books

Sampler Saturday: Special Edition

I know I promised horse portraits today, but I want to share these.

Elizabeth’s room hasn’t had a good cleaning in months…I think it was last spring sometime, pre-separation…and the mess was getting positively epic. So over the past week I’ve been going in there for a few minutes every day while she’s at school, just shoveling trash into a trash bag and toys into toy bins and so on, trying to find the floor.

I did eventually find the floor. I also found a few things that amused me.

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This is a pic that for whatever reason never made it into the book, but I love it! That’s Elizabeth in the front car, Buizel the Pokemon right behind her, Dragonite (her AdventureQuest character) next, Yoshi in the fourth car, then Thorn and Dart (both dragons).

Beneath the track is Prizabeth, Elizabeth’s Evil Twin, up to no good as usual.

Then we have this one…

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…which speaks for itself.

And then I found this, which just cracked me the heck up:

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Indeed.

Categories: Artwork, books, Comics, Dragons, Family, Humor, kids, Life, Sampler Saturday | Leave a comment

Jolly Jaguars and Fearless Ferrets

When I was 25, I met Steve. There was an instant mutual attraction, and we started going out together on the weekends. This gradually developed into a steady relationship, although we had practically nothing in common other than that everpresent magnetic pull.

When I was 26 Steve was offered a caretaking position on an ex-cattle ranch that had been bought by developers and subdivided into residential lots. He asked me to move in with him, and I happily agreed. This caused much uproar in both our families. Steve was six years younger than me and his father actually thought he was still a virgin until I, the Loose-Moral’d Strumpet, corrupted him.

My family predictably (but temporarily) condemned and excommunicated me for abandoning them and taking my income with me. This saddened me at the time, because I truly wished them all the best, but I had come to understand that you could hand my mother a million dollars and within a few months she’d be broke again and back in debt. Her “martyred victim” self-image absolutely defined her, and she sabotaged every opportunity for improving her lot that was ever offered to her. I could not see pouring the rest of my life into that gaping black hole of self-defeating futility.

Steve’s father continued to squawk pretty much nonstop about his heretofore unsoiled son Living In Sin, so when I was 27 and Steve was 21 we decided that maybe it was time to tie the knot.

I don’t want to give the impression that I married unwillingly. On the contrary, I thought we were wonderful together, a study in complementary opposites. And oh, the splendid dreams and plans we wove for our life together! It was going to be GREAT!

So we married, there at home beneath the cottonwood trees, and then there was a huge reception in town that seemingly half of Anza showed up for.

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But I’m getting ahead of my story…let’s back up a step.

After I met Steve and before I moved in with him, I met a woman who asked me if I wanted to collaborate with her on a childrens’ book. I don’t even recall how I met her or how the subject came up, but somehow we ended up working on this project together. It was an ABC book similar to Animalia, with a tongue-twister for each letter of the alphabet. The machine shop I’d been working in for the past four years was closing down, and I was eager to put that behind me and start my career as a Professional Artist.

The book was never finished…something came up in the woman’s home situation and she had to take care of it, and we fell out of touch. It probably wouldn’t have been published anyway; I think it was a bit TOO Animalia. The idea had Already Been Done, and better than we could have done it.

But pulling out those old illustrations a few days ago gave me a smile or two, and a few of them are worth sharing. For some reason they’re not scanning well at all, but you can get the gist, anyway. I particularly like “Jolly Jaguars Jog Jade Jungle, Jumping Jittery Jerboas,”

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and “Five Fearless Ferrets Falling Fast!”

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Some of the pictures contained little in-jokes, like the beetles referencing Raphael’s cherubs…

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…but this one?

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I got nothing. I can’t even remember which letter of the alphabet it’s supposed to be for.

With the book on permanent hiatus, I turned my creative efforts to other projects. For a while I was making a few bucks (actually a respectable number of bucks) painting portraits of other folks’ horses.

Those pics tomorrow!

Categories: Artwork, books, Family, Life, Love, Marriage, NaBloPoMo | 2 Comments

Love Is A Choice

I struck up a conversation with a woman at church last Sunday, and talk turned to the circumstances of my marriage and separation. I got about four sentences into it when she said that I absolutely needed to read a book called Love Is A Choice, that would throw the situation into a whole new clarity for me.

Naturally, no one likes to hear that they don’t already have a clear grasp of their own situation. I nodded and didn’t give her suggestion much thought. Except she KEPT bringing it up, there in church AND later on the phone when we were discussing a possible trip to the beach with our kids. So I told her I’d look for it at the library next time I was in Temec. And I did, and they had a copy, so I checked it out. And read it.

And holy crap.

This book is an honest-to-goodness MUST READ for anyone who endured a dysfunctional childhood and now finds himself or herself repeatedly dealing with unhealthy relationships in adulthood. A lot of it I had already figured out for myself, of course, but so much of this book was one blinding revelation after another.

I realized that I’ve spent my adult life in relationships that in some way mirrored my original childhood family dynamic, subconsciously convinced that if I just can manage to do everything “right” I can FIX IT this time and finally have it all turn out okay.

I realized that for my whole entire life, almost all the people who claimed to love me have essentially said to me, “You need to learn to be more forgiving and tolerant so that I can continue to treat you like shit without having to acknowledge your pain, because that’s the way things are supposed to be and the sooner you accept it the happier we’ll all be.” And on some level I believed every one of them, at least for a while.

I realized exactly why Steve has done the things he’s done, and why he’s unable to let go of his parents. And while it doesn’t change the fact that he’s a total douchebag, it evaporated all my feelings of anger and resentment toward him. Because seriously, the boy’s got a hard road ahead of him.

I realized that by some miracle, and by the grace of God, the fictional character that Steve invented and impersonated for me to fall in love with, combined with the cold reality of who he really is, was somehow exactly what I needed to draw me (slowly and painfully, but in a more-or-less straight line) out of my old codependent patterns and into a healthier way of seeing things. And when I had reached a sufficient level of sanity, I knew that the marriage wasn’t working and I left it behind. Not all at once, but as each new truth replaced an old lie it became easier and easier to let the whole mess go and move on. So again, as excruciatingly painful as it all was, and although it certainly wasn’t his intention, Steve really did me more good than harm in the long run. And I’m genuinely grateful for that.

These may all seem like little things, but for me just understanding them throws the world into a different light. It’s a strange feeling to see your experiences detailed in print as textbook examples of how a dysfunctional upbringing affects all of a person’s perceptions and choices.

The book is called “Love Is A Choice,” by Hemfelt, Minirth and Meir. If it sounds like something that might shed some light on your own experiences, do check it out. I promise you’ll be glad you did.

Categories: books, Christianity, Family, Friends, Life, Love, Marriage | 2 Comments

Choices

I loves me some Calvin and Hobbes. I bought the complete box set when it was released a few years ago to replace my incomplete collection of yearly anthologies; Elizabeth was seven at the time, and naturally wanted to investigate this ginormous box of big heavy tomes. I was a little reluctant to let her read them — Calvin isn’t exactly a stellar role model — but in the end I decided that we could work through whatever problems might come up. Elizabeth immediately glommed onto the misadventures of the naughty six-year-old and his wisdom-imparting stuffed tiger, and for weeks she was completely immersed in that world as she worked her way through all three volumes and then revisited her favorite parts over and over.

I’m still trying to decide whether or not I made the right decision. On one hand, the strip had a profound influence on her visual storytelling style. If Elizabeth ever makes her fortune as an animator or graphic artist she’ll have Bill Watterson to thank, no doubt about it. On the other hand, Calvin is SO unapologetically disobedient and self-absorbed, and Elizabeth wasn’t old enough to grasp that it’s the very unacceptability of his behavior that makes the strip so funny. She took his egocentric life-view to heart, and began getting into whole new kinds of trouble at school. And the stories she drew started to take on a rebellious tone. Eventually I put the C&H books away and forbade her to look at them anymore. She was, um, dismayed and resentful about that. A lot. I was the most horrible mother in the entire history of child abuse, to hear her tell it. But gradually her behavior and her attitude got back on track; deprived of Calvin’s subversive influence she eventually reset to being a basically agreeable and cooperative little person. Several months later she explained to me that she had seen the error of her ways, and that Calvin was a lousy role model, and that she would like to be able to read the books again just because they’re funny and this time she wouldn’t be led astray by Calvin’s naughty example.

She’d been doing very well at school, so I agreed to let her get the box set out again.

And within a few weeks history was repeating itself. Trouble at school, a difficult attitude at home, insurrection in her stories. Away went the books again.

But here’s the thing: I don’t like censorship. I never have. This goes back to my own childhood, when my mother used to try to control our very thoughts by insanely strict limiting of the information we received. She never EVER responded to a straight question with a straight answer. Her parenting mantra was “You don’t have to understand, you just have to obey.” Because of that, I stumbled into adulthood knowing precious little of anything useful about being a grownup. I had to UNlearn most of what she’d taught me before I could even begin to get along with my fellow humans in any kind of productive manner. My twenties were spent coming to terms with the profound disfunction of my upbringing; my thirties were spent rebuilding myself into someone I was actually happy being.

So, back to the issue of Elizabeth and Calvin. It rankled me that the only solution I’d been able to find was censorship of the book in question. Because let’s face it, kids are going to be exposed to that stuff their whole lives. Trying to shelter a child from subversive influences, rather than pointing them out and teaching the child to recognize them and understand why they’re ultimately self-destructive, is pointless and counterproductive and doesn’t do the child any favors in the long run.

So over the past year I’ve done a lot of talking to Elizabeth about choices and ethics and consequences and what makes a behavior good or bad and why. And last weekend I pulled out the Calvin and Hobbes books and we started reading them together from the beginning. Time will tell if this is going to cause more problems, but if it does I’m going to find some other way of solving them than hiding the books away again. I did notice that this time both kids were laughing at the sheer outrageousness of Calvin’s actions rather than admiring his audacity. About a quarter of the way through the first volume I handed it over to them and said, “Here you go, enjoy. If you start having trouble in school we’ll talk some more.”

So far so good, but that’s a secondary point. I want to teach my kids not just to rise above bad influences, but to face reality head-on instead of hiding the problematic bits and pretending they don’t exist. Sometimes love means giving a person room to make mistakes and then helping them to learn from the experience.

Happy Love Thursday, everyone. Here’s to learning from our mistakes and making better choices in the future.

Categories: books, Family, kids, Life, Love, Love Thursday | 4 Comments

Sampler Saturday: Where It All Began

When Elizabeth was six years old she discovered candy corn. And oh sweet mystery of life, how she loved those little nuggets of corn syrup and food coloring.

Not to eat, mind you. No, they became action figures: new characters in the rich tapestry of her inner world. She wasn’t writing books yet, but for months her drawings were populated with sentient candy corn kernals going about the business of collecting food. This is a Walking Candy Corn:

In her world they were industrious creatures much like ants, who spent all their time stashing food away for the winter, usually to the consternation of whoever they were stealing the food away from.

One day she decided to sit down and create her very first Actual Book. She began with the title: Spots And The Walking Candy Corn. (Spots was one of her Fisher Price toys, a little giraffe.)

Then she got so wrapped up in Spots’ tale of woe that she forgot to actually include any Walking Candy Corns in the story.

This one is by special request: the first complete book Elizabeth ever made, at age six.

It’s an I Can Read Book!

Spots is the tiny creature at the bottom of the page. Parental figures are always towering giants in Elizabeth’s drawings.

Love the wiggly reflection in the water. Click on any image for a larger view.

Yeah, I’m thinking Spots could maybe use some Prozak.

Pull it together, man!

But what’s this…

A carnival! Now we’re talking!

Not sure why there are vicious dinosaurs at the carnival…

This is an erupting volcano. Spots is just having the crappiest day ever.

I love this image. Spots and his enormous mother sleeping snugly in a giant bird nest. It’s so cozy. :^)

And there you have it — Elizabeth’s first book, fresh out of the Wayback Machine. Seems like forever ago that she started writing them, but I guess it’s only been four years.

It’s been a fun journey. I can’t wait to see what she’s writing in another four.

Categories: Artwork, books, Family, kids, Life, Sampler Saturday | 6 Comments

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