Freedom

Many pages from this journal are now gone. This will probably be the first of several similar posts. Shredding is shedding, and shedding is freeing.

Meanwhile, it’s October 1, official beginning of Spooky Season! My fun skeleton, Lord Cuttlebone, is out of the closet and back on the pages of Instagram.

Tarot Etc. Thursday No. 23

Continuing to send all good thoughts to those in Florida recovering from Ian, including an artist I know through social media who can’t get back to her home, in a city where the extent of the destruction isn’t yet known.

It’s been a while since I did a Tarot Thursday because I finished sharing all my various decks. However, you may recall that I have a couple of books from Adam J. Kurtz that I’ve featured on here before.

I knew that in 2018, Adam used a Kickstarter campaign to create a simple, fun Tarot deck using his unique approach to art and illustration, but I was trying NOT to get more decks, so I never ordered it. In September, Penguin reissued the OK Tarot: the Simple Deck for Everyone.

This time, the offer was too good to pass up, and I really like supporting Adam’s creativity. If I ordered from an independent shop, I’d get a scarf/cloth that could be used either to lay out readings or wrap the deck or tie around a dog’s neck, if any of my dogs would put up with such shenanigans. (They won’t.)

I opted to order the deck from Adam’s OWN local store, and by doing so, my box was signed by him. So I got the scarf, extras like a couple of free stickers, and the deck itself.

This is a deck that is, as Adam intended, Brimming with hope and good energy… [and] avoids depictions of race, religion, or gender to help YOU focus your intention, find clarity, and remember that even if things aren’t perfect, they’re still going to be OK.

The cards have simple meanings for the reader to decipher on his or her own terms. Kelsey Anderson provided the card interpretations that are in the accompanying booklet. She’s a spiritual counselor and an advocate of using spiritual tools for self care.

I’d hoped to do a reading so I could feature the deck today, but since I’ve mostly spent this week in bed trying to sleep my way through being ill, maybe another time, like when I have a character who needs direction. Meanwhile, the cards are tucked safely away among the boxes that house all my decks of tarot, oracle, and related cards.

I’m not perfect; but I’ll be okay. Thanks, Adam, for the reminder.

Shiny

Thinking about Florida today as Hurricane Ian makes landfall and hoping for the best. I have friends and family living all over the state or who own property and vacation homes there.

Meanwhile: don’t feel well; can’t write; here are shiny things to distract us all.

Most of these stretch back to the 1980s, so if they look vintage, they’re imitation. In earlier decades of the 20th century, you could walk into junk/antique/resell stores or pawn shops and find an abundance of old brooches, pins, and pendants. Originally called “paste,” later “costume,” jewelry, they rarely had monetary value, so when they ended up in stores after deaths and estate sales, they were usually inexpensive (there were exceptions, of course).

Not so much anymore. The prices vary but can go quite high. Fortunately, one of my characters is scouring stores in rural areas and small towns in the 1970s and can buy what she wants. She has a plan, and I don’t have the budget to go to my favorite antique or vintage stores to make it a reality. Hopefully, when I get back to writing, I can describe her vision in a way to do it justice. She’s well ahead of her time, and the suggestion for what she’s doing came from Lynne.

My Saturday


Saturday summed up in a blurry phone photo, left to right:

A coloring page I finished from an online crafter who sends emails full of tips and projects, and most recently, some adult coloring pages related to sewing. So I colored the sewing machine. In front of the coloring page, the colored pencils I drew from are resting on top of my iPad. Though I haven’t been reading this month, I do have two new ebooks (both memoirs) for next month, when I’ll probably be spending lots of time sitting in waiting rooms or in my car. I’m almost finished with that homemade iced coffee. Next project: return to kitchen to mix more. The colored gel pens and markers I used are in front of a couple of dolls who represent characters (Muses!), because on the laptop, I’m seven pages into the chapter I’ve been stalled on, and that’s a good thing.

Back to my alternate universe. Hope you’re having good Saturdays.

Grease is the word


I don’t know if I’ve shown this house or told this story before on here, but I’m old enough now for people to expect me to repeat myself, so whatever.

Here’s the setup. This was an old house on a shady street in Tuscaloosa that I shared with two roommates who were sisters. The door went into an entryway where I set up a desk with a couple of chairs and held office hours with my students. Right off the office were stairs going to the second floor, and next to those, the room with the double windows was my bedroom. The rest of the downstairs was a separate apartment, with beautiful glass doors locked between the apartment where two guys lived and our part of the house. I don’t remember if we ever opened those doors or just went around to the other entrances, but we hung out with them and they with us, and we all went to each other’s parties.

On the second floor, which was all ours, the sisters each had a bedroom, and there was a large living room, a bathroom, and the kitchen. Off one corner of the kitchen was a sort of trunk room that we could use to store extra furniture, our luggage, and put bikes or whatever if we had them. Closest to that little room was our stove.

Both the sisters had a tendency to peel and slice potatoes and make French fries at all hours of the day and night. (Typical for late-night studying.) The younger sister liked to take tortillas, quarter them, and fry them so that they puffed up. She’d then sprinkle them with powdered sugar, and she called them “fake beignets.” (Here are real beignets; I don’t have a photo of the fake beignets.)

Since they had something greasy going a lot, they just kept one of my iron skillets, filled halfway with cooking oil, on the (cold) stovetop all the time. Me being older and more cautious, I often told them this was a bad idea. The air is full of things: dishwashing detergent bubbles, our exhaled breath, sneeze droplets–need I go on? At the very least, I said, they should put a lid on the skillet. But they shrugged off my suggestion, and so it goes.

One afternoon, I was sitting at the kitchen table, probably writing a paper for one of my graduate classes. I kept hearing this little noise, but no one else was in the house, so I ignored it. It was just by chance that I looked up and across the kitchen, which is when I realized what the noise was. A little mouse was perched on the edge of the skillet and leaning over to lap up grease. What I’d been hearing was his little tongue hard at work drinking the grease of potatoes and dough. After I sucked in air, I stood, and like a flash he was down the stove and slipping under the door to the trunk room.

I disposed of the grease and scrubbed that skillet for who knows how long, and after that, we co-eixsted with our non-paying resident, but the Grease Skillet Bar was permanently closed to him.