Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Mud season

Oh no--no matter how nice everyone has been--and people have been very very kind. Businesses and friends have gone out of their way for me in ways I dare not expect and can't but appreciate and cherish.  Still no matter how hard I try to accept it--and I do try very very hard--there is a part of me that is screaming inside--"NO!" "Let me wake up from this nightmare. This is really not happening to me. Tomorrow I can go back to my happy contented life at 2 Conway Street and create the quilts of my dreams."

OK--I know that is not going to happen. I know I should be so grateful. And indeed I am. After all, I lost my studio--my home away from home--but not my home. More importantly I did not lose any one near and dear to me. That would have been unimaginable. And I don't want to seem unthankful for all those who have been so kind to me. This is just a passing moment and I do appreciate and cherish your lovely and gracious actions--please do not get me wrong.

I did have my best quilts with me and within me. I can rebuild. Maybe even making better quilts or a better career. I have an absolutely wonderful husband who will do anything he can for me. I have great friends. A great community both in Shelburne Falls and in the general art/quilt community.

I know deep in my heart that I was/am very very lucky. Yet sometimes I cry. I scream with rage. I hope to wake up. I hope this is not wrong. I hope this is just normal.

Meanwhile I try to make quilts that contain the mud. Maybe it is too soon. Maybe I need to make quilts about rebirth. Dawn. Maybe a complex quilt will contain my feelings. Not sure. I will try a new quilt tomorrow--see if that tames the anguish inside me.

For now though this is my first quilt of the mud season. I hope you will bear with me as I try to sort through this random act of whatever.


What do you think? How do you cope? Is working through mud the answer or should I go to dawn? How do you use the rage against the night?

4 comments:

  1. Hi Ann. I just "met" you (on Twitter) because of the storm. I heard about you because of your loss. So there's one more consequence for you, for what it's worth. I love this quilt. I see the mud, I see the dawn. Both are there. I imagine that you will have to work through the mud, because you're an artist and that's what's there to work. I make art just that way -- collecting my fears and confusion and anguish as well as my hopes and joys and transforming them in the crucible of my studio. I'm sorry you lost your studio, because a studio contains all of the energy of that work. I wish you increasing ease in your new space and strength to move forward.
    your new friend, Annie from Northampton

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  2. Thank you so much Annie. You are absolutely right that one of the "positive" things of Irene is the many wonderful people that I have met as I sort through all this. I am sure that I will ease into the new space and ease into the new art. It is all so new to me and I had to get a new studio before I could begin to feel. Thanks again.

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  3. I see à glorious dawn at THE beach! No mud . À new beginning.
    I think it's interesting you used these long strips instead of THE blocks you usually do.

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  4. Hi Ann, I also have not met you (however I've had your blog listed in my blog list for a while) and I am hoping that your friends, new and old, will help you keep your sanity through this tough time. I think it's perfectly OK to scream. Scream until you are hoarse and then reach for some fabric. I also see the "dawn" in your new piece. Just let it out in whatever way you can and it will be just right for you. Wishing you blessings and a bright new beginning! Nancy Turbitt

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