Monday, March 21, 2016

Nature's Symphony


Nature’s Symphony

it is again that time
when the last of the
ice on the shores of
Lake Ontario show

in a perfect ‘V’
the Canadian geese fly
north homeward
and return to their
soft muskrat mounds

it is spring’s safe haven
a welcome respite from
winter’s chilling grasp
a hibernator’s release

to stand freely in the
healing warmth of
April’s soothing breeze
dressing for comfort

another new song from

                nature’s symphony

**

Just a teeny tiny poem to welcome Spring and to celebrate World Poetry Day! I am working on something new but this one suits the day and the seasonal shift. I say this, tongue in cheek, as a mighty nor'easter blasts us. I do like irony but I like Spring more.

In propinquity,
Nic

Friday, March 18, 2016

Collage Art - Ernest Hemingway


Collage number 2 is complete! I had a tattered copy of Ernest Hemingway’s ‘A Moveable Feast’, bought it for a mere dollar once upon a time, its pages were loose and falling out. While framing Sylvia, I came up with the bright idea for this one.

Initially the book’s spine and the back cover photo of Hem were not part of the action plan but when I was dismantling the pages it ripped in such a way that was fitting to piece in. Creative fate if you will.

This one was just as enjoyable and relaxing as the first except I substituted cold coffee for a warm London Porter.

The morning after I was finished I had a bit of a Fred Flintstone thumb from the glue. I bought new stuff so when I was done my hands looked like I had worked on a small engine. Even the wee throb in my right hitchhiker is worth the time spent making something else.

For those of you not familiar with Hemingway, ‘A Moveable Feast’ is a memoir chronicling his days in 1920s Paris as a struggling, young expatriate writer; written toward the end of his life and published posthumously in 1964. It is a tremendous account and made its most important quote one of the focal points of the piece.

I don’t know what’s next. Something will inspire though, of that much I’m sure.

In propinquity,

Nic

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Collage Art – Sylvia Plath



This is how I spent last Saturday night. I pulled out all of my art supplies: glue, double-sided tape, scissors, etc, etc and I made this. I had two copies of the same book so I got the bright idea to utilize one of them and created a collage of Sylvia Plath’s collected works.

I sat contented with a coffee and a good playlist being precise and peaceful. I finally found a frame for her last night so it will be on display at home somewhere soon.

I was pleased with myself, to have created something, to have put my idle time to good use. I already have my stash poised to start another!

I can’t wait to get to work!

In propinquity,

Nic

If You’re Looking For a Fat Girl



If You’re Looking For a Fat Girl

if you’re looking
for a FAT girl
in a plain black
cardigan jumper w/
rhinestone buttons
you will not find her

yet she is everywhere

her imperfect nature
her thudding toddle
her full figured face
her weighty self-loathing
her invisible incidence

beclouds
her luminous whole

to the bone
in the bread
on the moon

if you’re looking
for a FAT girl
ten feet towering
brazen, wise-mouthed
& deeply aggrieved
you will not find her

yet she is everywhere else

her blemished build
her imposing disposition
her long fingers & wide palms
her invented composure
her inescapable immediacy

surpresses
her incandescent spirit

if you’re looking
for a FAT girl

look at me
look at her

look at us 

**

Here’s a truth: loving yourself is the greatest revolution. For so long, a large portion (pun intended) of my female life, I have measured my worth in pounds and inches, logged calories, fat grams, weighed portions, chewed slower, ate less on smaller plates, drank more water, buckling under the burden to be thinner. AND if I was thinner, I’d be prettier, possibly popular, people would buy me new clothes if I just lost some weight etc etc etc. The pressure, the pressure, the pressure! I was always the fat kid. That kid is still in there somewhere, serving her portly little mouth the last cookie from the jar to soothe hurt feelings, sate loneliness, and quench a craving because she doesn’t know any better, because, frankly, she just can’t help herself, she doesn’t understand. I do, but she still doesn’t.

I learned a valuable lesson a few years ago:  beauty is NOT a size. Confidence is your best accessory, your supreme power. You could be a size 2 or 22, confidence is everything. Short, tall, round, lean, young, old muscular, plain … it matters not, confidence is king. What matters is who you are, not what you look like. Let’s face it, girls did not just decide one day to hate their thighs or stomach, legs or double-chins: it is learned behaviour, taught by the societal mouthpieces demanding an impossible standard for women and for men. My standard of beauty was severely skewed as a young girl: magazines, movies, music videos: all of the things I saw in every medium were not what I saw in the mirror, far from it. It wasn’t until I was a grown woman that I realized, my entire life; I’ve been beating myself up for my undesired body shape, its size.  Eating was/is emotional for me. I was a lonely child, surrounded by adults who didn’t think anything of feeding me to keep me happy or quiet or use food as a substitute for quality time spent. Food was my friend I just didn’t understand why my clothes hated me so much. That is a fucking hurtle, one I still strive to overcome. Believe me.

I recognize that after doing a great deal of work on myself: changing my perspective, my attitude, eating better and exercising regularly – that it honestly didn’t matter how big or small I was. I was pretty okay; in fact I was fabulous! Miraculous things began to happen to my spirit when put a positive focus on myself and paid less attention to what others looked like. Instead of berating myself for my round shoulders or my stomach, I concentrated on the things I liked about my body, that no one is perfect and most importantly: I didn’t need any kind of validation from others to feel good about myself and how imperative it is to surround yourself with supportive, like-minded and optimistic individuals. It is a complete overhaul of your perception of self and the world. It’s a revelation to love you.

I admit, I lost my footing and felt those old familiar pangs of shame directed at my body and choices, notably when I recently had to disrobe for a mammogram. Food still is a crutch for me. Sadness is a slower-downer for me. I’ve had a rough go and I am just starting again to kick my own ass back into the positives. Having said that, I still think I am awesome. I just need more apples, longer walks and deeper breaths.

If you’re reading this, you are beautiful. Just as you are. Embrace it.

In propinquity,
Nic