Monday, December 31, 2018
snatched from the jaws of defeat!
I
trust everyone who celebrates Christmas had a lovely day. It was
quiet and peaceful here. If you've been reading me for awhile you
know it's not a holiday I participate in. If you are new here and are
curious I wrote about it most recently here and here. If
you want me at my cynical best read the last two paragraphs here.
And so as is the tradition on the day after Christmas, millions of
people flocked to the stores yesterday to return all those gifts you
bought so lovingly or thoughtfully or just grabbed in desperation.
Trump's
Christmas present to civil servants was, of course, to shut down the
government putting them on furlough days before the holiday denying
them the ability to, you know, pay their mortgages, all because he
hates brown people. Trump and his administration's cruelty and
heartlessness knows no bounds. I'd say that it couldn't get worse but
I know better than to invoke the gods and so on Christmas Eve, ICE dropped off hundreds of migrants,
that they could no longer hold in detention, at a bus station and a
park in El Paso and hundreds more on Christmas Day with no money, no
food, no blankets, no guidance, and without alerting the charities,
shelters, and churches in advance that help integrate these people so
they could be ready for them with beds, food, and advocates. Yes, we
want them released, not held indefinitely in detention or until their
hearings come up but we want it done in a compassionate manner,
coordinating with the agencies and organizations that help them with
the transition. You would think that even Trump's minions would have
a modicum of compassion on Christmas Eve but apparently even that is
beyond them. Not, of course, that it would be any more acceptable on
any other day of the year but because of all the hype that goes into
Christmas in this country, it seems a little more callous.
I
imagine all the hard hearted right wing commenters on immigration
stories and posts were chortling with glee...you liberals wanted them
all released, well, here ya go, put them up in your home, you
feed them and clothe them, how many are you volunteering to
take? I can't tell you how many times I have read that in response to
someone who is against a wall on the border and against tearing
families apart and placing them in detention. How do they go through
life like that...fearful, jealous, ungenerous, uncaring, angry and
hateful. Compassion helped us survive as a species, when we were
small groups and needed everyone to survive in order to survive. And
that same need caused us to engage in hospitality, welcoming friend
and stranger alike with food and drink and shelter for the night if
need be. What has happened?
Ah
well, there are good things happening out there. The citizens of El
Paso stepped up, the twins, back from their respective colleges, and
their mom came out to visit yesterday, the grandboy has a new puppy,
the sun is shining after two inches of rain last night accompanied by
lightning and thunder which kept the dog and me awake half the
night while she trembled and panted in my face, my neighbors waved as
they drove by this morning while I was in the front yard, the
chickadees and cardinals are helping themselves to the sunflower
seeds in the tea cup, and today is Marcmas! He was moaning yesterday
about flipping over to 67. I have little sympathy since I'm facing 69
in four months. Birthdays around here usually mean a movie and dinner
out but so far no plans have been made.
So,
one more week of being mostly unproductive and lazy that I justify
because holidays, treading water while the last of this year
comes to a much deserved end.
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
the 'to do' list continued albeit with much less energy and a quiet day
Monday:
you
can get up if you want but I'm staying in bed
*
Plant the peas
√ *
Vacuum the rest of the house – I even beat the two small oriental
rugs (cough cough) and then I ordered a robot vacuum cleaner
*
Mop the floor in my studio and kitchen
√ *
Rake the Little Backyard - oof
yes,
I know it doesn't look like I raked but you did see the 'before'
picture, right?
*
Clean off the work table in the garage
*
Wash the car (now that all the windows are clean)
Stuff
I did that wasn't on the list:
Morning
yoga routine - yay, 2 days in a row!
Washed
3 days worth of dishes
Used
the 4 long S hooks (previous estate sale find) to temporarily hang
the 4 bird houses (also estate sale finds) I have accumulated (I had 5 but I used one for the
present exchange at the garden club christmas party last week after I
spiffed it up a bit), probably not where they will stay but at least
they aren't on the work table in the garage anymore
two
of the four
Went
and picked up the gift for my sister that I had to order because I waited too long and they were sold out that finally
arrived!
Walked
the dog – the short walk today, very quiet in the neighborhood
Sat
my butt on the couch and settled in for the evening
Tuesday:
A
quiet overcast day with no expectations, stuff nothing to do, or
places to be. It's a good thing too because the body is groaning.
Merry
Christmas to all who celebrate.
Sunday, December 23, 2018
the 'to do' list that has nothing 'to do' with christmas
Saturday
I drove into the city and visited with my daughter while she and Jade
wrapped presents then Jade and Robin went with me to run my errands,
one of which was to add to the set of 24 colored pencils I have (I
now have 48). We were going to have a late lunch but the place my
vegan granddaughter wanted to eat at and the place she was willing to
eat at were both closed so lunch was a bust as I was ready to head
back.
Today
I slept late, did my yoga, we had our late Sunday brunch and then I
started on the chores that have been piling up around here.
√ *
Clean out the gutter across the front of the house (the only one we
have left) - had to drag out the big ladder and if I'm not covered
with bruises later from banging that thing around it will be a
miracle
√ *
Climb on the roof and clear off the big branch, small branches, and
leaves - did not fall off, big plus!
√ *
Rake the leaves away from the foundation and off the concrete apron -
fantasizing about a leaf blower
√ *
Clean all the glass inside and out on the car and the coverings on
the lights front and back - of course the entire rest of the car is
dirty
*
Plant the peas
√ *
Cut the small trees down growing next to the fence over at the shop -
did 5 today but still several more and a butt load of wild grape,
it's an ongoing job
√ *
Vacuum the house - well, half of it anyway but I had to sweep the
studio first
*
Mop the floor in my studio and kitchen
√ *
Put the bird feeder up – I actually did this the other day
√ *
Rearrange the shelving unit and bakery rack to get all the frit and
powder off the floor - though now I think I should move the frit to
the bottom two shelves
*
Rake the Little Backyard
√ *
Walk the dog - it was even the long walk!
*
Clean off the work table in the garage
*
Wash the car (now that the windows are nice and clean)
Guess
I'll work on the rest tomorrow. If I can get out of bed.
Friday, December 21, 2018
an autumn sky and the last adult leaves the room
The
banshees were back. The wind howled and shrieked all day yesterday.
It was a beautiful day otherwise, clear sky and pleasant, well except
for the wind which had a bite to it.
I'm having a hard time getting
motivated this week. I've done nothing with the modeling glass
samples I rolled out and dried, or the one feather that I keep having
to repair. Tomorrow. I'll do it tomorrow I tell myself every day. I
did scrape the kiln shelf and applied fresh kiln wash to it.
There's
so much stuff that needs to be done...vacuuming and mopping the
floors, clearing off the table in the garage to give me some work
space, raking the leaves off the concrete apron outside the garage
and the little backyard, getting a container to keep my balls of
modeling glass in, reorganizing the garage after all the
construction, acquiring more shelving units, cut down the small trees
growing against the fence over at the shop, it just goes on and on.
I'm
headed into the city tomorrow because I guess the last three weekends
there just wasn't enough. But the twins are back from college for a
few days and Jade is going to photograph my drawings with her fancy
camera with an eye to getting note cards printed up and I want to go
to the art supply store and get more colored pencils, colors I don't
have, with an eye to doing some more little drawings and one or two
other little errands.
It
looks like the last adult is leaving the White House completely
giving the asylum over to the inmates, not that I have any admiration
for Mad Dog Mattis, or Kelly for that matter, but they, at least, are
intelligent and understand the issues, unlike any of Trump's other
appointees who don't have even a basic idea of what their jobs entail
or what they are supposed to be doing besides getting a paycheck like
Kirstjen Neilsen, director of Homeland Security who didn't even know
how many legal ports of entry there are along our southern border,
had no knowledge of the studies that show immigrants are far less
likely to commit crimes than native born, or know how many people
have died while in the care of her department. And now Trump is
getting ready to shut down the government over a boondoggle while
Republican Rep. Mark Meadows tells those getting ready to be
furloughed or expected to work without pay that they 'signed up for
this' as a civil servant. Of course, he is still getting paid.
And the stock market is nose diving, people are being laid off,
factories are closing, black lung disease is increasing, interest rates are rising, prices are rising
as Trump's policies finally start to show their effect while he hands
the Middle East over to Russia and Iran and thumbs his nose at what
is left of our allies.
But,
hey, Happy Holidays y'all.
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
the county at work
Thank
you for all the kind words about my small rescue though I couldn't,
in good conscience, have done anything less. It's a sad statement on
the prevalent atmosphere in this country that what I did is
considered remarkable.
Our
open house is over for another year and some of us agreed that 3
weekends was too many. I doubt we had more attendance, it was just
spread further out. We have some different ideas for next year though our location is our main problem, if
our hosts decide to do it again. It's a lot of work on their part and
they are aging along with the rest of us. Frankly, I've expected the
last several years to be the last time.
Everyone
had some good sales except us which at the end of the day on Sunday
was still just the one $50 sale. I don't know how the handweavers
made out. This was the first year for them to join us and they were
only set up for this last weekend but oh, they had some gorgeous
stuff.
Not just loom woven items
but some beautiful dyed scarves,
some in the Japanese shibori tie dye style and some, my favorite, that were
dyed using natural materials like leaves and flowers and seeds.
Well,
our weekends were dismal until we started to pack up and Kathy of
Dick and Kathy, our hosts, told me to wrap up the Tea Box.
I gave her
a skeptical look, really? Yes, she said. I put my arm around her
shoulder, gave her a hug, and asked, this isn't a pity buy is it?
This box was not cheap, the most expensive thing I had put out.
No, she said, she's had her eye on it for a couple of years and it's
the last box. Actually, it was the very first one. And I am working
on another but they take so long to make, not just the hours in the
making but the time between sessions of actually working on it.
The
Tea Box has always been one of my favorite pieces and I have not been
sad at all that it never sold. Ironically enough, one of the visitors
to the show had asked me that very day if it was hard for me to sell
my work, to let them go after all the time I have in them, and my
answer to this question has always been 'no' because once a piece is
finished, I admire it but then I'm working on something new, that
it's the process of making that I enjoy. So as I'm wrapping it up I'm
feeling a little melancholy, I had expected after all this time that
I would have this piece in my personal collection. I'm glad, at
least, that it went to someone I love. Dick and Kathy have an amazing
art collection and not just glass. This isn't the first or even the
second piece of ours that they have bought.
So,
I didn't get pictures of everyone's work or even good pictures of
those I took. For instance, you can't really see any of Gene's fused
glass work here
and
I should have just taken a picture or two of individual pieces like I
did of this lovely piece of Chin's
and
some of Tom's acorn boxes.
Got
a fair picture of Liz's frit and powder paintings
but
none of Bob's crazy stuff, everything from marbles to some fused
glass pieces to turned wood to metal sculpture, the guy just does a
little bit of everything. Nor did I take a picture of Eric the young
glassblower's work or any of Dick and Kathy's new blown glass pieces
all of which they sold.
Liz
came in about mid-day on Sunday after hosting the life drawing class
at Archway Gallery, the artist's co-op, that they offer every Sunday
morning that I attended yesterday (but not the other two Sundays
though I should have ) with this coat she borrowed from a friend
which looks like the pelt of the abominable snowman all wired up with
blinking lights (this is not Liz in the photo but one of the
handweavers).
End
of day yesterday after wrapping up the Tea Box, we broke down our
display, loaded it in our pick-up truck cleverly disguised as a car,
dropped into Trader Joe's as we passed by and picked out something
for dinner, picked up the dog from my sister's house when we got
back, and slept late this morning.
Labels:
art,
art glass,
craft,
open house,
pate de verre
Friday, December 14, 2018
putting some good out in the world, new stuff, and banshees
Last
Sunday morning while we were waiting for someone, anyone, to come in,
Chin (he has a longer name that is hard to pronounce and so he just
goes by Chin), the classically trained in Japan ceramicist who makes
beautiful elegant forms, and I were talking about the dearth of the
arts in our culture. Most the people who buy his work are older, same
for us. He also did the Saturday show in which the jeweler basically
sold out but didn't do well, maybe sold two pieces. Our experience
seems to be that anyone younger than 50 or so is not interested in
art or even quality. They have been raised in the Mass Production of
Cheap Goods from China Age with art mostly missing from school
curriculum and museums no longer free and a government that doesn't
really support the arts as important to our culture (as opposed to
Japan, for instance, where artists are considered national
treasures). Chin recounted a looker asking why his work was so
expensive when you could buy the same thing from Walmart to which
Chin replied that the guy should go get it at Walmart. There is no
appreciation for handmade or quality. One of the reason galleries are
dying...the older folk have all they need or want and the younger
folk aren't buying. And it's not that they aren't spending bundles of
money, they do, but they spend it on $1,000 phones that they'll
replace in a year or hundreds for a pair of shoes with a name that
will wear out in about a year but a piece of art that will grace
their home with beauty forever they aren't interested in. And art
isn't the only fatality of this lack of appreciation for quality. I
have read that many household goods manufacturers have stopped making
their top of the line quality products because no one buys them
anymore. For instance, washing machines that are worn out beyond
repair after about 7 years now as opposed to the 30 year old machine
that came with the house that we still use. We, as a nation, have
fully embraced the throw-away culture.
And
speaking of expensive shoes, did you see the bit about Payless Shoes
opening a pop-up store in a mall, Palessi, charging hundreds of
dollars for the same shoes that normally cost about $50, and people
bought them! Many people.
Well,
once again I remind myself that I make this stuff because I enjoy
making it and so I've made some progress in playing with this new
technique, several line drawing of various feathers and 7 balls of
modeling glass with two more colors, a lighter gray and opaque white
(the white in the picture is white opal, also opaque but not as
bright as opaque white) to mix up before I start rolling out some of
this stuff to make the bases for a coupe of feathers and some squares
to experiment with color mixtures and transparent powders over opaque
colors.
yes,
this is glass powder mixed with a binder and a liquid medium
We've
been on a warming trend since the cold wet rainy weekend. I checked
the rain gauge Monday and we got 5 1/2” between Friday afternoon
and Saturday afternoon. After two days of sun, it's overcast again
and while it's supposed to get up to 70˚ today, tomorrow another
cold front blows in. The weekend should be nice though, sunny and not
too cold.
my
peas are sprouting!
And
did you see the Toddler in Chief threw a tantrum yesterday live on
camera and in color, constantly interrupting the adults in the room
and then stomped out after declaring he would be proud! to shut down
the government if he doesn't get his way and then reportedly went
into an adjacent room and threw a folder full of papers scattering
them everywhere in his pique. It's going to be a bumpy two years, if
he lasts that long. Here's some advice for Donald...you want a wall,
you promised a wall, you also promised Mexico would pay for it. You
want the wall? Then keep the other part of your promise and get
Mexico to pay for it. Other toddler news, he has decimated the Clean
Water Act after boasting that our air (whose anti-pollution
regulations have also been slashed) and water has never been cleaner.
Perhaps so, but now not for long. More MAGA!
So as not to leave you with a bad taste in your mouth, here's a picture of my silly dog trying to stand on her head.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)


Formed in 2009, the Archive Team (not to be confused with the archive.org Archive-It Team) is a rogue archivist collective dedicated to saving copies of rapidly dying or deleted websites for the sake of history and digital heritage. The group is 100% composed of volunteers and interested parties, and has expanded into a large amount of related projects for saving online and digital history.





















