thought is going into doing the small book of dementia poems. I know how it would be illustrated….a tether line in soft graphite that the reader follows through the pages…sometimes it is slack, other times stretched thin. And broken, and tied back up, and full of knots and frayed…but it finds its way through the pages and past each poem.

I will resist making the book accordion style even though it lends itself to one continuous piece of rope. There will be more poems than what would be wieldy in that form.

And poetry is so vertical! It would have to be similar to the last poetry book I made, “Distance Matters”. That one worked well with all those woodcuts made to fit the format. It will be a dilemma because the words want to be vertical and the tether wants horizontal. There is no way to have the tether vertical without looking like it is hanging….not a connotation I want…that’s for sure.

And poetry stanzas don’t look right side by side. That is a bit like taking the Empire State Building and making it into two adjacent high rise apartment buildings.

Plus you can only have one poem per page. Some will fill the page, others won’t. I think the tether line needs to run along the bottom of every page…maybe the longer poem pages is where it gets stretched thin or breaks to let the words in.

Here are two shorter ones I wrote two days ago and today.

Going to Town

He is the passenger.

I have buckled him in,

turned up the heat,

and backed out of the garage.

We are going to town.

There are lots of curves

to go around.

He grabs an imaginary wheel

to help me steer.

Before long we both are making

squealing, screeching noises,

and arrive laughing

and safe at our destination.

 

The Well

I tie on another length of rope

and lower the bucket deeper

into our well of memories.

We wait for the splash

as it sinks in the darkness.

I hold on tight and count to three

before pulling it back to the surface.

Together we peer into the stillness.

He watches and waits

for me to tell him

what it is

and when it was.

 

Anyway, I will draw some images of the tether line to use when I get it all figured out. The main thing is to keep writing for now.

And speaking of drawing, here are the last two gloves. This morning I started on hats…fifteen more pages to go and I can move onto my new book without the haiku and maybe a bit of color.

I will be back….

Some New Ideas

I like this picture of inside reflected on outside. Dreary day here. So here is a poem I wrote two days ago when the weather was dingy.

Winter Sky

There are so many lovely shades of grey

that could have been chosen.

But when it is going to be a cold and dreary day

what does the sky do?

It picks the only grey that looks

like a dirty white sheet.

And keeps it waiting in the dark.

so that before that lovely pinkish grey 

can arrive with dawn,

this grey is dropped over the house,

the trees, the garden, and me.

 

I spend the day watching through the window

for holes in this old sheet.

There are none.

That is probably why it is used so often

November to March.

No amount of rain will clean it.

It smells like other dirty days.

The winter sky is always ready

to pull it back out of the hamper

to float down on my world,

tucking it tight under the horizon.

 

More gloves for the drawings a day.

Warm, lined black suede gloves

make it impossible to

pick up a quarter.

 

Putting on these gloves

is like wearing a pair of

little brown Muppets.

 

Prompt writings:

You are given a box of clothes from someone extremely close who dies suddenly. Write the scene sorting through the clothes.

Look at these things! It was not as though she had bad taste. She simply had no taste. Just something to put on her body and head out the door. So as not to have to consider what colors may go together, she kept to beige and olive green. They’d look military if it weren’t for the cut of the shirts and pants. Loose on her frame and always in motion. This is the first time I have seen these clothes still. They are so empty.

Write a conversation where no one is saying what they really mean. Contrast their body language with their verbal language.

She said, “Yes, dear” staring out the window. He nodded to her back while reading his paper. Both had agreed to something that neither cared about.

How does one know when one is truly comfortable with a new lover?

When one can yawn in the face of the other’s excitement.

 

I read this book recently. Out loud to Lee. I liked the dedication the author had toward helping to save these largest owls in the world in outback Russia with rough men, vodka, makeshift equipment and exhaustive adventures. He writes so easily about the hardships endured in the most inhospitable place. I would recommend it to those who are environmentalists, lovers of birds and very rugged individuals.

As soon as I finish the latest Cormoran Strike book (I am only a tenth of the way through) I will start on one of these.

All writers start with an idea and some degree of passion to tell a story.

I like writing. It usually takes days like the one I started out with in the Winter Sky poem. One like today…rain pouring down, someone else taking care of Lee who slips further away on dismal days when he can’t be outside.

I found this from my journal writings.

“Books! They are the perfect form. In making them I become the story teller, the illustrator and the architect of the book itself, putting everything in a closed form for the viewer to hold in his hands and slowly make it come to life.” Sandy Webster

When I show the images in my sketch book of the Responsibility Hands and write about Lee’s dementia often someone will ask if I am planning on writing a book.

My answer is “No”. I don’t get anything from other’s people’s experiences about living with dementia except the worry that now I have “that” to look forward to. So I avoid them. I couldn’t do that. My life is not theirs. I respect that. It is offensive to have to listen to others push their ideas of what it takes to get through. I wrote the following as part of a letter to a friend who found himself on a pedestal of handing out advice on keeping hope:

“I don’t think that anyone needs to be taught the hunger for hope. But there are many who know beyond any doubt that the hunger for it does not lead to its arrival. We are not talking about those who are privileged to have the option of choice, the ones who have the luxury of time to find themselves, but those who are already awake and face every day knowing that it will be one spent solely in pursuit of survival. I suspect I am too much the pragmatist to believe everyone has a chance and choice for hope and calmness in their life. Not all people are privileged to have the helping hands of others nor are they in a position to hear those voices sharing a truth that could not be further from their own.”

I don’t remember if he responded.

 

The closest I have ever come to doing something like explaining dementia is this artist book interpretation. A physical interpretation of dementia. Nowhere here is a cautionary tale. No running diary of living this life we share. Just a tactile thing of what it is like and how the missing pieces are saved up in a safe place of small glimpses.

But thinking about the writing I shared the other day, If You Noticed, an idea came to me. I could write a small, illustrated book of poetry that captures the reality of dementia through small observations.

And perhaps it would be titled, “…trust the tether line.”

Here are two:

 

He Doesn’t Remember

He doesn’t remember

anything before what happened

in the last few minutes.

And a few minutes from now

this time will have gone off

to where years of minutes

keep a gate open

behind a grey mist.

And only then can the light shine

on what is left behind ….

the work of making

our next few minutes matter.

 

Yesterday

Just yesterday

he could button his shirt.

I saw it!

His hands grasped

each side of the shirt

near the collar

and he felt his way down

to the first button and hole.

Body memory took over

and down the shirt he went.

All but the last one

because that part would be tucked in.

And after the shirt

was smoothed down

he hiked up his jeans

and worked that button into place.

Found the zipper

and pulled it up.

Then he grasped both ends

of his leather belt,

put one end through the buckle,

pulled tight and fitted

the prong through the hole.

He tucked what was left into

the loops of belt and jeans.

That was yesterday.

 

So back in a couple of days…

 

 

Thanksgiving Day

This morning we took a walk along the trail. It looks so different from the last time I showed pictures. The mist made it perfect for photographing. Let’s walk.

And we are back home…

I finished the latest and sixth Responsibility Hand…more small things to take on and remember it happens.

And my last four days of drawings….still on those scarves.

Very old worn saris

make up these Kantha stitched scarves

and they were on sale!

 

One side apple green

the other a soft beige hue.

lovely knitted wool.

 

Less than successful

attempt at eco dyeing

but such a soft silk.

 

Hand dyed and then stitched

long loose silk and cotton scarf

made by thoughtful friend.

 

My mother used to cut poems she liked out of magazines and newspapers. I would sometimes do the same. This one from The Detroit Free Press in 1972 or 73 seems appropriate today. I pasted it to a recipe card back then, which also seems appropriate. Never found the author.

“Lord, in thy Mercy’s tender care

hear one earnest urgent prayer

for all who wander to and fro

and have no special place to go.

Who see the windows warm with light

in other people’s homes at night.

And feel their loneliness the more

that others hurry to some door

where love expectant warms the air

and one is loved by those who care.

Bless those who rootless, restless roam

and have no place to be at home;

remember those we may not know

who have no special place to go.”

 

That’s it for today. I am going to watch “cop shows” with Lee, fix hotdogs for lunch, read some more of our book to him and then work on a simple Thanksgiving dinner of Cornish game hen, dressing, broccoli with hollandaise and pumpkin pie!

Til later

Bracing for Winter

I have decided to just ignore the next few holidays. No decorations, nothing that will have Lee asking about when the kids are going to come. They are to stay home and stay safe. We will do the same and have celebrations closer to summer when the virus should be better controlled and vaccines are available to all of us. I just started this 927 page book to read aloud to Lee. Might take all winter!

Here are some illustrations from My Life in Clothes and the Fairy Book.

And an unfinished fairy page. I don’t have too many pages left in this book but thanks to Lorraine I have more books to draw into.

And those four days of scarves and haiku….

Organic cotton

in earth tones of stripes and dots

by Gudrun Sjodren.

 

Two long plant dyed scarves

twisted, knotted with tied ends

makes a neck warmer.

 

A very complex

patterned, layered and dyed scarf

I bought in Bali.

 

Mary and I both

wanted this scarf so we cut

it in two pieces!

I will take more photos of my sketchbooks from travels, etc. and post them another time. But the other day I found this piece of writing I did from a “taste” prompt in a writing class. My mouth watered as I read it!!

Lick off a spoon Poem

Homemade Fudge

For this I will use my largest wooden spoon.

I am sure I read somewhere that you need to use a large spoon.

It is a big pan with high sides.

The sugar has started to dissolve in the water.

I clip the thermometer to the side keeping it‘s tip off the bottom.

I stir it and taste the simple syrup on the spoon.

Now the cocoa powder is stirred in.

Taste again to make sure it really does taste like chocolate.

Boil to soft ball stage – 232 degrees Fahrenheit.

Just in case the thermometer is off a bit, begin tasting at 180 degrees Fahrenheit.

Finally! 232 degrees.

But just to be sure it is soft ball stage, drizzle some from the spoon into cold water.

Lick the spoon.

And reach into the water to shape the drizzle into a soft ball.

Eat the ball.

Remove the pan of fudge from the stove and stir in the butter.

Stir vigorously til the fudge just begins to lose its shine.

Try to pour quickly into an 8 by 8 buttered pan.

OOOOhhh. Some has hardened in the pan.

Use the spoon to scrape it out – one mouthful at a time.

 

I found some other worthy bits of writing in old computer files and will post them later. I need to get this finished while I still have wifi at the house. The cleaning lady is cleaning. The caregiver will be here in an hour. I need to make a grocery list that starts with wine.

More later.