Photography


On Saturday, I received my “pretty” print from Today is Pretty.  It is, to overuse the word, very very pretty.

I hightailed it to Target today and picked up a cute little floating photo frame and hung it this morning.  The wall is in my entry way, just as you come in the door.  It matches the red kitchen, to its right, which unfortunatley, has no more wall space. 

In other random news, I’m about a little over half done with my freelancing gig. It’s totally time consuming, as we can see from the little blogging, but so much fun.  My day work has been slower than all get out, so it has been so nice to have a diversion at home to keep my Capricornian-brain whirring.  I’ll be glad when I’m done before I go on vacation, but I’m loving it now.  I’m such a geek.   

I just want to mention that I never win things.  My dad and my brother are both really lucky. Before I was born, my dad won a bunch of stuff of game shows, including a car.  My dad would challenge my brother to all sorts of ridiculous long shots and my brother would win. 

Me, not so much.  A game of Monopoly or Trivial Pursuit every now and then. But never a sweepstakes or contest. 

So I’m incredibly excited that I actually won something today.  Sheri, over at one of my favorite photoblogs Today is Pretty, hosted a freebie contest. All one had to do was comment on a specific post and she would draw names for people who won a print of one of her awesome pics.  And I won!  Something I can actually use, beautiful photographic art!  Yay!

You can check out the photo I won here (mine’s the one in the middle).  I’ll post a pic of where I hang it, once I find out where it goes in the home. 

This weekend, Soulless Machine and I got to attend an art festival in our neighborhood, Red Hot Art.  It was probably the most punk art festival I’ve ever been to.  (I felt very uncool — no tattoos or dreads on me.)  There were several clusters of musicians, slack rope walkers practicing on a small slack rope tied between two trees, and very affordable and cool cutting edge art, including…

  • There was one gentleman (who’s name I didn’t get) taking votes on two of his paintings. The winner “lived” and the loser was going to be whacked with an ax. 
  • Cody Kiser, who had cool Picasso-ish paintings
  • William Hessian, an illustrator and painter
  • Elizabeth Montgomery, mixed media collage-y type paintings
  • Lucas Glusenkamp, really awesome sci-fi/horror inspired art

Looking at the list of artists, I noticed that cris t halverson, whose very cool digital images got published in the first issue of Asphalt Sky, attended, but I didn’t see his booth. Bummer!

I am also a little bummed that I didn’t buy a very specific painting.  It would have looked so nice in our living room, another red item to match our red couch, curtains, chair, etc., and now I can’t find it online. The moral of the story:  buy it now. 

Despite these two disappointments, I was really impressed by the Red Hot Art Fair. It was partially supported by the local arts organization, Steven Square Center for the Arts, and I’m wondering: why am I not a member?  Something to ponder for later.

This weekend, my husband and I took a road trip to Madison, WI to visit some close friends.  As a pit stop, we hiked in Devil’s Lake State Park, a gorgeous state park that surrounds a large lake, but also has an oak forest and a huge rocky hill you can climb. 

The weather was perfect — sunny but not sweltering and we hiked several interlacing trails, including one up some stone stairs built into the rocky hill. The top picture is of the “Devil’s Doorway,” a rock formation at the top of the hill.  It was nice to stretch our legs, take some pictures, and get some much needed sunshine in before we finished the drive.  Check out my husband’s blog for more pics from the weekend!

On Sunday, my husband and I went on a cheap date to Como Zoo & Conservatory.  It was one of the first truly nice days of the season and we wanted to spend time outside.  Well, so did everyone else in the Twin Cities. 

Despite the crush of parents with strollers, asking their mute 2 year-olds,”Do you see the monkey? Over there? See it? Monkey?”, it was still a really fun time.  Many of the animals weren’t outside yet, although we did see a few of the large cats lolling in the sun.  Just like our kitties do, but 100 times larger. 

After the zoo, we traveled through the conservatory, which had some unbelievably beautiful flowers — which felt weird, since the grass outside was still brown. But it did make for some neat pictures and an incredibly rough quatrain, which I share in the spirit of NaPoWriMo. 

Note:  To see the pictures somewhat bigger, click on them.  To see them actual size, click on the expanded version. 

At the Conservatory

Waxy purple petals and trimmed green leaves
arching towards an artificial sky.  Sweet
cloying fragrance (piped in).  Manufactured
stone walkways, leading us through early spring. 

 

I’ll be honest, I’m running outta steam on this every day poetry thing and I’m glad there’s only 8 days left.  I’m hoping to get enough real poems out, as opposed to these little quatrains. 

I’m open to assignments…if you’ve got a good one.

 

This morning was gorgeous and sunny, though still a little cold, so I decided to document what the beginning of a Minnesota spring looks like. Most of it’s pretty gray, but I got to see some interesting things in my neighborhood as the inhabitants were waking up and the sun was warming the softening ground.

Mostly Minnesota spring looks gray and brown, as above, but I began to see other colors in the neighborhood. Especially when I started walking in the alleys that run in between two streets.

invoking-spring-8.jpg

invoking-spring-7.jpg

It seems that people throw away the most interesting things, especially on a Sunday morning.
invoking-spring-6.jpg

invoking-spring-5.jpg

invoking-spring-4.jpg

After finding the above, I saw three emo boys in black hoodies and black jeans being dropped off back home, carrying a half-empty cardboard case of Heinikens.  I was too shy to ask if I could take their pictures.

invoking-spring-1.jpg

Then, I found the neatest porch.  A flash of color in an otherwise still dreary area.

invoking-spring-3.jpg



…our sun has finally returned. I never thought that a long stretch of cold weather would affect me so much. But now that the sun is returning, I’m having some serious spring fever.

Which leads me to creating. I’m starting a new project, which I’m not quite ready to unveil yet. (I want to make sure I stick to it first.) I’m finishing up submissions for Asphalt Sky, so the new issue should be out by the end of April. And, I baked muffins for breakfast last weekend. Even though they came out of a box, they sure are pretty.


Today was an unexpected day off. At the beginning of the week, I thought I was gearing up for a 6 day work week, with short days on all 6 days. But my boss gently encouraged me to take a day off, and work longer days, so that I didn’t have to work 6 days in a row. This was a lovely surprise and I feel like I’m stealing free time today.

I’ve been both productive and relaxed, which is a blessing for me. I’ve cleaned the house, watched DVDs, taken an inspiration walk, posted fliers and bookmarks for Asphalt Sky, and obviously, taken pictures. I feel pretty lucky to have this time off, to recenter and be creative.

On my flickr site, I’ll post the bigger versions of some of these pics, but until then, enjoy my still life collage.





The more I write, the more I understand my inspiration to be cyclical. By that, I mean that there are high times and there are low times. Even looking back at my Weekly Word Counts, I can see that there have been fertile writing times and fallow writing times this year. These times have little rhyme or reason; some days I am inspired, and some days I’m not.

On rare days, I feel a physical itchy rush of energy which translates to getting a lot of work done. This week has been like this. I’ve sat at my computer or in front of my journal for hours and when I’m not writing, I want to be writing. Or reading. Or posting on my blog. I simultaneously love and loathe these high creative times. I love it because I feel productive and on top of the world, and I loathe them because I know the crash that follows.

So this weekend, I’ve been focusing on renewing my energies. Filling the well, as some of my grad teachers called it. Part of this is reading and writing, the two most important verbs that a poet can do, and part of this has been taking care of myself. I can be miserable at this last part — I’d rather do do do than paint my nails or take a walk or meditate, or any of the other typical well filling activities.

However, yesterday, my husband and I went to Minnehaha Falls with the camera and a couple of bottles of water, and we walked. Many of the fall leaves had already fallen to the ground, and that’s when I really realized that November happens this week. (Already.) Sometimes we talked, and other times we were silent, just listening to the rush of the falls and the crunch of the dry brush underfoot.

When we left, I felt both calm and overjoyed, as if I was spilling over inside. I think that’s what serenity and true creativity feels like, not the panicky compulsion to complete more and more tasks.

Last night, I went to an awesome Halloween party, hosted by a friend from my last job. It was a costume party, of course, and I went as a haunted doll (hence the picture above) and my husband went as an apocalypse survivor. We all read scary stories, an annual tradition inspired by the famous party attended by Mary Shelley and Lord Byron where Shelley debuted Frankenstein. Yes, we’re very nerdy.

Our scary story elocution is a contest. There were a lot of scary stories, including a murderous game of cat and mouse between Alice and the White Rabbit, a cabal of cannibalistic foster children, a librarian who unwittingly donates her soul to the devil, a creepy doll party (my husband’s story) and a reverse chronological detail of a murder gone wrong. After 3 years, I won the coveted Raven Award with the story about Scotty that I posted a bit of for Writers Island, and I’m totally excited about it.

So as promised, here is the Scotty Potty story, in it’s entirety. It is long… but it is officially award winning.

The Stranger

I loved waking him up in the morning. I wished I could still sleep as he slept. His body twisted in pretzel shapes, clutching his raggedy bunny doll. I could never sleep that soundly anymore, not since bills and mortgages and project deadlines, and waiting to hear if he would stir.

This morning though, he was awake when I walked in. The room was freezing; the window beside his bed was open halfway. He figured out the childproofing — he’s only 5. His face was turned away from me, towards the icy air.
“What’s going on, buddy? It’s freezing in here.” I reached toward the window to shut it; he turned on me. His face was gray ash, his blue eyes shining.

“Don’t shut it. I need to get used to it.”
“Get used to what?”
“Cold. It’s cold where I’m going.”

I wondered if he was still asleep, night terrors like some of his kids in play group get. “School? It’s not cold there – they have heaters in the classrooms.”

My son looked down at his hands. He looked like his mother whenever he looked down, the heavy-lidded eyes, the pink lips. This morning, his lips were almost blue. His hands were empty.

“Where’s Mr. Carrot?”

He looked out the open window and I followed his gaze. Mr. Carrot was 10 feet from the house, half buried in the morning snowfall.

“Why’d you do that kiddo? Mr. Carrot’s going to need a bath now.”
“I don’t need him anymore. He can’t help me.”

I read about this in all the child-psych books, security blanket type issues. He’s ahead of schedule, but that was nice for once. He was smaller than all the other boys in kindergarten.

“What’s Mr. Carrot supposed to help you with, pal?”
“It doesn’t matter.” He paused, slid to the edge of the bed.
“Daddy?”
“Yeah, pal?”
“How come you never call me by my name anymore?”

Before I could answer, he padded to the bathroom and shut the door.

He was quiet at the table, we all were, the three of us chewing our cereal. Only the dog noisily snorted his approval of breakfast. As my son fished the final Cheerios out of the milk, I grabbed my keys and his book bag. Our daily routine.

“Alright pal – time for learning.” I used my post-caffeinated singsong voice. He stared at his cereal bowl.

“I don’t want to go,” he said as if to the milk.
“It’s Thursday, little man. Only two more days and then we can party on the weekend. We’ll do forts on Saturday. Promise.”
“I hate it there, Dad. They hate me.”
“Who hates you?”
“Everyone. They pick on me.”
“They don’t pick on you.” My wife shot me one of her looks. This was a lie. His kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Keely, had already phoned us on several occasions, because he couldn’t play at recess without being ridiculed. I know how hard it is to fit in, but I figured he had to learn to fit in. We all do.

“They call me Scotty Potty.” I bit the inside of my cheek — it was so minor, so nothing, but that must be horrifying to a five year old kid. My five year old kid.

“Don’t let it eat at you, Scott. Ignore them or go play with someone else.” I walked towards him – put my hand on his shoulder. At that moment, he transformed into a whirring vehicle of rage. He screamed, kicked, windmilled his arms.

“I donwana donwana donwana donwana–” He screamed those words over and over, a stream of syllables.

I had never seen him like this, not in five years of baths, bed times, and vaccination shots. This was more. He was a stranger to me then, someone else’s child full of rage.

We did what we could. I grabbed him by the pants, she hoisted him beneath the armpits, until little by little his voice grew hoarse from screaming and we somehow managed to squeeze him into the car. He finally stopped.

The entire drive to school, he never looked up.

When we arrived, I pulled Mrs. Keely aside. Told her about the tantrum, the nickname, the favorite stuffed animal face down in the snow. She smiled one of her wan, kindergarten teacher smiles.

“Paul, it’s natural for a boy of his – sensitivities – to dislike school. To fear the large groups of kids. I’ll keep an eye of him today, I’ll call you if anything happens.”

I left the classroom, the peeling posters on the wall, the cliques of kids already forming around the plastic house play sets and coloring books. I waved to Scott from the window; his face was still flushed and red. A group of boys sat in a circle around him, surrounding him. He did nothing and I left for home.

I spent the morning as I usually do, cleaning up dried milk puddles off the kitchen table while chatting with clients. I looked at those stubborn white films as the evidence of our lives together. Our table is ringed with the ghosts of former mornings, because they never truly disappear, even when I scrub. This morning, Scotty’s stain was thin translucent white and it flaked off in one intact iridescent circle. I didn’t need to add water; it just lifted off, like it was never there in the first place.

It was then that I remembered Mr. Carrot, lying in the snow. I wonder what inspired him to send the stuffed animal sailing out of the window late last night. He loved this rabbit. It’s been with him as long as he’s been alive. I stepped into my snow boots, barefooted, still chatting with my client. He was yammering on about project synergy and inclusive cooperation, or some other corporate bullshit. This is why I like to work from home, to remove myself as far as possible from corporate identity annihilation.

Mr. Carrot was still face down in the snow; he seemed to be sinking. I picked him up, his fur was stiff from the ice and cold. As I turned him over, I dropped the phone and it was immediately swallowed by the snow. Somehow, Scott had gutted Mr. Carrot. Not just gutted. His stomach was ripped open from throat (if he had one) to crotch. All of his gray stuffing was spilling out of the wound. I looked closely and found chew marks along his center seam, as if Scott had used his teeth. His button eyes had been plucked off and were hanging by single threads from empty cotton sockets. At that moment, the house line rang its insistent cheerful tone.
I fished the office phone out of the snow bank, hung up on the client. Fuck him. I’ll pay for it later, I’m sure. I slid-ran inside, picked up the phone.

“Mr. Noonan? This is the Franklin Elementary Principal.”
“Yes, Mr–?”
“Dr. Batton. It’s your son. An incident has occurred. You need to come in. Immediately.”

I took Mr. Carrot with me, even in his sorry state. Scotty may need him if he’s okay. That was my only thought as I drove – 55 in a 25 – the mile and a half to the school. If he’s okay. I wasn’t even praying for him to be okay – I just let the if hang there.

When I arrived, there were ambulances, cop cars, a field of red and blue flashing lights. A small stretcher was being wheeled out of the school. A little four foot body, draped in a heavy white cloth lay motionless upon it. Blood soaked the sheet where the face should be.

Instinctively, I ran to the stretcher. Told them I was the father. I needed to see what they did to him for myself. I uncovered the body from the feet, noticed that these weren’t Scotty’s shoes. A hand grabbed my arm forcefully. Someone said, “You’re not the father of this one.”

I was led into an empty classroom. They were all empty, but this was his classroom. The room was dark, the peeling posters of circus clowns and cartoon characters glowered at me. Their faces took on gray shadows. Scott sat on the nap map. As soon as I walked in, he looked up at me. I ran to him. He was unscathed – no cuts, bruises, broken bones, as far as I could tell. But he was covered in blood. Blood on his hands, on his yellow Dora sweatshirt. Blood around his mouth.

“What happened, buddy?”
“They didn’t call me by my name, Daddy. They never called me by my real name.”

I hovered over him, not knowing what to do. All I knew is that I didn’t want to take this one home.

Next Page »