Fine Art Friday – My Brother!

My brother Jim (the physician) is hands-down the most artistic of the seven children in our family.  I adored him as a child (still do) and he tolerated my puppy-dog devotion, willingly sharing his plans for the art project of the week.  He is a master designer and a wonderful executor of his designs.

Six years ago, I saw some small watercolors he painted and subtly hinted implored, begged, eagerly asked for a one watercolor of his to hang on my wall.  To my joy, my exuberant joy, a package came this week with my wish. 

The Adirondack chairs are sitting on a hill on a island which is my brother’s family’s favorite getaway.  It is an artist colony with no automobiles, a lovely public library; an island famous for its remarkable light.  They speak with such love for this place and take every opportunity to spend time there.

I have to share with you one of Jim’s most excellent projects: the cover of the wedding invitation for his wedding.  He drew a chalice.  Anyone who knows them will clearly see the profile of Jim and Kathleen’s faces in the chalice.

Folks, it’s a Fine Art Friday Feast today.  I haven’t gotten to all my usual online haunts but please, please, check these out: Maple Grove  Quiet Life Seasonal Soundings Mental Multi-vitamin .  You will be enriched by these posts, I promise.
                                 
I found the perfect spot for my treasure in our bedroom.  I can look to my right when sitting at the computer and this is my view: 

She’s Not Here, A Short Story

phone

The young girl sat up in her bed, rubbed the sleep out of her eyes, threw her hair off her face in one easy motion, and scrambled out of bed.  It was early Saturday morning. The house was hushed and still.  With the stealth of a burglar she tiptoed down the hallway and carefully descended the creaky stairs.

After some major disruptions in the household, the ten-year old clung to the solid comfort of this familiar routine.  She turned on the stereo, adjusted the tuner, and turned the volume at the lowest possible setting. Grabbing some pillows off the sofa, she plopped on the floor inches from the speaker, flat on her stomach, her elbows in the pillows and her hands cupped under her chin.

The next two hours brought radio programs for children.  Thirsty for story, she drank in the drama while the rest of the house slept. Midway through the last program the jangle of the telephone ringing pierced the quiet.  Like quicksilver she jumped up and grabbed the receiver before the phone rang again.

“Hello,” her high childish voice could barely be heard.

“Hi! Is your mommy there?”  the other voice trilled.

“Mmm…no,” she whispered tentatively.

“Would you leave her a message, please?”

“’kay…,” her voice wavered.

“The chair she had reupholstered is finished and is ready to be picked up at the shop.”

 “Thanks. Good-bye.”

She replaced the receiver and returned to her position on the floor.

~     ~     ~     ~     ~     ~

The liturgy of the next Saturday was the same as the first.  The family slept while the young girl listened to Aunt Bee, Ranger Bill, and Sailor Sam.  She took every precaution  to listen to her radio without waking them.  Once again, the loud ring of the telephone shattered the solitude. Once again, she darted to the dining room side table and grabbed the phone before the second ring.

“Hello.”

 “Hello!  I’d like to speak to Nellie Harper!”

 The girl paused; she finally said, “She’s not here.”

 “Well, listen hon, this is the upholstery shop calling, and I called last week and left a message.  I told her when she brought it in that it would be ready in two weeks, and this chair has been in the shop for a month now, and I really need your mom to pick up this chair.  Would you puh-lease let her know?”   Her voice was a mixture of cloying sweetness and ill-concealed irritation.

 “Hmmm.”  came out in hushed tones.

 “Thanks, hon, I really appreciate it. You have a good day, now.”

~     ~     ~     ~      ~     ~

A week went by.  The light was lasting longer, birds were chirping in the trees, and  school was winding down.  Summer had almost arrived, though the markers of seasonal change were little noted in that house.  Once again, the young girl woke up early Saturday morning, worked her way around the squeaky steps and kept her rendezvous with the radio.

She wasn’t surprised when the phone rang; she answered it as she had done before.

“Hello,” spoken softly, so softly.

 “Hi!”  spoken in the tone of one eager to check off items on her list.

 They both recognized the other’s voice; they both had the script memorized.

 “Honey, look, is your mommy home this morning?” came the coaxing plea.

 “No.”   The single syllable dangled in space with nothing to support it.

 Exasperated, the woman on the other end of the line raised her voice.

“Well, where is she?  I’ve called, I’ve left messages, and still Nellie has not picked up her chair.”

She clipped each word shorter than a buzz cut.

The moment of truth could be delayed no longer.  The words that were stuck in the child’s throat, words that could not be spoken the previous Saturdays, words that were impossible to say, even today, were forcefully dislodged.

 “Ummm………she………well……..ummmm.   She died.”

 “Ohmygosh, she died? She died?  Your mommy died? What happened?  Oh, honey, I’m so sorry, I’m so sorry.  Was she in an accident?  She died?  I had no idea.  Oh, honey, I’m so very, very sorry.  Oh dear.  I–am–so–sorry.”

 “No…..she…….just……died.”

The silence was more uncomfortable for the girl than for the woman.  She sensed the shock, the awkward drop, the conversational vertigo of the voice on the other end.  The ten-year old knew she would have to bridge the gap and end this call.  The girl found her voice.

“It’s all right.  You didn’t know.  It’s okay. No one told you.  I’ll tell my daddy about the chair when he wakes up, okay?  He’ll come to your shop and get the chair.  It’s okay.  You didn’t know… Good-bye.”

She walked back to the stereo, turned the radio off, sat down on the floor and sobbed.

My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun;
Coral is far more red than her lips’ red;
If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun;
If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.
I have seen roses damasked, red and white,
But no such roses see I in her cheeks,
And in some perfumes there is more delight
Than in the breath that from my mistress reeks.
I love to hear her speak, yet well I know
That music hath a far more pleasing sound;
I grant I never saw a goddess go:
My mistress when she walks treads on the ground.

And yet by heaven I think my love as rare
As any she belied with false compare.

Sonnet CXXX
 ~ William Shakespeare

“And in some perfumes there is more delight than in the breath that from my mistress reeks.” Did you laugh outloud when you read this line?  I did! I love this sonnet, I think, because I could imagine my husband saying these words.  It was his honesty, his integrity that drew me to him, and honest he is.  Even when I have bad breath.  Kind, mind you, but truthful.  He eschews sentimentality and doesn’t particularly care for Hallmark cards. The couplet at the end is essential to the sonnet.  Because his love is also the truth.

My middle son, who is getting married next month, inherited the blunt genes but also the kind ones.  I can count on him to let me know if I have missed plucking a truant hair from my chin.   I value this highly because I hate those nasty female chin hairs!  And I know he loves me, and it is this love and not nastiness that informs those lovely conversations. 

Happy Birthday Bro!

It’s my brotha’s birthday!  My youngest brother, Dan, the opera singer.  He introduced me to the concept of blogging, although he doesn’t have one of his own.  “Lurker extraordinaire” is what he calls himself.  He installed Firefox on my computer and showed me how to open many blogs in tabs.  Most of what I know about computers I learned from him .


We two were the caboose of a large family.  We didn’t always get along, but those days of adolescent bickering are almost impossible to remember now.  It seems that we’ve always shared friends, more so today than ever.  He gave me one of my best friends when he married the beautiful Valeri.  We spend at least one week together every year: a festival of feasting, cooking, reading, talking, listening and sharing.

How he got to be an opera singer is story for another day.  He sings the big arias and requiems with gusto; when he approaches the end of the Lord’s Prayer the goosebumps break out;  but when he sings Children of the Heavenly Father a capella I can only close my eyes and weep.

But I have this against my brother:  he reads my blog every day but he will. not. comment.   I know, Xanga is a pain in the patooie.  However, if Martin Luther could post 95 theses on the Wittenburg Door dontcha think my brother could post one comment on this blog?  Would you join my campaign to convince Dan to comment?

First, he needs a Xanga name.  Any suggestions out there?  GodLovesTenors?  You all can do better than that, no?  Pictures aren’t necessary, but here are some possibilities.  Which one would you pick?

  

      Happy Birthday, dear Danny.  I love you more than the crisp clear air in the blue, blue sky today.

Steady Hand, Full Cup

The fire in the woodstove has taken the edge off of a
chilly morning; a sense of serene stillness hovers over
the neighborhood. Everything outside of me is peace and tranquility. 

On the inside, though, there is much scurrying:  reviewing
my to-do list, trading priorities like baseball players, scuttling
this job so that one gets done, wondering how today’s
deadlines will get met. 

This busy morning, on a whim, I picked up a notebook my
father kept and read this quote he wrote down sixty years ago
at 7 p.m. 4-19-46 at St. Giles Church in Vancouver BC:  

It takes a steady hand to hold a full cup. 


Those words immediately altered my perspective and calmed my spirit.  I instinctively link the words full cup with the word blessing.  Yes, I have been blessed with a full cup today.  Give me a steady hand and a steady heart, Lord.  I pray that I don’t spill too many drops.   



LadyCordeliaFitzgerald

You must  go over to my neice’s new blog and check out the pictures she took of her PA farm.  They are stunning.  Her artist’s eye has captured the countryside.  Does anyone get the literary reference to her  blog title?  (Hint: she loves all things gabled and green).   If  I’m allowed to brag, she is a  beautiful  young woman, whose loveliness goes very deep.  

Our prayer group has expanded and just about doubled in size to 35 people.  We’re meeting at our house tonight and I’m providing the meal.  Yikes! The menu is Company Mashed Potatoes (the kind that keeps in the oven), Hamburger Gravy (two crock pots), Green Salad, another veggie I haven’t decided, fresh rolls (my DIL makes these and they are perfection) and Apple Pie for Dessert.  I’m always afraid that we’ll run out of food and I’m not used to cooking for this number.  It’s a tweener number, ya know?  It’s not 20 and it’s not 100.  We set up long tables in our large garage and it’s like a big banquet.

The best part of prayer group is praying.  We pray around the circle and I love to listen in on the kids’ prayers.  While some have learned formulaic prayers, others pray straight from their soul, i.e. “Thank you for getting our family through this divorce.” 

Bountiful Booty

I love being the baby of the family.  With six older siblings, I am the happy recipient of  hand-me-downs.  Don’t think clothing here.  Think cookbooks, piano music, and most recently, Teaching Company Tapes.  Oh yeah!  My  PA brother has a plethora of  these tapes.  I bought a suitcase,  filled it with tapes and brought them home. 

This afternoon my son and I are making applesauce while we listen to Robert Greenburg’s How to  Listen to and Understand Great Music. We laughed aloud when he explained the difference between  German language songs and Italian  songs.   Greenburg plays music on the piano and from CDs to illustrate his points.  My heart  jumps as I hear  my 15-yr old son hum along.  He knows this music!  He likes this music!  Sigh.  But then, who can help but liking Bach?

Explaining the history of music inevitably includes the history of the world.  I am so thankful for the past 12 years of homeschooling.  I can follow and correlate, synthesize if you will, the lectures in a way that I can’t imagine doing had I not had the learning that comes with teaching.  It is so satisfying to build upon previous learning; to add a room or a story to the edifice which is our life.  

Isn’t this the most exciting thing?  Bring on the long nights; bring on bathrooms that need cleaning; bring on shirts which need ironing; bring on dough which needs kneading; bring it on, baby!  I. am. ready. 

Pace Yourselves

It is difficult to find people who know how to pace themselves
in getting the job done in the amount of time they have.
To me this is one of the most important things to learn.

Franz Mohr  in My Life with the Great Pianists

I’m bursting with stuff to write: more about my trip to PA, some of the delightful things I brought home, quotes from reading on the five hour layover, new artist discoveries, a very nice new CD, a picture of the socks I won from Donna’s birthday drawing.  BUT I’ve really looked forward to a good teaching day today; that’s my plan and I’m sticking to it!  I didn’t get to read my blog sistahs so I’m looking forward to catching up on that.  Sigh.  It’s a good life, so abundant and full.

Fall Foliage – Pennsylvania

 

The colors down at the farm in PA have been spectacular.  Spec. Ta. Cu. Lar. A camera lens can never quite capture what the eye sees.  Every conversation in the car was interrupted by the words, “Look at *that* tree!”

Tonight is my last night of a lovely lingering; by Wednesday I’ll  be back to the books, back to teaching my son and back to real life in Oregon.  This has been an incredible time with my oldest brother’s family.  I feel like now I know my neices. In truth, now I know my brother and SIL! My husband and son were deer hunting while I was gone. They were both successful and we have organic, range-fed meat in our freezer (*wink* to our earth muffin friends). 

Enjoy the pictures, my friend. Enjoy your family.  Pick up the phone and make a call.  You’ll be glad you did.

 

My day as a Penn State Fan

          

Last Saturday we went to a Penn State football game.  I donned a borrowed sweatshirt and slipped into the life of a Penn State fan.  I learned the liturgy of PSU football, tutored by my beloved niece Anne.  First off, Joe Paterno is “Joepa”.  One of the chants is “JoePa” with the other side responding “Terno”. There is an abiding affection for this man that permeates everything within a 100 mile radius. 

 

 

 

 

This wall has a quote: “They ask me what I’d like to be written about me when I’m gone. I hope they write I made Penn State a better place, not just that I was a good football coach.”

 The stadium holds 100,000 + people.  By the time the band comes onto the field, the stadium is packed with people.  The drum major wuns out and does a flip on the field.  He jumps high enough to make the flip without the plumes on his hat touching the ground.  The tradition is that if he makes the flip without muffing it, PSU will win the game.

The players do not have their names on the backs of their jerseys to emphasize that they play as a team.  My brother’s extended family is very closely connected to PSU; consequently we had great seats on the 45 yd line, 15 rows up.  Sometimes I look straight ahead at the line of scrimmage.

 

 

 

 My brother’s family are friends with two of the players.  They’ve had them down to the farm, fed them, and encouraged them.  It was fun to cheer for specific players and to follow them.  The final score was PSU 33 Northwestern 7.  Hooray!!