Archive for Uncategorized

new to mothdrawn

ahoy!

some new things to mothdrawn:

1. I have an RSS button in case anyone wants to see mothdrawn in their feed.

2. I have a ’subscribe-to’ button, which will let you know by email what updates are in the Daybook (unfortunately the photos don’t post there, though, so you’d have to come back to the site to see those).

3. I have my new flickr photo thumbnails posted on mothdrawn as well as here.

These three new web thingies are available at the bottom of mothdrawn in the footer.

Thanks for going over there to see my new site!

mothdrawn

Hi! I have moved my website energies to a new location: mothdrawn.com

I was missing creating daily updates, but feeling like the blog is a tired form. However, unlike with social media, I love that an individual’s website really allows you to enter someone’s world, to not just receive snippets that have that same feeling as other snippets above and below them. I still have blogs I visit because I want to fully enter these individuals’ worlds — to be absorbed by their language and imagery. I crave that, actually. So I’ve created a ‘daybook‘ with daily entries that don’t deal so much with the banal minutia of life as much as capture a certain energy I want to share with others. It is a way for me to study and to share beauty. It is still personal, but it’s personal like poetry is personal — hopefully more edited and refined than blogs tend to be.

New to the mothdrawn site that makes it pretty different from this site: I have created a small shop in order for readers to get to hold a piece of beauty in some form — currently there are drawings, photographs, and letterpress. I hope to add more work in the near future and for it to be continually updated. I believe that the online world can be as good a gallery space as any, so I choose to show my work there in a gallery form. I think the shop is then a way for people who enjoy my work to get to know it in a new way — to hold it, stick a photo in a book, frame it, or give it away. There is something wonderfully human about receiving mail, and I want to share my work in this way with people.

Thank you so much for taking a look at my new website!

some months

(some drawings and photographs compiled into a calendar for friends and family)

january.jpgfeb.jpgmarch.jpgapril.jpgmay.jpgjune.jpgjuly.jpgaugust.jpgseptember.jpgoctober.jpgnovember.jpgdecember.jpg

garden stones

Drawings on rocks — drawings of what will emerge from the dirt.

drawn rocksdrawn rocks

one year one month one golden boy

henry

the blanket quilt

I drew blankets, had them printed on cotton through Spoonflower, then sewed them into a quilt.

blanket quiltblanket quiltblanket quiltblanket quilt

one year old

2010

I was pregnant, and cranky, and bloated. We watched Sunshine Cleaning, saw a lot of blood, then woke up at 2 in the morning to blood and contractions.

My boy was born and placed in my arms and instantly I knew he was strong.

His sister walked into the room and cried and knew that he was her brother. She said later in the year that she knew when she met him that we are more than animal because she would do anything for him, she would die for him.

We learned how to be a family with a baby. At first we were in a force field of love, a  trance of sleepless love, and then we got pretty stressed out with a lot of nursing pain and new-baby exhaustion. Then we  slowly evolved, all of us kicking and screaming.

The dogs and cats learned to respectfully accommodate a new, warm baby who at first looked at them with hazy eyes and then smiled at them and now pulls their tails and kisses them and repeats after them, meow, meow (to the cats); pant, pant (to the dogs).

I learned to have to be okay with sleeping in past Rosie’s off-to-school hour because the baby hadn’t slept that night, or being up way before Rosie because the baby couldn’t sleep. I learned to be okay with not-so-great dinners and lunches packed by her father, which she often refuses to eat.

I learned to cope with a teenager for what felt like the first time. A sixteen-year-old now, fully inhabiting the complicated dichotomy of still-a-baby and you-can’t-make-me.

I felt the anxiety of wondering if my baby was succeeding, was rolling over at the right age, crawling in the right way, then watched my baby walk into my arms so soon, launching himself, stumbling, giddy in his sweet, quiet way.

I edited a manuscript, feeling my brain come back to me after a half-year of postnatal breastfeeding fog, and I find myself more proud of it than ever.

I began a new manuscript, and then another, and I keep writing, slowly, sleepily but earnestly, eager to see how they unfold.

I drew a lot of blankets, I sewed a blanket-quilt.

I sewed my baby a few pairs of pants while he slept, which he has thankfully outgrown.

I bought only three packages of disposable diapers all year, and I washed a countless amount of cloth ones.

I washed and folded, washed and folded, washed and folded with a baby sleeping on me, a baby sleeping beside me, a baby fussing beside me, a baby helping me  unfold.

We drove to Pensylvania just before a snow storm with a one-month-old, flew to California with a three-month-old, flew to Baltimore with a four-month-old, flew to Pennsylvania with a six-month-old, flew to North Carolina and drove up the coast to New York City with a seven-month-old, flew to Salt Lake City with a nine-month-old, drove to Pennsylvania with a ten-month-old, and flew to Pennsylvania just after an ice storm with an eleven-month-old.

We opened up a dream and bought a farm. Twenty acres of land that we bought because we are all body now and so little computer, stooping for a baby and dreaming for a baby, working with our hands and kneeling on the floor beside him, feeling pure in this way, and slow and sleepy, and part of something grounded.

His language is unstoppable. First dada, then ball, then balloon. Leaf. The sign for more. The word mama – which usually means milk or some abstract wanting. The sound meow, then panting, then moo, which sounds like boooo. Ba for toothbrush, Ba for brush, Ba for fan. The whinny of a horse. Juice. The name he has given his sister, Ta-ta. A laughing sound which means Nana. Papa for my father. The hoo-hoo-ha-ha of a monkey. Baa for lamb. Doh for radio, Tah for guitar.
He woke at two in the morning this morning of the day of his birth and didn’t fall asleep until almost four and it occurred to me that maybe in some universe he understood that a year ago this is when he woke me with contractions. I wrote this to my mother, who said that when my brother and I turned one, we did much the same thing, waking crying at the minute of our birth. Tonight he went to sleep at 8, in my arms in the bed, and I held him and tried to hold the moment even as I wanted to jump up and finish making dinner, this moment when a year ago he started to breathe.

It’s not that I cry when I think of a year passing because time feels so short, because it hasn’t. It’s that so much is that wasn’t a year ago — so much beautiful and hard and patient and impatient. This human being, this mouth I love, this whole boy, I get to witness him unfolding and it is incredible. Life, humans, our complicated brains and hearts and way of being, we sure do make beautiful babies.

hated hat

henry, one year old

write after breakfast

The homeless writing workshop I lead has a website now, thanks to the Sweetland Writing Center at the University of Michigan. The hope is that the website project connects the two communities, teaches computer skills to people in the workshop, and offers another chance for those in the workshop to feel proud of their work.

Visitable here:

writeafterbreakfast.tumblr.com

new land

We bought 20 acres of land at the edge of Ann Arbor. It has a small house for a studio and office (we’ll still be living in our  house, we’ll use this new one for work and making things). The land has two ponds, one small and one big. It has some trees. But mostly it has a whole lot of land for Steve to farm. We have big plans for greenhouses and hoop houses. We feel so very lucky and excited!

WE JUST BOUGHT 20 ACRES OF LAND, Y'ALL20 acresview standing on the jeep roof20 acres with two pondshenry wears his overalls because he's farmer henry now

sunset

sunset