A Birthday Blog for Me and You

I can recall being 17 and not liking some parts of my body. Of course there were pimples, and my strong thighs seemed too big. It didn’t help that my brother teased me with “blubber butt” and my boyfriend called my face and nose “round”, not in a flattering way. Now, at 77, I love every part of my body that works, and am grateful for every day I have lived, even the hard ones.

March 8th marked 30 years since I bought my house – the little house in the woods on a little lake that has been my dream come true. As I walked around my yard the other day, I was drawn to the wood here and there, no longer covered with snow, but weathered and beautiful. I remembered how I used to “antique” things. All kinds of items, small or large, whether painted wood, plastic, or metal, I liked them so much more with that old, weathered look. Dry-brushed paint, speckle-sprayed, or sponged-on colors looked more real to me than a single, smooth, “perfect” color. Living in my own home and being an excellent scavenger (if I do say so myself) has allowed me to luxuriate in the real thing!

Maybe it’s my preference for all things natural. After all, how often do we see a single color, with no texture or variation in Mother Nature’s palette? Wood and water, sky and stone, foliage, fur, and feathers – their beauty is in their abundance of ever-changing elements.

I have come to appreciate the same in myself. You may have seen my poem Lines in my book, Enchanted. I’ve changed it a bit now that I see more lines and spots in the mirror.

Lines
another year, a few more lines
in the face looking back from the mirror

life lends her hand with meticulous care
to etch the legends there
of lucid days
of lusty nights
of messages shared
about wrongs, about rights
of laughter that lingers
of smiles that last
of longing
of learning
of leaving the past

I know that new freckles
old scars and fine lines
are the legible passage of time
full of lessons and blessings
that wipe away tears
in this gift of a life I call mine
weathered dock icy water
My dock is weathered because it’s lucky enough to exist in wind, sun, and water! So am I!
The chair on my dock must have been yellow before I found it on the curb. This fits me better. Those golden screws are like the golden sun that holds my parts together.
This chair is no longer safe to sit in, but might make a beautiful frame!
My love for the simple, the old, the wabi sabi has given me a solid handle on my frugal life.
This barn door, once a deep red, is reclaiming the beauty of the trees from which it came.
Shutters clatter and laugh in the face of the weather they are meant to keep out.
Once a rocking chair, weather has freed this “bent wood” to bend to its own artistic heart.
Mother Nature welcomes her children back home…
to their interdependent family…
dressing them up for the party…
reminding them that they have more life to give.
More lines in my face, but hey — more lines in print, too!
More gray in my hair, but hey — I’ve got hair, and lots of it!
More fat in my belly, but hey — who will notice under my dress and jewelry gifted from friends in Africa!
I don’t look so good in a swim suit, but hey — I have Greenie to swim with!
I had a speck of cancer for a minute, but hey — it’s gone!
I have less strength, less energy, but hey – good friends help me hang my precious memories on walls.
I am lucky. I am grateful. Like weathered wood, I have more to give. So do you. Happy Birthdays to us!

Big thanks to Anthony V. Hall for taking this and other photos at my November African exhibit opening. Big thanks to Greg Andres, wherever you are, for taking the one of me in the … 60s? 70s?

Happy New Year!

sunset reflected in loon eye

While searching my photos for a holiday picture, this one suggested a red tree ornament reflecting candlelight. But it’s natural, which is always my preference. I was delighted to photograph a loon close to my canoe. Discovering the sunset while editing the picture was one of those happy surprises.

Another was being asked to do three photo/poem exhibits in 2023. It kept me busy, but I was honored to be able to share my work. Many thanks to all who encouraged me in so many ways. I will be taking my exhibit at Burnhaven Library down this Sunday, and this is one that will go back up on my wall while I’m missing the snow.

shed with lake open in December

The totally open water on my lake this December is a surprise, but not a happy one. I would be selfish to complain when others around the world suffer devastating effects of climate change and war. Yet I can’t help but wonder how it is affecting my fish friends – Greenie, Slim, and others. I swam nearly every day last summer, often with them, and took lots of underwater video. I’m making progress on Greenie’s chapter book about our eight summers together. Will there be a ninth? I sure hope so.