Showing posts with label emma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emma. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2011

I'm lovin the bu(r)ds

The last few weeks was made of rolls and rolls and rolls of words.  I lose count when I talk.  In my rough estimate, I have blabbered all the way from June to July.    My words if strung together can tie a ribbon around the moon- not that I needed to talk so badly- it's my job!

And yet...

I feel that there is more I needed to express.  Maybe i have not laughed loud and long and often enough or cried that I felt there was a constriction lassoed around my throat.  The days had been so bright and blessed so maybe I needed to do something in jubilation (?).

So...

I tried to let my brush lead me.

  birds in motion!
birds with wings like flowers...

Now I feel so much better and so much more relaxed like a bird that soared and dove and got dizzy in its flight.

Today, I am loving the birds on my roof all the more and I just did a bit of talking!

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

the throne

Chairs are quite reliable and dependable for as long as they are there when you need them.  They don't complain much but they do squeak a little with age or when the load is heavy .  Yes, they do get old too!  Worn and shaky, like little old ladies and frail diabetic, hypertensive old men.

Like us,  a chair has a face that distinguishes one from the other.  Long before the invention of monobloc chairs or plastic chairs, these thrones were handmade from trunks and vines, twigs and branches.  They were defined by the signature of their makers- artisans whose preoccupation was balance and proportion, details and features.

Chairs have evolved.  Some have "flesh, skin and bones" like the upholstered settee.  They have buttons that would convert a sitting couch to a lounging bed.  When Paula Capanas and her team were in grade one, their "laughing chair" was a feature in one of my school's science expositions.  This particular chair had three settings: low, medium and high.  It was one of the greatest improvisations of a chair that I have seen in my entire life!  A classmate was behind the setee while a subject sat strapped in it.  A low setting when pressed would give a low tickle, medium- an average tickle, and high would be the ultimate tickle!  What's the guy doing behind the chair?  Hihihihihihihi!  Tickling the one strapped in the chair.  

Goldilocks loved the bears' chairs!  She sat on all three- papa bear's, mama bear's, and baby bear's and unfortunately broke poor baby bear's chair!  Some humans have been known to develop such attachment to their chairs that their spirits seem to inhabit their favorite chairs long after they are gone.

Sofa, divan, chaise lounge, couch, davenport, rocking chair, chesterfield, daybed, Paula's chair - O chair, you have tolerated laziness, supported buttocks and spine at work,  but you have also provided rest.

Pablo and I share the same thoughts if not fascination with this very ordinary thing:
"Yes,
a chair,
loving the universe,
for the walkabout man, the sure foundation,
the supreme
dignity
of rest!"
- neruda


and I say:
Waiting to be rested  upon and worked upon
a sanctuary of four legs
ready to carry any pressure and weight
a chair of sensual delight
and gaseous outpourings!

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Where and What??

After learning that I had another surgery, my oldest friend said: "What else is left, Emma?"
Pilar is 89.  She remembers a LOT!  She has a big byte of memory bank.  I have a hard time remembering.

I am struggling with my memory or the decline of it.  So I left my comfort zone, with the intention to make myself struggle with survival in unfamiliar territory.  I have to recall names and places.  I have to remember where I left my things and remember facts and stories of the past.  Until I realized that maybe, this is my new me.  I was born again in the same old body!

And I live in the comfort that so many young people have lost their sensitivity a long time ago and they don't even remember to make their bed! And I still do.  So why would I even bother if I forget where my cell phone was? I can ring it anytime.  I have several pairs of eyeglasses that if I forget that I wore a pair on my head, I have another pair probably in my bag,  in my drawer or inside the refrigerator! My camera will remember places and moments I will surely forget, so what's the fuss?