Life

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

It’s My Blogaversary!

Ramblings is one year old today!

Some highlights…

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What a difference a year makes.

And…apparently that’s all I have to say about that.

PS. Happy Love Thursday!

Categories: Animals, Artwork, Family, kids, Life, Love, Love Thursday, NaBloPoMo, Road trip, Spelling Bee, trail rides | Tags: | 4 Comments

Wordless Wednesday: Pyracantha

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Categories: Gardening, Life, NaBloPoMo, Wordless Wednesday | Tags: | 5 Comments

A Menagerie Of Beasties

I’d been living in Anza for about two years when my friend Dani wrote and asked me if I’d do some illustrations of creatures for the rpg gaming system she was putting together.

This is where the “coloring book” style I’d developed came in handy, because I could send her copies of pen-and-ink sketches until we’d hammered out exactly what a particular beast was supposed to look like…

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…and then do the same with color copies (from Kinkos; a color copier in every home was still a distant dream back then) until we reached a final product:

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That project kept us busy until Dani discovered the sweet addiction of BBSing (computer Bulletin Board Systems, for the youngsters in the audience: basically it was the social networking forerunner of the World Wide Web). She moved to Memphis, and I saved up my pennies for a year and flew out to visit her there, where I was quickly assimilated into the BBS collective as well. When I returned home she sent me one of her old computers so that I could keep up with the groups, and it was like a drug to me. I lived for the discussions and debates in those forums. My little 2400-baud modem connected me to people I could have actual conversations with (albeit slow ones; I would log on in the evenings and 30 to 45 minutes later I would have a complete download of everyone’s latest contributions to the discussion forums), and it was pure heaven.

You know, relatively speaking.

Categories: Animals, Artwork, Friends, Life | 4 Comments

New Days, Old Truths

“The money changers have fled from their high seats in the temple of our civilization. We may now restore that temple to the ancient truths. The measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we apply social values more noble than mere monetary profit. Happiness lies not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort. The joy and moral stimulation of work no longer must be forgotten in the mad chase of evanescent profits. These dark days will be worth all they cost us if they teach us that our true destiny is not to be ministered unto but to minister to ourselves and to our fellow men. Recognition of the falsity of material wealth as the standard of success goes hand in hand with the abandonment of the false belief that public office and high political position are to be valued only by the standards of pride of place and personal profit; and there must be an end to a conduct in banking and in business which too often has given to a sacred trust the likeness of callous and selfish wrongdoing. Small wonder that confidence languishes, for it thrives only on honesty, on honor, on the sacredness of obligations, on faithful protection, on unselfish performance; without them it cannot live.”

— Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 1933

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