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.

Collage Draft: Hungry Mind

Collage Draft: Hungry Mind  

Knickerbocker Staircase, circa 1780. Photo by Beth Heffern

 

I intended to write a blog post tonight, but got distracted by Facebook. I tuned into the Open Group at Bedlam Farm (a Facebook community) and saw Beth Heffern's challenge to do some interactive photo editing. I haven't had time to work on any photo collages lately and I was intrigued by Beth's photo as well as her idea to have members of the forum edit the picture of the Knickerbocker Staircase in their own way in order to learn from each other. By the time I took on the challenge, members had done some incredible editing, warming the shot, transforming it to black and white and creating some intriguing abstracts as well as stories to accompany them. I started the above collage and have a lot more to do to it before I call it complete, but unfortunately it's time for bed and I have to get up early to work on my Obamacare article. I'm happy with the beginning, however. The child on the staircase is named Sadie. I captured her photo at the Bedlam Farm Open House the other day and asked her mom's permission to use her photo in a collage. I have some others I will be using in the future, but when I first saw the staircase I pictured a child sitting on it. She and the cats, I imagine, are being inquisitive, listening to voices nearby. The other girl is my niece Catherine. I am considering lightening her hair in the picture to more closely match Sadie's. We'll see. I haven't quite worked out the whole story yet. I added broken glass on the staircase and I am imagining an argument that the child is overhearing. I am pleased with the dimensionality of the piece, the way Catherine is running toward something and the play of light. I'm trying to decide where to add hand-drawn elements and if I will add a further border or any embroidery. We'll see. I may even take things away. It's just a start...

I'm interested in what the picture is saying to you so far...

 

 

 

Making Friends at Bedlam

Me and Pearl: Photo by Jackie Campbell The day was warm and so were the people at The Bedlam Farm Open House yesterday. I was there to show my artwork and connect with many of the people I have met online and through Jon’s new Facebook group, The Open Group at Bedlam Farm – basically an online creative forum and blossoming community. One of the friends that I had met through the blog was Jackie Campbell, a woman who proved to be just as sweet and amiable as I had imaged through her comments. She took this picture of me with Jon’s daughter’s lab, Pearl, a sweetheart of an animal. In fact, she stole my heart and tried to steal the day. Although many were enamored with Red and Frieda, who came out off-leash to impress the crowd and Lenore, known as the Bedlam Farm love dog, Pearl managed to snuggle up to anyone who would love her and even tried to consume Jon’s therapy dog demonstration by nudging her own muzzle in to rest on the lap of the volunteer patient. She seemed intent on getting all the love and attention she could and as an old gal’ she had earned it!

Schnorkie

SONY DSC Last Sunday we took my niece Ellie to Quechee Village to ride the train there. While she and her parents shopped inside, my mom and I rested near the entrance. It was hot and we were soon joined by other weary shoppers looking for a seat and some shade. The most interesting of these was a tall, slim blonde woman and her dog, a teeny comical wisp of a creature, part Schnauzer and part Yorkie -- "a Schnorkie" her owner proclaimed her. At four years of age, she had reached her full height and weight. She was happy to climb up on the wooden bench next to her Mom (just out of sight) and pose for my pictures, stopping only to meet and greet the other shoppers passing by. Her exuberance and no doubt unique appearance brought a smile to every person who stopped to pet her. It was interesting to observe their interactions. Some people seemed annoyed at first to have a dog hop in their paths. They would start to walk on by, but her persistence would make them look down and in every single instance, they warmed to her -- a smile passing from their lips to their eyes. She seemed to excel at hospitality. She wore her self-appointed job well.

Mirage

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I use to dream that things could change, until I discovered

A dream dies a more agonizing death than a beloved dog

You cannot put it to sleep and out of its misery

Instead it flails in the sun in the full light of day

The later leaves you a wag of its tail and years of memories

The former only the mocking prospect of what could have been.

Husks II

blog corn 2 Walking past the cornfield the other day

I revisited my reformed headbangers

Boomers who’d left the sixties in their wake

My long-haired rockers now shorn

Their garish cranberry locks a respectable brown

Short

No longer rocking or swaying in the wind

Plumper, fatter

They lean in close conversing

Shunning whispered secrets of rendezvous and romance

In favor of meeting minutes and agendas

Respectable

Ready to be plucked up and join society

I miss their nascent days

When long red wisps of hair flailed in the breeze

And their bodies spoke of promise

When they craved the kiss of the sun

Rather than to ripen in its embrace.

 

I wonder if once in a blue moon

Under the glow of its yellow light

If they may still

Let their hair down

Shake beads of perspiration into the midnight sky

Let loose and howl

For all they’ve lost

And all they’ve gained

 

For potential

And fulfillment

 

For the hope of harvest

And the day when it comes due.

 

Corn at Blue Moon

 

 

Gonna Fly Now

blogsneaker The theme song to Rocky may only have been playing in my head when I entered the door of my house yesterday after a 3-mile walk around the stretch of road we call “The Boulevard,” but it was playing nonetheless. While family, friends and neighbors may walk The Boulevard with ease, I have seldom completed it. But after coming back from Hana, Hawaii where I walked a lot, I decided to keep up the good work and start walking The Boulevard both for the exercise and as a form of prayer and meditation. The problem is it hasn’t been easy and it hasn’t been peaceful. It would be simple to blame my being a desk-bound, out-of-shape couch potato as part of the problem and no doubt I could be more physically fit, but the real issue is my feet. Bone spurs, Achilles tendonitis, and plantar fasciitis don’t make walking easy as I found out when I hiked around Portland, Maine on my recent reunion with friends. A couple of years ago, I saw a podiatrist and physical therapist who fit me with orthotics, but the plantar fasciitis recently flared up even with them in my shoes. It seems my rigid high-arched feet don’t make for easy walking and I tend to supinate, walking on the outer sides of my feet. It helped hearing this from the physical therapist who explained some of my lack of athleticism could be contributed to the fact that my legs were simply not made to do what a lot of people can do so easily. She even told me that certain muscles in my legs were working so hard that they were equivalent to that of a gymnast. I wish my old gym teacher had heard this report.

Still, knowing the reason why my feet didn’t work and my legs turned to rubber when I tried to walk didn’t help me complete The Boulevard, but a new pair of shoes did. I stopped in the New Balance sneaker store the other day to see if they carried high tops. My sister-in-law had a cool pair of red Adidas and try as I might to make a similar pair fit me they were just too narrow. I knew New Balance carried wide widths and if they had high tops I thought I might find a pair there that were more comfortable. They didn’t have any in, but what they did have was a certified pedorthist to offer advice. Although I had never heard of a certified pedorthist after a few minutes talking to her I realized she was a foot expert. She immediately identified the problems with my foot that I had learned form my podiatrist and had fitted me with the proper size shoe. Although I have known for years that my foot measures a size 7, I have been wearing 8s and 9s in an effort to accommodate their width. Sometimes I could go smaller with a 7.5 if I was lucky enough to find a wide-width shoe, but this was rare. I discovered, however, that not only did I need a size 7 with the proper fit to accommodate my high arches and tendency to supinate; I also needed a double E in width. For years, I had been living in the confines of a too narrow shoe. The pedorthist sent me home with my new sneakers and the warning to break them in gradually. I did and voila I managed to complete the whole stretch of The Boulevard yesterday; hence the refrain of Rocky’s theme song.

That may have been enough to proclaim “Gonna Fly Now” but it was my revelation that it wasn’t just my shoe that was the wrong size. For a while now I’ve been shaping myself to accommodate other people's visions of my life, trying to fit within the confines of two small a worldview. As I walked The Boulevard, stared at the expanse growing corn against the blue sky, I realized mine was a double E life and it was time for me to try out the shoe that fits so I can fly.

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Dog Birthday Party

Isabel SONY DSC

“A dog birthday party? That’s ridiculous!” My 17-year-old nephew Christian exclaimed in response to my answer as to where I had been all day.

It was ridiculous, silly and fun, which is also what made it so special. I thought about the dogma, beliefs, and debate that had been hurled at me over the last few weeks – conversations about salvation, damnation, global warming, politics -- I’ve been assigned an article on Obama Care, for goodness sakes – and the Sweet 16 birthday party for a mascot at a local gift store in Waterbury, Vt. seemed the most carefree and sane thing to do among my list of prospects: It was pure fun!

Gretchin, Ellie and Mark

 

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I was a tag-a-long on an invite my 18-month-old niece Ellie had received. It seems she and my sister-in-law are frequent visitors at The Tiny Acorn gift shop in Waterbury, where Isabel, the 16-year-old birthday girl, reigns. In addition to the array of toys on display, Izzy seems to have attracted my niece’s attention and subsequent devotion. She smothers Izzy with hugs and kisses and thus, earned an invite to her party. Upon learning of the event, I begged an invite. So last Saturday, the four of us – my niece Ellie, my sister-in-law Gretchin, my brother Mark and me – all headed off to The Tiny Acorn where we were greeted by a nicely groomed Izzy in the glass doorway and a sign above announcing her party. Hardly through the door, we were given balloon animals in the shape of dogs and the opportunity to make each a bedazzled collar that could also serve as a bracelet. I wrapped mine around my wrist. Gretchin adorned Ellie’s with an E and I chose a B, since my nieces and nephews all call me Auntie Bee. I noticed yesterday that Ellie’s was still intact, while I somehow managed to lose all my beads, jewels and letters by the end of the day.

Making My Bracelet

 

Isabel and Me

We searched for bones and were awarded with a grab bag of goodies when we found one and we even ate bone-shaped sugar cookies as our desert. We also had our faces painted. Gretchin, Ellie and I with flowers, while Mark, after a little coaxing, sported a pirate’s patch. Ellie kept touching the flower on her cheek, smearing it before the paint dried. She spent the rest of the day saying, “I like my flower” even after her mother washed it off. Mark, Gretchin and Ellie all cleaned their faces shortly before returning home while I kept my flower on for the rest of the day, reluctantly washing it off at midnight.

The girl who painted our faces wants to be a writer and is considering attending Champlain College, my brother and sister-in-law’s alma mater, so we exchanged writing tips and college advice.

Me, Gretchin, Ellie and Mark

We finally left the store a couple of hours later after a lunch of grilled hotdogs, Costco lemonade and a promise that we would send  photos and that Ellie would return again soon. Before she left, she took a display of tiny folded rain jackets and placed them in a half-circle around Isabel – her gifts for the day. She then lovingly bent down and gave the old girl a hug, a pet, and a kiss.

My nephew may have rolled his eyes when I returned home and people may question why a 46-year-old has let her life go to the dogs when there are more serious issues to attend to, but I am convinced that should we burn in an apocalypse, freeze in a global ice age, collapse under an economic meltdown or survive another 1000 years, when we go to meet our maker it will be the hugs, pets, and kisses that count. We could do worse than dog birthday parties and the wag of a tail.

Isabel and Ellie

Isabel and her Presents

For more photos from the party check out my personal facebook page.