Happy Childhood

“I never meet anyone who admits to having had a happy childhood,” said writer Jessamyn West. “Everyone appears to think happiness betokens a lack of sensitivity.” I agree, and go further. Many creative people I know actually brag about how messed up their early life was, as if that was a crucial ingredient in turning them into the geniuses they are today. Well, excuse me for breaking the taboo, but I, Rob Brezsny, had a happy childhood, and it did not prevent me from becoming a sensitive artist. In fact, it helped. Now I ask you, my fellow Cancerian, whether you’re brave enough to go against the grain and confess that your early years had some wonderful moments? You’re in a phase of your cycle when recalling the beauty and joy of the past could be profoundly invigorating.

This is seriously a little uncanny.  I don’t know if it’s because Rob Brezsny has the same sun sign as I do or what it is but his horoscopes really rock.   The stuff is always just a bit behind the work that it describes for me, I’m always just a little ahead of the planets but it’s spot on every time.

I realized not too long ago that while I had a pesky brother and a father who had anger management issues, a mother who wasn’t in touch with her feelings, I had a pretty normal childhood.  I was talking with my sponsor and she said that we should just face it, we were born with anger issues , born resentful alcoholics, etc…

And I said, hey, you know, I don’t think that’s true for me at all.  I remember being a very happy child.  Sure, I liked it when Dad was in a good mood and when he wasn’t if he had a meeting that night.  Sure my little brother took great pleasure in messing with me until I blew up.  But on the whole, my personality was pretty chipper, fairly happy.  I spent a lot of time with friends but even more time alone.  I was perfectly happy sitting in my room or outside, drawing in a sketch book, reading, sewing, playing with toys.  I had no problem being alone, I liked myself and I liked the things I did.  I didn’t feel ugly or stupid most of the time, I remember feeling pretty darned good.

I remember vying for Dad to carry me first on the stool to go get our teeth brushed.  I remember an awesome trip to Hawaii, to Alaska, playing in Volunteer Park in the trees (I had favorites then as I do now).  I remember going to the museum all by myself just to look at the art.  I remember hot summers at the beach, riding the bus, riding bikes, my first motorcycle ride, my portable record player, the dolls I dressed, the clothes I learned to make, the books I read, and the round houses I designed. The boys we tried to tempt, discovering my new more rounded body, my first period. Yes, I had life frustrations, things that upset me. I got into trouble like any kid. I got a few spankings. But I wasn’t born resentful.  I wasn’t born unhappy.  I distinctly remember being a pretty happy kid. I remember adults being kind to me, telling me nice things about myself. I remember being told that I don’t accept criticism gracefully every year on my report card and I still don’t do it all that gracefully. I’m working on that. Mostly I rebel when the criticism is based on some stupid rule about being normal or when it is only that other person’s opinion, not the truth about me.  You bet I rebel.  I had lovely friends, young and old who nurtured me and my interests.

I think this photo says a lot.

I did get braces…  and isn’t that mod dress just the coolest? Thanks Mom for always nurturing my love of clothes and textiles.  Not so much for the goofy home perms… *laugh*

I have some really happy memories from my childhood. Friends, things I did, places we went, stuff I made.  I have been making things, drawing, since I was at least this age.  I have my first embroidery from 2-3 years earlier than this photo.

It really helped me to realize and re-experience my childhood because for years I heard in AA how messed up folks were before they started drinking. For a long time in sobriety I thought that was true for me too.  And it isn’t true at all.  Hey, I started drinking when I was 13, but it was to do what my friends were doing. I already belonged to their group mostly, but the drinking brought the boys and hey I wanted boys too.  I liked the cool kids because they were cool.  I became cool too.  I found it very fun, partying with my friends, getting snockered.  That switch got flipped when I first got a buzz on.  But I didn’t start drinking because my life sucked and I wanted to blot it out or forget things, not at all.  That crap happened much later.

In the end it wasn’t about fun and friends and silliness.  It was about forgetting and killing the pain.  But the pain that I wanted to forget wasn’t something I was born with.  It wasn’t there before the drinking.  The drinking created it, pure and simple.  No doubt about it.  And it changed the way my brain works forever.

That little girl that I was?  The creative artist, actress, reader and writer I was?  Is still here.  Yes, there is some baggage for certain but little by little it’s being dealt with. The happy returns, the free spirit that I was is still there and little by little I uncover her.

Remembering her. That happy, little, sweet, girl with the clear, grey eyes and the crooked teeth, always smiled, always shone.  I’m so glad I found this photo and started thinking about what it really meant about me as a person.

That underneath the drama of life, I am, at my core, a very happy, shiney, free spirit.

The Star – aaaaaaah

You are The Star

Hope, expectation, Bright promises.

The Star is one of the great cards of faith, dreams realised

The Star is a card that looks to the future. It does not predict any immediate or powerful change, but it does predict hope and healing. This card suggests clarity of vision, spiritual insight. And, most importantly, that unexpected help will be coming, with water to quench your thirst, with a guiding light to the future. They might say you’re a dreamer, but you’re not the only one.

What Tarot Card are You?
Take the Test to Find Out.

Stats

I’m just a little freaked out. Okay, intrigued.  Curious. Puzzled.  Don’t know what to think.  But I think my blog has been discovered in some way.  I hope it’s happy readers.  When I moved to this new URL my readership dropped from about 150 (my highest day ever was 157) to about 30 on a top day.  Most days I have about 5 views.  Since I don’t have the time to read all the blogs I love and comment rarely, I didn’t get many new readers.

Overnight my stat count went from 10 to 240!  How incredibly unusual.  Typically I would expect, if anything at all, a slow increase.  But this is a leap and then some.

Holy Mackerel. What is that all about?

Rabbit Quilt Fabrics

I finally have all the fabrics together.  Joann’s had a 40% off sale on quilting fabrics and I found what I think are not only fabrics that go well together but that also compliment what they represent in the quilt “story” itself.

This is such a lovely little garden.  Rabbits cavorting amongst the vines and flowers.  The garden in the center all laid out. The original inspiration had more autumn colors.  This is all about spring for me.  I chose a more pastel palette with a few darker prints for contrast.  A reminder of the quilt inspiration photo:

  • For the white area I have three shades of cream all with little vines and flowers printed on them.
  • For the green area, I have a lovely cream and green print with little vines and flowers printed.
  • For the leaves and vines I have three shades of green all with vines and leaves printed on them.
  • The flower yoyo’s are either flower prints or gingham.

Vines and leaves on top row, backgrounds in the center row plus the bunny fabric which has little swirls all over it, flowers on the bottom row.

Clicky make biggie. . .

Some of you might ask how I chose the fabrics.  I must admit that I have always been comfortable finding the fabrics and embellishments to be the best part of most projects for me. But I stood in front of those hundreds of bolts of quilt fabric and was completely overwhelmed.  I wander up and back looking and looking pulling this out and this out and putting them back.  OMG.  I finally saw these adorable little bundles, five fat quarters all tied up with a ribbon. Each one perfectly matched.  There was one set with the Asian inspired florals that are “gilded” and one with the floral/gingham pastels.  The two little bundles complimented each other so well I thought.  (Those two bundles, a total of 10 fabrics, are the bottom row in the photo above)  So I bought those with my coupons and started making my yoyo’s.  Once I had that palette it was easy to go back a week later to choose the other fabrics, the top and center row fabrics.

The conclusion I arrived at is that you must, somehow, arrive at 2-3 main fabrics that you can not live without and that compliment each other well. The fabrics that caught my eye in the two bundles were the ginghams (remind me of my father’s mom) and the 2nd and 4th fabrics from the left bottom row.  Once you have your foundation it becomes an easier, and fun, process of selecting the other fabrics.  But until you get that foundation set, it’s a task that overwhelmed me, Queen, or at least Princess, of Never Ending and Overwhelming Projects.  Your mileage may vary.

I plan on doing the quilting by hand. I much prefer hand work to machine work both in appearance, and just as importantly for me, for it’s meditative qualities and the potential for magic.  I love hand work. I live for hand work.  I take it with me to meetings so a lot of my work is done in recovery meetings or in quiet time at home. I believe that gives it all a very lovely healing loving energy.  As Sarah of Forest Grove suggested, this is a work that will be done in its own time.  And it will be an heirloom that will pass to my brother’s children one day.  For some reason it makes me happy to have family to pass my treasures to.

The quilting will be done by hand using perl cotton in a variety of shades depending on the area of the quilt. Pale greens, pinks, lavenders, periwinkles.

The circles in two sizes ready to be made into yoyo’s.  I will post a yoyo tutorial sometime this week.  They are so easy and are a fading craft. You can do all kinds of things with them too.  Stay tuned…