Thursday, February 28, 2008

 

White is Tough

Wow. This has been a most enlightening experience so far. I am deeply struck by my own limitations – both physical and mental as well as financial. I came here just off of three weeks sick in bed. The way my body aches and I am so exhausted and frustrated, I would say that I am not yet well.

Issues of class and race and sexuality are glaring and the gaps are disconcerting. This is an overwhelmingly straight white upper class retirement-aged set of women. There is a token man – a handful of ethnicities represented – one or two women under 35 and a few under 50. I haven’t met any dykes yet but maybe they might be hard to spot since there are so many short-haired women wearing jeans and sensible shoes.

The gap between the service personnel and the attendees is wide. Most conference attendees around me have not thanked the servers at meals– they have not made eye contact or greeted them. It’s weird. When someone complained about the “cafeteria food” I nearly flipped. The food and the service here are stellar.

The class division isn’t reserved for the dining hall though– the money that is dropped on “retail therapy” is shocking. It’s not that I don’t understand – I do. I wish I could afford all of those gorgeous hand-dyed fabrics made by designers that I am supposed to know when the purchasers drop their names. I don’t begrudge anyone their love of color and texture. Nor do I begrudge them their homes or their second homes or their acreage or their horses or their llamas or their nice cars. I wish everyone could have a large, airy studio with great lighting and tons of stocked storage for fabrics, paints and threads. And even though the women I have met are, for the most part, genuinely kind and supportive - I just feel really outside.

Today was a day of despair.

I worked hard. I struggled. I tried and I failed on several attempts at understanding the color relationships of white (which - it seems - is never really white). I struggled with line. I struggled with my own drive and vision. I struggled with expectations. I came here with high hopes – because it is one of the premiere quilting seminars in the country. I am here with some of the most published and marketed quilters of our time. Some of them have artistic talent that is breathtaking. So I was reeeally hoping to pick up a set of technical skills and I was hoping to finish this commission while I was here. I have worked hours and hours and hours (which does not help the physical pain or the exhaustion).

I happen to have chosen - or the commission happens to be – one of the most challenging subject matters – without simple, clear lines and with a VERY difficult set of colors. (The commission is not, by the way, the picture of the Asilomar beach above.)

When I get it – it is going to be fucking amazing. But it is going to take more hours and more money in fabric than I will ever see in return. My mistake and that’s OK. I tried something new and went out on a limb. I don’t regret that.

I don’t regret any of this actually. It’s been a very enlightening experience. I have questioned my role as a “blue collar” quilter (I just made that term up because it’s how I identify my work.) I have been sufficiently humbled and can see clearly where I lack talent, where I lack technical skill, where I lack humor.

Dani – who is my rock and my anchor and my support in so many ways – held out this quilt seminar experience to be juxtaposed with my chemo experience. There in the chemo rooms - I am often with older straight people. We have cancer in common. Unless I was outrageously sick or sedated - my role there is to cheer people up – to entertain them and inspire them and to listen with an understanding ear. I was always joking and telling stories and genuinely lifting spirits. And here – I am so serious! I have wept pitifully twice (!) today because I felt so thoroughly tortured and frustrated. My fellow students often try to cheer me up or give advice or offer me fabric (very sweet but what am I going to do? Take the 22 0 or is it 44? - colors that I lack?) They tell me to stop thinking and to walk away from it for a while. The two experiences (chemo and quilting) are so different!

I’m not giving up. I’m just going to let go of the expectation of learning things from this instructor. I am going to give up on the idea that I will finish the commission this week. I am going to live with the fact that, despite the insane amount of money that I have already spent on fabric and fusible web, it is still not enough and I will reluctantly have to buy more. I humbly admit that I have a LOT to learn about the properties of light on the color white and how to translate that into cloth.

It has been good to realize that I prefer to work in my own studio – no matter how lovely the individuals around me are in the crowded classroom. I prefer to work with music blasting. I prefer to have more than the space of one table on which to work and I prefer to work alone – not with someone next to me at all times (it's a rule here).

The instructor has told me several times that we are more alike than different. But I am thinking that she really has very little idea what it is like to be a pagan among christians, a radio listener among television viewers, a left-leaning liberal among flag-toting patriots, a lesbian among straight people, a renter among home owners, a tattooed sober girl in fusia among a group of very nice ladies wearing expensive paint-speckled sweaters who sip wine. The instructor is not a blue-collar quilter who makes affordable art infused with memory and meaning. She is an Artist who does shows, makes patterns, publishes books and sends quilts off to museums and photo shoots. She has sold (to my knowledge) one quilt. For $12,000. Good on her – but that is a very different reality than mine.

Yes – we are all creating something with cloth. Yes – I can translate the stories about husbands and penises and can relate (sometimes). Yes – I am fortunate to have the commission money to be here at Asilomar (thanks to “San Lorenzo Egrets”). Yes – I too have a family and a supportive partner (but not the civil or tax rights that the straight people take for granted). We are alike in many ways. We probably all appreciate the sun and have to pee first thing in the morning. We probably have all had our share of blessings and heartaches. But it is not stubborn uniqueness that separates us. I sense that I am truly out of place here.

As a side note – I got two commissions today by phone. So I guess I have to finish this one. Wish me luck.

I will – as Suji suggested – take what I like and leave the rest. (Hey – where have I heard that?)




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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

 

Sunset at Asilomar
Empty Spools Quilting Seminar

I am learning how to paint with cloth - but using no paint. I am learning a LOT about color and really SEEING what is there instead of what I think is there. The brain is a complicated and stubborn thing. And in related news - I keep getting the feeling that I do not fit in. Where is the queer craft mafia? Where is one single lesbian? Where is anyone with a tattoo or a piercing or a wicked sense of humor? I knew I would be among the youngest attendees - but I am starving for some ? laughter - raunch - style - lively discourse. The best thing I can say is that the people are very very nice and I am sure that if I had a chance to get to know them - I would find some of these edgier qualities but so far we are either working or sharing a crowded table as we eat or sitting facing forward to listen to the speakers who show their work. There is not much time to get to know anyone. The women in my class are talented and kind and funny in the few moments that we get to connect.

I feel like I am a room of people listening to classical and easy listening while I am rocking out to "I wanna be your Dog" and "Drive" and "Prey for Rock n Roll". Somebody at breakfast asked if I was in the class with "the tattoo lady". I told her that I was.

There have been a handful of quilters who have impressed me. I wanted inspiration and I wanted to learn. There are plenty of quilts to be impressed by and although the learning is not happening in a huge way - it is definitely happening. I feel like the dumb student who just doesn't get it. Thank heavens my slowness isn't keeping anybody else back.

Patience. Open mind. Humility.

Luckily, my teacher Melinda Bula is VERY talented as a quilter. I'm not sure about her teaching style yet. We are her second class. I have so much to learn about art and color theory. I wish I could get it.

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Saturday, February 23, 2008

 
Yes! I am finally coming up for air! Being sick and having such low energy has made horizontal homeschooling quite an adventure! We are doing very well though - Pk is drawing more than ever, we read the entire diary of Ann Frank and Pk has learned how to simplify fractions. This is quite a feat since he could barely divide before I got sick.

And now - Pk and Dani will have a real homeschool adventure! I am leaving for 5 days to go to a quilting seminar. I will be working on a super secret commission and I am VERY excited! I wish I could show you pictures - but alas! then the secret would be out!

For Dani's sake, I wrote out all of the assignments and we went over teaching strategies and lesson plans. It will be a week of prime numbers, parts of speech and feminist history (Wilma Mankiller and Angela Davis.)

Thanks for tuning in and wishing me well. I am slowly but surely gaining strength.


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Wednesday, February 13, 2008

 

Leukemia & Lymphoma Triathlon

This year I am the honoree of my dear and long-time friend, Ren. In fact - I have known Ren for about as long as the Lymphoma & Leukemia Society has been helping people and searching for a cure to all blood cancers. 20 years! (I just ran across some great photos of us from Michfest in the 80s)

I am really hoping that people will click here to contribute (even a small amount) to Ren's goal - all of which will go to the LLS (they have been so helpful to me over the years). Ren is training hard and it represents no small feat as a mother of two, librarian, small business owner and partner. She is taking on a LOT - so please - let's help her out!


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Day 6 or so of flat out flu. I am way weary. The simplest tasks seems monumental. But one foot in front of the other I go. My Michigan Photo Album is almost done for the Half-way to Fest Party and I am working on getting to all the emails. I wanted to print this obituary as I was sad to hear it:


Brenda Kay Henson, age 62, Dumas, Arkansas, passionately devoted, loving, faithful, protective and courageous wife of Wanda Faye Reeves Henson, went to be with her awaiting family on the other side, at 11:47pm February 8, 2008. She died peacefully at home in the grateful arms of her wife and surrounded by family and longtime friends.

She is survived by her wife Wanda Reeves Henson; sister Barbara Ley, Chauncey, Ohio; daughter Andie Gibbs (and life wife Terri Valenti), Ovett, Mississippi; daughter Terri Elliott, Omaha, Nebraska; son Robin Gibbs (and spouse Ann Miller), Jemison, Alabama; son Arthur Elliott, Reno, Nevada; grandchildren Vannessa Gibbs, Britney Elliott, Arthur Elliott, III, (and Brittney & Arthur’s mother Leslie Melancon), Alexandria Elliott; greatgrandchildren Leighton Albin, Alyssa Albin; numerous nieces, nephews and self-identified ‘children’.
SisterSpirit, Inc/Camp Sister Spirit, PO Box 12, Ovett, MS 39464 or Rainbow Law, RR 1, Box266C,Wallace WV 26448; or to a social justice organization of one’s choice.

Condolences may be sent to Wanda Henson, 317 Adams St., Dumas AR 71639,
or bkins45@centurytel.net.

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Saturday, February 09, 2008

 

I have been sick sick icky sick. Tissues everywhere. Tea and sympathy. I feel miserable but then it all gets put in perspective when I read "The Diary of a Young Girl" aloud to Pk. I just imagine Anne Frank with a cold - diving under the covers every time she had to cough. I got nothing...

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Tuesday, February 05, 2008

 

I voted.
It was a very tough decision.

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Friday, February 01, 2008

 
Anyone who knows me, knows that I am an ambivalent dog lover. I see in Pk and Dani (and in this lovely Post Secret postcard that shares an amazing resemblance to our two dogs) how very essential animals are to people. I am very grateful that Pk has the opportunity to cuddle with his dog as he detaches from us as parents. I am glad that he has the chance to see how his giving effects a dependent being. Dani's connection to her dogs throughout her life is of indisputable value. I am glad, overall, to have the dogs in my life - but it is mostly because I can see how much they mean to the people I love.

Our two whippets add a lot of extra work to our lives. They are probably the easiest breed to deal with - truly lovely dogs - but they still chew things occasionally. They still require attention and money and planning. They beg for food and jump on people (which irks me to no end.) For such narrow dogs, they take up a heck of a lot of room in the bed and need to be covered constantly - day and night.

I don't even know why I am saying all of this. For such a loving person, it seems so mean spirited and selfish. I would take in a stranger from the street (and have many times) but I begrudge a sweet little creature two square feet of bed space? What is up with that? Is it because when I am blind (without the prosthetics) the dogs scare the heck out of me by jumping when I cannot see them? Is it that my sister took the role of "the dog person" decades ago? Is it left-over jealousy from when my sister and I shared a bedroom in my adolescence and the spoiled cocker spaniel named Prince had his own screened in porch room? Am I afraid that someone will peg me as an animal lover when I am secretly nice to the dogs?

I do not know the answers.

I do not know why you come here and what you expect to find when you get here but I can assure you that it will be me - as honest as I can be. Sometimes I talk politics, sometimes quilting, sometimes parenting, sometimes religion. Today I am copping to the real me. Yeah - I like animals. Sometimes I even love them. I am grateful for much of what they bring to our family life and I am very very kind to them. I'm just saying that I personally could probably live without them.

If I had the above post secret postcard - I would write this secret:
"Sometimes when I see your cute whippet faces
or hear your high pitched whine
or feel your bread sticks dig into me -
I feel like Cruella deVille."



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