Everytime I pick up The True Adventures of John Steinbeck by Jackson J. Benson, I start daydreaming after a few paragraphs. This isn't because the book is boring. It's actaully really great and I like learning about Steinbeck's life and method. He destroyed everything he written unless it was published. He never wanted anyone to read the inperfections. If it wasn't good enough to be published, then it wasn't good enough at all. He reworked and reinvented his stories. We would spend years on certain novels and then wrote The Grapes of Wrath in a year. Before reading this biography of Steinbeck, I would have called him a genius, but he was just a man who wrote and never stopped writing because it was the process that was exciting and the stories never completed. So I start daydreaming about the process of writing in the middle of the paragraphs about Steinbeck's influential friends, theories and the progress of his life. My favorite of his friends is Ed Rickett. This is merely because he walked from Indianpolis to Georgia and when people asked him why, he responded he wanted to see the country. Everyone was suspicious of this so he started telling people it was to win a bet. Obviously, we have similiar interests. I wish I could write him a letter.
The funny thing is Steinbeck burned most of his work, which contradicts my last blog.
....
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
The burning of your written work.
Is there something worse than the burning of writing? There's crumpling of paper being thrown into a trashcan. There's the tearing of paper into pieces. There's the slipping of paper, untorn, into the recycling bin. That's all destruction. Maybe there's some frustration behind it all until it's resolved with those sounds. Then there's the infactuation with the burning of gifts from old lovers: mixtapes, stuffed animals or pictures. You need them to be gone, destroyed and never found. That's why they are burned. There's something hateful, destructive about burning anything.
And what if the gifts are letters someone has sent through the mail. They have dates. They are a history of something and you've carried them across state lines all the way to Texas. I don't want these letters destroyed. I don't want to throw them in the trash, but I don't want to carry them around with me anymore. Something needs to be done with them.
I thought I was going to write a book. Take the letters and homemade envelopes to Kinkos and photocopy them on the color printers. Put them inbetween the written pages of a book that was in the form of letters to someone else. That was the idea for almost 2 years. I wrote some and then stopped. I couldn't humble myself enough. I couldn't honestly put myself into the story to make it any good. My New Year's resolution is, "To be honest in your writing, even if you're afraid someone will get angry with you." (This is actually why I don't write so muchbecause I can't show it to anyone.)
The letters have just sat in a box, building up as more came in the mail. The other night when I couldn't sleep, I opened the box and took the letters out. I read each one. I hadn't read any of them since one would arrive. I'm not really the type to go back and look at things over and over, (Although I do replay conversations in my head. They are not tangible so I need to try to grasp them.) but this particular night I pulled the letters out of the box. The letters were spread out between 3 different addresses for me and 4 different return addresses, though one address was a lot fewer since I didn't want to write for a couple of months. That's right, I'm stubborn. My favorite were the first letters. They were the ones written months before anything happened like the one where she said we should sit closer together because she liked the way I smelled.
The only solution is to bury them. That way maybe someone will find them, dig them up, and carefully sort through them like they are old newspaper clippings or a hidden treasure. I want to drive out somewhere in Texas and bury this stack of letters I brought to down here with me. I want to tie them with a ribbon in chronlogical order and hide them under an Oak. Or I should find an attic. But there's also a story waiting to be written on the way to bury them, some significance to it all. I want to write that, but mostly I want to let go. (There, that's me being honest.)
And what if the gifts are letters someone has sent through the mail. They have dates. They are a history of something and you've carried them across state lines all the way to Texas. I don't want these letters destroyed. I don't want to throw them in the trash, but I don't want to carry them around with me anymore. Something needs to be done with them.
I thought I was going to write a book. Take the letters and homemade envelopes to Kinkos and photocopy them on the color printers. Put them inbetween the written pages of a book that was in the form of letters to someone else. That was the idea for almost 2 years. I wrote some and then stopped. I couldn't humble myself enough. I couldn't honestly put myself into the story to make it any good. My New Year's resolution is, "To be honest in your writing, even if you're afraid someone will get angry with you." (This is actually why I don't write so muchbecause I can't show it to anyone.)
The letters have just sat in a box, building up as more came in the mail. The other night when I couldn't sleep, I opened the box and took the letters out. I read each one. I hadn't read any of them since one would arrive. I'm not really the type to go back and look at things over and over, (Although I do replay conversations in my head. They are not tangible so I need to try to grasp them.) but this particular night I pulled the letters out of the box. The letters were spread out between 3 different addresses for me and 4 different return addresses, though one address was a lot fewer since I didn't want to write for a couple of months. That's right, I'm stubborn. My favorite were the first letters. They were the ones written months before anything happened like the one where she said we should sit closer together because she liked the way I smelled.
The only solution is to bury them. That way maybe someone will find them, dig them up, and carefully sort through them like they are old newspaper clippings or a hidden treasure. I want to drive out somewhere in Texas and bury this stack of letters I brought to down here with me. I want to tie them with a ribbon in chronlogical order and hide them under an Oak. Or I should find an attic. But there's also a story waiting to be written on the way to bury them, some significance to it all. I want to write that, but mostly I want to let go. (There, that's me being honest.)
Friday, December 12, 2008
Happy Birthday Charles!!!!


I found "Charles" in a drawing book in the MICA library about a year ago. He was the first embroidery project I did in more than 8 years. I don't know anything about the original drawing except that the artist's name is J. F. Raffaelli. I named him Charles. He currently lives in Minniapolis. I'm glad I had the people around me that reminded me I love embroidery.
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Today, I saw a bumper sticker that was the background of the Colorado license plate and it read, "Tourist." I remember a first girlfriend of mine being from Colorado and saying how a lot of Texans spend vacations in Colorado and how the residents of Colorado hate it. I guess that's the good thing (among many great things) about being from New Jersey. Nobody goes to Jersey to be a tourist.
I am hoping to get a letter tomorrow. I haven't got one all week. I want to hear Britt's response.
"You know some ghosts come everywhere with you yet you leave them unaddressed for years." -Adrienne Rich. I have some letters to bury. That will be the best thing to do with them and it is only appropiate that they be buried in Texas soil.
It's freezing out tonight. I was at the last Camp Camp ever. It was funny because it was a celebration of everything that they did and how grateful they all were for being able to be apart of it. I just sat back and watched. I've only seen a couple of them and not even all the way through. So it wasn't a triumph thing for me. I kept picturing if it was the Kitty Club calling it quits. That would be sad. I miss them. I hope I get to see all their grins in a couple of weeks. Less than 2 weeks. I need to call some people and see who's where and when. Hopefully, the Texans won't be in Texas when I'm in the Northeast.
I ran out of black thread today. This is a huge problem.
I'm so excited it's Sagiattarian time. It just makes me so so so happy inside.
I am hoping to get a letter tomorrow. I haven't got one all week. I want to hear Britt's response.
"You know some ghosts come everywhere with you yet you leave them unaddressed for years." -Adrienne Rich. I have some letters to bury. That will be the best thing to do with them and it is only appropiate that they be buried in Texas soil.
It's freezing out tonight. I was at the last Camp Camp ever. It was funny because it was a celebration of everything that they did and how grateful they all were for being able to be apart of it. I just sat back and watched. I've only seen a couple of them and not even all the way through. So it wasn't a triumph thing for me. I kept picturing if it was the Kitty Club calling it quits. That would be sad. I miss them. I hope I get to see all their grins in a couple of weeks. Less than 2 weeks. I need to call some people and see who's where and when. Hopefully, the Texans won't be in Texas when I'm in the Northeast.
I ran out of black thread today. This is a huge problem.
I'm so excited it's Sagiattarian time. It just makes me so so so happy inside.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
My kids are awesome and had their embroidery (art) show!!!!

My kids are awesome! They got really into teaching the guests how to embroider and I even got a forward from Wendell from another lady that praised the embroidery section of the WOW! I stood back and watched the kids and their artwork looked so so so great on the board. (That's what the picture is of.) I'm really thankful that I had this experience. I hope the kids don't forget it because I'm not going to forget these past couple months of hanging out with them and embroidering. I love how you can teach something to someone and it evolves and they make it their own.
Monday, December 8, 2008
This nice thing happened today.
I looked at one of Nate's bulletins today and it was one of those silly surveys. Then this happened...
Q: "Is there anyone you want with you right now?"
A: "Jess Pane would be nice."
And then my little heart melted all over the place.
Q: "Is there anyone you want with you right now?"
A: "Jess Pane would be nice."
And then my little heart melted all over the place.
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Monday, December 1, 2008
and the list continued...
stretching, bandanas, climbing Mt. Royal (in Montreal) in the rain, being humbled, naps on couches, gnomes, grandpa yelling at the television, a multi vitamin and a glass of scotch, not being able to stop laughing, being invited places, mandy picking me up from the airport, rice, hot sauce, fans on front porches, chasing waves, warehouses, lighted streets, homemade whistles, random car rides, apple picking, beet picking, pumpkin picking, when other people remember the same memories, rummy 500, dedication pages in books, railroad stakes, hats, red heads, flannel sheets, new jersey accents, the new jersey shore on christmas eve day, skeeball, fog, britt leaving her hat in my car and me accidently forgeting to return it, how it molded to my head, my quilt from Sears, britt repairing the holes in it in the car on the way to texas, shibori, saturday quilting class, learning how to make rope, story telling, american history, abe lincoln and the lincoln memorial, the portrait gallery in dc, notes you leave on the ground, fabric people lose, how robert sullivan gets obsessed with things and then writes about them, crosswords, getting to talk to leisha hailey, knit hats with pom-poms, hot showers in the winter, cold showers in the summer, lumber trucks, finding Foam Henge with Leah in Virginia, letterboxing, tacos, how fun alexei's brithday party was, being excited and talking too fast you slur over your words, stamp collections, the postal museum in dc, how the museums are free in dc, sijos, fitting everything in one bag, boggy creek farm, feeling good, having a crush, that it's the month of december and that's my favorite month...
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