I was given gifts of earmuffs and a pair of mittens at work the other day. The mittens were made for me by a regular customer. She even asked what colors I like.
She is a possible model for me: she crafts lots of things, and she both sells and gives them away with lightness. She doesn't seem to have any hang-up whatsoever about either.
BELOW: Wearing my mittens and earmuffs at a burger joint near work, where I had French fries for lunch yesterday. It's joined to a laundromat and smells pleasantly of hot-dryers inside. Outside, it smells like drugs. When I walked up, people were bent over in the sheltered doorway of the laundromat, smoking crack (chemically smelling). In the parking lot round the other side sat a police car. Such is life in the 'hood.
Anyway--even though the mittens were a warm and welcome gift of love, the gift of earmuffs are my favorite, because of work politics:
Mr. Jester Mushroom was the only manager at work this holiday week. He's assistant manager, but that mostly means he has a set of keys--he's still "one of us" workers (so far). The mood was mellow.
Jester was at the cash register, giving the cashier a break, when I stopped on my way out to pay for the earmuffs. They had a new tag, but no price.
"How much are they?" Jester asked.
"Esmeralda will know," I said.
I turned to ask our coworker who hangs clothes. She is a warm and lovely person, from Mexico, and her English is not fluent.
"Three," she said, which seemed very fair.
Jester started to ring it up on the register, then stopped and said, "Esmeralda, did you say three or free?"
"Free," she said. "Free!"
And Jester agreed. "Free."
This gift helped me especially much because I've not been able to shake the ick of the so-called 'thank-you' dinner last Sunday. Getting REAL free love from coworkers and customers re-sets my mood.
This morning, a volunteer Vicky is picking me up to go to her Congregational church--a liberal congregation, tending toward wealth, like the one I went to last month, but with less gibberish? We shall see.
II. Pick Your Own Sticks
I'm interested, but I'm not looking for a home church. As I keep saying, the most important thing is to Do My Own Work.
When I find myself ruminating about the store––(sometimes thinking about shopping baskets in the middle of the night--I resent that!)––I remind myself to think about my projects. Which works, but man, my mind runs to that old groove.
Stop it, mind!
I must ponder, for instance, how to make God's eyes. Yet more snow has covered the ground, so it's the end of pick-up sticks for the season. I like natural sticks best, but if I'm going to keep making them this winter, I'll have to use other things. Chopsticks worked, pencils not so much. I'll keep my eyes open.
The wool and wood eyes seem to weather well.
III. Choose Your Own Colors
After I address my Christmas prints this afternoon, I will start a new lino print.
I want to print a library card! Do you remember I printed punch cards? I loved those and the whole idea of hand-making everyday things that are now machine-made of plastic. My sister has started quilting since she quit working six years ago. (She is happy and engaged in retirement--very. She reminds me of our ever-active Auntie Vi . . . which also reminds me that much as I cherished Vi, I did not love everything about her--for instance, that she always insisted Every Day Is a SUNNY Day. Spare me.)
A friend helps Sister choose her fabrics because, she says, "I'm no good at choosing colors."
How can you be bad at choosing colors? Just choose ones you like!
But... no. I get it actually. Working in Housewares, I see that people are often spectacularly bad to anything to do with DESIGN---from color to placement. So very bad at it. Like, putting tiny objects on dark, bottom shelves or behind tall things.
But I'd still rather make my own mistakes in craft/art than follow someone else's "correct" way. I mean, what's the point?
I guess the point is getting the finished object--a perfect quilt. My sister sews the patches with a sewing machine, and she also hires someone with a long-arm sewing machine to top-stitch (the decorative stitches on the quilt top). The quilt looks exactly like what it is: machine assembled.
She's happy and proud, so that's fine for her--no harm!
(And it’s not AI designed, though Sister keeps texting me AI material… yesterday, a synopsis of a book she read. Why? Is her brain going?
Sometimes I truly wonder.
But bink says she was always like this. I hope it’s that and not loss of mental acuity.)
For me, this kind of quilt-making is a model of what I don't want to do.
This morning I’m listening to Sarah Vowell read her book Lafayette in the Somewhat United States—she’s talking about the patriotic fever that welcomed Lafayette’s tour of the US in 1825, the same year there was near-violence over the presidential election—including threats to storm the Capitol.
In the first 15 minutes, she’s already made me laugh out loud.
This:
Americans’ unified enthusiasm for Lafayette, Vowell says, was for the man himself – – it was not a reflection of a simpler, more agreeable time.
“In the United States, there never was a simpler, more agreeable time.”
——
Hopefully today —Thanksgiving in the USA—will agree with us.
M & Q drove down from Duluth yesterday – – even though there’d been a snowstorm the night before. Here, too. This feels early, after years of brown Christmases – – but bink reminds me that when we were kids, risking sliding off snowy roads into ditches —(or dying)—on Thanksgiving was quite normal.
I’m putting a little extra effort into the vegetable dishes for today’s dinner, as one guest is vegan. Roast potatoes dressed with fresh rosemary, onion, garlic, and olive oil; the collards & mushrooms, w smoked paprika and apple cider vinegar, are made with an enriched stock from a small sheet of dried seaweed, dried mushrooms, leeks, parsley, and the usual mirepoix.
The guest is bringing vegan pumpkin pie & ice cream! I am taking a day off from not-eating white sugar.
There’ll be a roast chicken in the Dutch oven too, for those who partake (probably me).
I hope you enjoy your Thanksgiving – – or, as the case may be, Thursday.
I. What Does a Toy Mean to You? 2026 Girlettes Calendar
I wasn't sure I'd make a sixth Girlettes calendar, but there were howls of protest here:
"You have to show Doll Summer Camp/ the Boy King James/ our apple candle...!"
____________________
So, that's done--always a big undertaking, sorting and choosing, arranging... You know. Plus, if I choose any photos from previous years, I have to check the old calendars to see if I've already featured them--I don't always remember.
I LOVE Penny Cooper & Low standing in the sink to wash their hands, for instance, and was surprised to see I'd never featured it. (It's from roadside stop on a car trip with bink to see Auntie Vi, before Covid.) Maybe I thought a bathroom sink wasn't picturesque? But they're so darn cute there!
____________________
Busy week coming up.
I worked on my Christmas print and the calendar this weekend, and I've barely cleaned or organized or shopped for Thanksgiving. Turns out Marz & her sweetie Q are not staying here though-- they are getting an Airbnb so they can have time together.
Once again, I feel like such a mom, even though Marz is not my kid. "But you practically live with Q," I want to say (BUT DON'T). "Don't you want to spend all your vacation time with me?"
Ha-ha, guess not!
It's just what you want for your kid though, right? That they should go away and have their own life. Absolutely! 100%.
I'm a little sad and disappointed anyway. Still, it gives me Wednesday to clean and cook!
Now I'm inspired to do more linoleum printmaking, I won't get rid of that set-up. Plus there're the yarn and sticks for God's eye makings. And dolls and bears...
I am going to start thinking of the living room as a studio, and then I'll have different expectations of order there.
As long as it doesn't achieve the disorder of Francis Bacon's studio, which looks like it's about to immolate itself, I'll be okay. I always admire his studio though. If I painted in oils, I expect mine'd look similar.
_____________________
A Victim of Charity
I had such an awful time at the Thank-You staff dinner last night, I kind of have to laugh. I think I'd mentioned a rich donor had wanted to celebrate the thrift store staff with dinner at a fancy restaurant?
Well, this donor is one of Big Boss's Christian connections. As in the evangelical, born-again type.
Now, you know I love religions, and I count "good old Jesus and his family" as my friends (I love that Alexei Navalny referred to them that way)––along with many other wacky Black Swan figures in history and Story.
But there's a kind of Christian I do not do well with: the "Jesus is my Lord" type that is more interested in Certainty and Control than Mystery and Muddlement.
A very common type. Very much not Toyful.
And 'not Toyful' was the vibe last night. The dinner was for staff, but the host (not the donor, who wasn't present) was a local Christian leader, and he set the tone. Basically, I felt like a Victim of Charity.
The attitude of people who perpetrate Charity is:
We are doing something for you, but we are not asking you what you want. We are giving you what we think you SHOULD want.
This attitude to charitable giving is definitely NOT just Christian-- it is a common, normal attitude (American, anyway).
I'd been feeling a little worried about the dinner beforehand, and right off the bat I knew I was going to have a bad reaction. We each got one (1) ticket for a free drink when we walked in, but the bartender said he could not serve me a martini--only beer & wine--even if I paid for the martini myself.
He was visibly embarrassed to say it, standing in front a wall of liquor bottles, but those were the rules the hosts had established, he explained. So I asked for a martini glass, and I poured my beer into it, with a lemon twist.
I hate this moral policing and self-righteousness. It's very human: I see it all around, on the Left as well as the Right, and I often catch myself doing it--and I hate that too.
It is a killer of freedom as taught by Noam Chomsky ("figure it out yourself"), and Saint Paul ("work out your own salvation"), and Roger Williams (Soul Freedom), and the whole philosophy that YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO FUCK UP.
Indeed, fucking up is a way of learning. Okay, within reason. Societies have laws for Public Order and Safety; parents set up gates so children don't fall off balconies.
But in Soul & Art, yes, we may benefit from help and learned-skills and teachings and stories, . . . and then we need freedom to PLAY.
And this kind of restriction through "Help" that is "good for you" is the opposite.
"We will only let you buy healthy things because we want what's best for you."
No you don't. You want to exercise control.
Also, for God's sake, how stupid is a "no martini" rule? If you let people drink beer & wine, what's the difference? They just drink more to get the same alcohol. If they really wanted to control it, they should have let everyone know it was a Dry dinner--no alcohol at all.
Meanwhile, talk about unhealthy--everyone was chowing down on steaks and farm-raised salmon. My vegan pasta was so greasy and gloppy, I didn't even eat it all. (I do appreciate they even had a vegan option.)
The restaurant was very cool though-- built in the 1930s, it had an F. Scott Fitzgerald vibe. It had the sort of wall geegaws that Trump loves in gold, but in tasteful gray and white.
Side note: What's the connection between tackiness and autocracy? They seem to go together. Trump's Oval Office:
As I say, the restaurant was old-school cool. The sort of place to drink a martini.
I would go back, except entrees run around $50. I looked it up. It cost $250 just to rent the party room we were in, and food service is some-$75/person.
And there's another Charitable Assault: I can guarantee you that my coworkers would rather have had $50 cash and fried-chicken at Popeyes or KFC. Or, with a rare exception, the whole $75, and skip hanging out with coworkers you see all the time anyway. That'd be my preference.
And skip the after -dinner "entertainment"-- an entertainer did magic tricks with clever patter. He was good, and it was okay–– but he ended with using a giant deck of cards to tell The Christian Story, saying every time he came to a "ten" card,
"This is the Truth. It is not pre-ten-d."
Oh, so clever. As told to the children.
I bent over my lap and curled into a ball. I'd have hated the manipulation no matter what, but, worse, he was talking to two Muslims and one Jew that I know of on our staff, as well as plenty of agnostic/atheists-- and this dinner included our sister store, and there must be others on that staff too.
HORRIBLE. More Charity as Control. The whole thing was a trap to lure us into a revival tent.
Honestly, I expect most of my coworkers didn't mind. To begin with, they probably didn't look up the prices. (They tend not to be obsessive fact-checkers like me.) But I minded.
Ah, well. It's sort of a good wake-up call, a reminder of reality for me. I am rarely around this type of Christian, and they are--obviously--quite numerous and powerful.
I do see the appeal. A HUGE attraction: togetherness, and protection from loneliness.
Also, predictability; safety (or, the illusion of it); the dream of a healthy individual in healthy families in a healthy society, even if it means giving up individual freedoms.
But... it all is so... kind of... stupid. Not stupid to believe in Jesus, but believing that Other People are going to keep you safe, make good decisions for you, guide your life for you? I have not noticed that Other People are well-suited to doing this.
I mean, Big Boss can't even figure out to order more shopping baskets. (Will they suddenly appear and prove me wrong? I hope so!)
Well, I'm not sorry I went. It was a good reminder of what I LOVE (more important than what I hate), and what I want to pursue--- what I do want to "stir into flame"--and that is. . .
making my own mess, playing in my messy living room.
My Christmas card print turned out to be a painting as much as a print. At the kitchen table:
It started as a botanical print of pine cones holding winged seeds in their scales, but it took off in different directions—almost calligraphic. The top looks like the Hebrew letter Shin...
..and the whole thing reminds me of 2 Timothy 1:6 "Remember to stir into flame the things of God."
(I
used to send about 100 Christmas cards, but in recent years have barely send half that. I
only printed fifteen of these--the rest will be commercial cards.)
Oh, who is this, perching in the break room at work?
Ever since the puffy Portland frogs came on the scene, I've been tucking little frogs around.
Two other coworkers add toys or trinkets to their areas-- Sander (Hannukah candle-lighter--coming up soon, and I just found a small menorah!) and Book's Amina, who is a fan of anime and suchlike.
But--since Ass't Man left-- no one else adds decorations to the break room. I've hung framed art (donated) over the years. I just added a Virgin of Guadalupe--the Mexican apparition of Mary––in honor of our Catholic Hispanic coworkers (several from Mexico).
II. What goes around, comes around (eventually, maybe), if you're there to see it
Ass't Man took up my invitation to help with end caps. I was surprised. I thought I'd never see him again after he'd dropped in the week before.
But he showed up this Monday, and I was delighted, and told him so. He has one hour on Mondays, he said, between getting off work (he's a special ed aide, like I was briefly) and picking up his daughter from some after-school activity-- enough time to decorate one end cap.
Great! I said. NO ONE does any decorating.
And he whipped together this black-and-white display, below. He always mixed things from different departments--here, soccer shoes on the top shelf, and a speaker (?) on the bottom. (I later added the Black rag-doll family in the basket. I know it throws off the color scheme.)
Ass't Man had left the store two years ago on a sour note--after I'd told him how uncomfortable I'd been with his drunken behavior toward me at a party at Emmler's.
It had gone badly. I'd felt extremely uncomfortable, and he'd gotten defensive and turned on me: "I have to walk on eggshells around you!"
And I'd gotten angry. "You sound like an alcoholic!" Well, that was true . . . but said LOUDLY on the sales floor at work? Not ideal.
That was pretty much our last conversation until four days ago, when he –– in passing (we were not even facing each other) ––mentioned that he's quit drinking. He also let slip that he's been "sort of boycotting this place".
AND he said he'd be so much more effective as Assistant Manager now that he's worked in Special Ed. I can totally imagine that!
Before the thrift store, he'd worked in graphic design for twenty years, and never directly with people. He was terrible at people, but, granted, he was also inexperienced. As anyone could see.
(It's classic bad management that Big Boss made him manager. BB simply promotes the Last One Standing. I'm only not a manager because I've refused it--and I doubt he'd offer it to me now.)
I am very happy––but cautious––about AM. I had felt like I'd broken up with my store husband when he left. But I know he has quit drinking before, and not been able to stay with it. So I'm not going to get my hopes up.
It's great he's trying, anyway, and now we're not forced into proximity, maybe we can enjoy one hour a week. I could take that time to work on another end cap. But not at first.
We'll see if this even lasts, but I do feel a bit restored by even the brief chat. Him telling me he quit drinking feels like a reply to and acknowledgement of my distress two years ago. THINGS TAKE TIME.
AND... talk about things going round--the same week AM dropped in, Manageress hired Emmler Ann back as cashier. I'm thrilled! She's the wild child artist who I'd made Alley Protectors with. She's also been gone two years.
So that Monday AM helped up front, Emmler was at the cash register, and for a moment the three of us stood together, saying hi.
It's so interesting--it's by my own returning to the store that I am present for these people's. I am grateful. _________________
III. Some stuff
It's cold outside. 26ºF / –3ºC this morning. I added this record to a work display yesterday.
I miss my orange couch--the same color as the one above. I slightly regret having gotten
rid of it, though it was the right thing to do when I moved into a room
at HouseMate's. But I have my ugly brown couch now, so I'm okay.
BELOW: An example of me taking advantage of my coworkers' ignorance: someone had priced a bag of these three skeins of yarn $4.99. I saw the malabrigo tag and snatched it up.
Malabrigo is a family-owned, hand-dyed yarn business in Uruguay, though
this "Dos Tierras" blend of alpaca and merino is made in collaboration
with a Peruvian place. It's not the MOST expensive yarn--"only" $22/skein. (The Noro yarn of my stripey sweater is double that.)
Anyway, there's enough for a knitter to make something--it would be a shame to cut it up for God's eyes. So I offered it to J-shek, my writer friend who knits and had donated some leftover yarn to my eyes project. He was happy to accept.
BELOW: A new old tablecloth for Christmas Eve dinner! And a couple old hot pads crocheted to look like . . . brain coral. (I have a few already.) Can you see? Those wavy lines are open and elevated ridges.
Now I've got my needlecrafters to help me, maybe I'll learn how to make these. They're so appealingly weird--and useful as trivets.
BELOW: Experimenting with technique... My 2nd attempt to mimic the Diebenkorn painting. I wound a patch of asymmetrical blue and thicker lines of orange & red.
The balance is not right. . . Needs to be chunkier. Will try, try again! THINGS TAKE TIME.
I’m stopped for a happy hour beer and a yarn-ball rolling stint, a block from my house. Despite walking past it almost daily, I’ve avoided this deli and organic/local farms butcher & market because during Covid they instituted a 10% service fee. Lots of places started adding fees, but usually more like 4%—and most took them off after lockdown.
I resented that this deli only removed theirs when the City passed a law saying places could not charge these (often hidden in small print) fees. I thought the deli was awfully snooty, catering to the Montessori trade. (There’s a Montessori school in the neighborhood. Like I’ve said, this neighborhood is on a social border. And so am I.)
But lately I’ve heard that they are strong, active supporters of immigrants—and I saw signs that they’re hosting a “What to Do in an ICE raid” training—the sort my workplace should hold. So this afternoon I decided to try it, and it’s very nice, though it smells of smoked meats… a mix of delicious and disgusting. They’re playing good music though. (Some acoustic alt-country blues kinda music?)
I despair of my workplace. I won’t go into it, but Manageress just decreed something so nonsensical, it’s like saying, “I want us to flounder in disorder.”
I absolutely am committing HERE & NOW to putting my energy into My Own Work, especially into art making & toy playing!
I’ve already started—God’s eyes, Christmas card prints, needlework group, postcards, Bear repair, reaching out to people… and gathering tiny musical instruments for the Girlettes’ Christmas parade—new this year!
And now I am going to wind up some of this beautiful yarn I just got in the mail from k. It’s wool carpet yarn—too scratchy to wear next to the skin but absolutely ideal for winding around sticks.
I really needed a reminder and the thrift magic sent me one this morning – – I pulled these tiny, old, pipe-cleaner Christmas creatures out of the trash at work. They were all bent and twisted, but savable. (My coworkers are criminal —the “church lady” ones, I mean.)
From today: a God’s eye in colors from Richard Diebenkorn’s painting “Berkeley No. 52” (1955) —the postcard here. I continue trying to shake loose my color habits.
MT dropped by with a book and joined me in wrapping yarn for a bit. She said she used to close her eyes and choose seven colored pencils out of the enormous number she had – – and then use only those in her next picture.
P.S. I confess to you, my brothers and sisters, that I have turned to ChatGPT for actual help.
In the past, I've only talked to it about what it (AI) is, how it works, what its existence means, and the same questions applied to human beings (what are we, anyway?), and that sort of philosophical and computer-y stuff.
But now I find myself in a workplace situation I could use help with, and I thought that with its patchwork of patterns, Chat could put together something helpful.
And it did, right off the bat. It used the phrase "managing sideways" to describe what I am facing. I won't go into it, but a coworker is not pulling their weight; I have not said anything to them because. . . among other things, I resent management, who should do it, and never does.
I gave a brief overview, and Chat replied:
"In workplaces with weaker management, informal “managing sideways” often falls on conscientious employees. That doesn’t mean you have to take on more than is fair, but you can approach this in a way that’s low-conflict, professional, and safe."
I immediately felt better that what I face at work is so common (I knew it was), there's a phrase for it (one I'd never heard). It can be a good thing in a healthy workplace (mine is not).
And then it came up with a list of helpful ideas for strategizing with my coworker. Yay!
I got my hair buzzed short seven Saturdays ago--it's growing out. This week, Media Jeff (store volunteer) said it looked good–"like Caesar".
Caesar? I'd rather look like Tintin, I said, with a flip in the front.
Housewares volunteer Nina was standing nearby. She's a cosmetics enthusiast. "I'll bring you some product!" she said. She brought in three hair waxes and pastes for my very own. (I own zero cosmetics, not even a lipstick anymore.)
Yesterday I slicked back the sides and flipped up the front. Much better!
I took this selfie in the bathroom of the French Café where Marz used to work. I went there yesterday after the Needlework meet-up at the library. (The needleworkers meet on the first and third Saturdays of the month. This was my second time.)
II. Tips
There were about a dozen women--most of them knitters and crocheters, a couple cross-stitchers. Both crocheters were making amigurumi--one, a set of 12 wee figures from the Nutcracker Suite; the other, a topsy-turvy figure with a reversible flower-petal skirt. The knitters were making hats, scarves, or sweaters, from simple beginner's patterns to intricate Scandinavian ones.
I made several God's eyes (below). I've realized that pencils (slippery and six-sided) don't hold yarn in a straight line, so you end up with a circle instead of a diamond. Now I realize that, I'll start using that feature on purpose. Flower colors with leaf-greens behind. The center eye on pencils looks like a rose.
The one on the far right looks kinda... fleshy, like labia, doesn't it? I'll try to play that up more.
I'm starting to take time to add decorations again, like the felt baubles on the blues-and-white Greek eye above. (I'd stopped doing that when I'd wanted to make 100 eyes fast.) I made this one at the French café.
At the group, a knitter had asked me if she could have the Greek eye that I'd made there. She wants to hang it at her workplace-- in food service at a tough grade school. Since the school outlawed phone use this year, she said, there've been more student fights in the cafeteria. I don't know if she feels the need for protection from school staff or the kids!
I'm happy when people want the eyes. Since she'd wanted one, I left the second Greek eye at the café as a tip, with a tiny note saying what it was.
You don't have to tip––it's bar service––but I usually do put something in the tip jar (though I know the mostly young women who work there earn more than I do).
(Tipping is weird. The more upscale the place, the more servers make, while working in the grungiest food service--fast food--servers make NO tips.)
Anyway, lately I've started to cut back on tipping because prices are so high--and most places charge a dollar extra for non-dairy (plant) milk, oat, soy, or almond.
I'd paid $7 for an oat-milk cappuccino.
I don't like that upcharge. I think places should encourage dairy-free milk for health and sustainability reasons--and kindness to cows, too--and spread the expense out so everyone pays the same, no matter which milk they choose.
(Like, places don't charge more if a customer uses the bathroom...)
III. Choose Your Milk
Starbucks stopped upcharging for vegan milks last fall--as a sales incentive, and also because of pressure from animal rights groups. (per PETA). I'd hoped more places would follow their lead.
Some have. The manager at a café that did told me the milk industry makes dairy super cheap for them, and non-dairy milks cost a lot more. "But you don't have to pay for refrigeration."
"And it's good for the cows", I said.
There's a coffee shop here that makes non-dairy milk the default--I love that!
I'd made an effort to eat less animal products a couple years ago, after I got some wonky kidney readings. Now I'm just finding I don't want to eat them--especially flesh. Cheese, I still love.
A wealthy friend of the thrift store (I don't know who) is hosting a thank-you dinner for staff next weekend. We were asked to choose an entrée from the menu ahead of time. Everyone was choosing salmon, and I was going to too--and then I thought about how salmon are farmed. It's disgusting.
But--how nice––they offer vegan bolognese. So I chose that, and will bring a little baggie of Parmesan cheese to sprinkle on top.
IV. Postcard Exchange
One of the needleworkers, Juno, a trans-woman, brought a photo album of postcards she's received through an international postcard-swap, PostCrossing.com. (Also on IG.)
[Btw, I use pseudonyms or nicknames for most people on my blog.]
This online organization has facilitated people sending and receiving 80 million postcards since 2005. I
thought it'd be boring to look at someone's postcard album, but a lot
of the senders had put creative care into their mailings, with lots of
fun stamps and some wild postcards.
Juno said that she'd listed LGBTQ+ in her profile, and that some people try to send stuff that matches profiles. So she gets a lot of fun queer-themed cards, including a card from Finland with that country's OFFICIAL Tom of Finland postage stamps
Another needleworker, Christine, had signed onto Postcrossings recently because of Juno. And another woman passed around instructions she'd printed for knitting washcloths--"the easiest thing to learn to knit on".
I love all this physical sharing! I
don't want to learn to knit, but this sort of thing is exactly what I
wanted in a seeking out live get-togethers---the physical presence of
other people leading to exchanges of collateral tidbits.
And I
do want to exchange postcards. I have lots sitting around, and some
fun stamps. And some cool postcards get donated to the store too. Christine and I exchanged addresses for a direct swap, and I think I'll sign up at postcrossings too. ________________________
V. "Better to do it"
For the time being, I'm giving up on visiting churches. Tooooo many things have to line up for me to fit with a church. Hardly anything has to line up for a crafting group to work. Not even crafting itself! Yesterday, one woman confessed that she doesn't really do needlework, she just brings something to work on so she can socialize.
No one has started a political discussion, though sometimes there's some mention... "He's a Trumper", said disparagingly. There's no group recital of a Land Acknowledgement. The library that hosts the group shares our county's Land & Water Acknowledgement, and it has active programs about/with indigenous people--with offerings this month, Native American Heritage Month.
You know I'm not a particular fan of Land Acknowledgements. I'm only mentioning it because I'd thought the church I visited was hypocritical in reciting a strongly worded one while doing nothing (so far as I could see).
OMG, here's a hilarious mock-up of these acknowledgements from Reservation Dogs--even our ancestors the Dinosaur Nation get acknowledged. (I love that! But... WHAT ABOUT Conifers & Ferns?!) The characters only tolerate it because they are getting gift cards for attending.
I'd loved that show but had forgotten that scene. I came across it in an NPR article from 2023, So you began your event with an Indigenous land acknowledgment. Now what?
"Indigenous
leaders and activists have mixed feelings about land acknowledgments.
While some say they are a waste of time, others are working to make the
well-meaning but often empty speeches more useful."
I have so many questions though. When
this church, for instance, recited its strong statement about
indigenous people, I wondered, . . . What about ALL the other people our ancestors oppressed? And what about the oppression of those ancestors themselves?
Should the men stand and say, "Our ancestors have sexually and socially exploited women"?
Should women say, "Throughout history, we've emotionally manipulated our children and partners"?
But... this is so specific. Ridiculously specific. Our ancestors weren't all one sex or race or nation... or even species. Dinosaur Nation!
In the end, I like the Catholic Confiteor (I acknowledge...). It's a one-size-fits-all confession of personal [fill in the blank] failure. I acknowledge that the church has hurt many people, but to me, this is not a crushing statement, but an uplifting one:
I fuck up. We all fuck up. WE ARE IN THIS TOGETHER. Let us help one another.
There are various translations--this is how I remember it:
"I
confess to almighty God and to you my brothers and sisters that I have
sinned through my own fault, in my thoughts and in my deeds, in what I
have done and what I have failed to do.
Therefore I ask you, my brothers and sisters, and all the angels and saints in heaven to pray for me to the lord our God."
I especially like that kicker, "What I have failed to do". ________________
Finally--did
you see? This week the new pope, Leo, oversaw the Vatican's return of 62 indigenous artifacts to Canada. The previous pope, Francis, had supported the move.
I like that. Need to do it? Want to do it? Better to do it.
Oh! Ha, I just looked up from the kitchen table where I’m typing – – of course I like that– – Girlette Spike already said it—
“nothing for it but to do it”.
(I’ve posted this before—it (a gouache painting) is one of my favorite things I’ve made. It's from a photo Marz took of Spike sitting in an old truck's wheel-well on a goat farm in New Mexico.)
Have you noticed, sometimes if an art/craft piece isn’t working out, it helps to keep going—to add more? More of some thing. If you don’t like it, you have nothing much to lose by trying.
I did not like this ^ God’s eye I made this morning. So on that theory, I added felt baubles that I’d gotten from the store – – and that bit of frivolry lightened it up. Plus, I realized it matches the autumn grasses and fading flowers in the city–planted boulevard outside my window.
With writing, however, it’s often the opposite – – it may help to take stuff out. Not as easy to edit yarn, which is more like writing by hand.
I nabbed these Carl Larsson cookie tins for MsChocolate (of Swedish descent). They are “vintage”— from the 1980s, which doesn’t seem old to me. But to my coworker born in 2004, they must seem antique.
They held pepparkakor—Swedish ginger thins. (More about those cookies.)
I love Carl Larsson’s art. I’d have priced these tins more than 99 cents each, but since I benefited from a coworker’s decision, I’m not complaining. Our prices are bizarre—someone will price cloudy old plastic containers $2.99, and then these lovely tins one-third of that. I try and catch such errors but lots gets by.
I don’t mind people pricing things too low – – then shoppers get a deal – – and sometimes that shopper is me – – it’s more a problem when people price stuff too high. Ah well, not that important.
Big Boss said nothing about my email requesting shopping baskets. It’s entirely possible that he’ll go ahead and order them and simply never tell me – – and one day they’ll turn up. And it’s also possible he will ignore my request. Either way, I’ve decided that’s the last time I’m going to put myself out like that. I’m choosing not to set myself up to be disregarded—his usual m.o. (not just to me).
If I’m going to be annoyed or agitated, I’d rather it be for something more worthwhile! For instance, sharing my artwork more widely—like, making and selling prints, as Joanne, blogger of Cup on the Bus, had advised me to do last year. That means facing fears I have about being public with things I make.
I’m not sure why that frightens me. If I did it, I’d probably find out!
Sometimes the best things are accidental. In this case--the top of my pine cone looks like the Hebrew letter Shin. Shaped like three tongues of flame, it is a letter of fire and transformation.
And the winged seeds look like eyes-- like a on dragon kite. Fire & Eyes!
I know the letter Shin because Leonard Nimoy used it for Mr. Spock's "live long and prosper" hand sign--fromhis growing up seeing it used as a priestly blessing in synagogue, to representShaddai (God) and Shalom (peace).
I need to buy some real linoleum. I've been using this soft-cut rubber stuff, and it's too pliable--you can't carve crisp, fine details. But I'll use up what I have.
An old friend took me to a new café in my neighborhood – – there hasn’t been one I’ve liked within walking distance – – until now!
Nice and sunny—good light for making little things from yarn. Not cheap, but nowhere is. A cup of brewed coffee is $4.25, but that includes tax & tip, so that’s not bad. Lattes are $7.25.
Brewed it is!
Pastry prices?
Best to eat at home first.
I spread out the God’s eyes I’d made to take their photo, and a young woman came over and asked me what they were. I told her, and I said she could have one if she wanted.
She hesitated, so I said, “Please don’t feel you have to take one.”
And she said, “No, I really want one! I was just deciding.”
(I always feel awkward offering people something – – I don’t want them to feel they have to accept out of politeness. A neurotic thing to worry about. 🙄😆)
I'm starting to design my Christmas card print... a mature seed pine cone. All my life I've seen pine cones and didn't realize they are always paired: cones that disperse pollen in the wind ('male') + cones that produce (mostly winged) seeds ('female'). Or maybe I just don't remember--I probably learned when I was a kid.
Also--they are older than dinosaurs (240ish million years ago): "Conifers ['cone-bearers'] first appear in the fossil record over 300 million years ago." But not as old as ferns (360 million years ago). (Wikipedia: conifers.)
Below, left: Linda Sue had posted this botanical diagram I'll use as my inspiration... Below right: Pine cone cross-section from Pacific Science Center
I want to get back to printing FOR FUN. I haven't carved a lino print I've been happy with in a year--I kind of lost my confidence. Possibly this is too exacting? We shall see...
II. Another anecdote about the power of "making little things from yarn":
Back
in the 1970s when Ram Dass was giving a far-out lecture to a
bunch
of young tripsters, he noticed an older woman in the audience wearing sturdy thick-heeled shoes, a skirt and
jacket, anda hat with
fruits around the brim.
She sat there nodding to everything Ram Dass was saying. He was fascinated,
wondering what she was doing in this crowd. At the end of the lecture he
smiled to invite her to approach.
When she got to Ram
Dass she said, “That was just marvelous, and I know exactly what you
mean.”
Ram Dass replied, "How do you know all that?”
She said, “I
crochet.”
~ Becoming Nobody: Everyone's busy being somebody, Ram Dass, documentary film by Jamie Catto, 2019
_______________
Do people crochet pine cones? OF COURSE. Instructions on youTube
ABOVE: (From left) Command Sgt. Maj. Gabriel Cervantes and Col.
Burt Thompson of the 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, with Interpreter
John Mardo. 2008. (Center) Pfc. Casey Long of the Tennessee Army
National Guard. 2008. (Right) Sgt. Tim Johannsen and his wife,
Jacquelyne Kay, at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where Johannsen
spent 2 1/2 years after losing his legs on his second tour in Iraq.
2008. Courtesy of Platon
Writer Andrew Solomon talks about what helps with depression, which varies hugely. He said...
"Depression is so exhausting.It takes up so much
of your time and energy,and silence about it,it really does make the depression worse.
"My favorite of the letters that I got
was from a womanwho said
that she had tried therapy, medication,she had tried pretty much everything, and she had found a solution
and hoped I would tell the world,and that was making
little things from yarn."
I would add, Try a little tenderness (...to your inconvenient self).
BELOW: "The Scorpion"--from Stanley Spencer's 'Christ in the Wilderness' series of paintings, 1939
Last night's crop of God's eyes to add to the fence:
I keep thinking about these two versions of Doing Being-Human. (I posted this before--"'Craftivism' draws knitters, crocheters to Portland ICE protests...")
Sunday morning, 6:30 a.m. I've been getting up early with the time change--because I've been falling asleep so early, since it's dark before 5 p.m.--by 8 p.m. I feel like it's midnight!
I've set a pot of black beans to boil on the stove, to make some sort of chili. I've barely been to the grocery store in weeks. I'll go to the nearby Mexican grocery and get some veg. They sell wrapped bundles of chopped stew vegetables for $8---usually squash, carrots, zucchini, cabbage, corn on the cob, potato, jalapeño, a spray of cilantro, etc. I'll add a can of stewed tomatoes, a can of hominy (softened dried corn), and spices, which I have.
Nothing grand, obviously, but the first cooking I've done in almost a month. I got so TIRED of making food and have been living on cheese sandwiches and so forth--like, oatmeal, boiled eggs, sliced apples with peanut butter.
The co-op has a machine that grinds plain peanuts (no salt or anything else)---it's so good fresh! It's on sale this month for $3.99/pound, which is decent, you don't eat that much.
I don't mind eating like that, but my body has not seen a veg in a while...I 've been eating out a lot too, which costs too much--even the cheapest places cost near $10 for a little something.
And
now that people's federal food benefits are being cut, I won't go to the food
shelf for my coworkers' lunch, because children will be needing
the food... We adults can scavenge and scrounge up something, usually.
Why are we having to think in these terms––will children get enough to eat?––while we spend billions on AI and missiles??? Yes, I know why. It's insane.
Ah, I just checked: happy to ssee that Minnesota has secured SNAP benefits after our AG Keith Ellison sues the Trump administration... [news article here]. (I didn't used to like Ellison, but he's been great since DT took office.) But still, I don't need it, and I am tired of making lunch for coworkers for now anyway.
Sometimes the daily tasks of taking care of myself feels like such a burden. I've been letting it slide, but yesterday I caught up on laundry and tidying--there were sticks and yarn on every surface, and dolls too--they are gathered up into small study groups now.
What are they studying? I don't know, but that's what they said, "study groups". I think this group, below, is planning a marching band parade for the holidays--can you see their little metal instruments up front? I brought those from the store last week.
Yesterday I also opened, de-stuffed, and washed two damaged stuffed bears--one that I've had for months to repair for an acquaintance. Her dog had chewed her childhood bear's eyes and nose off, leaving big holes, so I will repair its face, as well as clean and restuff it.
And I got two grocery bags of stuff together to go back to the thrift store, and I put a grocery bag of books I've read (mostly from the store) into nearby Little Free Libraries.
Having performed this life maintenance, I'm mostly restored to rights.
I have been neglecting my apartment mostly because I've been out socializing more than usual. A good trade off, but I'm tired of people-ing, and I am not going to a new church today, as I had planned.
I'm going out for coffee with bink instead, which we often do on a Sunday. (this doesn't count as 'people-ing' because bink is no work.) She's been laid up the past three weeks though, healing from foot surgery to plane-off bone spurs. It's like carpentry work!
It's exciting that she'll be able to walk without pain again, but it's a long recuperation--a couple months--since of course they have to open your foot to get to the bone, and now it has to darn itself together again. But it will, and then we can go on walks together again--me with my much improved knee ligament...
How is your space suit holding up? A 73-y.o. friend calls these old-age discussions of health Organ Recitals. A good exchange of information, often.
Life is grim. Make Art!
Another reason I am not going to the Congregational church I was going to check out today is because . . . every time I go to a Protestant church [or Anglican and its offshoots churches], I re-discover how Catholic I am (even if I can't stand to go to Mass).
(Some of this has to do with social factors more than theological--the Anglican {i.e., Episcopalian} church near me is the Pearls & Martinis crowd.)
The pastor at the church I visited saying he wanted to get rid of the Cross was a perfect example of Tidying Up instead of Diving Into the full mess of being human. I want to tidy my house but prefer to dive into the weirdness in the House of Gods.
I just watched a 6-episode BBC show, Broken (2017), about a troubled priest in a troubled parish in Liverpool--played by the excellent Sean Bean (Boromir in Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings and Ned Stark in Game of Thrones).
I liked it a lot because it's grim and bitter, and so am I (sometimes). (I don't think it shows in my own art, does it? with the girlettes, for instance, though I suppose they are weird in their own sweet way.)
Review of Broken in the Guardian. I wouldn't have thought of It's a Wonderful Life, but that was the director's inspiration--and now I see it. It's really grim--I skipped an episode where a character kills herself (I read the synopsis, wanting to know)--but it ends in hope and love.
________________________
"Successful art changes our understanding of the conventions by altering our perceptions."
--Sol Lewitt
NOTE: Kinda gruesome image coming up of St. Bartholomew, flayed. (I say "kinda" cause there are worse!)
What I love most about the Catholicism is that,far from shying away from discomfort and mystery, it embraces it, the weird, is itself weird ---as weird as life is, can be. Etymology of weird:
Old English wyrd ‘destiny’, of Germanic
origin. The adjective (late Middle English) originally meant ‘having the
power to control destiny’, and was used especially in the Weird Sisters, originally referring to the Fates, later the witches in Shakespeare's Macbeth ; the latter use gave rise to the sense ‘unearthly’ (early 19th century).
Big Problem: I hate the Catholic hierarchy, having seen it up close and personal. But so much in the faith fits me well--including that the Mass centers around a ritual (the Eucharist, or communion) not one
person's sermon. It's impersonal in the best way.
Catholic priests are, at root, mere functionaries. They are there to say the magic words that mysteriously transform the mundane into the divine. (Their personalities show through, of course, sometimes horribly, but they are not the point.)
The Church is full of stuff that makes the best weird art--as Greedy Peasant revels in--here (below, right) with his Halloween costume: The martyred St Bartholomew (one of the twelve apostles) carrying his own flayed skin. instagram.com/p/DPv6VnFgMGw
He modeled it on, among other depictions, Matteo di Giovanni's painting “Saint Bartholomew Flayed”, (1480, Italy, tempera and gold on wood), below left.
More on the symbolism, etc., at the painting's home, the Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest.
And more depictions--including one by Michelangelo, a detail in the Sistine Chapel––"the artist portrays St. Bartholomew holding his own skin, like a rumpled dress"––here.
"...Like a rumpled dress." This is the religion/art for me.
"You just flayed the bears!" say the toys here. Well, no... it didn't hurt them.
And that reminds me, I'm eager to see the new Frankenstein by Guillermo del Toro, a very Catholic filmmaker. Lapsed Catholic, like some of the best, retaining the morbid monsters and the hope for redemption...
Here is GDT with a many-eyed monster. He has lost 80 kg/176 lbs. --saying "You have to cut back on the tacos".
(Del Toro didn't say how he lost weight. Doesn't matter--I'm glad to see it, because I'd bet it was endangering his life, and I want him to live to make many more movies.)