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When I bought my Pineapple Brocade fabric from Heather Bailey a couple months ago, I received a 10% off any order coupon for her store. It expired at the end of December, so I just couldn’t resist, I had to buy some more fabric. Her fabrics are just so pretty! So my order came in today and I’m so excited! 🙂

Hello Roses – Olive

Rose Bouquet – Blue

Sway – Olive

Tiled Primrose – Canary

Paisley – Lime

You can check out her fabric collections on her website, here.

I also ordered the Henrietta Turtle mini pattern and the Clementine turtle kit to make myself one of those darling little pincushions.

Hopefully Clementine will look this this when I’m done:

All the other ones are cute too! I almost got Edna:

Here is Alice:

And Gladys:

And Eloise:

She doesn’t have kits for them, but Effie and Ollie the Elephants are cute too. You can buy her mini pattern for them, here.

Or if you like fruit better, she has a mini pattern and kits for apples, pears, tomatoes, and strawberries. She calls them, “fresh-picked pincushions.”

This is starting to sound like an ad for Heather Bailey. Sorry! I just like her stuff! It inspires me to want to sew all kinds of things and make my own fabrics! (maybe one day) 🙂

Finals. Finals. Finals.

This week is such a strange week. All my classes have ended, so I don’t have to go to class anymore, but I still have to study. I’m really stressed because of all the studying and work that I have left to do, but at the same time I’m relieved because I’m so close to being 100% finished with each of my classes. I love the feeling after completing everything for a class and knowing that you are completely done with it forever. It is such a weight off your shoulders that you can feel immediately. Its a little sad too, though, for the classes you enjoyed.

Anyway, Calculus final tomorrow, Children’s Literature essay due and pick up Creative Writing Portfolio on Wednesday, Access test Thursday, work on Drawing Final on Friday, Children’s Literature final and extra credit fairy tale paper due Saturday, work on Drawing Final more on Sunday, turn in Drawing Final on Monday….and then……CALIFORNIA on Tuesday!!!! 🙂

I’m getting excited!! But anyway, I’m just rambling and trying to find reasons not to have to study for my Calculus Exam. However, considering it is already almost midnight and my final starts at 8 a.m. tomorrow, I’d better get to work. 🙂

When I was about eleven or so I went through this “wedding planner phase.” I was convinced that wedding planning was my destiny. My little sisters, Kelsey and Jill, and I would have play weddings in our backyard all the time. Our love of weddings probably stemmed at least partially from the fact that our dad was an ordained minister as a hobby and went all over marrying people on the weekends. We had been dragged to a greater amount of the two hundred or so weddings that he had officiated. They were all very different.

He did have some pretty and traditional ones, but he also had people that got married in our living room, backyard, back deck, front yard, and even our kitchen (well it is more like a great room, if that makes it sound any better). He even had a wedding or two where he met the couple on the side of the road just inside the county of their marriage license, and performed the ceremony there. Some weddings were outside. Some were inside. Some brides wore white, some wore black and some wore jeans.

Regardless, we had always been fascinated by weddings and we loved them. So therefore, one day we got the brilliant idea to marry our dogs to each other. I think I suggested it first. Once we got to thinking about it, we were rather appalled at the fact that we hadn’t thought of it before. I mean Chloe and Chase had already had several litters of puppies together. Why hadn’t they been married? We just didn’t see it as very moral to be allowing so many illegitimate puppies to be born at our house. The only thing left to do was to plan the wedding.

Kelsey and I snuck into Mom’s sewing room to find some white fabric. Once we found some we snatched up Chloe and tied it around her body. I’m sure Mom wouldn’t have been happy about us taking her fabric, but I’m pretty sure we returned it once we were done, and I don’t think she even noticed it was gone. Chloe and Chase were only Yorkies, so it wasn’t like it was a ton of fabric anyway.

Jill rounded up Chase and combed his hair. His fur was black already, so we didn’t see any need in dressing him up too. We told him that after ten or so litters of puppies together, it was about time he agreed to marry Chloe.

We went outside in the front yard and found a cute spot with some big stones and flower bushes that would make a cute backdrop for the wedding. Then we took our positions. Kelsey acted out Chloe. Jill acted out Chase. I, of course, officiated the ceremony. Kelsey walked Chloe down the aisle to meet Chase, Jill and I at the end. I said the vows and we argued for several minutes on what was correct dog talk for “I do.” We assumed Chloe and Chase had no objections.

We were right down to the last bit where all that was left was for the groom to say “I do,” and Jill, of course, let go of Chase, and after being held there without his will for so long already, he was off as fast as he could go to chase down some random squirrel or bird in the yard.

What were we to do now? We held a vote. We decided that regardless of the fact that the groom had run away, since he couldn’t actually speak anyway, the ceremony could proceed without Chase actually being in attendance. Jill was given the honorary spot of Chase for the remainder of the wedding.

Jill said “I do” for him, in a mixture of words and barking. I had planned to say, “You may now kiss the bride” after this moment of the ceremony, but we were only left with one dog. Kelsey voted to make Jill kiss the remaining dog anyway, since she had agreed to fulfill Chase’s duties; however I vetoed the idea, for Jill’s sake. The wedding ended, with all of us reassured that the next batch of puppies would be born to married parents.


So if you haven’t noticed already, my creative writing portfolio is due tomorrow. Well actually, now that it is after midnight, it is due today, technically speaking. Anyhow, that means that I’m working late into the night trying to revise and edit all the pieces for my portfolio. My last two posts were also revisions to pieces that I did for my creative writing class. This one is one that I posted earlier in the year and was supposed to be a short short story. Well, I have a problem with making things short. I just have too much to say. So anyway, it didn’t fit the confines of a short short, which doesn’t bother me any. It wasn’t fiction anyway. So here is the revised version. Let me know if there are any farther revisions that need to be done. 🙂

Getting Ready

Sometimes it feels like our bathroom is the center of the universe.

I have less than thirty minutes to do Jill’s hair because Kelsey just informed me that she needs me to take her to town to take pictures of her and her date and she has to be there in thirty minutes. Not to mention that we live way out in the country and it is a good fifteen minute drive to town. Therefore, I really only have less than fifteen minutes to have Jill’s hair done. Why did I spend all afternoon cooking lunch? I should have started on this sooner.

I grab a chair from the dining room table and drag it into the bathroom, ordering Jill to promptly sit down. She sits in the chair and not two seconds later, I hear a creak and the whole chair starts leaning to the side. I look down and see that one of the legs is almost completely unscrewed and her weight on the other legs is about to break the chair completely. Just then, my older sister, Blair, walks through the bathroom, sees the dilemma and says she has it under control. She flips the chair over and tries to screw the leg back in. However, it just doesn’t seem to go in any farther. After wasting a good five or so minutes messing with the chair leg, I leave it to Blair to fix and I go get another chair.

I have to make Jill sit on three pillows to make her tall enough that I won’t get hairspray all over the back of the chair. I’ve got the curling iron plugged in. I’ve got a whole pack of bobby pins and a brand new can of hairspray, thanks to Drew who had to run to the store and bring them to me this morning because Jill forgot to get them yesterday when she was in town. As soon as the curling iron is hot, I’m ready to roll.

I’m definitely not a hairdresser. I usually don’t even do my own hair on a daily basis, and I’ve never even tried to do fancy hair before. Wait, I take that back. I tried to do my own hair for my senior homecoming when I was in high school. I guess it turned out okay, but not like anything that I had hoped for. Jill had wanted me to make her an appointment with the lady that cuts my hair, but I figured that this close to homecoming she would already be booked solid. To keep from causing any grief, and since I was already coming home from school for the weekend to see the girls all dressed up, I volunteered to do it myself. What are older sisters for anyway?

I have a plan and I hope that it works. It makes sense in my head; let’s just hope that it transfers to hair correctly. Paint and canvas is more of my comfortable medium. I grab a huge clip from the counter that I had Jill get from Mom earlier and I clip all of her hair to the top of her head except for the very bottom layer. I start to curl her hair in medium sized ringlet curls. Two down, only like forty left to go.

I get into a routine. Small section of hair, twist around the curling iron, hold for a second, slowly release, grab the curl and hold it in my hand, then drench it in hairspray. I have to be careful to spray each curl individually, instead of her whole head because I don’t want to end up with all of the curls sticking to each other. Not yet at least.

I hear Mom walking down the stairs that are right outside the bathroom door.

“Jiiiiillll…I need you to try this dress on right now! I need to make sure that it is going to fit correctly before I sew the zipper in,” she yells as she is walking and finishes her sentence right as she turns into the bathroom door.

“Mom, you’ll have to wait. Can’t you see we’re a little busy right now?”

“Well you better hurry up because if I don’t get this dress done, she’ll be going to the dance naked,” she says as she spins around and heads back up the stairs.

I roll my eyes. She always waits until the last minute to do these things. She volunteers to make dresses for us, and she is an amazing seamstress, but every single time she waits until like two days before the event to even start it and then is super stressed out right up until it needs to be worn, stressing everyone else out as well.

“You are stiillll doing her hair! I have to be in town in like five minutes!” Kelsey screams as she walks by the bathroom and sees me.

A minute later she returns with an arm full of make-up to apply to Jill’s face while Jill is sitting there. Doing her hair and make-up both at the same time sounds like a disastrous plan to me, but I don’t say anything because I don’t want to hear Kelsey rant about it.

As I’m hair spraying curl fourteen, Drew walks through the bathroom.

“Geeze…there is a huge hole in the ozone layer above here now,” he says jokingly after getting a sniff of all the hairspray fumes. “Aren’t you glad I upgraded and bought TRESemmé, instead of the cheap White Rain?”

I told him to just get hairspray; it wasn’t for my hair so I didn’t really care what kind. Jill isn’t picky either.  Now that I’m standing in a cloud of it, I am thankful that it at least is scented and smells kind-of like flowers, or something like that. Kelsey of course is complaining about it, since she has to smell it while she is doing Jill’s make-up. But really, when isn’t she complaining? I did accidentally spray a little of it on her arm and so now she is whining about her arm hairs being stuck together.

I can hear Mom yelling something about Jill’s shoes not matching her dress. She says that she has spent hours working on this dress putting layer after layer of cerulean blue satin and tulle together and spent all night hand-beading the top and there is no way she is going to let Jill wear gray suede pumps with it. Dad yells behind her that they better match because she is wearing them because they cost him ninety dollars. I can hear their voices getting closer. Mom and Dad stomp down the stairs and into the bathroom, still arguing. Our bathroom is pretty big, but I don’t know if it is big enough for all this drama. I’m only on curl twenty-five.

Kelsey is yelling at me because the curling iron cord keeps almost knocking her make-up off the bathroom counter every time I start a new curl. There really isn’t anything I can do. I tell her to move her make-up elsewhere. She doesn’t do it. Luckily, I never actually knock it off.

The next time I look down, I see that Kelsey has conveniently perched herself on Jill’s lap for the duration of her make-up doing. Jill grimaces from the added weight and drama. Kelsey says her feet are cold from standing on the hard tile floor and that Jill better not complain because she is taking the time out of her own getting ready to do her make-up. I ask Kelsey if she thinks that wearing four inch heels all night is going to be any more comfortable than the tile floor. She just rolls her eyes.

I think that Jill might be a little overwhelmed by this point. For Kelsey this is all a daily occurrence. She ever leaves the house without her make-up on, hair done, clothes perfect, and her nails freshly painted to coordinate with her outfit. Jill, however, is much more relaxed and generally puts on the first thing she sees. Over the last year, since she is in high school now, she has started to pay a little more attention to her appearance, but she definitely doesn’t go to all this trouble on a daily basis. I don’t think that for her first homecoming dance, she expected me to be doing her hair in the bathroom with Kelsey sitting on her lap doing her make-up while Mom finishes sewing her dress together in the other room. Thank goodness I’m almost done with these curls.

I don’t think that any of my homecomings were ever quite this dramatic. I was the organized one, so I generally had everything taken care of beforehand. I do however remember my freshman homecoming. Mom was ironing my dress right before I was getting ready to put it on, and she had the iron too hot and melted part of the satin strap. I definitely was freaking out about it. So I do give Jill credit for staying calm throughout her whole getting ready process, despite everything going on.

Whew, the curls are finally all done! Now it is time for the up-do. This is the part that I’m not so sure about. I pull all her hair back except for a couple curls in the front and put it in a low ponytail on the back of her head. I take each curl individually from the ponytail and put it up to her head and pin the curl down with a bobby pin so that eventually, they will all cover up the ponytail holder. So far it seems to be working. This part is going much faster than the curling, but still not fast enough for Kelsey.

Kelsey is done with the make-up so she runs off to go put on her dress. I know I only have a few minutes before she will be back to yell at me some more about it being time to go and that she is going to be late.

“Awww….Jilli! You look so pretty! Cakie, will you do my hair after you are done with Jilli’s?” Evie, my niece, asks as she walks in and sees Jill’s hair and make-up.

“I’d love to Evie, but I don’t know if I’ll have time today. Maybe for church tomorrow,” I tell her.

Blair comes in and asks Jill what her jewelry looks like. There is a long silence. Apparently, she forgot to buy any. I tell her that I think I have the earrings that I wore for my senior homecoming somewhere. Blair says that she can wear her three tiered diamond necklace. Blair puts it on her, but the clasp doesn’t clasp all the way and it falls to the ground. I look at her. I think we are both thinking the same thing. Jill is relatively clumsy and good at forgetting about things or losing them. We decide she doesn’t need a necklace. I tell Blair the earrings are in my suitcase in my jewelry bag and she goes to look for them.

Crap, I’m almost done and I run out of bobby pins. How did I manage to already stick sixty bobby pins in her head? I only have the two front curls left to pin back. I yell for someone to get some. The only person that can hear me is Drew. He is sitting in the floor in the family room playing with the baby and Evie. He doesn’t know where any bobby pins are. Where is Blair when I need her?

I rummage around in the bathroom drawers. I find four. Luckily I get those in her hair and get the last coats of hairspray piled on before Kelsey comes back downstairs. Mom waltzes in right then and seeing that I’m done, grabs Jill and whisks her off to try her dress on. I’m pretty pleased with how my masterpiece turned out. Not too shabby. Maybe hairdressing is my calling. Well, maybe I shouldn’t go that far.

I unplug the curling iron and run to the other room to get my camera, since I’m always the designated photographer for every occasion. I grab the camera and barely make it back down the stairs before I run into Kelsey.

“Ohhhh no you don’t. We don’t have time for pictures here!” she screams. “I’ve got to be in town NOW!”

“Oh relax. You have time for at least a couple pictures.” I tell her. “Plus I’m sure the background is prettier here anyway, so don’t even get your panties in a wad.”

Now she is just trying to be difficult. She knows she wants pretty pictures, so she follows me outside onto the patio and we both yell at Jill to hurry up and get out there too. Eventually Jill joins us, her dress hot off the sewing machine, and they smile and pose. I notice that Jill is wearing the gray shoes and my earrings. I get several pictures, Dad gets a few more with his camera, and Blair a few more with hers until Kelsey has had enough. She is almost thirty minutes late by now, so I guess I don’t blame her for yelling this time. Although, she should be used to it, my family is never on time anywhere we go. I don’t know how I got volunteered to do all this, but regardless, we get in the car and I’m off to the next adventure.


“You don’t know how you met me, you don’t know why, you can’t turn around and say goodbye…” The words of the Uncle Kracker song float through my car from the radio much like the breeze coming in through my open windows. The song came out when I was in about fifth grade, so it usually isn’t on the radio, but every time I do hear it, especially on a spring day like this, it immediately takes me back to Michelle, and riding the bus home from grade school.

My little sisters, Kelsey and Jill, and I and Michelle were each sitting in our own ugly green, vinyl seat of the bus, two of us on each side of the aisle, making a little square with our seats. It was a sunny, spring day and the windows were down. The wind filled the bus as we bumped along the back country roads. Jo, the bus driver, had the radio on and that song was playing. It was Michelle’s favorite. Jill liked it too. Kelsey and I freaked out.

Our mom only let us listen to Christian music and country music growing up. She called everything else, “devil’s music.” She never really said why, but us being that young took it as truth, no questions asked. You didn’t back talk when mom said something. When we heard that Michelle liked this song, clearly “devil’s music,” we were offended and laid the blame upon her for causing Jill to like it as well. She might as well have been asking Jill to renounce her Christian faith right then and there. Kelsey and I were appalled. Michelle’s parents obviously hadn’t informed her about “devil’s music.” We took it upon ourselves to tell her of her wrongdoing. I don’t think that our speech had any effect on her. We wondered if she had any morals at all.

The song itself takes me back to that moment, but mostly it just makes me think of Michelle and remember the strange presence that she had in my life. We had just met her not that long before that bus scene, during winter break that year.

Actually, she was in our yard when we met her. This is strange because we’ve always lived way out in the country on over 200 acres of land that has been in my family since my great-great-great grandpa got out of the Civil War. We’ve never really had any neighbors.

It was a snowy, winter day and I was trying to find the perfect sledding spot in my yard. I hiked up the hill on our side yard to try out its sledding potential. All went well until I got to the bottom of the hill and my sled landed very abruptly up the side of the trunk of an evergreen tree and I landed smack on the wet, snowy ground. Not the most graceful ending. I got up to look around and make sure Kelsey and Jill hadn’t come back out and seen my landing.

I saw no sign of the girls, but I did see something. I started to freak out. There was a girl standing at top of the hill, behind where I had started sledding. I was pretty sure from where I was standing that she couldn’t see me. She was outside a little house that sits on the top of the hill that my dad calls the Mr. Potts’ house. My family owns it, and when my dad was a kid, my grandpa rented it out to a man named Mr. Potts. However, there had never been anyone living there as far as I could remember. I had never actually considered it “living material” judging from the outside look of the house.

I wasn’t sure why the girl would have been there unless she was living there now, although I didn’t see anyone else up there but her. I immediately ran inside to tell the girls. My dad overheard me talking and confirmed that he was renting out the house. He said that the man living there had a girlfriend and maybe she had a daughter. The girls and I were excited. A neighbor! Someone that could come over and play without having to call or have our parents pick them up! We just had to meet her.

She happened to be in the same grade as me. After that day in the snow, she came down the hill to our house and we all played together and we became pretty good friends with her. She slid down the frozen creek in our backyard and swung over the creek on the tarzan vine with us. In the mornings, she would walk from her driveway down to ours and we would all huddle together to keep warm while we waited for the school bus. We were always climbing trees together, playing in the yard, and making forts in the woods.

Most of the time, we got along just fine. We enjoyed having someone else to play with, but sometimes it got to be too much. She would come over almost every single day and we got tired of having to entertain her and share our stuff with her, especially in the summertime. It was just too hot to be outside. On these hot days, the girls and I just wanted to sit inside in the air-conditioning and watch TV. However, we had a pool and Michelle didn’t really have anything at all to do at her house, so it seemed like she was always knocking on our door ready to swim. Mom didn’t want her inside, so when she came over, we were forced to go outside and play with her. This was especially unfortunate because at the time I was going through a phase where I wouldn’t swim because I was convinced the chlorine would ruin my hair.  Luckily, there were three of us, so if I didn’t want to swim that day, I could usually talk Kelsey or Jill into swimming with her.

I remember one day, none of us wanted to play with her because she said she had ringworm. My mom got mad at us for not being nice and so she took Michelle into the backyard and taught her how to make these little things to hang in your house and make it smell good out of lavender she clipped out of the garden and threaded ribbon through. Michelle sat in the backyard making them and we felt bad and so we went outside and made them too.

I hadn’t ever been in the Mr. Potts’ house before she lived there, and we definitely weren’t allowed to go there while she was living there. I’m not sure what her mom or her mom’s boyfriend did for a living, but he had long, black hair and they both smoked and I’m sure they drank and the house looked like it was about to fall apart.

Kelsey and I snuck up there with her one day. The outside of the house was covered with ugly brown shingles that were falling off. They were made of some strange thin material that looked like it wouldn’t keep the house very warm. The inside of the house wasn’t much better than the outside. It was messy and mainly just really small. I don’t know when it was built, but it made me feel like I was stepping back in time, except for their stuff everywhere. The ceiling was really short and looked like it might cave in. They didn’t seem to have any nice things. I remember feeling very out of place. We didn’t stay very long. Mom never found out that we went up there.

Even though my family has land, we aren’t rich and we don’t have some old source of family money or anything. Our house isn’t some super nice mansion. It is the same farmhouse that my great-grandparents built themselves and my grandpa was raised in. It started out relatively small and was built before indoor plumbing existed. It has been added onto over the years, mostly by my parents to accommodate them and my three sisters, my brother and me.  It is relatively large now, but it needs renovation. I have nothing to complain about though compared to where Michelle lived. She didn’t seem to mind though and never said anything about her family being different from mine.

She lived there for over a year, maybe even closer to two years. Eventually her mom and the boyfriend broke up and so Michelle and her mom moved somewhere else. She never came back over to play. I saw her at school sometimes, but we weren’t ever in the same classes. I remember she got in a fight with some girl in middle school and so her mom kicked her out of the house that they were living in then. She moved in with her dad. I didn’t really see her much after that.

The last time I saw her was a couple years ago, at the end of the summer before I started college. Kelsey, Jill and I were at the county fair. It was in the evening and we were riding rides and walking around. We had just gotten lemon shake-ups and we were passing one of the game booths they had. I think it was one of those ones where you try to test your strength by hitting the platform at the bottom with a big hammer and seeing how far up the meter the little marker moved. I looked up and there she was. She wasn’t riding rides, she was working them.

I was scared to walk up to her because I wasn’t quite sure what to say. It had been so long since our days of being childhood friends. That part of our childhood seemed to be the only thing we had in common. We had grown up and become very different people, I could already tell. Her wild and curly ash blonde hair was ratty and had blue streaks in it. She had on baggy pants and looked pretty rough. I couldn’t just walk by and act like I hadn’t seen her though.

I smiled and walked up and asked her excitedly what all she had been up to. Her voice was different, not at all like it used to be. She sounded very manly; rough to match her appearance. Like her voice had been hardened. I don’t think life had been very easy for her. She said she had been good. She had been working with the carnival company for over a year then and had been loving it so far. She said she was getting to travel and see the world. She told me that I knew her; she just couldn’t stay in one place. She said she was getting ready to head to Miami with some guy to get a job selling novelties.

I told her that sounded exciting. The way she said it, she really did make it sound a whole lot better than I’m sure it was. She said it almost as if she was trying to impress me by it or maybe she was just trying to convince herself of how great it was. I remember thinking about how scary I thought it would be.

I wasn’t really sure what else to say. I wanted to ask her how she had gotten involved in the carnival business or if she ever thought back on those days playing in our yard with us. Before I had the chance to say anything else, she asked me how I had been. I just said “good.” I didn’t really know what to tell her about my life. I didn’t want to sound rude. The biggest things that had happened in the last year, the things that you would usually tell someone when they ask, like the fact that I had graduated from high school, as senior class president and in the top ten percent of my class and had gotten a full-ride scholarship to a southern ivy-league equivalent university and was getting ready to move to New Orleans and have all my expenses paid for me while I went to school and figured out what I wanted to do, didn’t really fit in the scheme of this conversation.

It made me sad to think of how close we really were for that little while and then how she had just slowly faded from my life and I hadn’t even realized when she’d dropped out of school and out of my life completely. I knew she hadn’t graduated with our class, because as class president, it was my job to read off the names for people to come up to the front to receive their diplomas and I knew I hadn’t read hers. Judging by the time frame of her carnie excursions, she couldn’t have graduated from high school at all.

The song ends and for a moment I’m brought back to my car and back to the present. However, I can’t get that image from the fair and our conversation out of my mind. I was raised in a family with the belief in the American dream. That all people can succeed and do what they want and be happy and everything will be perfect as long as they work hard. Why is it that Michelle and I are two girls, the same age, from the same place, with lives that crossed paths for one quick moment in our childhood and yet I have so many opportunities that she will never have? What makes us so different? The family we were born into, the amount of hard work we put into things, education? Is it hard work or is it social standing that really gets you somewhere?

I guess there really isn’t one easy answer. There definitely isn’t an answer that I will ever truly understand. However, I am happy that we were part of each other’s lives, even if just for a moment. I do wonder if she thinks back and remembers me in the same way that I remember her. I wonder if I had as big of an impact on her life as she had on mine.

In my creative writing class we studied poetry a month or so ago. I wrote this poem for my class and posted it on here. I remember thinking at the time that it felt so unfinished that I was weary to “publish” it on my blog. Everything just feels so permanent once it’s on here. We had to do revisions for our final portfolio and I knew that this poem was just begging to become something completely different. The revision is done and I’m pleased with what it has become. I feel much less weary to post it because I feel like it deserves to be permanent now. 🙂

But anyway, I like the idea behind this poem. The fact that you can start out with this blank piece of paper that has a million possibilities and can become anything. However, in the end, memories can never really leave the moment they were created in. Therefore, the poem ends with “No words.” I also like that the middle of the poem has so many references to water, the enemy of paper. I like that juxtaposition. My favorite parts are stanzas 5, 6, & 7.  🙂

Ripples

White scrap paper.
Black ink.
Memorializing
letters, words and phrases.

Road rushes beneath us
into a smooth
river of gravel.
Continuing for as far as we can see.

The bridge runs
directly over the water.
So close,
yet never touching banks.

Faint horizontal line
far in the distance.
Does the dark evening sky
ever lean down and touch the cool water?

We row out
to where the stars are.
Fluid motions
bobbing in sync.

I hold my hand out
over the water,
slowly drawing your picture
and watching it ripple away.

Some things
aren’t meant to last
longer than
just a moment.

Not smooth.
No longer white.
Only shiny black smudges.
No words.



Pink Blossoms and Spring Meadow II

I really like this painting! I’m thinking about commissioning the artist, Patty Baker, to paint an original one for me. You can check out her website, here. I really love her landscapes! She also sells work on Etsy and you can buy commissioned paintings from her there as well. Here are a few of her other works:

So my dad sends me little cards about once a week or so here at school. They are so random, but just another way that he can tell me he loves me every week. Sometimes he will tell me all about everything that has been going on at home, like what sport Kelsey is trying out for this week to keep from having to run in athletics or what Papaw is up to or how many guns he’s sold lately. Sometimes they just say “hey” and sometimes they have quotes or words of wisdom inside. I’ve even gotten a used Thank You card before from someone that thanked him for marrying them (he is an ordained minister as a hobby) and he marked out what they wrote and then wrote a note to me underneath that and sent it because he ran out of the other cards he had. I’ve had the same similar situation with a re-used Christmas card I received last August. He started out last year with this whole set of Indian themed cards that I think he had gotten in the mail for free for donating five dollars to a Native American Indian reservation. He ran out of those and then he bought a pack of cards with a watercolor painting of a boat on them and now I’m getting ones with three gerber daisies on them.  He even gave one to my grandpa last week, so I got one from Papaw the other day. It is a sweet gesture and I look forward to seeing what he will say next. Anyway, the card I got today had two quotes inside. This one really inspired me:

“Happiness doesn’t depend on who you are or what you have. It depends solely on what you think.”
-Dale Carnegie

It reminded me to put a smile on my face and cheer up my mood because my happiness all depends on how I think of it. 🙂

Here are Trang’s contact cards! I posted the digital file on here right after I made them, but here is a photo of them printed. I love seeing things the things I create in their final form, it is so rewarding! Let me know if you or someone you know needs business cards or contact cards!

Okay, so I know I keep going on and on about the “icing on the cake” and I don’t want to overuse the saying, but I was thinking the other day about my favorite things in life. So I started writing down the first things that came to my head. I typed them all up and was going to post them the other day, but then I got busy working on other stuff and didn’t have time. I went back to them today and was reading through all the things I wrote, and I don’t know if it is just because I’ve been studying poetry in my creative writing class, but all the words seemed to all connect somehow. I went back through them and linked them all together and I thought it was pretty cool how they all flowed into one big thought. As I was paying attention to the things I wrote, it struck me how lucky I was to have had everything in my life happen in the way it has. Everything that God has given me has meant so much in my life. My family, my hometown, my backyard, my childhood, the traveling I’ve done, the places I’ve been, all the memories I’ve made. They all connect to form the person that I am today, and I thank God for every experience that I’ve been through. As Thanksgiving approaches, I would remind everyone to think about your own lives and all the things that God has given you and everything you are thankful for. It wouldn’t even be a bad idea to write them down.

I know my list isn’t complete, because it will change as I change and grow as I grow, but for right now, here it is:

Icing on the Cake. The best things in life. Writing my own life story, everyday. Writing. Creative non-fiction. Fiction. Poetry. Thoughts. Ramblings. Notes. Lists. Books. Looking at books. The covers of books. Having books on my bookshelf. Flipping through the pages of a book. Picture books. Books where you create your own pictures. Reading books. The pleasure of seeing a book you’ve read and knowing all the secrets it holds inside. Literature. Magazines. Especially home decorating magazines. Decorating. Decorations. Living in a pretty space. Planning the layout of my future house. Planning things. Soft, fluffy pillows. Matelasses. Quilts. Curvy lamps. Curtains. The things that make a house a home. Cute. Cozy. Clean. Organizing. Cleaning. The refreshed and renewed feeling you feel after everything is clean and straightened and organized. Things are tidy and swept and all the laundry is done. It is as if you are cleaning yourself out along with your house. Home. The Art of Homemaking. Fabric. Sewing. Embroidering. Making things. Creating things. Craft rooms. Ribbons. Buttons. Glass. Glass bottles. Paperweights. Ornate frames. Whimsical. Colorful. Color. Art. Paint. Painting. Art Supplies. Designing things. Graphic Design. Drawing. Doodling. Pictures. Looking at pictures. Taking pictures. Capturing memories. Memories. Remembering. People in my past. People in my future. Life. Living. Not being scared to fall in love or take a chance. Happiness. Weddings. Dresses. Dress up. Swirling around when you have a big, fluffy skirt on. Elegance. Classy things. Little black dresses. Pearls. Diamonds. Crystal doorknobs. Chandeliers. Lace. Simplicity. Home. My hometown. The view of the world from right beside my house. Rolling hills. Womble Mountain. Wallace Family Homestead. My backyard. The creek in my backyard. Water. Water under my bare feet. Moss under my bare feet. Being barefoot. Being barefoot outside. Being outside. Trees. The smell of Sweet Olive Trees. Flowers. Growing flowers. Growing vegetables. Gardening. Farms. Barns. Little bridges over tiny creeks. Dirt paths through the woods. Making forts in the woods.  Being outside. Being in the country. Living in the country. Driving on country roads. Driving towards The Round Candy Store with my windows down listening to country music, thanking God for all the wonderful things he created. Beauty. Real Beauty. God. My family. Siblings. Sisters. Hanging out in the kitchen with my family. Cooking. Baking. Cookbooks. Kitchens. Everything-but-the-kitchen-sink cookies. Hot chocolate. Sorbet. Italian ice. Lemonade. Fruit tart. Vegetables. Soup. Potato Soup. Mashed potatoes. Home-style country cooking. Picnics. New Orleans. Old buildings. Bricks. Antiques. History. The world. Traveling. The Ocean. Lighthouses. Running along the beach. Dancing in the rain. Sunshine. Sunrises. Sunsets. Colors of the sky. Nighttime. Flashlight tag. Stargazing. Living where you can actually see the stars. Spring. Summer. Fall. Winter. Leaves falling. Sledding. Boating. Fishing. Porches. Hammocks. Relaxing. Peace. Hugs. Cuddly Hugs. Hugs from my nieces. Seeing the world through the eyes of a child, where everything is good and nothing is bad.