Inside the Lion’s Paw

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Being brave sounds good theoretically, but I don’t always know where to start.  For example, I am faced with a difficult choice today.  No matter what I do, someone will be disappointed.  I want to do the brave thing.  I want people to know I love them.  On days like today, I really, really wish I was one of those people who – you know, right? – doesn’t make such a big deal out of everything.

When I feel the quick sand pulling at my feet, it’s time to come here, and make something.  That is crystal clear for me by now.  Just to see myself peeking out into the world changes things, changes me, even though nothing is really different.  I feel better.  So maybe that’s enough bravery for today.

Skipping the Garden Path

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I had ambitions.  Oh yes, I did.  But for this week, just one or two little posts will have to suffice.  Going around in circles in real life has been very, very wearying.  I suggest you take a different path.   Wander with the blue daisies and pansy ring, instead and I will see you where the crochet rose blooms, in the center of everything!

Dimestore Heart

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Most of the things I still love in life could, once upon a time, be purchased at Woolworth’s, including (though not pictured here) – hot dogs wrapped in bacon, surrounded by crisp grilled buns; machine knitted lace cardigans in yarn so skinny it seemed like thread,  tiny blue bottles of Evening in Paris perfume for birthdays and Christmas, and many, many things with swans on them.  I liked to look at the embroidery kits, but mine didn’t turn out like the picture, so I lost interest.  Probably this was the beginning of my life-long addiction to the fantasy of making things, rather than the actual fun of trying out an idea.  Now I buy these things for myself, leftovers from other people’s unrealized flights of fancy.   I still like to stick to the five-and-dime budget.  Ok.  I’ll give you a dollar, but that’s as high as I go!

All Arranged

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Some people really have the gift of arranging things.  I can’t help thinking if things are well arranged, then the people in the surrounding must be well arranged, too.

Of course, I know this isn’t true, but no amount of adult experience has dispelled my fantasy.  I want so much to be able to have the spaces between the rosy coral, and the marble table and the Persian horse medallion align like tumblers in a magic lock, revealing an enchanted reality I am confident is there, but hidden from non-arrangers like me.

If I ever were to find that secret key, we both know what I would do next.  Lose it under some mail, or leave it on the bus, or forget it in my pocket and put it through the laundry.  All things considered, I guess, arrangements are better left to other people.

In Good Time

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I do feel a little discouraged.  Maybe its the weather, which has covered the sky in tones more or less the same as this photograph for about half of the last 30 days.  But sunny days can be the worst, and some of you know what I mean.  In my favorite book on mindfulness for depression, the authors even give the example of how thinking you should be enjoying a sunny day just makes your mood even darker.  Duh.

Recently I was obsessing about whether or not to go to the thrift store, or just stay home and keep cleaning. (I imagine this is what I was thinking.  This is usually what I am thinking, any given Sunday, so its a safe bet.)  After a teetering for quite a while on a painfully stark precipice of unhappy options, I realized that truly, I was very uncomfortable either way.  I mean, really, my anxious anticipation was equal, no matter what I chose.  And that is the meditator’s conundrum –  my own unhappiness is infinitely morphing, and thanks to meditating, this fact now pops up inconveniently, when all I really want to do is avoid my feelings.  Shit.

I wish I could say that in response to my anxiety, I got out my camera and took this picture, but I honestly don’t remember.  Let’s say I did, though.  I think it feels about right.  You look down at your feet and realize there isn’t much room to move or the way forward seems blocked. You can’t step backwards, time won’t allow it.  Then you notice the pool of light on the ground, and see your toes, and the flowers, and quietly, things change, loosening up just a little bit.  You, included.

My Darling

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This seems like a picture no one else will want.  It resonates with me, though.  The image feels like I witnessed something:  my life, which is too genuinely imperfect and unruly to be aesthetic, brushing up against another being who was unfolding without waiting until the conditions were better.  I thought the light was lovely,  and I decided not to be embarrassed.  I thought maybe I could make a picture.  It’s only an amaryllis on the kitchen floor, after all.  What’s the worst that could happen?

Exactly Lilacs

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It is better to be swamped by lilacs than by work, no doubt about that.  Still, at work you might feel you can do something;  with lilacs you are helpless.

I hope this picture shows the way the lilacs feel.  Its how I feel – might be in motion, might be out of focus (maybe that comes to the same thing in the end.)  Then, I maybe rest for a moment or my point of view catches up to where I am and something is clear.

But not for long.

Lilac Kingdom

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There is a lilac planted somewhere near the door (front or kitchen) of every – and I do mean every – farmhouse in Wisconsin.  This is because only lilacs are beautiful enough to shame that brazen blue sky into modesty, or to make up for what winter has done to the roof.   It was of the utmost urgency, I think, that the arborists at the University of Wisconsin tested so many varieties of lilac.   A woman needs some optimism to live out in the middle of that much snow, and I wouldn’t want to be the extension agent who recommended a lilac that couldn’t deliver the goods.

Lilac Point of View

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Some days my life just seems so selfish.  Like, for instance, I get to stand around in the middle of the most lilacs than I have ever seen in one place, for as long as I want, or until the sun goes down.  It’s lonely, too, but there is no one to stop me.

I know they say after a while, you get accustomed to scents, but I don’t believe it.  Lilacs are the exception. Their fragrance is with me, still.

The Lilacs Delight

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It feels every bit as ridiculous and wanton as you might imagine – lying on  ground, shifting my head against a drapery of creamy purple bells, raising the view finder to see if my crown of lilacs has appeared.  But the stakes are high.  Either I infuse my lungs and mind with essence of lilac when I can, or lose my chance.  So, I do what the lilacs tell me, and let them have their fragrant say.   I may look a little silly wearing a crown of lilacs, but maybe that was the lilac’s delight:  to bring me down to earth, tickle my scalp with petals, and  fill my eyes with magical, real life play.