7.27.2011

He's Leaving On A Jet Plane

Once again he's gone.  Once again I am proud of him and feel the litany of reasons why I love him and this life with him rushing into me all at once.  What an amazing privilege to love and see the world and its people.  And what a void there will be in our arms and by our sides until we're together again.

Fly away, Ma Luffin Mayun.  On a wing and prayer.  Lord, pilot him.
a last-minute snuggle
commissioning the interim man-of-the-house
I love the way his brave face betrays him with a tinge of melancholy
 

signing I-love-yous and blowing farewell kisses from the porch

7.25.2011

Literary Laryngitis

I think it's safe to say I'm in good company.  ACB is feeling it.  SBB is, too.  And it's not a topic I haven't hashed out with KakiBlack any less than a thousand times prompted by a hundred different circumstances.

This life is not perfect.  I am not perfect.  It is what it is.

I make it my goal to be authentic in my writing.  I figure it serves no one well for me to write about anything other than the life I genuinely live with the voice that is organically mine.  I long ago made peace with the sort of laws of imperfection that exist around us all; things are not always as we wish them to be; the hair, the clothes, the status, the days just don't always fit as comfortably as we'd like; there's that something we can't seem to quit, or that something we can't seem to begin.  However, the more days, months, years, and experiences I accumulate the less I want to be anything other than what I am in all the becoming.  I'm okay with the work in-progress.  And though I don't love everything about myself or my life or my way of doing things, I don't spend a lot of time trying to be something I am not or comparing myself to any one else.

Until the times when I do.

I want to be a writer.  Like, a lot.  I have loved to write and photograph and chronicle as long as I can remember.  (Ironically, for a woman that doesn't answer her phone I feel like I have a lot to say.)  In recent months I have dreamed of it and ached to do it, disappointed when there isn't time and so contented when there is.  I have brainstormed topics and thought some things through.  I have networked a little here and there in places where blogs can get a little bit more exposure (because, after all, writers want to be read in the end).  And I have read other people's blogs, particularly those of other "successful" women bloggers. 

It seemed like a good idea at the time.  Um, not so much.

What I have found myself doing is sinking underneath the sea of other writers out there.  Even now just thinking about it I can feel my chest tightening at the thought of the overwhelming number of female bloggers/writers who have carved out a niche or branded themselves into these forces to be reckoned with.  They write about everything: motherhood, home life, marriage, career, fashion, food, homesteading, crafting, spirituality, health.  You name it, it's being written about, and often better - or at minimum, more thoroughly - than I could write about it.  At least that is how it feels because that measuring stick I pride myself in not pulling out much is not only pulled out, but is measuring my writings against these - or worse, my life against theirs - and I'm carving out notches to mark all the places where I don't measure up.

I hate that feeling.  And all the measurements and comparisons seem to tighten like a vice grip on my throat, on my written voice in particular.  I ask questions of myself I've never asked before: could I write more like her, about more of that?  Should I twist this thing and contort it to try to make money out of it?  Do I continue to nurture a deep-rooted passion regardless of who notices or am I looking to peddle some gimmick that will stroke my own ego by raising the number of readers?  I hate these questions.  This is not who I am.

I believe I have a healthy and balanced confidence in my own writing, and in this life I live as a whole.  And to have allowed myself as much time as I have lately to make comparisons and draw misguided conclusions severely erodes that confidence and my morale.  There are some exceptional women writing some exceptional things out there, and some who aren't.  And there are some who paint a picture of an unattainable perfection, an I-have-it-all-together-at-all-times-ness, that I can't identify with but have wondered lately if I should fake.  Then, I remember.  There are a lot of writers, but there isn't another one with my voice . . . because my voice is only mine.  And your voice is only yours.  It's worth adding to the chorus. 

If you've forgotten or maybe even doubted, you're in good company. 

Use it.  Don't lose it.
       

7.18.2011

A Monday Meme

Today's meme - a photo prompt - from Three From Here & There is based on this quote: 
"By acknowledging and owning the limits of our own subjectivity, our soul remains open and limber, available for growth, development and discovery. But when objectivity is taken to the extreme, it erodes both our humanity and our humility." - Shane Hipps, Flickering Pixels 
Maybe it's that we just got back from a week of vacation within which we soaked up new experiences and ventured out into never-been-tried outings (in spite of being in the same spot we have vacationed every summer for a decade - thank you for that constancy, JoCanMax and Harry).  Maybe it's that we are still in the stage of parenting children who are themselves fresh-from-the-market and find so much wonder in so many things.  Maybe it is the change of scenery, of smells, of tastes, of locale that time away from the everyday faces and places brings.  Whatever the culprit, growth and development and discovery was ours.  Souls were opened a little further and limbered up into a more flexible posture.  Vacation can be an education in limiting our subjectivity; dropping our guard and pieces of our biases and spaces in our agendas.  And if we vacate well, perhaps we bring the awareness of our everyday subjectivity home with us and tweak our real world.

But then, too, there was that Thing in a week of vacation and relaxation that shows me where becoming objective to extremes erodes away at my humanity: "celeb-reality TV".  I like it, at least enough to get sucked into it in some measurable amount.  And I know we all know it's contrived and an alteration of reality rather than reality itself.  But maybe that's just it: something peddled as reality mixed, plated, and served up within a culture where one of the highest virtues is open-mindedness - staying completely objective - and where our favorite past time is peeking into the lives of the rich and famous.

Do I want to be me or a copy of a beautiful, sexy, and successful Kardashian?  Are Kim, Khloe, and Kourtney somehow helping set my moral compass?  Do we just keep giving Paris a free pass at engagements and breakups and a platform on which to display them?  Am I even still allowed to feel compassion and sadness for a girl who is 16 And Pregnant, knowing that she cannot know for possibly even decades to come the fullness of the difficulties her life will now hold not only because of mothering so young but also because of splashing it all over television and magazines?  Can I shake my head in disbelief at devastated lives on Celebrity Rehab; people who have gained the whole world but lost their souls?

There are limits to my subjectivity.  At least there better be.  Limber is definitely what I need to be.  But there had also better be limits to my objectivity.  Status or celebrity, fortune or fame - or the complete lack thereof - should not buy anyone a free pass, nor a position chained to stocks in the public square.  My subjectivity must make me love people extravagantly, lavishly, excessively - even celebrity-people.  But my objectivity must make me see through face value - even if the face is the spokesperson for Proactiv and has it's own on-call makeup artist - to the heart of a person.  My subjectivity and my objectivity must march out together waving a banner that God.loves.you.  All the "you"s, and He wants so much more for you.

I'm not preaching.  And I don't even know where I'm headed with all this.  Perhaps I'm just stretching, growing, limbering up.  And trying to remember humanity and humility in the exercise.

"Do we watch reality television for precious insight into the human condition? Please. We watch for those awkward scenes that make us feel a smidge better about our own little unfilmed lives." - Entertainment Weekly
*I love how differently people can read or see the same thing.  Check here and here for some other impressions of this week's quote.  So cool how different the perspectives are.

7.04.2011

Saturday's New Tradition

Saturday arrived once again, and once again we took our stroll to the Statham Farmer's Market.  This is our fourth week shopping at the market, and for the last two weeks Ma Luffin' Mayun's brother and his wife, Phillip and Becca (and the resident bun-in-the-oven we get to meet in late August) have come along for the venture.


Little Big Man decided to wrestle up
some cowboy boots and a ten-gallon hat
and mosey on down to the market.
Last week, everyone was encouraged to bring their pooches for the "Dog Days of Summer".  Though we opted to leave our two wiley coyotes at home, there were some cutie dogs.  If I remember correctly this one is named "Maggie".
This week there was a wonderful local saxophone quartet playing patriotic music.  Ma Luffin' Mayun is a UGA Redcoat alumnus, so he was all too thrilled to sit and listen.
Becca the patriot in front of the band stand.
Listening to the music

We've tried all kinds of new things throughout the weeks, including honey with the honeycomb.  Truly delicious.  It melts in your mouth like butter and after you've chewed it for a while, you just spit out the wax.
Trying the honeycomb
And here is our haul from last week and this week...
From top center going clockwise: bunch of sage,
two bags of lambsquarters (absolutely one of our new favorites), zucchini,
kale, pesto, crookneck squash, turnips, roma tomatoes, bowl of honeycomb,
bag of lettuce, and our cups of sweet tea
(from the market on 6/25/11)
Fourteen ears of corn
(from the market on 7/2/11)
From the top center going clockwise: kale, heirloom varieties of squash
including Peter Pan squash (shaped like flying saucers), sweet banana peppers,
all-natural lotion bar, handmade castille soap, all-natural skin cream,
honey, tomatoes
(from the market on 7/2/11)

Along with all the veggies we are picking up each week, sticking to our goal of only eating local produce from June through September, I love coming across products like these: handmade soaps, lotions, and creams made with ingredients that are natural and that I can use for myself and the kids (especially Little Big Man with his eczema).  This particular soap made by the Bartons of Sweet Tea is purely olive oil without any added perfumes which is perfect for his skin.  They also made the lotion bar that is absolute divinity.  The skin cream in the jar is made from olive oil, bees wax, water, tea tree oil, and vitamin E by the folks at Blue Sky Honey.  I have used it as facial moisturizer the last two days and love it.

I can't say enough about the market and our growing affection for our community as a result.  It is a blessing each week to see familiar faces, to learn the names that go along with them, and to happen upon old friends.

Here are some more shots from our last two weeks at the market...





My first batch of fresh pickles made from our
farmers market harvest
Ma Luffin' Mayun's BLT made with farmers market goodies
Here is a list, certainly not complete, of some of our favorite vendors.  We are proud to be their regular customers...
Lazy B Farm
Blue Sky Honey
Back In Time Farm
Sweet Tea
Bear Creek Farm
JessAnne Heirloom
Double Bridges Farm