Monday, June 23, 2014

Ain't Nature Grand?

 So, I did some watercoloring tonight.  I intended to do a quick piece that was abstract and sketchy, but it turned into an experiment in layering colors and fairly accurate.  It's from a picture of my century iris --  this is the first year it's bloomed in ...well, a long time. It was really fun to paint again.  Since my desk is still on the porch, I painted out there and felt like a nature girl... happy.
This is some columbine with that one little jewel
 in the center of a leaf.  I had to capture it.

An Indoor Nana Day

Puttin' the pressure on

...pays off in a really flat ...orange thing
On Nana day a week or so ago, we had a great time with the salt clay.  I think Felix's favorite part was smooching and making these flat walls, roofs, and other useful flat things.  But look at all the beautiful things we made that they went with.
Sometimes I can't believe this beautiful little boy.  I love you, Felix.

Monday, June 9, 2014

IMPATIENCE


Patience, I’ve always maintained, is an expression of faith.  For months now, I’ve been feeling an urgency to understand a vexing problem so that I can correct the misunderstanding that I’m certain is coming between me and my associate.  My body knows, my senses tell me, that I am impatient.  
So, yesterday, when browsing among all the beautiful things at the garden store, I saw a vase that had these words written on it, 

“The secret of nature is patience.”

I vowed to remember it, to paint it and memorialize it because it seemed like such a beautiful thought.  Now, I suspect the beauty of it is that I need to apply it to human nature; to my nature and keep conscious of the secret, try to keep the practice of patience - patience with me as I make this troubling journey with my friend.  I can make this a journey into faith that we’ll work this out, into faith that, whatever happens (perhaps something I cannot even imagine) is going to be a good thing or I can keep spinning my wheels and trying to have all the answers, be the one with the right answers.  I can hold on to the belief that that is what will get this over with-if she'll just trust me.  (I just want it over with!)  Here, I'm reminded of a children's book by the Hobans: "A Bargain for Francis", in which Francis (or her mother) asks, "Do you want to be friends or do you want to be careful?"  I am SO accustomed to careful that I really do want that even as I would really like to have the friend I trusted back.  When I trust her, we can work things out.  When she doesn't seem to understand, when the trust is lost, we can't.  I can't.  It keeps coming back to the need to be patient, to have faith so that we can work things out according to our natures, and get back into a new  harmony with each other.