+ Her Barefoot Heart

Category: stitchings (Page 19 of 37)

s . . . s . . . s

Mountains

IMG 0342

Sunsetca

i’ve been many places
in the past several weeks,

IMG 0210

traveling for many reasons,
all reasons involving other people.

Beach1

some folks are quick to divide people
into two groups:
those who like people
and those who don’t like people.
i continue to bump up against
that categorization,
but i no longer spend time and energy
trying to explain that i, too, like people
just in different doses.
defending and explaining is time and energy better devoted
to what my soul must have
as nourishment:
space,
silence,
solitude.

Solitude

120, Envoy: Illuminary

5 120 2 erased

To understand what it feels like to look at Nancy’s art, you can not look at it with a logical mind. My daughter said it best, “It feels free,” and how does one capture freedom? As a flag flapping in the wind? You do that already with these. So I brainstormed and hunted the web looking for images that made my spirit feel free. And instead of taking a picture of the stitching in an organic place, I placed it upon the images that reflected most to me what it makes me feel when I looked at it, the joy and openness…

120Illuminary

Today’s Envoy is my friend Illuminary. The first time I read her writing, I was smitten, absolutely smitten. Then next thing you know, we’re tucking each other in at night with stories about our day or how we wish our day had been or how we hoped tomorrow would be – a ritual that continues to this day. Beyond giving me a sweet, soft place to lay my head every night, let me tell you: this woman is amazing. She gets more done in a minute than I get done in a week. She home schools Little Moon (my special name for her special daughter), makes pottery, sews, quilts, makes dolls, reads the best books, tend a garden, writes, makes brooms, paints, and I don’t know what all. Seems to me there’s nothing this woman can’t do. Simply said, she is an artist – an artist in various creative mediums, an artist at life, and an artist at friendship. And she’s as generous as she is talented. This week found her holding class for the Empty Bowls project, and I know she donates some of her mugs as a fundraiser for an animal shelter. Go visit her blog and be captivated by her writing, by her special way of looking at the world, then visit her etsy shop and let her become your favorite elf. Thank you, MoonGlow, for this beautiful collage and your beautiful words that accompany it. I’ll talk to you later when we tuck ourselves in under the moon that holds you, me, and Nancy, too.

~~~~~~~~~

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.

127

3 states

+

12 hours on the road

=

tired

it was a good two weeks, and now we are home.
no unpacking tonight,
that’s what tomorrow is for.

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127

3 clues to what this drawing makes me think of . . .

1

Cats1

2

Cats2

3

Cats3

~~~~~~~~~

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.

123, 124

We spent today on this boat:

MaryFrankBoat

with these people called Mary and Frank Russell:

123 124

123 124b

Frank worked with Nancy’s dad
and quickly became like a part of the Chambers family.
He knows Nancy,
though he’s not seen her in a while.
I hope that changes one day soon.

It was a day spent leisurely swapping stories, remembering when.
chortling and loving,
relishing being together again
after at least 10 years.

I don’t know when I’ve been so relaxed, so sated.

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~~~~~~~~~

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.

121

Piersign

My mother and I spent the day in Fairhope, Alabama

Flower2

where the flowers were pink

121ause

where the fountain at the pier was tinged pink
in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness month

Pierwalker

and where a woman named Gladys
(seen here on the bench on the left)
walked the pier,
stopping at each bench
to sit and rest a spell.
“Hello,” I said to her as we walked by,
cause she was cute as a button.
“Hey,” she said, “I like your skirt.
I could just snatch it right off you.”
Oh my goodness, how I do
love sassy women.

Sky3

It was a beautiful day.
Oh yes, yes it was.

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~~~~~~~~~

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.

116

Brightspot14oct12

This is how my morning started: with a bright spot Out There, waiting for me.

We watched Felix Baumgartner parachute through space. Transported me right back to those early morning space launches. Daddy woke up me and carried me to the sofa where I watched it all on a black and white tv. Today my son, Kipp, texted me to turn on the tv, and I sat on the sofa and watched it unfold, this time in living color.

Clouds14oct12

Thunderstorms are predicted for tomorrow,
and the clouds are rolling in early in preparation.
It’s quite lovely here, dark clouds or no.

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116a

~~~~~~~~~

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.

115

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Beach

It was tired out today, so we moved slowly.

Shrimpfestival1

This evening, once it had cooled off,
we went to the Shrimp Festival.

Bottletree

Many artisans had closed by the time we got there, but I did spy one of my all-time favorite things: bottle trees. They’re an old Southern custom, brought over from Africa, I’m told. The bright colors reportedly mesmerize and beckon evil spirits who are ultimately captured and imprisoned inside the bottle, preventing them from wreaking further havoc.

LulusSign

Then it was Lulu’s for supper.

Littrees

Where the trees were so lit up it looked like Christmas in Alabama,
and the people were so lit up,
they looked like University of Alabama fans
(who had a very good day, I’m told.)

115

And not a minute too soon: bedtime.

~~~~~~~~~

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.

114

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114c

Today found us going to Sacred Ground, otherwise known as Monroeville, Alabama, home of Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird.

114b

Two years ago, I was driving down the interstate when I spotted a sign that said “Monroeville”, so of course I took a detour. I had to. You know I did.

MonroevilleCthseInside5

On that visit, I happened to walk into the courthouse at the same time a woman named Blondell was taking her cake inside for the meeting. As we pulled into town today, I said “Wonder if I’ll see Blondell today,” something my husband and nephew found especially funny.

MonroevilleCthseInside4

But I want you to know that right when we got through touring and photographing, out walked two women, Ann and Martha. (Let me tell you: they are as much fun as they are precious.) Martha’s daddy is about to celebrate his 90th birthday, and they’re having the party at the courthouse.

MonroevilleAnnMartha

We talked a while (long enough that I’m expecting an invitation to the party), then I mentioned how two years ago when I visited, I met Blondell, and wouldn’t you know that Blondell is a friend of theirs. Ha.

CapoteQuilt2

There’s lots to see there, and in the Capote room, there are quilts from his aunts and stories about how he asked for the ones they didn’t offer him outright. Said he loved wrapping himself in Alabama.

MonroevilleCthseTree1

If you’ve never been by there, you should go. Take your time poking around the rooms, reading the stories on the wall, sitting in the courtroom, shopping in the gift shop. And hey, tell Blondell and Ann and Martha that Nancy and I said Hey, would ya?

MonroevilleCthseArt

If you’ve never read the book, you have to. I mean it. Scoot. And when you get to the end, to the part where Scout talks to her daddy (Atticus Finch) about the story he just told her about Boo Radley, when she says “An’ they chased him ‘n’ never could catch him ’cause they didn’t know what he looked like, an’ Atticus, when they finally saw him, why he hadn’t done any of those things . . . Atticus, he was real nice . . .” and Atticus says “Most people are, Scout, when you finally see them,” when you get to that part, promise me you’ll read it right out loud. Twice.

~~~~~~~~~

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.
And pssst: there’s a pinterest board, too.

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