+ Her Barefoot Heart

Category: Blog (Page 62 of 101)

News of The 70273 Project with a side of Jeanne’s Barefoot Heart

cheers

Mintjuleps

So last night we reminisced over 2 glasses of wine, answering the question: What would I do differently. Tonight we had pretty much the same conversation over a couple of mint juleps (pronounced mint jewel-lips, of course), and while I can’t remember much of what He said, I can assure you that if I had it to do over again, I’d start by being an only child. I’d lose weight by adding at least 3 inches to my height, and I’d quit trying to fit a Southern girl into a California dress cause while I might be able to squeeze into it, it just doesn’t look that good on me.

I would eat only what I want to eat – oh wait, I already do that.

I would install an emergency tiara in every room in my house. (I have one I’m taking to WDS cause you just never know.) I would outlaw stupidity – you’re welcome – and coloring books would have one little ole’ bitty line. The rest would be up to you.

I would make all the cell phone companies tell the truth, play nice with their towers, and deduct $5 and apologize for each dropped call.

I would stop this nonsense about sports and science being the end-all of all end-alls, lording over the arts. There’d be no more cutting the arts first again, ever.

I’d bring back stocks for the public embarrassment factor, employing behavior modification in hopes that people would start behaving themselves better. It would be ever so much cheaper than putting them in prisons, me thinks, but let me be real clear about this: people who harm and abuse others would skip the stocks and go straight to prison. Period.

I would make ice cream a food group.

When one country tries to strong-arm another, meddling in affairs that don’t concern them, I’d make the leaders don uniforms and duke it out before starting a war and sending innocent people smack into harm’s way. I’m considering sending the families of the world leaders – and I mean ALL world leaders – with them cause I think that’d make everybody stop and think before they shoot off their mouths and their pisspoor attitudes. Might help them mind their own damn business, too.

I’d require every single person to do something nice for somebody else at least once a week cause call me old-fashioned, but I think it’s healthy and good for everybody concerned. And though I feel kinda’ silly saying it, I’d trust everybody to commit this kindness (planned or random, your choice) without supervision or fear of penalty. Trust. What a concept, eh?

I’d bring back manners – nothing fancy, just your garden variety basic “please” and “thank you,” and I’d give bonus points to those who read and commit a poem to memory and dance a jig or sing a song at least once a week.

Obviously what I’m really saying is (in my very best Southern accent): Sugar, if I had it to do all over again, I’d be Your Highness, the Potentate Herself Overall.

Or something like that.

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1

I may wind up doing this one over. I’m stitching through a foundation paper. I scanned each drawing then printed each out onto a sheet of this paper that was then pinned to the fabric panel. I stitch right through the paper then tear the paper away when i’m finished. I didn’t pull the thread tight enough on this one, was treating it too gingerly I guess. but still, I’ve started.

~~~~~~~~~

She draws, I stitch.
She is my developmentally disabled sister-in-law, Nancy,
and I am Jeanne, the woman who flat-out loves her.
Go here to start at the beginning and read your way current.

in the beginning

you get an idea.
you’re excited,
and before you can talk yourself out of it,
you make a shopping list
and gather materials
you’ll need.
everything is nice and orderly.
you are ready to start.

11

somewhere in the middle
things go wonky.
you get confused.
nothing looks the way you’d imagined.
you are lost.

2

6

you persevere,
trusting, hoping, thinking,
and maybe even praying a little bit
in your own way of praying.
maybe the entire process
is praying, now that you think about it.

12

eventually
order is restored.
you are excited again,
eager to move forward.
you may not know how the finished
project will look,
but you know what you need to do next,
and that’s enough
for now.

~~~~~~~~~

And so I begin this a special project that begs my attention. Though it will be documented here on Gone With The Thread, a blog created specially for irrepressible pursuits of my heart, you can read a little bit more about the inception of the idea here.

It’s Never Too Late, Right?

Bloom2

Saturday night.
A chilled bottle of wine.
Nowhere to go.
No clock to follow.

It’s hot.

After 2 glasses of wine, I ask my husband: What would you have done differently? He would’ve applied to Harvard or some other Ivy League school. He doesn’t know what he would’ve done career wise, just that he would’ve given a little more thought to what he might want to do instead of taking the easiest way out, applying to colleges that didn’t require an essay, going to the first one that accepted him. He might’ve gone to law school, he says, and when I remind him that he started law school after we were married and tell him that he could still do that, he says No, not now. Though he doesn’t think he has the stomach for medicine, he thinks he would like to have been a country doctor . . . and I can see that. I can also see him being a teacher – I’ve never known a man more patient – or a vet. He once thought about being a vet, he tells me.

Me? What would I do differently? Not so much, I tell him. I would still leave psychology for education. I would still be a career (sometimes called stay-at-home) mother. I would’ve home schooled our children. It was unheard of them, and I did talk with him about it at the time, but the fight would’ve been too great. At least it seemed so then.

I would’ve married the same man – there’s no doubt about that – and I’m not just saying it because he reads my blog. Marrying him is one of the few things I got right. And my children. Oh hands down I would’ve had the same children: Alison and Kipp. Not so much as a shadow of a doubt there either. Sometimes I think I must be gaining weight not cause I eat too much and move too little but to make room for the mother’s love that expands my heart to triplequadruple the recommended heart size for a woman my age.

But what would I have done differently?

I would’ve pursued yoga and meditation when I first encountered it. Just think how tall and slim and flexible and mellow I’d be now.

Though I can’t tell you the specifics of what it would be, I would’ve found a career that would’ve made my husband’s family welcome me proudly to their table.

I would do something – just about anything – to see my children point to me and say “That is my mother” – not under their breath or from a sense of obligation to tell the truth or with a distinct tone of embarrassment but with pure unadulterated pride.

I might’ve gone into medicine, something I wanted to do as early as fifth grade, but somewhere along the way I got the idea (yes, sarcasm) that I could only be a nurse, and though I now value nurses and credit them with the real healing that occurs, I didn’t want to be a nurse. Ego, you say? So be it.

Sometimes I think I would like to have followed the trail of law enforcement that is in my DNA. Wear a uniform, drive real fast, carry a gun, flash a badge. I’ve gotta tell you: that still appeals to me, sometimes more than others.

I would never have asked or allowed that preacher to marry us, that’s something I would’ve done differently, and I would’ve verbally slugged that Marine chaplain who asked probing, inappropriate questions for his own entertainment. I would punch that mental health professional in the mouth to shut her up and keep her from doing more harm.

I would never have made our children go to church. Not that church, anyway.

Wanna know what I’d like to do now? I ask my husband. I want to speak up more and stay quiet less. I want to speak without qualifiers that erase what I want to say before I say it simply because I’d rather shoot myself down than have somebody else shoot me down.

I want to lead the parade of independent thinkers. I want to do everything I can think of to convince people that they can and should think for themselves. “They think you’re stupid,” I’d say at every opportunity, “so think for yourself and prove them wrong.” What a better place this world would be if people were encouraged and felt safe thinking their own thoughts. Can you imagine? (And for the record, I believe that thinking starts with feeling, starts in the heart.)

I want to write my books and plays and even music that I’ve been carrying around inside for I don’t know how long.

I’d love to hang a shingle out that says “The Holder, The Listener, The Laugher” or “Hugs, Ears, and Chortles” or something like that. Hang it out online and on the door of the studio I’ll eventually have – either, both. I would never try to tell somebody what they need to do – I know, even if they don’t, that they know. Down deep in their bones, they know the answers they seek, they know the path they long for. I’d just listen to them and hold the space till they tripped over their own answers, over their own way. Humor and laughter, those are my go-tos. I’d love to use humor and creativity to help people find their own answers, satisfy their own longings, understand (or maybe just “own”) their special and unique way of being.

And last but not least . . . I’ve been an end of life doula many times, and I’d love to do that more. I’m good at that, and I love doing it because it’s one of the few times when I totally, unequivocally trust my bones. I’d love to maybe be a chaplain – a non-denominational chaplain in say the forestry service or local police and fire department where I’d sit with families in crisis, fetching them hot chocolate, holding their hands, handing them hand-embroidered handkerchiefs as I listen to them share story after story after story. A purveyor of comfort. That’s what I want to be. That’s what I want to do.

Bloom1

in her own language

Nancy1

Nancy2

Nancy3

We visited Nancy last week, my friend Angela and I. After she finished her brownie sundae with strawberry milkshake, I put paper in front of her and a pen in her hand, and our Nancy drew like a woman possessed. She doesn’t have the fine motor skills to turn a single page at a time, and I couldn’t turn the pages fast enough. She drew then stopped, waiting on me to find her a fresh page. She filled the remaining pages in my pocketbook notebook then Angela’s notebook then a few bits of paper I happened to have tucked to the side. That night I bought her a 6-pack of composition books and a side of pens, and the next day when we took her to lunch, I opened them in front of her. Though she didn’t draw with quite the same intensity as the day before, she was nevertheless focused, and filled the better part of three of those six books.

Yesterday and the day before, I scanned those images, and purchased several yards of white fabric – some broadcloth and some white textured fabric purchased at a thrift shop. (Stay tuned for details on my choice of fabrics.) Today I cut the fabric into pieces, and tomorrow I’ll print each image onto a sheet of tear-away paper, then I’ll set about stitching each of Nancy’s 163 drawings – one image to one piece of cloth – using purple thread because purple is her favorite color and Angela’s purple pen is the one she obviously preferred. I imagine doing one sketch/stitch a day, but you know how that goes . . .

of brokenness and beauty

“It’s wrong,” he said, “to take away the story a pot can tell.”

A pot should tell about the passing of time. It should speak of the woman with swirls on her fingertips, who smoothed the inside surface with a piece of gourd. It should raise a prickle of wonder at the artist who looked at a lizard and saw the geometry of its back limbs, right angles framing the curve of its tail. It should lay bare the disaster of its breaking and what else might have been broken with it. If it has empty space in its skin, that emptiness is part of what it is.

Clay that holds a story of human creative power holds also a story of the fragmenting power of time and weather and irretrievable loss. The beauty in a bowl is the truth of it. If part of its truth is the wounds it has endured, then those wounds are part of its beauty.

From Wild Comfort: The Solace of Nature by Kathleen Dean Moore

~ /// ~

DSC06404

She messaged me in mild panic: my granddog had broken my son’s favorite bowl. “Send it to me,” I told her, and I spent months mending it. Not because it took that long, but because I enjoyed the process. He assured me he didn’t want it, my son, so I’ve adopted it, and for some unfathomable reason, I can’t bear to finish mending it.

~ /// ~

Shards2a

I bought two bags filled with shards of broken dishes – five dollars a bag – and years later, I am still tickled with my treasure. “What will you do with them?” my husband asks in a chuckle. That was a long time ago, and the shards still just sit in a dish, treating my imagination to stories untold.

~ /// ~

Nancy1

Nancy2

Nancy3

We visited Nancy last week, my friend Angela and I. After she finished her brownie sundae with strawberry milkshake, I put paper in front of her and a pen in her hand, and our Nancy drew like a woman possessed. She doesn’t have the fine motor skills to turn a single page at a time, and I couldn’t turn the pages fast enough. She drew then stopped, waiting on me to find her a fresh page. She filled the remaining pages in my pocketbook notebook then Angela’s notebook then a few bits of paper I happened to have tucked to the side. That night I bought her a 6-pack of composition books and a side of pens, and the next day when we took her to lunch, I opened them in front of her. Though she didn’t draw with quite the same intensity as the day before, she was nevertheless focused, and filled the better part of three of those six books.

Yesterday and the day before, I scanned those images, and purchased several yards of white fabric – some broadcloth and some white textured fabric purchased at a thrift shop. (I’ll explain my choice of fabrics another day in another post.) Today I cut the fabric into pieces, and tomorrow I’ll set about stitching each of Nancy’s 163 drawings – one image to one piece of cloth – using purple thread because purple is her favorite color and Angela’s purple pen is the one she obviously preferred. I’ll be posting occasional updates here where I do my long form writing, but mostly I’ll be documenting this journey at my new blog, Gone with the Thread, specially created for such inexplicable but necessary pursuits of my heart.

~ /// ~

I keep the shards without so much as an idea of making a wailing wall like the one in The Secret Life of Bees or the mosaic wall in How to Make an American Quilt. I don’t want to remake them into something they once were, and I don’t want to make them into something else entirely. I keep the shards and the pieces of the bowl just as they are because even in their (so called) brokenness, they speak. Because even in their (so called) brokenness, their possibilities are limited only by my limitations. Because even in their (so called) brokenness, they are beautiful.

It’s the Little Things That Trip You Up and Lift You Up

Andy2b

Before we met, I dated enough good men and enough skudzoids to know what I looked for in a life mate, so on on that fateful January night so many years ago when Eros was in such a jolly good mood and nudged us in the direction of each other with his arrow, I was ready. In the beginning there was the love of freedom that comes from being launched into the world as independent young adults. There as the love of newness that comes with new jobs, new relationship, new domicile. There was the love of each other, undoubtedly based more on pleasing appearances than anything else, given the short time we’d known each other. But through the potholes and detours that are inevitably encountered on any journey, through births and deaths, through prosperity and leanness, through agreement and disagreement, I’ve grown to know and love – deeply love – your soul.

As your handwriting shows, you are a man who takes his time about things, being sure before committing, taking pains to make sure you’re understood. What you lack in patience for other drivers – especially the Floridian drivers who spend their summers here on the curvy mountainous roads (in front of you, more often than not) – you make up for in kindness. Remember those two puppies we rescued from the pound the first year we were out of an apartment in in our own home? I can still see you sitting there in the grass on that ridiculously hilly backyard, a pudgy brown and black puppy wiggling in each arm. When one got sick and had to be euthanized, you asked me to tend to that because it was something you simply weren’t able to do.

I couldn’t help but notice early-on that you are quite literal, a way of being undoubtedly learned both from training and from example, and this black-and-white way of seeing the world, this orderly linearity way of proceeding is at times annoying, at times exasperating, and at times, I must say, actually quite reassuring and useful. For years I took those irritating follow-up questions you ask me I tell you a perfectly fine story, as one-upmanship, behavior I’ve long attributed to you being raised in a family that values math and science more than the sun and stars. Then one day – not too long ago, actually – I vowed for the zillionth time to never waste a perfectly good and well-told story on you ever again, when from out of nowhere comes a resounding thwack, and I realized that you’re not scolding or belittling, you’re not criticizing or poking fun – quite the contrary. You’re listening to me. I wouldn’t go so far as to say you’re hanging onto my every word (far too many times I can see you there, your eyes glazing over as I talk), but you do listen more often than I’ve given you credit for.

You’re a man who notices the little things, my husband. Why if I had a nickel for every four-leaf clover you’ve found, you’d be sipping a drink while patiently waiting for me to post this from a cruise ship in some exotic part of the world. When we go for walks, I look for a safe place to land my foot while you find the most marvelous surprises – leaves turned lacy in their act of decaying, eggshells left behind after the hatching, heart-shaped rocks, and yes, of course: four-leaf clovers.

Over the years, we’ve used that iron skillet to prepare nourishment for ourselves, our family, and our friends, but never as a weapon against each other. You are one of the most understanding, supportive men I’ve ever been lucky enough to know. You’ve taught me what healthy relationships look like, what true-grain love feels like. Sometimes we’ve experienced seasoning simultaneously and sometimes individually, but we’ve never grown away and left the other. I remember thinking it impossible to love you any more than I did back in that fresh, newness of youthful love, but tonight, though I have no standard of measurement that will satisfy your engineer’s brain, I tell you anyway that I now love you more. I now love you for more than just your fetching countenance. I love you for all the little things that are the beauty of your soul.

Happy birthday, Andy.

Clover2

She’s my Sister-in-Law and I Love Her Like the “in-law” Part was Silent

Nancy2

This is Nancy, and today is her birthday. Now the only test Nancy will ever need to pass is an eye exam, but don’t you waste a minute thinking there’s not some cognitive activity going on there. It just looks a little different from what we’ve been taught smart looks like, that’s all.

There was the time we visited her on Memorial Day weekend, for example. She prattled on and on (she has a tendency to repeat things) about how nobody had to go to work on Monday. “Nobody has to go to work on Monday,” she said over and over and over again. For the first thousand or so times, I made conversation by telling her that I had to go to work on Monday. We got to the restaurant and talked about other things over lunch, then as we were leaving the restaurant – before we even got out of the parking lot – Nancy said, “Nobody but Jeanne has to go to work on Monday.” The rest of us had already forgotten that it was even a holiday weekend.

The lenses on her glasses are perpetually covered with her fingerprints because when her glasses slide down her nose – a frequent occurrence – she places three fingers on each lens and shoves the glasses back into place. But thickly-coated or no, when it comes to jewelry, Nancy has 20/20 vision. You see, our Nancy loves jewelry as much as the next girl, so when we visited her a couple of months ago and found that we couldn’t take her shopping to pick out her own, I slipped a bracelet off my wrist and put it on hers. It was a slim cuff bracelet made of pewter, much different from the elastic-strung beaded bracelets I usually get for her because they slide on over her wrist, making it easy for her to adorn herself. Well, Nancy took one look at that bracelet and smiled . . . until she turned her wrist over to look at it from the other side. Seeing the opening in the back, Nancy promptly removed the bracelet from her wrist and tossed it on the floor saying, “It’s broke.”

She can’t read a book, our Nancy, but she can put a 500-piece puzzle together faster than you or I can dump the pieces out of the box.

Nancy has no interest in or need for time management apps, but she keeps a record of her days in a spiral-bound composition book. Using one page for every day, she notes what’s most important to her: what she had for breakfast, who had a birthday that day, the names of her family members, the word “love,” and her signature. Every single day contains “love.” Think about that for a minute: Love. In every single day.

When it comes to dance partner selection on Friday nights, it doesn’t matter to Nancy what kind of car the man drives or how much money he has in the bank, or even what color his eyes are. What matters to Nancy enough to dance with a man is that he doesn’t hit and he doesn’t bite. (I know I told you that before, but I think it bears repeating for a lot of women, don’t you?)

Oh sure, our Nancy will never graduate from high school and she’ll never hold a college degree, but she knows things that can’t be learned from reading a book or attending a class. She is one of the few people (maybe the only person) I know who is content with her life just as it is. She doesn’t live in the past, and she doesn’t live in the future, Nancy lives every day in the present. And she sure does know how to pick a man.

Nancy is not beautiful by cultural and advertising standards. Her teeth aren’t perfectly white and close together. She’s a mouth breather. Her fingers take a funny turn and point upward even when her hand is resting palm-side down on the table. She has an unsteady, uneven gait, sort of shuffling her feet while her body sways side to side from the shoulders. But know this: if you overlook Nancy, if you ignore her or dismiss her or disregard her, Nancy’s not the one missing out. You are.

NancyJeanneShopping

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