Breaking the law, breaking the law

I’ve already started working on my final collection for LJ’s Runway Monday. I don’t want to be stuck doing a bunch of stuff at the last minute, disliking it all and viciously stabbing myself with needles. I’d rather spread the needle stabbing over a long time–take a more zen approach to the pain.

I called Lynne a bit ago to ask, “Any advice on putting in sleeves?” Her answer reminded me why I never enjoyed or developed the ability to sew. Too many steps! Too much patience! I’m an “I want it done NOW” person when it comes to this kind of stuff. I don’t understand why I can be a patient teacher and a patient writer, but in most other respects, the most impatient of people.

Speaking of Lynne… In our early teen years, my mother often said that Lynne was a bad influence on me. Actually, I was just a typical, surly adolescent, but since I was my mother’s surly adolescent, my bad behavior was clearly SOMEONE’S fault other than my own (or hers), and Lynne was the designee.

At least this was what I always thought when Lynne and I laughed about our terrible teens. Recent events have led me to wonder if my mother might not have been right. After Lynne flew into Birmingham the day before my mother’s memorial service, she rented a car and drove into her (and sometimes, my) hometown the more meandering back way. She wasn’t in a hurry, and she wanted to see the place where her daddy had worked all his life. Without naming towns and businesses–to protect the guilty–Lynne got a terrible shock when she drove by this place that looms so large in her memories only to find it torn down.

I knew she was upset, so I asked if there was anything left of the building: a bit of rubble or something. Upon finding out that some bricks remained, I was game for a late-night bit of trespassing. (I like to drive the getaway car.) This is when Lynne reverted to what can only be called her Wicked Influence and devised a “bonding experience” for my nephews.

My nephew Daniel is around twenty years older than his brother Aaron, so it’s not like they got to be bad boys together the way Lynne and I got to be bad girls together. Lynne suggested to the two of them, and to Daniel’s son Dave (who’s actually five months older than his Uncle Aaron) that they accompany us on our “adventure.” Dave flaked out and fell asleep. Then Lynne took orders from some of us for fast food, and a few people slipped out the door while I was busy doing something–probably knitting blankets for the homeless or reading to the blind or something.

What I found out is that

Lynne plus Tom

when mixed with:


Daniel and Aaron

leads to my being LEFT BEHIND, and only AFTER their return from the fence-climbing, barbed-wire avoiding, under cover of darkness BREAKING THE LAW, did I get to whip out my camera and get a shot of the evidence:

Come to think of it, maybe it’s my mad skillz as an eager photographer that made them leave me behind. It’s like they learned something from all those Darwin Award winners who take photos of themselves committing criminal acts.

To add insult to injury, I had to drive the stolen goods all the way back to Texas, where they still sit in my car.

Wait. What I meant to say is, I never saw those bricks before in my life, and as my mother, Daniel, and Aaron could tell you, It’s Lynne’s fault!. And probably Tom’s.

LJ Runway Monday Challenge, Week 7

On Bravo’s Project Runway, the designers were taken to a rooftop where they were presented with several hybrid Saturns. Once the car doors were opened, the designers had to grab as many of the materials used in the construction of the cars as they could. They were told to come up with an innovative design that incorporated these reusable materials.

Heidi Gunn, who is currently in evacuation mode thanks to Hurricane Gustav, gave the LJ Runway Monday designers the same challenge. Here’s how I dressed Summer.

drive it, wear it, it’s all good

Button Sunday

As I headed back to Houston after my trip to the Southeast, I decided to take the northern route because I wanted to see… BUTTONS!


These are buttons collected by Bill Clinton, forty-second president of the United States, during his presidential campaigns. They’re on display at the William J. Clinton Presidential Center, which was my destination and the reason I spent a night in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Will you see what I saw?

My First Two Great Loves

I didn’t intend to do another post today, but I’ve been looking through the photos I took over the past week, and I’m starting to see things I didn’t notice before.

I just took this photo of a silver locket.

It belonged to my mother. I wore it on the day of her memorial service because of the two pictures inside it.

Those are my oldest two nephews, Daniel and Josh, when they were babies (they are cousins, not brothers). They have been the source of nothing but joy to me for most of my life. I rocked them as babies. Played with them as kids. Treasured them as teens. Watched them grow into amazing young men and start families of their own.

During the service, I found my gaze returning to the two of them over and over again. My heart always leaps with joy when I see them for the first time, and thereafter it overflows with love every second I get to spend with them. It’s better than being a parent, because I never had to worry about them or teach them or discipline them. Much like my mother, their grandmother, I just got to enjoy them.

As I said, I was looking through photos, and there is one of me with the two of them. I know that I’m drawing strength and happiness from their presence, as always.

Then I began to giggle when I saw what one of them did. Is it the one who looks serious and beyond all that? Or is it the one fighting his smile?


Josh, Becky, Daniel

When the two of them were saying their goodbyes to each other, Josh said, “Well, see you in another twenty years.” And Daniel glanced over at his Aunt Debby and me with a speculative expression and said, “Maybe only fifteen.”

Vulture.

How I love them.

Playing Catch Up–Part 2–Joy and Joyness!

Somewhere between Knoxville and Memphis–who knows, maybe around Lebanon–

–I got THE phone call. The one I wanted before I left Houston, but since it didn’t happen, Lindsey delivered this:

Why, you might ask, is there a zipped up freezer bag containing Lindsey’s lens-free camera, battery charger, and download cable? I’m protecting it all from dust, of course, while Lindsey is at the beach for the Labor Day holiday. I don’t NEED the camera anymore, because the phone call was about this:


The D40: HE IS HOME! In perfect working order at no charge to me, because the warranty covered the broken flash. My happiness is indescribable. The only glitch is, now I’ve gotten used to Lindsey’s D80 and I have to relearn my camera. Also, I need Lindsey to come and help me reset stuff because I’m too lazy to dig out and read the manual (sorry, Rhonda).

Having watched Project Runway on Wednesday night, I spent much of my time on the road Thursday envisioning my design. As a result, when I got home, I was able to sew it immediately and quickly. It turned out exactly how I wanted it, and I got to shoot photos of it with my very own camera with decent light again!

Though my design will be posted on time, I don’t know if or when it will be judged. Blame freaking Hurricane Gustav. Two of our judges may have to evacuate. Two of our designers and another of our judges may be sharing bottled water and cooking all our food on a grill because we don’t have power. Fashion stops for no force of nature, but electricity does. So Runway Monday may be Tuesday, or Wednesday, or whenever our judges and producer can get it together. It’s HURRICANE FASHION!

I’d better keep Lindsey’s and my camera batteries fully charged so no matter what happens, we can document. I know after the fiasco that was Hurricane Rita in 2005, we won’t be evacuating.

Sending good, good thoughts to everyone on the Gulf Coast–and hopes that Gustav will decide that land is boring and will turn back to the sea to experience a quiet death. That would be the most joyness of all.

Promises

I want to do a long post. There are so many moments and images over the past week, that I could subject you to the experiences for the rest of the year. I also want to catch up on all my LJ and blog reading, because there’s a lot to read and comment on!

However, relaxation, not the computer, beckons. Yesterday my sister and I drove on back roads, through small towns, right into the Smokey Mountains. It was an almost biblical experience, as my mind kept repeating a line from a Psalm:

I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.

Mark made a comment to an earlier post of mine about Tara. And it’s true that like many Southerners, I draw strength from this land, most particularly these mountains. My sister showed me on the atlas the place nearby where she would like her ashes to be scattered after she dies. I understand why. Though the U.S. has more majestic mountain ranges, these are “our” mountains, and even when none of us lives here anymore, and there’s no house, this feels like home.

We are staying for a couple of days in a room that overlooks a stream. There’s even water tumbling over rocks just outside our balcony. And ducks going after Fruit Loops dropped by a child from the balcony of another inn across the creek:

Here’s one of the scenes from this past Saturday. We were given a chance to, as Fr. Jeff said, help my mother rest in peace by dropping the red dirt of Alabama onto the box that held her ashes. This moment, which I’m sure was captured by Lynne with Lindsey’s camera, evokes the full range of emotions my heart can experience.


My nephew, Josh, and his daughter, Amelia.

I have no doubt from whence my help cometh: the love of nature, family, and home–all enduring gifts from my parents.

I did warn you…

I feel like I’ve just come back from a long journey. These amazing people I had the privilege of watching grow from birth to adults–I get to see not only them for the first time in years, but their children, some of whom I’ve never seen. This has fed my spirit like nothing else in the world ever could, and there is so much more to come tomorrow!

A bit of my joy in photos.

behind a cut to save your monitor space

Using the psychology

Falling in love with the D80. Thinking this will make the D40 rush home in a jealous rage.

I will be on the road for a few days. You probably wouldn’t even be able to tell if I wouldn’t feel compelled to stop somewhere, shoot a photo, and scream, “LOOK! HILLS!”

Also, my accent will return, so be sure and read my posts with that in mind.

Oh. And another way you may be able to tell is that Tim will get crazy with the Glock if anyone tries to breach security at The Compound. You have been warned.

See you next from…somewhere else.

A most trusting and generous friend:

One who says, “Whatever, dude, it’s a camera. A friendship is worth a lot more,” when I express anxiety as she places in my hands her most beloved Nikon D80 for a week because my D40 is still at Nikon–and I’m about to see so many of the people I cherish all in one place–an event NOT to be trusted to a point-and-shoot Kodak with flash issues.

That friend is Lindsey, and if anything happens to her camera, I’m gonna need a job. And maybe a new address. 😉

The photographs are going to rock my world and give me something to treasure for the rest of my life. Thank you, Lindsey, a million times, thank you.