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My island, your island

I have asked my American friend Kristin from Wanderlust, to write a guest post for me. I have had the pleasure of reading Kristin’s wonderful writing for a while now and it is time that I began to share. So without further ado I have great pleasure in introducing Kristin Brumm.

I admire Kim for many things, but chief among them is her unabating love for our environment. I will say upfront that I do not consider myself someone who steps all that lightly upon the earth. I recycle more than I throw away, I compost, I often eat organic, I campaign like hell against Republicans. But I also drive a minivan, because I have children and it’s practical. I don’t take public transportation or carpool. I rarely buy used. I am the face of the concerned, yet mildly apathetic citizen. Middle consumer. I also sometimes, under duress, pull into the McDonald’s drive-thru and order Happy Meals for my kids, even though I know they are devoid of any nutritional value. This doesn’t mean I love my children any less than other parents who have the fortitude to avoid such lazy temptations.

And so it is with our planet. I love our earth with such intensity that it sometimes hurts, and I especially love the Australian land – recklessly, passionately, inexplicably – which is why when Kim invited me to write a post for her, my mind tracked back 22 years and landed on this story.

When I first came to Australia I fell in love. Not with a person, but with the land. I’ve written about that on my blog, but that’s not what this post is about. I was young, traveling alone and on the cheap, and as happens in those situations I didn’t follow a set itinerary, but rather allowed fate and whimsy to chart my path. Which is how I found myself headed to the tropical coast after four weeks in the Northern Territory. At this point in my travels I had already been in the country several months, met a couple of traveling companions (an Aussie and another American, both men) and covered some 7,600 km, from Sydney to Brisbane to the Red Centre to Darwin and points east, all by car. Someone knew someone in Cairns and thus my traveling companions and I ended up at the home of a man and his 2 sons, crashed out in the spare room.

The man was a divorcee, probably in his 40’s, and his sons were maybe 8 and 10. They were a motley bunch, the father clearly out of his league trying to raise two kids on his own. The house was littered with fast food wrappers and had all the touches of a make-shift bachelor pad. Sparse, mismatched furniture, barren walls in the kids’ rooms, empty beer cans piled in the trash.

And the kids. Wild, unruly, angry as a bed of scorpions. Violent. And simply starved for feminine affection.

As the lone woman in the group, the kids were fascinated with me. I was there for perhaps three days and they never left me alone. They followed me everywhere, hung on my arms, showed me their toys, hit me when they got angry, often hit me hard. One of my companions would have to pull them off me and physically restrain them until they settled.

I had met their mother in Sydney. She had left their dad a couple years back and in doing so had left the boys too. I don’t know the reasons for any of it, it wasn’t my place to ask. She was an attractive woman and seemed much more cultured and sophisticated than the father, and I just couldn’t see the two of them together. I think I remember hearing that the boys were just too unruly for her, or that was a reason given anyway.

One day we took a boat out to Green Island. I went off for a walk and the boys followed and I was annoyed by this. After being harassed and shadowed and pummeled for three days running I simply wanted some space. It was a secluded path and I was taking in the beauty of the trees and the shrubs and the silence, what I could get of it anyway with the boys yammering loudly behind me.

And I remember this, so clearly. One of the boys, the older one, reached up and grabbed the branch of a small tree and snapped it off violently. Snapped it right off this beautiful tree like it was nothing. I was shocked. I remember feeling actual pain in that moment, as if he had ripped an arm off my body.

I wheeled around angrily, started to explain to him that this was wrong, that you didn’t just go destroying wild things willy nilly, but even as the words were escaping my mouth, I realized their futility. How they were like fragile seeds falling on the cracked and barren desert.

We stood there, facing off. Me, defender of trees, foreigner passing through his life, stirring up unwelcome emotions. Him, defiantly holding his stick, his nine-year-old heart shattered in a hundred places because he had already suffered the deepest blow imaginable. No, unimaginable. A mother’s love is a given, the one constant we should all be able to count on.

As I looked at him I felt an odd emotion which I’ve since come to know well, something that sits at the border of aversion and love. Perhaps it is merely compassion. I stood there, feeling utterly inadequate.

“Come on then,” I said, “Let’s get back to the beach.”

The next day we left Cairns and headed down the coast. On the way out the kids showered me with brief hugs and fisticuffs. I have no idea what became of them. I never saw them again. They would be around thirty now, perhaps with children of their own, perhaps with divorces of their own. Though in my mind they will be forever frozen in time, two children throwing themselves against the world, asking it to bleed for them, angry, bewildered, raw, bereft.

When I think about that branch being ripped from the tree I cringe a bit even now, so many years later. I still love the Australian land as much as ever and I still lack the words to explain, though as I’ve gotten older I’m less interested in explanations in general and more interested simply in rich experience.

It still makes me immensely sad that so often we can see but not mute the pain inside another person. That seems a flaw of the human condition.

Kristin writes at Wanderlust
You can find her on Twitter
Wanderlust is on Facebook


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Down by the River.

We go down to the river a lot “The Spouse” and I.

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Naked Blogging.

I have been meaning to post a photo of myself here for a while and I keep on forgetting. So what better time than now when I have been inspired by my lovely British friend Barbara to bear all. I have been so busy that I haven’t had a chance to visit anyone on line and when I did everyone was naked. YAY.

The idea originally came from Jodie Ansted at Mummy Mayhem.

My gorgeous American friend Kristin wrote that, if you believe that beauty comes from within and would like to support this movement, put up a post on Friday and show us your beautiful self, sans makeup.

It is Saturday here in Tasmania but better late than never.

I don’t wear makeup unless it is a special occasion and this photo is how I generally look every day. Except that in this photo I am remarkably clean. Normally I have clay on me somewhere.

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A lazy photographer.

I didn’t realize how lazy I had become in regards to my photography. Once I had adjusted the settings on my lumix I could just snap away merrily and take zillions of photos that I was reasonably happy with. The Nikon is a whole different ball game, it is tricky and complicated and my ratio of crap photos to decent is about a hundred to one. Luckily I have fluked a couple of decent shots that give me hope, that eventually I will learn how to use my tricky, tricky camera.

I am also learning how to use photoshop to edit my photos which is another tricky and complicated programme.I don’t like to edit my photos, it is a pain in the neck and a complete time thief. Most of the photos that I publish here have only had minimal editing or in the case of this lillium, not been edited at all

I know that all I really need to do is take the time to properly read the instruction book that came with the camera but time is something that is in short supply lately.

The mice have decided to do a little bit of interior decorating for me. The helpful little rodents decided that this neglected corner of my kitchen needed a bit of sparkle. So they broke into my secret stash of left over Easter Eggs and ate the chocolate. By way of apology they then nibbled the paper into mouse sized pieces and artistically filled a spider web with sparkly foil.

I have packed up the cups for Brenda’s bloggy birthday giveaway and I will post these off today. If you haven’t entered Brenda’s giveaway I think there is still time, if you’re quick.

Yesterday there was a lovely sunrise and as much as I am conscious of how busy my life has become. There is always time to take photos of the sky.

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Another Artist’s statement.

I have to write another Artist’s statement for a catalogue that some graphic design students are doing as a project. So my lovelies I am going to write it here and I would like your feedback. This particular artist’s statement is going to be in a catalogue with some photos of my  shells which are part of the Boganvillainy installation.

I am a ceramic artist, writer, photographer and dreamer. I live in rural Tasmania, my home is surrounded by tall eucalypts and fragrant silver wattles. Wallabies eat my grass and possums raid my garden. Wedge tailed eagles soar overhead and Tasmanian devils squabble in the gullies of a night time.

As I stand outside enjoying the autumn sunlight I hear distant voices which are quickly followed by the harsh roar of a chainsaw. The crashing fall of an ancient tree destroys the silence.

This is Tasmania and I am Tasmanian.

I watch as ancient forests are destroyed and turned into woodchips. I watch as the people that protest this destruction are vilified and their reputations attacked. I watch as the young people that venture into the forests to protest against this destruction are attacked and despised

I watch and I despair.

In order to control that despair, I make. I pour that emotional energy into the clay and see where my anguish leads me.

I am a ceramic artist and when my hands are filled with clay, I am able for a short time to forget my despair and shame, that I am a silent witness to the destruction of Tasmania’s spiritual heart.

The thought of ancient forests being turned into woodchips chills me to the core of my being. What madness is this, that we have become so anaesthetised in our lives that we squander so lightly our grandchildren’s legacy?

In this beautiful island state of Tasmania so many gifts of nature are taken for granted. Native animals lie dead on the side of the road, victims of our haste. Ancient forests are turned into paper, waterways are poisoned, beauty is destroyed. All victims of our greed.

If I allow myself to think too deeply about our poisoned waterways and smoking forests, I will be paralyzed with grief. As my tears mix with the clay and the forms come to life before me, the despair loosens its grip on my soul and I allow myself to hope

The shells that are featured here were made in direct response to the proposed  Gunns pulp mill. The shells are slip cast stoneware. Three shells are featured here, one pristine, one altered and one destroyed. We are attracted to beauty and once we hold that beauty in our hands we need to change that beauty to fit our own needs and ultimately we destroy that which first attracted us.


So that is what I have sent off.

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Dragon eggs, and an art swap.

Time is getting away from me. It is racing away at an alarmingly fast pace and it feels like there just aren’t enough hours in the day. I have been in touch with the trustees of the Chauncy Vale wildlife sanctuary and they are still very keen for me to make great piles of dragon eggs and leave them all about the place. I have asked a couple of other ceramic artists if they would like to display their work at Chauncy Vale next year and luckily for me they have agreed. Yay.

I have to write up a brief proposal before the committee meets later on this month, so that they have something on paper and then it is really time to get serious about making.

My initial idea was to slipcast the dragon eggs but I had a bit of trouble making the model. One clay model looked like a giant pod thing, another looked like a tic tac. I was finding it quite hard to get the shape that I wanted and the fact that it is absolute chaos in the studio at the moment wasn’t doing my head space any favours. I thought about casting a football and then modifying the mould to make it more egg like but it was just all too hard.

In the end I asked David for a condom and we filled that with plaster and then I gently shaped the wet plaster until I had an egg shape that I was happy with.

I am in two minds whether to leave the imperfections in the model or not. I am not sure. I think it adds character to the piece but whether I want fifty eggs with the identical marks is another matter totally.

Once I had overcome the initial hurdle of making a prototype egg everything started to fall into place. I dug out a bag of really gutsy, grogged clay and made two hand built eggs.

I made these by making two pinch pots and then joining them together and shaping them into an egg shape. I textured the eggs by rolling a rock over them and I have also pressed a piece of bracken fern into one egg as I am experimenting with trying to get a fossilized look. These two took about forty minutes each to make and I don’t think I will be able to make more than two or three at a time as my wrist was really aching afterwards. Now that I have made the first clay eggs the ideas are racing through my head and I feel like I have a bit of  forward momentum now.

On twitter yesterday I saw an interesting tweet talking about an Art Swap.So I clicked over for a bit of a look and the idea has captured my imagination. Here is the opening blurb on the web page.

Artists:

On Twitter, I am promoting an art swap as a way for artists to share with and collect from their peers.

As artists, we often appreciate other artists’ work, but do not actively collect.

This is a way for us to give to others and collect beautiful art at the same time.

This is a way to inspire others… to build our community worldwide… and encourage others to create.

I joined up immediately and here is the link to ART SWAP if any artists out there are interested.

So that is where I am at with the Dragon Eggs at the moment and as I was wandering around outside yesterday the ducks were following me hoping for a snack. This one was even smiling for the camera.

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Ehlers Danlos, fear, frustration and dislocations

Yesterday afternoon my daughter rang me, Veronica had dislocated the bone behind her knee and it was refusing to go back in. I was full of useless advice and it was a horrible but brief conversation. Veronica was in a lot of pain and I was unable to help her. There was one small consolation though and that was that Veronica was trapped on her chair in front of her computer.

I suppose if you are going to be in excruciating pain with a bone poking out the side of your leg and unable to move, there are worse places to be than at your desk in front of your computer. I told Vonnie to keep me up to date via twitter.

Here are some of  our tweets over a three hour dislocation.

@SleeplessNights will straightening your leg out make it pop back in?

@frogpondsrock Nope, will tear the tendons.

@SleeplessNights Bloody thing! While you are stuck there you could look up quince recipes for me.

@frogpondsrock lmao – I think not.

Relocated. Excruciating.

It wants to pop out again.

All the painkillers in the house wasn’t (isn’t) enough to deal with that. #ehlersdanlos

@SleeplessNights now strap the fucking thing

@SleeplessNights not that strapping it will help but it will make me feel better.

@frogpondsrock It’s braced with tube bandage, lots of it. Best stuff.

@SleeplessNights Good. Now please be careful, I still feel a bit sick for you.xox.

@frogpondsrock I am being very careful. Can’t bend the leg at all. Funny – I didn’t do anything to dislocate it, just bent the knee.

It is that last line written by Veronica that sums up all my fears and frustrations with Ehlers Danlos Syndrome. The fact that you don’t have to do anything at all to suddenly have a dislocation and be faced with excruciating pain is frustrating and terrifying at the same time.

My husband, son and daughter all have Ehlers Danlos but with varying degrees of symptoms.The Spouse  has only started to dislocate in the last few years and it is apparently quite common that dislocations will only start to present in middle age. David is in the middle of puberty and isn’t as bendy as his sister but to date he has dislocated his shoulder, elbow, fingers and his ankle subluxes. He can make a horrible clicky popping sound with his jaw and I worry that he will do it one time too many and bam out goes his jaw.

They all share the same symptoms of nausea, headaches, insomnia, low blood pressure, dizziness, achey joints, pain, stretchy fragile skin that tears easily, slow healing and they are also prone to infection. The Spouse and Veronica also have Livedo reticularis and Veronica and David have stretchmarks in strange places. They all have allergies, excema and asthma, poor circulation, weak eye muscles with a slight blue tinge to the whites of their eyes and I would trade them all in on new models if I didn’t love them quite so much.

Doctors in Tasmania know very little about Ehlers Danlos Syndrome and so it is very under diagnosed. Medical students only ever see the very extreme cases in medical text books and Doctors often fail to connect the dots. EDS has a lot of similarities with Lupus and EDS is commonly misdiagnosed as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or Fibromyalgia.

The Spouse has two sisters who are suitably sympathetic towards our diagnosis of EDS but completely refuse to believe that their children could have EDS. *sigh*  It is glaringly obvious to me that some of my nieces and nephews are definitely very EDSy and as much as I worry about them, I have to conserve my energy for my own children and grand children.

There are some very good bendy bloggers out there and I would recommend that you click over to Bendy Girl at Benefit Scrounging Scum or Achelois at The Tensile Times as well as my daughter Veronica at sleepless nights.

If you have any questions about EDS or if you think you have EDS leave a comment  and I will get back to you and help you as much as I can.

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Coming out in a small community.

When my children were small I dreaded going to the local primary school. I used to have to take deep breaths as I walked through the school gates, past the icy stares of the reebok squad and the condescending nods of the glitterati girls. It really felt like I was walking through a gauntlet of disdain and disapproval because I was the one who lived an alternate lifestyle.

When David saw me at school he would launch himself at me and I used to have to brace myself so that the force of his hug didn’t knock me over. Then together, we would walk out the school gates holding hands, swinging our arms and smiling to each other. Away from the horror that was a small town primary school full of prejudices.

We were that family. When everyone around us was building McMansions and driving the latest cars. We were building our house room by room from recycled materials. The fact that we had an outside toilet was a major talking point and my children were teased mercilessly by the children of relatives as well as the children of the school establishment. People that had never been to my home would tell stories in lurid detail of the wild drug orgies we participated in and the squalor in which we lived. The fact that we had few visitors and that alcohol was the only drug I used was quite beside the point.

At a time in Australia when people were encouraged to buy buy buy and credit was king. We stayed debt free and went without. The spouse was labelled a dole bludger because he was unable to work due to the pain of his Ehlers Danlos. We didn’t know it was EDS then we just thought he was broken and that his constant pain was due to a very serious motorcycle accident he had been involved in, in 1992 and then compounded by the injuries received when he was shot in a hunting accident in 1993. The label of dole bludger is a horrible one to carry though and living below the poverty line makes you appreciate the things you have.

If people were happy to make snap judgements based on the way I looked I was also more than happy to encourage their misunderstandings by dressing differently and not explaining myself or my motives.

Now that I am a bit more grown up I am ready to start to explain myself a bit. I look at the glitterati girls and they are still desperately holding onto their fragile crowns, their makeup is getting thicker as they try to hold back  the years and I find it hard to imagine that these women’s gossip and innuendo once made my life difficult.

I am ready to step out into the light of my small community and announce that here I am, I am an artist.

Members of the Greater Green Ponds branch of  Tasmanian Regional Arts are building up a collection of art and craft created in the Southern Midlands area. Their plan is to acquire works and lease them for display in public and private spaces through out the Southern Midlands.

I am going to ring them up today and offer to donate Boganvillainy to their collection.

I am a bit nervous, but it certainly isn’t as daunting as walking through those school gates were a few years ago.

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Hello my lovelies I am in need of your help. I will be sitting in the shop “Off Centre” every second Tuesday and I want to be able to access the internet from my laptop while I am there.

Yesterday was my first day in the shop and there is a lot of time when it is just me and the pots. It isn’t practical to take any work up with me to finish off up there and reading novels of a daytime makes me sleepy.

I bought a prepaid vodaphone usb stick thingy for my laptop and I installed that yesterday but oh my gosh what a pain in the butt it was. The internet connection kept on dropping out and when I did manage to connect it was incredibly, painfully, frustratingly slow. I would just get twitter to load to the point of signing in and then bam my connection would time out.

So how do you connect to the internetz when you are away from home? Who do you reckon I should talk to? Do you think that a mobile phone might be the way to go instead of using my laptop? Bearing in mind that I have to be frugal and that I can’t use a mobile phone here at home as we are in a Telstra black hole of doom, reception wise.

I want to be able to connect to twitter, my email, my blog and google reader. Now surely in the 21st century it should be simple.

I am off to the studio today to make the mould for the dragon eggs, I will try and remember to photograph the process so I can show you. But in the meantime Iam really really looking forward to hearing what you have to say about my connectivity problem. Cheers Kim

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For years I have had as my intro blurb thingy on various social networking sites, as well as in my about me page of my blog, a line that says I balance amazing cooking with indifferent housekeeping.I have been so busy lately that my indifferent housekeeping has fast descended into damn near non-existent and my cooking is only just barely covering my arse.

The Spouse is very fastidious, some might even say a touch OCD. Where as I am just a human bomb of  chaotic clutter. I am a collector of everything from rusty nails and interesting rocks, to bells and antique bottles. I cannot walk past a secondhand bookshop and I am in dire need of more shelves.

When I was contacted by Nuffnang last week to say that a company that produces cleaning products wanted to advertise on my blog I thought it was a hilariously, delicious irony. Of course I agreed as I am always hopeful that one day I will catch the cleaning bug and my house will look lovely and shiny.

I work in my kitchen at the moment and so when I should be practicing my domestic skills I am messing about with buckets of clay.

As I was writing this post this morning I was forced to actually notice the amount of dust that has accumulated on my bottle collection. The bottles are on a shelf behind the woodheater and are a bit tricky to get to but instead of cleaning the bottles I photographed them instead.

Then I noticed this spiderweb, it is on the left, near the plant. I have lots of spiderwebs in my house, the spiders catch the flies for me and so I leave them alone. I will have to remember to ask The Spouse not to remove it yet as he is forever destroying the spider’s homes, the minute my back is turned. I would like to see the spider catch at least one fly before all her hard work is ruined.

I have run out of space to store my moulds and so I had to put them somewhere where they wouldn’t get damaged. Plonked in the middle of the lounge room floor seemed a logical choice.  The coffee table is also covered with books, novels and half completed assignments but I will tidy that up later.

The Spouse was absolutely chuffed when Amy walked into the house the other day and saw my moulds in the middle of the room. She looked at me and very seriously asked me, “Nanny what’s this mess?”

So there you go my lovelies, If your husbands start to nag you about your messy houses just show them this post and you will be off the hook.

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