Transformation

Cycling  

“Ask him about the orange one,” I say to my brother Mark, elbowing him in the ribs. “Tell him your wife is interested in it.

“Yeah, right,” my brother says, shrugging off my request.

“No, really,” I try again, tugging at his sleeve and pulling him back in the direction of the tangerine bicycle in the center of the bike shop.

We are there because I am considering a bike, although I haven’t ridden one since I was in high school.

The store clerk comes over and asks if he can help us and I grab my brother again. “Tell him we all are interested in cycling,” I whisper, but he doesn’t seem to hear me.

“My sister is interested in a bike,” he says.

The clerk’s head swivels in my direction, reminding me of Linda Blair in The Exorcist. Okay, maybe it wasn’t that dramatic, but suddenly all eyes are on me and I don’t want them there.

“We – all three of us – are interested in riding the Stowe Bike Trail,” I mumble, although my brother and sister-in-law have expressed no such interest.

The thing is, I don’t want the eyes on me – the questioning eyes, wondering why I, who am obviously not athletic, would even consider getting on a bicycle. At least that’s what I feel the clerk is thinking. He may not be, he’s probably not. But that’s how I feel and so, I inwardly plea for my brother to step forward and take some heat off of me. Because he can’t read my mind, he doesn’t and thus, I try to muster some inner courage and bluff my way through the conversation with the store clerk.

I promise to come back and to take the bike he recommends for a trail run, all the time wondering if I can even get on a bike and whether or not the clerk will be watching if I do, a fear that could just keep me from fulfilling my promise. I might just be able to do it, but not if he’s watching. Not if anyone’s watching.

I leave the shop dissatisfied, knowing nothing about the tangerine bike and very little about the bike the clerk recommended, having nervously cut him off from asking any more questions by offering to return at a later date.

“I wonder what type of bike the orange one was,” I say, getting into the car. And, I really do wonder. I wanted to ask, but I didn’t want to look stupid. I didn’t want the store clerk to know that I was interested. I didn’t want to expose myself in that way.

“Aww, Kimbi. you really wanted me to ask? I would have if I’d known you really wanted me to,” my brother says.

Um, yeah, that was what all the whispering and nudging were about, I think, but I let him off the hook. “It’s okay. You couldn’t have known. It’s just I can’t ask. I don’t want the attention. All I can think is the guy is wondering why the fat girl wants a bicycle,” I say. And, that’s exactly the problem. Sure, I am considering the bike to try and get in shape and yes, I’ve lost some weight and yes, I’ve been walking and probably the store clerk if he knew all this would be supportive, but it doesn’t change the way I feel and it doesn’t help me rise to the occasion. Although I should happily be surveying the bikes and asking questions, I feel like running away and maybe I can’t do this bike thing after all, because who am I to think I can be buying a bicycle?

This isn’t a new thought. It’s a familiar one and its not always exercise or body image related, but it’s always about feeling vulnerable. I just don’t like that feeling and when it kicks in so does that deer caught in the headlights phenomenon. I freeze or flee or lie – declaring that all three of us are interested in cycling the bike trail, for example. Anything to not feel so exposed, so defenseless, so ready to be mocked. I know how ridiculous it is, how this feeling can hinder me, prevent me from experiencing some potentially cool experiences, but it’s a feeling that’s hard to kick and regardless of whether it has to do with riding a bike, getting a physical or entering a room of strangers alone, I have to try really hard to remember that I’m probably the only one picturing that chubby little girl on the playground. And, again, I emphasize that it isn’t really about body image, although that’s the form it takes, because we all have an inner self that’s naked and vulnerable. For some that vulnerable self takes the form of a short bald guy or a tall, clumsy girl, a braces wearing nerd or a chubby kid. Rarely, do we see that inner self as beautiful. She’s awkward or ugly, fat and found wanting. And, so I try tricks to keep myself from being seen in the full light of day while at the same time working on finding a way to do just that. Because in spite of it all, we all want to be seen and accepted. Everyone’s in search of the Superman to her Clark Kent and I may have found the key to finding mine.

I stumbled upon it earlier this year when I found myself “interviewing” my gynecologist during an annual exam. Somehow when I’m doing my job, the glasses come off, the cape comes on and my inner chubby Clark Kent becomes Super Reporter. So, today, after I finished my interviews for my Obamacare article, I googled some bike shops, called them up and explained that I was a freelancer interested both in gathering facts for a potential story and in getting a bike for myself. The story? How does a complete novice, who isn’t exactly fit, go about choosing a bike? The questions they asked me were the same as they would have been if I were just an ordinary customer – what is your experience, what are your goals, where do you expect to ride – but the consequences were different. I didn’t run, I didn’t freeze, I didn’t lie and while I still felt nervous, I didn’t feel fat or naked. There was no hidden self. I had revealed her at the get go. I tricked myself into believing I was wearing my job as an armor, protection from my feelings of inadequacy. The trick was on me  -- Clark Kent and Superman are one and the same, the glasses fool no one. And, that little chubby girl on the playground? She’s a writer who may soon own a bike.

Early Morning

Car It's an early morning tomorrow. I have to get up and make the almost three hour trek to Cambridge, NY for the Open House art show/reading at Bedlam Farm. I'm selling some of my photo collages  and note cards and reading one of the pieces I wrote for this blog. I loaded the car earlier today as I had a busy night. The basket contains my boxed and loose note cards and the bags my matted and framed collages.

Car 3

Scene from Yesterday

SONY DSC I was going to post tonight about spending the day with my grandmother on her 92nd birthday, but tonight when I was uploading photos to the computer I came across this picture I took yesterday that I hardly remembered snapping. I was trying to capture the crow in the tree. I decided to play with it a little in Photoshop and this is the result.

 

Appreciation

Photo2 I received a big order from a local pug rescue for some of my pug note cards last week. Today, I packaged them in their boxes and shipped them out. It was a day of getting caught up on a lot of things. The rain came down in torrential sheets for awhile this afternoon, but it was a good excuse to stay inside and pay bills, send out invoices, file articles, and organize my calendar. I realized that the AVA Juried Art Show closes at the end of July when I'll be away on vacation, so I decided to call them and ask if they could hold my art until August. When I gave my name, the woman at the other end of the phone offered some more unexpected good news -- my photo collage, Reflective Stroll, sold on opening night! Neither the big order of note cards nor the sale of the work yielded a fortune, but it is affirming to have my photography and artwork appreciated.

It's also wonderful to hear from the individuals who own my work. I've been meaning to mention one such person for a few weeks now. Vicki wrote to me the last time I was a featured artist in the Common Thread Give-a-way and I was so moved by her comments about one of my collages that I decided to give her one when she did not win the box of cards in which it was featured. Not long ago, I received a card from her in the mail. I opened it, read it and found the picture on the front appealing. I placed it in the basket where I keep my mail to file it later and it was only then that I noticed the logo on the back, Bedlam Farm. It wasn't coincidence I'm sure, since many of the followers of this blog have come here from referrals from Jon Katz and Maria Wulf, but it was neat how a card she had received from them, two people who have supported my work, found its way back to me in gratitude for my own.

SONY DSC

SONY DSC

Encountering the Handyman

Blog Sam Early each morning before the rest of us are even awake, Sam, the handyman who has been overseeing the renovations to the upstairs bathroom lets himself into the house. The pugs, still sleepy, largely ignore him. Sometimes Alfie barks her gentle woo-hoo. Waffles opens one eye. Sam glides through the house like a dancer barely making a noise. He has become part of the scenery to the pugs; not one to bother about. If they are loose as he passes through they may acknowledge him by running up and standing on their hind legs to sniff his knees. They greet everyone this way – with sniffs and snorts and high-pitched squeals. Alfie, my watchdog, has a purpose in her shenanigans. She seems to examine guests, catalogueing them in her “Book of Scents and Identifications.” Waffles becomes excited in sympathy with Alfie. “She’s barking, so should I!” seems to be her overriding thought. Both, however, seem to primarily regard Sam as a piece of furniture, par for the course,  nothing to get worked up about.

All that changed yesterday. Sam was passing through the kitchen just as the pugs came in from outside. They ran in happily, their hindquarters shaking from side to side so frenetically that their rears almost touched their noses with each sweep.  Glimpsing Sam they ran to greet him with their customary snorts and sniffs. That done Alfie stood watching him, her mouth open, tongue half out, panting. Sam suddenly turned from his work, paintbrush in his hand and addressed Alfie.

“This one sometimes barks at me in the morning,” he addressed me, gesturing at Alfie with his paintbrush. She started and looks amazed, moving toward me like a young toddler seeking its mother’s reassurance. “He talked to me,” she seems to say. “He’s never done that before. Did you see that Mom? He talked to me. What do I do?” It might seem unfair to assign such thoughts to a dog, but from my all-too-human perspective, the message seemed all too clear. I couldn’t help but laugh. Furniture doesn’t talk, but Sam was not furniture. He may have become part of the ebb and flow of our daily lives as he works to ready the house for Mom’s approaching surgery, but as Alfie’s encounter indicates, we should not take him for granted.

Under the Bigtop

vet b Taking Waffles to the vet yesterday was a bit of a circus. First, I decided to take Alfie along and get her weighed while I was there so I could figure out how much flea medicine to buy. Bringing Alfie with me automatically doubled the chaos. You would think my dogs never leave the house. At the sound of the leash, Alfie started yipping and yodeling; both she and Waffles spinning in circles around my legs. Waffles began panting in the snuffling/snorting way that only pugs can do. Within seconds she sounded worse than any lifetime smoker and I was sure she would die. Since I hadn't originally planned to bring them both with me, I hadn't put their seats in the car, which meant getting those out of the garage and buckled in while Waffles and Alfie went to work hog-tying me with their leashes. Unraveled and undone, I loaded  the pugs into their seats, making sure to put them on opposite sides to where they sat last time, since the two always manage to crisscross, tangling themselves in the process. By the time I got to the front of the car, they had already made the switch back to their original seating position. I couldn't win. I rolled down the windows to let in some air as Alfie's tongue was already hanging down to her feet and Waffles snorts had become asthmatic gasps. When we got to the vets, the vet tech claimed she could hear them as we drove up.

Surprisingly, the pugs tugged on their leashes and rushed for the door as if they were off on a hunt. Once inside they began barking as loudly as possible at all the other dogs, cats and staff they encountered. I tried to place first Waffles and then Alfie on the scale, but they kept jumping off. Alfie weighed 20 pounds then 19, then 20 again. I couldn't get her to sit her plump little rump down long enough to get an accurate reading. Waffles was much the same, although she looked like she might faint. Once in the office it took two vet techs to hold Waffles down while they clipped her nails. Meanwhile, I got a serious lecture about keeping them cool during the heat. I had a feeling, the techs considered me a careless parent as they listened to the pugs' heavy breathing. "They don't do this at home," I tried to assure, but I'm not sure they could hear me over all the snorts and squeals. As I tried to take Waffles off the table and make the switch so Alfie could get her nails trimmed, the pugs seemed to begin a gymnastic routine, circling and falling all over each other as they practically did somersaults. I expected Alfie to whip out a clown's hat and start squeaking her nose. "They're so well behaved," I joked.

The one good thing about the whole experience is that we caught Waffles hot spot early and were prescribed medicine to dry it up. The vet suggested it may have been caused by taking her swimming in the kiddie's pool the day before. So while the whole event seemed akin to being under the bigtop, the diagnosis at least brought some calm.

No one had informed my pugs, however, that the circus was over. Instead, the two chose to make a dart for the open door in an effort to circulate among the crowds and draw more attention. Although my pugs may never pass  as model patients, I'm sure they could fill the roles of circus barker if anyone should be in the need for one.

Good Fortune

AVA Gallery, Lebanon, NH It's been a week of good fortune -- first, the article on my memoir class appeared in The Valley News and then today I was notified that one of my digital photo collages, Reflective Stroll, was chosen to be included in the AVA Gallery and Art Center's Twentieth Annual Juried Summer Exhibition art show. This year AVA received a total of 310 works by 173 artists from 81 communities throughout Vermont and New Hampshire. This is my second year entering and although none of mine were accepted last year I was told that one came pretty close. This year, however, I submitted two of my digital collages and one was accepted. Of the 310 works submitted, 83 by 73 artists were accepted. The reception for the show is this Friday, June 21, from 5 to 7 p.m.

Digital Collage: Reflective Stroll

Just in case all this good fortune were to go to my head, I snapped this humbling photo on the way into the AVA Gallery to pick up the piece that did not make the cut. While the AVA Gallery is a prestigious art center, here in the Upper Valley we don't take ourselves too seriously. The artists had to follow a trail of signs around the back of the gallery to pick up their work. This was one such sign, hopefully not indicative of the artwork to be shown.

Juried Show Signs

Writing Prompt: Me and My Gals

Me and my pugs Busy weekend. Finished an article for Rutland Magazine in the wee hours and rose to visit with a friend and go on a shopping spree to Burlington. I've been enjoying sharing, reading and viewing the art, writing and photographs of a number of creative people on two new Facebook groups. Jon Katz's Open Group for Bedlam Farm and Maria Wulf's Fellow Artists. Both are growing and thriving and finding a life of their own. I think they are showing the desire for people to connect, encourage and learn from each other. That's nothing new, but as interconnected as the Internet makes us, it also has a reputation for cutting us off, keeping us isolated in a cyber world. In some ways, this is probably true, but in a broader sense these groups are demonstrating that the more things change the more they stay the same -- we humans, whatever our faults always seem to find a way to reach out, connect and keep sharing our stories whether it be across campfires and cave paintings, telephone wires or the world wide web, our tales reach out untethered to find a friend to listen to confirm that we are part of a greater whole.

Writing Prompt: In many ways our blog posts, tweets and Facebook updates are like ancient paintings on a cave's walls. They tell the stories of our times. If you were to leave a short and simple tale behind what would it be -- one post, one tweet, one status update. Write them now.

Business Card

I had some new business cards made up a month ago in anticipation of Blogpaws and the Creative Sparks reading at Hubbard Hall. The new cards not only feature graphics from my blog, but also a QR code that when scanned take people to either a reading of the story I shared at Hubbard Hall the other night or the animation of my Dogs Dancing at the Carousel collage. Here, is the card that leads you to the story and a video of what you see if you scan the code. This way those of you who were not able to come, will be able to share in what I read. My new business card

 

Lost

Waffles Lost Blog I lost Waffles today. For a whole half-an-hour my baby was missing. I always call her my little Pugdini and today she made good on the name, disappearing right before our eyes. We were preparing dinner – my father grilling steaks, my Mom setting the table, and me as quickly clearing it of my paperwork. Dad had the back door to the fenced-in-yard open and I had just run some files upstairs with Alfie and Waffles in tow. Next thing I knew I saw Alfie peaking around from in back of my father’s legs, but no Waffles.

Up to no good again, I assumed and shouted her name. Typically, she comes running, stopping short at the baby gate that she hopped over to get up the stairs, but which impedes her journey back down. This time, she failed to show when I called. I called again – trying first my high-pitched excited voice, followed by a sterner cry, and then back to nervous screeching. When she didn’t appear, I ran to the backyard searching for her and then back up the stairs, tearing into my nephew’s room, my office and bedroom to no avail. I ran back down the stairs and to the car declaring her missing. I drove up and down the street looking for her, by this time in tears. Logically, I couldn’t figure out how she could have gotten out. In the past she had escaped through a hole in the gate on two occasions, but the hole had been repaired and even when she had gotten out she usually just sat outside the fence trying to find a way back in to be with Alfie. She had never wandered off. I pictured someone nabbing her from the backyard, envisioning horrors like animal experiments being performed on her. When I calmed myself enough to deem this vision unrealistic, my next thought was of a big eagle sweeping down while we weren’t looking and flying off with her. “I’ll never get her back either way,” I thought.

Beside myself, I returned home only to learn that my parents hadn’t found her yet either. Another search of the house ensued and then I heard my Mom’s voice calling to let me know she was found safe-and-sound in what we assumed was a locked bedroom. I should have realized. The door was shut because of the bathroom renovations, but I had noticed that she had found a way in the other day. The problem is the door swings in to allow her entrance, but just like the baby gate, once it closes she can’t get it to swing out, impeding her exit. In my terror, I hadn’t thought of this, however.

I scooped Waffles out of Mom’s arms and held her close. She wiggled and wagged her usually stoic tail, while Alfie did the same. The two, sensing my excitement, got all worked up, like two children on Christmas morning. They didn’t know why I was so happy, but I could tell they both hoped it meant something tasty for them. In the end, it did. I placed both Waffles and Alfie securely in their pens with a bite-sized morsel of the grilled filet mingon. And, as she ate it I think Waffles was as happy as I was that she hadn’t gotten permanently lost.