IMG_9540elk good IMG_9548elk good IMG_9562elk goodOne of my Christmas gifts from Robert this year was paint!  He is currently out in my tremendously dismantled studio painting the walls for me.  Finally.  The metalsmithing side of the building was a truly awful mocha hue when we moved in and for whatever reason, I never took the time to change it.  Let me rephrase that, mocha isn’t an awful color, it can be very nice in some situations, but it is dark and dismal and sort of…grubby…in my studio space.  The room is being repainted in a feathery light grey (almost white) and one wall, the one that hosts my pellet stove, will be a deep, deep midnight blue.  Delicious.  Rob is also building me a new modular shelf unit for this wall to display all my inspirational bits and bobs I find whilst out on my rambles in the wild and wide open.  It’s going to be a sort of gallery wall for me and I look forward to it being finished, very much.

In the meanwhile, while the studio is down, and I’m in the throes of recovery from the jabberwocky of a cold I had last week, I have had plenty of time to set the entire house in order, purge a few cluttered corners, launder all that needs laundering and best of all, I’ve had time to slow down and read and sketch.  I’ve been doing so very much sketching, everything from blind contour drawings to more detailed sketches of beautiful tiny things, and rabbits, too, as always.

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Something I listened to last night.

A wonderful interview.

The book I have started to read.

The music we are hearing.

I’ve been meaning to mention Susannah Conway’s brilliant end of year workbook for weeks now.  We did not travel for Christmas this year.  It was our first year ever simply staying at home, by ourselves, having a quiet and relaxing time.  I had time to look back over the year past and lay some bricks for a path forward into the new year.  The hurtling speed of December usually results in me bellyflopping into January and simply keeping on keeping on.  Not this year!   This year I pinned the 2014 calendar to the wall with intention and momentum and managed to wave 2013 goodbye with a plenty of grace.  I don’t think it’s too late to take on this work book.  It’s basically a collection of writing prompts that help a gal look at the year past and prepare for the year coming.  Thanks Susannah.

Hope you are well, darlins.

X

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2014/01/05/7476/

[Belly Of The Beast Necklace — Autumn Bear — sterling silver, copper, coral, chrysoprase, silk and Oregon beach stone in ochre and striped plum]

Holy Coyote.  I know that today is the first of November but I have one final thing to do before I officially summit the mountain of October.  What a month it has been!  A very good month of very good work, indeed.  I am headed for Jackson Hole, Wyoming tomorrow on a business trip (with a bit of pleasure mixed in, to boot).  I can’t wait to see those snowy Tetons, hug my friends, pet a buffalo and have a couple of rambles with the dogs in the woods there.

A handful of random informations for you:

  1.  For the last two weeks of my life I have suffered a total body poison ivy (or poison oak — we aren’t sure which…) attack!  I had, at one point, a total of 21 patches of rash on my body (including the palm of one hand and the crease of one of my eyelids).  It was awful.  By nature, I am an itchy person, however, this is the itchiest I have ever been in the history of my life.  I’m almost over it now.  Yeesh.  I thought I might perish.  We don’t know how I came down with it or what the heck happened.  I have washed all the clothing and bedding in the house TWICE now.  Lord preserve me.

2.  I made this soup yesterday and my golly, it is the best pumpkin soup recipe I have ever tried and let me inform you of the fact that I am a mighty fan of the pumpkin soup.  Most pumpkin soup concoctions call for a vat of heavy whipping cream — not this one!  It’s quite light, spicy and whole.  PLEASE NOTE: I used an extra half an onion, 3 more garlic cloves than required, an extra teaspoon of cumin, a whole bundle of fresh oregano instead of dried oregano and in the future I WILL use two jalapenos instead of one…I may add carrots too.  I have about 12 baking pumpkins I brought home from the smokejumper base in Washington which means I’m pretty much going to make pumpkin soup for the entire universe for all of infinity.

3.  The studio is officially unpacked, fairly tidy, organized and ready for me to get down to business.  Did I tell you I am sharing my building with a girlfriend this winter?  She’s a painter and leather worker — truly talented and individual in her work.  I have much respect for her work but I also love her as a person.  I’m so excited about it.  She’ll be in Nicaragua for a little while but once she is home in Idaho again, she’ll be working alongside me in the studio most days.  I know we are both going to benefit from the creative energy and hum and thrum of each other.  We’re not the neatest pair of people, the studio may burst at the seams from creative chaos.  It’s still going to be awesome though.  I can’t wait.

I really like my building.  Working in the small space of the Airstream in the summer months helps me to deeply appreciate my workspace here in Idaho.  It’s expansive, lit with huge windows and the ceilings are high enough that I can really wing my way around without feeling cramped.  It’s good to be back.

4.  I had my hair cut.  It.  Felt.  So.  Good.  I think the last time I had it trimmed was April.  Now I look like a demure lady wolf without split ends.

5.  There’s a baby boom happening in Pocatello.  I mean, some of our friends are having babies.  It’s exciting.  It’s also terrifying because everyone sits around and talks about how Rob and I don’t have a baby yet and how we’re going to have a baby any moment now…just pop one out…it’s all rather disconcerting.  I stay cool as a cucumber when they all start talking like that.  Babies are contagious.  These will be the first babies in our circle of friends here which is why it’s exciting.  It feels like a big life shift for us all.  I’m going to host all the baby showers.  No one asked me to, I demanded the honor.  Which leads me to my next point:

6.  I love our Idaho clan.  Seriously.  Everyone is just exactly who they are.  It’s glorious.  I thrive in the circle of our friends here.  Thrive.  And the girls are all so awesome, unique, confident and straightforward.  I love ’em.

7.  Stop motion with PAPER!!!  Love that Laura Marling.

8.  The weather lately:

Wild and awful.  Lovely and dark.

9.  I made this little lady…more on her later.

10.  Have you checked in on Jonathan lately?  Gosh.  I think he is officially one of my very favorite photographers of all time.  Brilliance, color, emotion, texture, honesty…everything I always strive for with a camera.  Take your time looking.  You will be moved.

I hope you are all better than fine.  As always, thanks for being here.

X

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2013/11/01/6985/

Three Nights Ago

I went up high, into a cloud, looking for freedom in the dark cold.  When you stand alone in the haunting, dull edges of dimness, it can be easy to feel the tiny kindled flame of the heart burning merrily, underneath it all.  Unwavered.  It can be a simple thing to comprehend, there in the darkness, that there is the light within.  Other times, there in the dark, I suffer  a moment when I doubt my identity, I feel I’ve been divided, and divided again, to the point of spoils.  I feel the need to reinvent myself after so many pieces of me have been taken, crushed, used, spent like tinny, small currency, passed to and from weak hands that do not bear callouses from dedicated, hard work.  I have been used.  I have been kind.  I have been gracious.  I have believed in kindness and graciousness.  I still believe.  I hate my anger.  I lick my wounds.  I am a wild beast tired of biting at my own foot.  I forgive myself.  I motion myself to kindness once again.  I divorce myself repeatedly, cut the chains away, until I lay in jagged, unfettered pieces, strewn about on the forest floor.  A large hand reaches down from low clouds, meets me where I am, puts me back together again, holds me upright until I find my legs once more.  I stand.  I reach out my skinny arms, brace myself and sing into the void.  My voice falls back into my open mouth.  I swallow.  I tremble.  I plant my feet.  I roll my cold fingers into icy fists.  I close my eyes.  I shake the water from my mane.  I sing out, louder this time, I believe in the music, and my voice carries like gold, right and true.

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They say we are made of two wolves.

From the forest, from the night, comes a long legged pair of wolves, stepping quick, ruffs whipped by the gale.  I place the palm of my left hand on the gentle slope between two golden eyes, dig my fingertips down into thick, white fur.  With my right hand, I reach into the endless pocket on the edge of my hip, bring forth something good and rich and I feed the good and holy wolf.  I send the other away, slinking and black as night, hungry and alone.  I rest then and I realize that not everything in me has been used to death.  There is something in me that continues to unfold, something that is valuable and meaningful, worthy and sacred.  It is mine for the finding.  It is mine to actualize.

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[There is a tree on the side slope, upended, root ball exposed, ripe with mosses, and from its horizontal trunk grows a strand of green.  Sky reaching in newness.  Lit living even in the dim.  New comes from the old.]

I am new.  I am old.

There in the dark, where I can feel the light, I don’t doubt myself, I don’t recreate myself, I simply am.

Who am I.  Oh.  Who.  What am I.

Pared down, cut to ribbons by the knives of the wind, peeled and scraped, washed and wiped, swaddled in fog.  I am not much more than all that has come before.

Elemental.

Underwing.

I rise up.  I fall to earth.  I rise up.  I push off with all my strength.  The stones shatter beneath my feet.

I am not afraid of this storm, of this hulking black cloud pierced by mountain peak.  I am not scared of the wind that threatens to undo me, cell by cell, or the rain soaking through wool to the tight plains of my skin, the deluge that turns my hair to whips.  I do not fear the thing with wild eyes that watches me from the shadows.  I starve that thing, even though it is a portion of myself.  I won’t be moved.  I have no pity.  I am washed in rain.  I am thin, wasted, bare twigged, free of rust, flexing, shifting, alive and new.  I am whittled to bone, alabaster curve, spirit sigh.  I am the stone that reaches the sky.  I am the stone they say rises forever.  I am that stone, igneous and slow to fade.  My roots dive through the earth, emerge into a new sky and summit the sun.  I am anchored there, tethered to light, drinking it from two directions.  My hands howl.  My tongue is meek.  My eyes are wide bowls filled to the brim with the tilt and spill of milky moons.  I shoot through the loops of myself until I am atomic, aware of an ancient energy that binds me in, covalently bonded to the elements around me, held in the palm of the broadest hand.

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Every year, no matter the season, I know a thousand springtimes, and all the autumns to match — endless births and deaths, a crown of sorrow that gives way to truth.  I am dressed in leaves, curling and unfurling and dropping away.

I am a beggar.  I am a queen.  I am normal.  All this wrestling is beautiful and human.

I named joy when I first came into this world, like every child of God does, when they first arrive.  So I name it again, as is my right and my privilege, each time I am reborn.

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I left the mountain.  Night came fast.  I drove through billows of cloud, dropped away over jagged precipices, fell like a river from the lips of stone and beneath my hands the truck growled, purred and lit the way, as all good old trucks do when you find yourself out late and on your way home.

I Am Always Returning

[sterling silver, 23 karat gold, lapis lazuli, quartz and vintage angel skin coral branch]

This one really fizzes.  It is:

celebration

exploration

deep delving return to self

buoyancy

wild and leaping

serene cascades of light

moonlight through trees

illumination

imagination

the spirit of wild animals

the innocence of wild animals

the savage nature of wild animals

joy

folk art

folklore

a story

my story

scraping free of  a hundred razor sharp heart moraines — piled high with the tailings of the violent shifts of dirty ices

gravity

momentum

sweetness

kindness

VOX

truth

the suddenness of knowing just what I am and where I am going

understanding who I have been

forgiveness (of self and others)

transformation

hope

belief

faith

grace

and always redemption

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It’s a lot of other things too, but you’re a smart bunch and I don’t think I always need to spell everything out for you, plain as day.  Part of the way you receive and comprehend the beauty of this world is rooted in creativity and imagination!  That’s what makes pairing art with a human so special.  Your bold interpretation welded to my personal experience and voice…your YOU melded with my ME…well…that’s magic and that’s what it is all about.

I had a good and thoughtful time making this piece.  It’s been a while since I’ve created one of my large, narrative neckpieces.  To return to an avenue of design that has always been a part of my work with metal felt like a little miracle these past few days.  I can remember why I stepped away from it.  I had my wings torn from my back, again and again.  I’ll never forget why I have returned to it now.  Never.

It’s all so true.  Really.

 Each day of my life is laced up tight with tiny failures and small victories.  At the end of everything, when it all draws to a close, I hope the scale tips in the direction of victory and grace, for always.

I realize everything I have typed out here is wandering and perhaps even slightly cryptic.  It’s not my goal to sound pretentiously mysterious in any way.  Some things are so sensitive and delicate that they need sheltering and tenderness or they won’t make it through to the strength and power of full fruition.

  Here’s the thing:  In this work, there’s always time to start again.  And again.  I come around in wide arcs, I orbit that steady center, hear the still small voice and kneel down by the burning bush.  I lose my way, ask for directions, struggle up hill, coast into valleys…and all the while I get a firmer grip on the very definition of humility.

I know you probably know just what I mean.

Thanks for being here today.

X

Smile. You’re alive.

[whilst paddling the Methow River last night:  it was rapture]

I was stressing about something a few weeks ago, I can’t remember what exactly…oh, it was probably the broken water pipe at our Idaho house.  The broken water pipe that had been broken for a month and a half (and wasn’t noticed by our friends who are living in our house), the broken pipe that sprayed approximately 120 000 cubic gallons of water into the foundation of our home (amazingly, there’s no damage to the house), the broken pipe that created a $650 water bill in the month of July.  Yeah.  That’s what I was stressing.  Fret not, Robert was miraculously boosting the Pocatello satellite smokejumper base at the time and was able to deal with the issue in person!  How’s that for providence?  I was so thankful I didn’t have to deal with the situation.  So thankful.

I was telling one of our best friends about the broken pipe and some other life stuff and at the end of a long dialogue he gifted me with these three, tiny words:

Smile.  We’re alive.

Thank you, Sam.

After receiving that text, I shut off my phone and walked into the Pasayten Wilderness of Northern Washington and I did smile and I was alive and I am alive and it is beautiful…and everything else I could generally say about life that is good and true and honest and courageous at any given moment welled up out of my heart onto the tip of my tongue.  Things like: God is always good, my heart is beating cosmic music that joins me with the rest of the planet and the galaxy and the universe, I am alone but I am not lonesome, I am tiny and important, these raspberries are delicious, the trout are leaping for joy and I’m going to catch them one by one…and so on and so forth…I said all those true things, spoke the words into thin air until I was filled up and surrounded once again with light instead of shadow.  Once you let a simple truth resonate in your spirit, play you like a horse hair bow plays a violin, the seeds of joy and gratitude grow like wildfire.

Lately, I’ve been saying those easy, steady words to my friends when I think they need to be reminded of the simplest truth…they are alive and life is beautiful.

I’m saying to you, today, right now:

Smile.  You’re alive.  And it’s beautiful.  Even I can see that from way over here.  Put on your high beams and shine your light.

X