Monthly Archives: February 2016

In Safe Keeping

The Prompt: What’s the most significant secret you’ve ever kept? Did the truth ever come out?

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In Safe Keeping

What would be the sense of telling you my secret now
if in the past I’ve taken a very sacred vow
to never share it anywhere, with anyone at all?
Does WordPress now expect that I would seek to scale the wall
of confidentiality I’ve kept year after year?
They’re playing Devil’s advocate, but friends please have no fear.
You secret’s safe with me, for I have kept it all this time
and would not now reveal it for the price tag of a rhyme.
A secret is a secret and remains right here with me.
It is a pact between us, and forever it shall be.

 

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/evasive-action/

A Boy’s Story

It isn’t often that a boy finds such a receptive audience outside of his own family, but obviously, this boy had some story to tell! (Click on first photo to view all photos in enlarged view. When you get to last picture in this series, click on the black area to the right of the pictures and it will cause the second set of pictures that tell about Aedan’s adventure to appear.)

CLICK ON FIRST PHOTO BELOW TO SEE THE SLIDE SERIES AND READ ABOUT AEDAN’S BIG ADVENTURE.

 

 

Found Poem

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This morning I woke up as usual and lay in bed writing my poem, rose to take photos to go with it, then opened my front door so my upstairs neighbors could go through to the porch when they got home from breakfast.  When Cathy wandered in, she asked if I realized that I had a friend waiting on the beachfront porch.  Who was it, I asked and she said she didn’t know but she was singing.

I went out in my nightgown to see who it was and found a stranger–a singer/musician who had read my blog and come to meet me.  By the time I’d thrown clothes on, Fred–a slide guitar player who had been walking by  and heard her singing, had come to join her.  As the morning progressed, another woman wandered by on the beach.  Fred recognized her as a musician who lived on the same island as he in Canada, so he invited her to join us.  They ended up ordering breakfast from the cafe next door delivered to my porch.  I made coffee and they spent the morning.  Then Fred stayed to practice my “Ballad of Poor Molly” which he has set to music.  By 3 o’clock, he, too had left and I fell asleep on the couch and passed the rest of the afternoon napping–something I almost never do.  As I was waiting for my upstairs neighbors to come down to leave to meet friends for dinner, I wrote the first few stanzas of this poem.

Found Poem

One and two and three and four.
Four little music makers pounding on my door.
One beats a rhythm, one toots a horn––
wild and sweet––sort of forlorn.
One hums a tune behind her teeth––
a sort of descant underneath
the melody on the steel guitar.
The gulls reel in from near and far
to add their screams to the refrain,
then fan their wings, silent again.

Four musicians at my gate.
I wait for their music to abate.
Then I go and let them in
to add my music to the din.
I sing my lyrics fast and slow
first soft then loud, my lyrics go
up and over the drums and horn–
out into the sandy morn.
Over the rocks and out to sea,
setting all our music free.

When the drummer leaves my porch,
she leaves just three to loft the torch.
Too soon the horn, too, dies away,
but the hummer’s here to stay;
and steel guitar swells out to fill
the morning air until until
the morning bursts into full sun
and our melody comes undone.

Soon guitar and singer fade,
their morning share of music made,
and I fold my songs away.
I’ll bring them out some other day.
With music blown away, I wind
only words around my mind.
They weave their spell with me along.
I lose myself in their noisy throng.
Wander aimless, round and round,
in getting lost, this poem is found.

(You can see my “Ballad of Poor Molly” post HERE.)

Has Anyone Seen My Keys?

My Thingamajig

When I’m feeling you-know-what­­—
(that sort of panic in my gut)
I’d love to have a doohickey
with a backing that is sticky—

a whatchamacallit just for me—
bright orange, that I can easily see.
You know, some “thing”—some little widget
I can poke at with my digit

like the remote on my TV,
only this one’s just for me—
linked to my mind from A to Z,
a yellow page to memory.

It institutes a type of knowing
that reminds me where I’m going
when I head for my front door
and forget what I’m going for!!!!

The Prompt: World’s Best Widget––You’ve been granted magical engineering skills, but you can only use them to build one gadget or machine. What do you build?https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/worlds-best-widget/

Tulip: Flower of the Day

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Tulip–about to burst!!!

Flower of the Day – February 16, 2016 – Camellias

Valentine’s Day in La Manz

Random Snaps

(Click on first photo to enlarge photographs.)

Happy Valentine’s Day, La Manzanilla, 2016

Dream Jobs

                                                                        Dream Jobs

I have been lucky enough to have several “dream jobs” in my lifetime.  First of all, I was a teacher. I loved teaching kids and enjoyed the other people I worked with.  My first teaching jobs were in Australia and Ethiopia, which additionally gave me the chance to travel and live in “strange” environments–things I had wanted to do since very small.

I taught for ten years before finally deciding I needed to change my life to enable me to find time to write.  I then moved to Orange County, California, to live with a dear friend and spent two years studying a number of areas I felt had been neglected in my earlier education.  I would go to the library with lists of topics I wanted to know more about: art, artists, places, concepts, psychology, philosophy.

The writing of Carl Jung was of special interest and I allowed synchronicity and the unconscious to guide my life.  This took me to Los Angeles and into film school at U.C.L.A., an apprenticeship at a Hollywood agency and eventually to a job working in p.r. and publicity for Bob Hope’s production company.  It was a job where I was laid off for 5 months of each year, between shows, and this enabled me to write and travel.

After three years of working here, I married and moved northwards to the Santa Cruz area where I became a silversmith and paper maker.  For fourteen years, I traveled and did art shows with my husband.  This was as close to working for a traveling circus as I would ever come, and I loved both the studio work and the traveling.  The people we would meet in various locations across the U.S. became our friends and we slept in our motor home or van in convention center parking lots from California to Ann Arbor to Boston.

As the area of our travels narrowed to the west coast, Arizona, Oregon, Washington and Colorado, I accepted a “job” as the curator of a new art center in the San Lorenzo Valley near Santa Cruz.  Although this was a volunteer position, it was both time-consuming and extremely gratifying as I met and worked with artists throughout the Santa Cruz area.  I loved coordinating and hanging eight shows a year as well as teaching classes and handling show themes, admissions, publicity and openings.  It was practically a full time job in itself,  but we continued to handle a full show schedule ourselves.  By then, in addition to my making silver and copper jewelry, Bob and I were making art lamps together. He did the stone and wood work and some of the framework for the sail like shades whereas I made the handmade washi  paper and some of the framework for shades and covered the shades.

I’ve been lucky my entire life to always have a job I enjoyed and believed in and this continues to this very day as retirement has brought time to write more and to shift my focus from jewelry and lamps to mixed media assemblage, which I continue to this day.  While at the beach, I concentrate on collages of found objects from the beach and city streets. It also gives me time to write this blog which consumes an ever-increasing amount of my time.

Here is a gallery of shots that capture, I hope, my process in  collecting, assembling and mounting found objects into my assemblages.  If you click on the first picture, it will enlarge the photos and show them to you one by one:

Prompt: Describe your dream job. https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/money-for-nothing/

Orchid: Cee’s Flower of the Day 2/25/16

Orchid.
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Have you ever seen a blue orchid? The flower vendor swore it was its natural color.

http://ceenphotography.com/2016/02/14/flower-of-the-day-february-15-2016-daffodils/

Color Your World Hot Magenta

 1024x768-hot-magenta-solid-color-background.jpg       Hot Magenta

How fortunate that the hot magenta prompt coincided with Valentine’s Day in Mexico!  Lora Loka was busy sprucing up the front of her restaurant for her big Valentine’s Day extravaganza meal–complete with mariachis and tango!  Tablecloths and balloons echoed the theme and on the beach, this little missy with hot magenta shorts in hand makes her way flinchingly over the rocks, seemingly berating her dog friend who seems disinclined to help out this damsel in distress.  All in all, a hot magenta sorta day!

http://jennifernicholewells.com/2016/02/14/color-your-world-hot-magenta/

Finding Lost Heart in Mexico

As you can see from these photos taken just outside the house where I stay when I’m at the beach, Valentine’s Day is BIG in Mexico.  The streets are lined with these stalls encouraging lovers to pay homage to love.

In honor of Valentine’s Day, I’d like to publish Chapter 11 of my book Lessons from a Grief Diary.  It’s all about wanting heart and finding it, albeit not in the manner I might have chosen. This particular segment was written in February of 2002, although most of the events it describes occurred earlier. I was sure I’d published at least excerpts of this chapter on an earlier blog, but if so I didn’t tag it as I can’t find it among my 1,666 earlier posts, so if you’ve already read it, skip this one over!  And happy Valentine’s Day!  I’m spending it with friends at Lora Loka’s restaurant and then later going to a celebration of recovery from Hurricane Patricia in the town Plaza.

 

Finding Lost Heart in Mexico

Although he was a poet and a sculptor, my husband Bob was not an especially romantic man. When he gave me a book of poems for my birthday a few weeks after we met, he admitted that he’d actually bought it for his old girlfriend, but just hadn’t had a chance to give it to her. A book of poetry wrapped by his own hands with a red licorice whip bow was romantic, but a leftover present from an old love affair was like discovering on your wedding day that the ring your husband has given you has the name of his first wife inscribed in it.

That first gift, however, was romantic compared to what happened every Christmas and birthday after we were married. It became my responsibility to see that Bob gave me the correct gift. He’d start complaining weeks before the actual event. He didn’t know what to get me. I was so hard to buy for. He would stew and fuss and I grew to dread the advent of any gift-giving event.

“Forget about it,” I’d say. “Just don’t make me responsible for my own present. Being blamed and fussed at for weeks prior to the event ruins it for me. I’d rather not have anything.”

Usually, what he would do would be to put off gift buying until the very last minute. The day before Christmas, he’d charge down to Main Street to try to find the perfect gift at the feed store, the sporting goods store or Walmart–which furnished the sum total of shopping experiences in the small Wyoming town where we always went to visit my sister and mother for the holidays. Then he’d return home with gift wrap and a large plastic bag of ready-tied bows. All Christmas Eve, he would wrap gifts, then peel off the adhesive strip of each bow and slap it on the gift of choice. My mother, who had been married to a man who provided very well for us but who didn’t do Christmases or birthdays, was much amused by my husband’s concentration as he did his annual Christmas wrapping chores. She found it humorous and touching and it did much to endear him to her.

Yet in the gift I was likely to find a combination screwdriver, pliers and corkscrew or comfort pads for my shoes. One year he gave me all-weather perspiration- wicking socks, another year, a table saw that he said really ought to be kept in his woodworking studio, since it made too much of a mess for my cleaner jewelry studio. Was Bob inventive, talented, funny, handsome? Yes. Was he romantic? No.

The Christmas of 2000 was to be the last we’d ever spend with my mother. Bob did his yearly last-minute shopping, and I was the recipient of the usual assortment of stocking stuffers wrapped in paper with self stick bows. But at the end, there was an extra small package under the tree for me. It was a large silver brooch with flames shooting out from around a central heart locket which opened for a picture. It had been made by an artist in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, where we were planning to go in January to check it out as a possible place to live for a year; but he’d purchased it in a Berkeley, California, ethnic art shop. I was much touched by this romantic gift so uncharacteristic of my husband and put his picture in it as soon as we got home. Since it was too large and heavy to wear every day, I hung it on a banner on the wall in our bedroom.

Our January departure was first delayed when I needed to have major surgery. Then, as I had begun my recuperation, my mother went into the hospital and passed away within the week. And so Valentine’s Day found us still in California. When Bob showed up with two presents, I was surprised. One was a mini box of Russell Stover chocolates–my mother’s favorite food on earth, and I did honor to her by inhaling the entire box at one sitting, as she would have done. But the second package was a red wooden heart with white wings and a cord on top for hanging it. I hung it from Bob’s flying accordion sculpture that hung from the ceiling of our den. A wall switch turned on the blinking lights and the music for the accordion and as the wild polka music pounded out from the accordion, the heart swayed a bit. Two hearts within a few months of each other after 15 years of sweat socks and tools? Something was up, I thought.

Soon after, Bob’s mother went into the hospital in Michigan. Of course, we put off our departure one more time while he flew to Michigan. He sat by her bedside for ten days before she died. It was starting to feel as though something was trying to stop us from moving to Mexico using the direst means possible. When he arrived back in California, Bob said he felt like if we didn’t just pick up and go, that we’d never make it to Mexico, so we did just that. Leaving our house only half-packed up and unrented, we threw clothes, camping stuff, art supplies and books into the van and took off for Mexico.

There we spent probably the happiest seven weeks of our marriage. Bob, who had initially hated San Miguel and wanted to leave after our first day there, ended up wanting to buy a house there. “How did you know that this was what we were supposed to do?” he asked.

Although we’d meant to check out several potential sights for our supposed one year stay in Mexico, we had spent the first six weeks of our initial seven week pretrial in San Miguel. With ten days left before we had to be back in the States for my Mom’s delayed memorial, Bob suggested that we check out Lake Patzcuaro and Chapala, just to see something different before we returned to the States.

We “did’” Patzcuaro in one day, but upon arriving in Ajijic, we made the mistake of idly looking around at houses. The first house we looked at, was Bob’s dream house: perched high in the hills overlooking Lake Chapala, it looked like it had been sculpted out of clay: fluid lines, all round corners, high domes and one glass wall overlooking a terrace, pool, natural sulfur spring-fed jacuzzi and the lake itself. “Oh yeah, Jude, Let’s buy it!” said Bob.

“Bob, we can’t buy a house in Mexico,” I said. But our weekend trip turned into a week and by the end of it, we’d bought the house. The price of the house was almost exactly what we had inherited from our mothers. And so all of the sadness, disasters and delays that preceded our trip were what ultimately made it possible for us to do what seemed to be necessary to prepare for a perfect retirement for Bob. I loved the house, but it is not what I would have chosen for myself. I was sure that the pool and jacuzzi, which I ‘d probably never use, would be high maintenance. It was some way out of town–a good 15 minute drive–but Bob loved it and promised to do all of the pool and hot tub maintenance himself. If he couldn’t live in his dream house at age 70, what were we waiting for? I’d been wanting him to slow down and his whole body seemed to be urging him to do the same. He’d been exhausted for the past few years as he strove to keep up the same pace we’d kept up for the past 13 years–making art, traveling all over the Western U.S. to sell at arts and crafts shows, carrying heavy sculptures and displays, doing 11 hour setups and four hour tear downs, packing the trailer, driving long days to the next show or home to make more stuff to sell. It was exhausting for me and I was sixteen years younger than he.

The day we signed the final papers on the house, we headed back to the U.S. to attend my mother’s delayed memorial and to attend my school reunion and Bob’s family reunion. Then we went back to California to finish packing up the house and studios. As we emptied the house, we stuffed the van with the next assortment of items to take to Mexico. By the day of our second moving sale, the van was fully packed. We were ready to take off within the week. But two days after the moving sale, the doctor gave us the news that Bob had pancreatic cancer. He died at home three weeks later.

“I think you should go ahead and move to Mexico,” Bob said a week before he died, and that is what I did two months after his death.

Anyone who has lost a spouse knows that it is a surreal experience. You cannot quite believe that everything you do you do alone and for yourself. You keep expecting your partner to enter the room. Every sound seems to be announcing his arrival. Then you remember. I was exhausted from the two months of details that preceded my departure from California: Bob’s memorial, getting the house rented, the studios cleared out, disposing of Bob’s complicated possessions, pictures, clothes, tools, old love letters, a lifetime of journals. Just the paperwork of dealing with the deaths of Bob, my mom and his mom took a month on the phone and going from office to office. My life felt like a blur. California was like quicksand I’d never escape. When I finally drove away, my van packed, my only company our 14-year-old cat Bearcat, I felt only exhaustion, grief, fatigue. I could barely keep my eyes open all the way to L.A., fell asleep as soon as my head hit the pillow in the motel, then drove on the next morning to pick up a friend in Phoenix who would drive the rest of the way with me.

In Mexico, I dealt with my grief. Totally alone, I built an altar on the fireplace in my bedroom. I kept a candle burning there 24 hours a day next to my favorite picture of Bob. I propped the silver locket Bob had given me open next to it to show another face shot of Bob. For that four months, I mourned alone. My only friend was the Mexican woman across the street who pulled me out to Guadalajara, to the markets, to fiestas, to get my hair cut. I went along, but I felt like none of the life I was experiencing related to me. My furniture consisted of an air mattress, packing boxes and six folding canvas chairs from Walmart. I ate what my housekeeper cooked. I swam, I sat in the jacuzzi and imagined I was Bob looking out over the lake. I couldn’t believe that I was the one here in this house that had been picked as the perfect retirement house for him. It was heartbreaking that he hadn’t had even a week or a month in his dream house.

For some friends, it seemed impossible that I had chosen to mourn Bob totally alone in this place where no one knew him, but for me it seems appropriate. Mexico has much to teach us about life. Here, dead loved ones do not vanish into a void. Every year, they are celebrated and communed with during the Day of the Dead. Altars are constructed which hold the favorite food and objects representing the passions of the dead. The fact that I had eleven small seed-shaped urns on my mantle which would hold Bob’s ashes and which would soon be passed on to his kids and sister when they came to help me scatter my urn of ashes in the lake, did not seem maudlin or strange here. And so I fast developed the habit of talking to Bob. At times I would cry, pound the wall, kiss his picture–do all of the things we do to alternately augment or suppress sensation. Twice I thought I saw Bob. Once he was hurrying across the street holding a guitar. I pulled to a stop and backed up, but saw only a foot disappearing into a house. Another time, I glimpsed his profile in a restaurant, but when I saw him full face, Bob vanished as the man turned back into himself.

Then came the advent of my first Valentine’s Day without Bob. I was well aware of the day fast approaching. There were hearts for sale everywhere– on cards, balloons, flowers, t-shirts, boxer shorts and piñatas. Every restaurant advertised Valentine’s special menus, clubs had special music. It was as hard to overlook Valentine’s Day in Mexico as it was in the States. Yet I had no Valentine.

I’d already lived through my first Christmas with no stick-on bows, my first New Years, the anniversary of my Mom’s death, his birthday. There were going to be lots of firsts. Our anniversary was looming in the near future. But for now, there was just Valentine’s Day to get through.

The cat always woke me at sunrise, demanding his early morning smelly fish breakfast. Not exactly the most appealing beginning for a day, yet I was used to it. I dished out the goods, then opened the glass door that opened out from the kitchen to the front terrace. When I did, I saw something bright roll from the step, brushed by the door bottom. I searched for it in the hierba buena which grew beside the kitchen door. Saw a scrap of red, pulled it from the bushes. It was a tiny egg-shaped chocolate wrapped in bright red aluminum foil covered in silver hearts.

I could hear Lourdes opening the front gate. Had she put it there?

“No, Señora.”

Pasiano’s broom whisk whisked on the back patio. Had he put it there?

“No, Señora.”

The origin of the heart-covered chocolate has remained a mystery forever since, but I still have it. It sits in the palm of a carved wooded arm and hand I bought from a woodcarver who had carved it for a Santo, but was willing to sell it to me. The arm is on the bookcase near Bob’s picture. I choose to believe that however the heart covered egg came to be on my doorstep on Valentine’s Day, that it was Bob who somehow engineered its appearance. Next to it is balanced the red wooden winged heart he gave me on our last Valentine’s Day and the silver heart locket from our last Christmas. Since then, it has been joined by two stones in the shapes of hearts that I have found on the shores of the lake where I walk every morning, along with a portion of a flip-flop cut into a circle to be used as a fishing float, pulled into the shape of a heart by the tight cinch of the rope which held it to the net, and another small plastic heart–all items found on walks. Above them is the picture I took last week of the beach cow with the perfect black heart on its rear leg. They are all messages. I don’t look for them nor do I depend on them. But I am comforted that my husband, turned romantic so late in our marriage, might somehow continue that message after death. Whether I am finding what he hopes for me to find or whether I am finding what I need to find, it is all the same. I sit here in the house I have grown to love living the life I’d meant for him; but instead, it is a next life provided for me by my husband, my mother, and his mother.

Together, they have led the way, provided the means. And lest I forget this, either they or I provide an occasional reminder: a heart hidden in beach mud, on a stair step or on cow hide. Whether it is spirit or my wish to believe in spirit cannot be known rationally, but a few months ago, I found a silver heart locket for sale in a local shop. Turning it over to see who made it, I read the artist’s name. “Judith Roberts” it said. My name and my husband’s. When I got home, I looked at the back of the heart locket on my shelf. “Judith Roberts” it said. Bob had purchased it in Berkeley, California, and I had brought it back home to Mexico, not knowing that it would furnish the house where the spirit of our union would continue to live.