Gas hit $4.19 yesterday.  The rv is 29 years old.  We can’t park it at our house.  But we can’t think about any of this right now. Fact is, we are following a dream, and we are all in it together.  The kids are just as excited as we are.  Steve keeps saying, maybe we can go on the road full time.  Yep.  The old hippie dream.  Right here in the suburbs of Southern Nevada.  You can take me out of Sonoma County, but the hippie heart remains.  Which is why I had the idea to only use thrifted fabric for curtains and cushion covers in the rig.  And Steve and Timmy will install solar panels so we don’t have to use a gas-burning generator.

We are working on coming up with a name for our little rig.  I like ‘Little Green’ from the Joni Mitchell song of the same title.  The song ends with “have a happy ending” which can be our gospel reference painted on the back.  Little Green was the name Joni gave to the girl child she bore and gave up for adoption at age 19.  That brave act always haunted her, and she actually met her daughter not very many years ago. I love the lyrics:

…call her green and the winters cannot fade her, call her green for the children who have made her, little green, be a gypsy dancer.  Just a little green like the nights when the Northern lights perform, there’ll be crocuses to bring to school tomorrow…there’ll be icicles and birthday clothes, and sometimes there’ll be sorrow.

Life is like that, full of wonder (icicles), blessings (birthday clothes) and sometimes there is sorrow.

A week into planning for my dad’s recent triple by-pass surgery I developed an obsession.  There is nothing like the stress of a family member in a health crisis to get one to crystallize one’s ambitions.  We have always talked about wanting to travel as a family, to see America and the rest of the world, if possible.  Alas, rarely does the teacher’s salary afford such luxuries.  A small inheritance, however, has given our savings a nice shot of cash, and I began the quest to find the perfect motorhome that might allow us to get up and go much more easily than trying to save for a trip.  Facing my father’s mortality has made me join a gym, start a diet of sorts, and want to get on with our dreams of travel.  So, this morning I bought a motorhome.

Steve and I have, of course, discussed the idea of buying an old one in good shape for the past few weeks.  We looked at some new ones and some old ones, so we had a pretty good idea of what we wanted in terms of size and style.  I have been scouring craigslist Las Vegas, Los Angeles, San Diego and the Inland Empire, making alot of phone calls, asking alot of questions.  Most of the smaller ones only have two beds.  We need at least three, one for the kids to share and one for each of us, as I cannot sleep with my heat emanating husband in a bed smaller than king sized, and rv beds are small.  Most of the ones in our price range were either really beat up or missing an essential part, like a generator, fridge that works and/or airconditioner that works. 

I finally realized that I could also check Craigslist Chico, as with my sister living there, we could maybe get one there.  Yep.  Found a keeper.  1979 Dodge Vaquero with four beds(cute bunks for the kids), kitchy 70’s wallpaper and paneling and everything else in great working order.  The owner was hoping to find a family like us to buy it.  Plus he is a math teacher, so he gets the whole teacher-family-wanting-to-but-unable-to-afford-travel issue.  Sweet guy sent me maybe twenty pictures so we could get to know it from afar.  He drove it to my sister’s house this morning so she could drive it and check it out.  She loved it, wrote a check for us and will keep it at her house until we can come up and get it.  And for only $3,800.  A steal.  The owner says to call him anytime we ever have any questions or trouble with it.  Feels like a dream come true to me.  He wants to stay in touch, also, because his eleven year old son loves the rv and wants to hear about our trips and have us send pictures.  Fun!

So I went online to find some rv books we might need, realized that there are some well selling ones written as memoirs of rv trips and realized I wanted to keep a record of our life as rv owner/travelers.  Creativity with a motorhome will be a no brainer I’m thinking. My brain is fried now from little sleep taking care of my dad, but I wanted to start since we have made the purchase.  Not up to figuring out how to post photos right now, but one of these days I will.

Little Green

Little Green

The only thing I remember about art from growing up is those big pieces of manila paper we got to use at school sometimes. Only sometimes, though, not very often. I don’t ever remember making anything important or fantastic on that paper, but I loved the possibilities the blank sheet posed. I loved that we would soon get out our crayons and have some time to use them freely. And even though I also remember feeling inadequate and clumsy as an artist then, I remember the feeling of excitement I felt when I saw the paper out of its normal resting place in the hands of the teacher and ready to be distributed to the class. I think someone must have told me I wasn’t much good at drawing then because that is what I believed and I don’t recall anything I did from those years. But I still love that kind of paper and the promise of freedom it brought.

When I became a mother I promised myself that my kids would have paper and crayons and scissors and tape and markers and paints available always. Just in case they had the courage to try to create something. And they do have courage.

In college I took an art class. For one project I covered a large poster board with maps, then sort of cerulean blue washed over the whole thing, added some purple tissue paper collage and did some raised outlining with a bright yellow colored something or other. I really liked what I had done because it was creative for me, and I had used some of my favorite things: maps, yellow and collage technique, plus I had allowed myself to be completely free with it. My instructor didn’t like it, although I don’t remember why. It didn’t matter much to me because it pleased me, what I had done. But I think his dislike discouraged me.

Once cold winter day in Catalina I decided that I was finally going to just paint. I took some paper and watercolors down to the water and sat there in the cold and painted. It wasn’t very good, and I was freezing cold and worked for a long time, but didn’t really like what I had done, except for the subtle pinkish color that I was able to achieve in the white puffy clouds. But mostly it looked like a very wooden, amateur painting done by someone who did not know how to paint. Which is what I was, so I was not disheartened at all.

My best and most truly amazingly rendered artwork ever was a watercolor painting I had done one early morning in college (probably in the midst of finals, as these stressful times often led me to either sleep a lot or try to create something). I had received some homegrown pink roses from a man with whom I was obsessed at the time the night before. They were a sort of an apology from him, and represented to me the hope of romantic success and the ability to continue on with my obsession. Which brought me great joy and courage. Enough to attempt to paint what the roses, anyway, which was quite a lot. I had never even thought of painting roses before.

I remembered what I had been taught in a drawing course that I had taken only briefly about looking at the line, but not thinking about what the line is, just trying to draw the line as it appears. So I did that. I did not tell myself that I was going to draw or paint roses. I just began trying to copy the line of each petal and then I painted, again, not thinking about painting roses, but simply attempted to mimic the colors I saw. There was pink with subtle orange. I loved what I had done. Loved that I had done it, loved that I had been patient and thoughtful as I did it, loved the way it turned out.

Unfortunately obsessions can mess with one’s sense of propriety and at the sad but inevitable ending of our twisted relationship I not only chopped off all of my hair, but ripped this little painted memory to bits. Dang.

Creating art seems to me a way of being able to get at some of what lies within, to bring it out into the world without needing to explain. A means to display some hidden deep beauty that life’s hard knocks have rankled with, then locked away.

A painting or drawing or knit thing seems more subtle than language, my former first love. Writing seems so harsh to me now; to put the pain into words and onto page completely unappealing. I’ve got books full of the sad stories of my life. I want to burn them, to somehow make them inarticulate.

I wish to make art instead. Perhaps it will be more accurate a picture of me, the me who is still here, still hoping and dreaming, still breathing despite it all.

I think maybe I have finally grown tired of the tedious, ineffective verbal catharses of my life.

But I still have something more to prove, only this time I will use paint, color, texture. Maybe a few choice words, but mostly not. Mostly just beauty. And orange and yellow and red and green. And blue. And white. Probably not much black, though. I really don’t like black, except clothing. Finally figured that one out.

So this is why I started this blog.  To document my journey from talker to artist.  I hope.

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