Sunday, September 4, 2016
Quilt Square Six: My Mother's Smirk
I grew up all over The United States. There is no "home" town, as "home" was always a travel trailer, a tent, an apartment, occasionally a house, or anywhere that I was with my mom. My mother was a hippie; you know. . . the bell-bottom jeans, the John Lennon glasses (the round ones), and tassels on virtually everything. We traveled around so she could work & protest various things. To think back on it, I'm certainly lucky that my name wasn't something like, Moon Unit or Dweezil Zappa.
My mother wasn't simply making statements about the environment, the Vietnam war, racial prejudices, she was rebelling against her entire family. My maternal family is racist at its core; not all of them, mind you. They are very white (truth be told, they are American Indian, Portugese, and Irish) and affluent, live on "the hill," and "don't want nuttin' to do w/da 'monkeys' and 'dog-eaters' (insert all racial slurs here)." My mother made it a point to attend "blacks only" churches and demanded that I not use the "whites only" ANYTHING. For example, when we were living in a very small town called Depew in Oklahoma, my mother only had me drink out of the "blacks only" drinking fountain. She also convinced an elder, female family member to go to church with her one Sunday morning; the family member just about lost her lunch when she walked inside and found a congregation full of black folks. My mother just smugly smiled the entire service. That's the smirk I cherish.
My mother died right before Christmas 1977 when I was just seven years old. My life went to shit after she died. It was pretty shitty before her passing, too, but it got so much worse afterwards. I went from family homes to foster care to friends, and noone could handle me. I asked questions. After living the last year I had with her on the Navajo Indian Reservation, I didn't understand authority. I didn't know why I had to get up at a certain time, go to bed at a certain time, and even eat on a schedule. I got into a lot of trouble because I questioned why I had to learn stuff & why I had to stand, sit, and kneel at my stepmother's church (that got me slapped across the jaw, and my jaw clicks to this day. . . 40+ years later).
She wasn’t a saint, that Eileen Taletha, but she was the only mother I had. I’m certain that I would’ve grown to despise her because she was always leaving me with people that mistreated me so she could go party. I was molested by a few, pinched & hit by other children, & was used as a drug mule (mostly pot, but there was other stuff). In fact, I was at a terrible sitter when she died. My last words to her were, “I hate you.” I meant it, & I still do. Who has children just to pretend they don’t exist? We could be in the same freaking trailer, & it was like being alone.
She wasn’t a demon, either, that woman with wanderlust. I loved her so much & wanted to be with her every minute. When she’d get mad at someone for any number of reasons, she’d take off. Sometimes, she’d take me with her, & we’d hitchhike to Disneyland. Other times, she’d dress me up & enter me in “Little Miss” pageants. I could talk to her about anything. One time, I was telling her that I wished I could pee standing up, & she not only told me that I could, she showed me. Bath time was always fun when I could share with my mom. We’d take turns drawing letters & small words on each others’ backs, & she’d tell me stories about the different American Indians. She loved Buddha, Jesus, Ganesha, and any other prophet or saint that encouraged peace. She had statues that moved with us everywhere just to remind her to stay the course.
In short, my mother was a product of her environment. She was human. She’d cut your dick off with one hand while feeding the poor with the other. She was full of love but lacked the skills to actively love me. She was full of righteous anger that she used to fuel her activism. She could see the pain of the oppressed but didn’t know how to comfort my pain. However, she could make me laugh through tears, & that’s still my favorite emotion as it’s like feeling her around me.
It’s because of her that I question everything. It’s because of her that I cannot keep quiet for even the tiniest of injustices. It’s because of her that I speak. It’s because of her that I can be still & know things. It’s because of her that I can’t stand idly by while the world strips people (animals included—just as the American Indians did/do) & the planet of innocence & equality.
I miss my mother something fierce, and I still question everything and everybody all while wearing my mother's smirk.
Quilt Square Five: Happiness Narrative
Have you ever felt happiness? I mean truly, from the tips of your longest toenail to your head hair follicles? Have you ever felt the happiness that makes your body feel like it’s exuding electricity everywhere, almost to the point or even actually to the point of contagion? Well, I have. It’s rare, but it happens.
When telling my life stories, the general public seems desensitized & mostly poo-poo them as just that—stories. It’s been that way, pretty regular my entire life, literally (in the true Oxford definition!)! However, there have been some folks that have been moved by my stories enough to believe them & even become what I would consider friends. As a child, I did a lot of the childhood whiny shit, according to the adults around me, but I was really only reacting to my environment in the only ways I could figure.
I was always crying out to God things like, “Why me, God?” & “What did I do to deserve this?” EVERY FUCKING CHRISTIAN CHURCH—many different sects, mind you-- I’VE ATTENDED TOLD ME THAT IF I CRIED OUT TO JESUS I’D BE SAVED! FUCK THE CHURCH I would beg with God that if he took the abuse away that I’d be good. The abuse would go on, so I’d learn another way to not get caught by man {. . . not that I deliberately did these things (they were almost like instinct, like self-preservation, almost—kind of “a good defense is a good offense” tactic, if you will)}.
Wax them poetic, tragic, romantic, or simply life experiences they are my truths. Believe it or not, truth, integrity, & sheer authenticity make me contentedly happy.
When telling my life stories, the general public seems desensitized & mostly poo-poo them as just that—stories. It’s been that way, pretty regular my entire life, literally (in the true Oxford definition!)! However, there have been some folks that have been moved by my stories enough to believe them & even become what I would consider friends. As a child, I did a lot of the childhood whiny shit, according to the adults around me, but I was really only reacting to my environment in the only ways I could figure.
I was always crying out to God things like, “Why me, God?” & “What did I do to deserve this?” EVERY FUCKING CHRISTIAN CHURCH—many different sects, mind you-- I’VE ATTENDED TOLD ME THAT IF I CRIED OUT TO JESUS I’D BE SAVED! FUCK THE CHURCH I would beg with God that if he took the abuse away that I’d be good. The abuse would go on, so I’d learn another way to not get caught by man {. . . not that I deliberately did these things (they were almost like instinct, like self-preservation, almost—kind of “a good defense is a good offense” tactic, if you will)}.
Wax them poetic, tragic, romantic, or simply life experiences they are my truths. Believe it or not, truth, integrity, & sheer authenticity make me contentedly happy.
Saturday, August 27, 2016
Quilt Square Four: Depth Diminishes with Words
How do I tell you how I feel about your soul,
My fellow lover of linguistics?
I can’t. There aren’t any in my native tongue.
(i) “Aloha” is the closest word in any language,
But, still, it just misses the mark.
It hasn’t the resonance that compares
To the vibration of my soul
When you face me with your arms outstretched.
What song can I dedicate to the emotions that your
Soul brings to mine; none deliver.
(ii) “Sometimes When We Touch” comes to mind,
But only a few lyrics, taken out of context;
Like people do with the Bible so often
As they can’t make the words fit their needs.
What movie, television show, or play,
Can hold a candle to what I experience
When I watch you raising your babies?
Only one, (iii) “Fraggle Rock,” & yet it still doesn’t resound
The admiration I feel when I see
My ideal parenting blossoming in reality.
What topography can I use to describe
This connection? I want to find a mountain
As they are grandiose, but my mind. . .
It goes straight to the (iv) mushroom, Egads!
Decay. . . a fungus? I hear the world’s dogma
Shaming me.
Another way you are desirable to me?
You see the underlying connection. Feel it.
As do I.
My body reacts in such a sensual way
When you look me in the eye
That I must look away because. . .
I fear.
i “’Aloha’ is being a part of all, and all being a part of me. When there is pain - it is my pain. When there is joy - it is also mine. I respect all that is as part of the Creator and part of me. I will not willfully harm anyone or anything. When food is needed I will take only my need and explain why it is being taken. The earth, the sky, the sea are mine to care for, to cherish and to protect. This is Hawaiian - this is Aloha!” http://www.huna.org/html/deeper.html
ii Dan Hill 1977, “Sometimes When We Touch” {partial lyrics, taken out of context (it’s a necessary evil)}; specifically these lyrics: “I want to hold you till I die, Till we both break down and cry. I want to hold you till the fear in me subsides” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sometimes_When_We_Touch
iii Fraggle Rock’s “Come & Follow Me:”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUOwfbaKRgY
http://henson.com/family_fragglerock.php?content=story
iv Mushrooms: http://discovermagazine.com/2013/julyaug/13-mushrooms-clean-up-oil-spills-nuclear-meltdowns-and-human-health
My fellow lover of linguistics?
I can’t. There aren’t any in my native tongue.
(i) “Aloha” is the closest word in any language,
But, still, it just misses the mark.
It hasn’t the resonance that compares
To the vibration of my soul
When you face me with your arms outstretched.
What song can I dedicate to the emotions that your
Soul brings to mine; none deliver.
(ii) “Sometimes When We Touch” comes to mind,
But only a few lyrics, taken out of context;
Like people do with the Bible so often
As they can’t make the words fit their needs.
What movie, television show, or play,
Can hold a candle to what I experience
When I watch you raising your babies?
Only one, (iii) “Fraggle Rock,” & yet it still doesn’t resound
The admiration I feel when I see
My ideal parenting blossoming in reality.
What topography can I use to describe
This connection? I want to find a mountain
As they are grandiose, but my mind. . .
It goes straight to the (iv) mushroom, Egads!
Decay. . . a fungus? I hear the world’s dogma
Shaming me.
Another way you are desirable to me?
You see the underlying connection. Feel it.
As do I.
My body reacts in such a sensual way
When you look me in the eye
That I must look away because. . .
I fear.
i “’Aloha’ is being a part of all, and all being a part of me. When there is pain - it is my pain. When there is joy - it is also mine. I respect all that is as part of the Creator and part of me. I will not willfully harm anyone or anything. When food is needed I will take only my need and explain why it is being taken. The earth, the sky, the sea are mine to care for, to cherish and to protect. This is Hawaiian - this is Aloha!” http://www.huna.org/html/deeper.html
ii Dan Hill 1977, “Sometimes When We Touch” {partial lyrics, taken out of context (it’s a necessary evil)}; specifically these lyrics: “I want to hold you till I die, Till we both break down and cry. I want to hold you till the fear in me subsides” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sometimes_When_We_Touch
iii Fraggle Rock’s “Come & Follow Me:”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUOwfbaKRgY
http://henson.com/family_fragglerock.php?content=story
iv Mushrooms: http://discovermagazine.com/2013/julyaug/13-mushrooms-clean-up-oil-spills-nuclear-meltdowns-and-human-health
Friday, April 1, 2016
Quilt Square Three: Pharmaceutical Paradox
i am totally off pharmaceuticals,so now the doctors & the state say i no longer have the conditions that they diagnosed me with in the first place (which are life long diagnosis BTW). . . therefore, i don't qualify for services. they deemed me disabled as long as i was on THEIR MEDS, but now that i am totally on #MMJ & a healthy diet i cannot afford my meds. . . it's how they do it. the medical industry makes clients & customers. they don't treat patients!!!! #PolymyalgiaRheumatica #Fibromyalgia #spasms #PTSD
Labels:
Fibromyalgia,
PolymyalgiaRheumatica,
PTSD,
spasms
Location:
Vancouver, WA, USA
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Friday, March 11, 2016
Quilt Square Two: Discovering Toni
It's kind of a running joke within my circles that I am called Saint Anthony. I have been called this as long as I can remember. The family that started this tradition disappeared in 1976 off of the Navajo reservation after the white police raided for Vietnamese refugees fleeing naturalization. But, I remember them. I don't remember their names, but the mother was always losing things, & she'd mutter them out loud. Apparently, in the midst of my playing (& w/o thinking) I would reply nonchalantly the whereabouts of said object. Whether this was because I was an observant child or just clairvoyant I don't know. I was always told that I was stupid & couldn't see the nose on my face by those that were supposed to care for & encourage me, so I learned not to trust my own skills. But, this Japanese lady knew. So, she called me lil, Saint Anthony, or Toni. I thought it odd as he was a boy.
After my most recent walk through the darkness & almost experiencing death at my own hands, again, God told me to do a few things. Some I don’t understand, like setting up a makeshift studio in a bedroom. & some I do, like researching the saints. I am not catholic, & I have always thought their ways weird & too stuffy. I also see their prayers as if they are too frail & guilty to come to god with a powerful voice. In short, I thought all Catholics were either bullies that forced attrition upon oppressed people (which they have) & were really weak & worshiped graven images & false idols. I still think that they let guilt & fear rule them, & I know they worship graven images & people. However, I do appreciate the saints. They were imperfect people doing a perfect work.
Saint Anthony of Padua is the Patron Saint of Lost, Misplaced, or Stolen items. He is also the Confessor & the Doctor. He is the lover of children (not in the way dirty way you may be thinking). He really was a good teacher, & he suffered the children as Christ commanded.
As the Confessor, he wrote homilies that I would be proud to call my own. He questioned the traditional churches about grace rather than commands. I really would have liked this guy solely on his teachings of the word, but I digress.
336 after his death, his body was exhumed for some reason or another, & although his entire body was gone, his tongue remained perfectly intact. It was preserved & is now displayed somewhere or another. Frankly, the place & time doesn’t concern me. He was a great orator & teacher, his tongue. . . HIS TONGUE! was completely whole! It is displayed in what appears to me to be a giant open-faced vagina sammich, but to each their own interpretation.
See for yourselves:
I have since honed my skills of finding things. I am so good at it that some people have calked me from across the US to ask me help them find their car keys. I have done so successfully too many items to count. It spooks most people, & others just take it for granted. But, I know I have this gift. I also have the gift of gab & the ability to teach when the student is ready (otherwise, I am an impatient fuck). What I’m trying to say is that God is showing me connections that may seem minuscule to the average eye but are astonishing when seen through the spirit!
After my most recent walk through the darkness & almost experiencing death at my own hands, again, God told me to do a few things. Some I don’t understand, like setting up a makeshift studio in a bedroom. & some I do, like researching the saints. I am not catholic, & I have always thought their ways weird & too stuffy. I also see their prayers as if they are too frail & guilty to come to god with a powerful voice. In short, I thought all Catholics were either bullies that forced attrition upon oppressed people (which they have) & were really weak & worshiped graven images & false idols. I still think that they let guilt & fear rule them, & I know they worship graven images & people. However, I do appreciate the saints. They were imperfect people doing a perfect work.
Saint Anthony of Padua is the Patron Saint of Lost, Misplaced, or Stolen items. He is also the Confessor & the Doctor. He is the lover of children (not in the way dirty way you may be thinking). He really was a good teacher, & he suffered the children as Christ commanded.
As the Confessor, he wrote homilies that I would be proud to call my own. He questioned the traditional churches about grace rather than commands. I really would have liked this guy solely on his teachings of the word, but I digress.
336 after his death, his body was exhumed for some reason or another, & although his entire body was gone, his tongue remained perfectly intact. It was preserved & is now displayed somewhere or another. Frankly, the place & time doesn’t concern me. He was a great orator & teacher, his tongue. . . HIS TONGUE! was completely whole! It is displayed in what appears to me to be a giant open-faced vagina sammich, but to each their own interpretation.
See for yourselves:
I have since honed my skills of finding things. I am so good at it that some people have calked me from across the US to ask me help them find their car keys. I have done so successfully too many items to count. It spooks most people, & others just take it for granted. But, I know I have this gift. I also have the gift of gab & the ability to teach when the student is ready (otherwise, I am an impatient fuck). What I’m trying to say is that God is showing me connections that may seem minuscule to the average eye but are astonishing when seen through the spirit!
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Quilt Square One
So much for being happy with my life. . . now, I am lucky to have any feelings about it. And logical thought regarding my emotional or mental status went out the window with any faith I had in the human race when part of ANY organized entity. HMOs, hospitals, police, churches, public schools, mental health organizations, the government, politicians, non-profits. . . FUCK THEM ALL. "Yippy-Ki-I-A, MuthaFux!"
I have experienced firsthand how the many systems have failed me & my children, the last of which has scarred me almost to the point of hating everyone & everything again. Damnit!!!it took me & Christ a billion years to shed that skin.
I know I must still love people on an individual level, though, because I stopped on my walk home from the WinCo & shared my groceries with the homeless band of men that sleep from bridge to bridge. I've come to know them & consider a few of them my friends. I know that if someone was giving me grief, my trolls will take care of business. Be nice to the homeless, people; it has fared me well both in the past &will in the future.
As most people with any type of mental diagnosis, I have learned to disguise it well. That's why I love acting so much. It may sound cliche to non-thespians, but it's a deep, emotional ride for actors. I can channel my energies into a character. It's also why I like advocating for things I find important because I can channel my emotions & passions into changing laws (I was one of the original people that proposed the Reunification of Families Act in Washington State, & I was an active, founding member of the Kelso Downtown Revitalization Association (KDRA). I can "perform" my daily duties with a smile on my face thanks to my natural mother's "persuasion" to participate in beauty pageants throughout the US. I was a toddler in a tiara, but I never felt like I had to do it. I liked it. I didn't have to win. It was fun. It taught me to smile & be especially friendly towards men as they showed far more attention & gave a lot more money than the women. It was the 1970s, so men still controlled most of the money, too.
Today, I am still scared to go outside, but I am venturing more & more. I am trying to digest everything that happened from December 26, 2016 to now, & I feel like I'm drowning in tragedy, lessons, loneliness, & unconditional love. It's messy & complicated. There were two supportive people there for me for the duration, but they refuse public acknowledgement. I really love them. I'm trying to blog about it as it seems no one is hearing me, per usual!!! -- with the exception of these two people.
I have experienced firsthand how the many systems have failed me & my children, the last of which has scarred me almost to the point of hating everyone & everything again. Damnit!!!it took me & Christ a billion years to shed that skin.
I know I must still love people on an individual level, though, because I stopped on my walk home from the WinCo & shared my groceries with the homeless band of men that sleep from bridge to bridge. I've come to know them & consider a few of them my friends. I know that if someone was giving me grief, my trolls will take care of business. Be nice to the homeless, people; it has fared me well both in the past &will in the future.
As most people with any type of mental diagnosis, I have learned to disguise it well. That's why I love acting so much. It may sound cliche to non-thespians, but it's a deep, emotional ride for actors. I can channel my energies into a character. It's also why I like advocating for things I find important because I can channel my emotions & passions into changing laws (I was one of the original people that proposed the Reunification of Families Act in Washington State, & I was an active, founding member of the Kelso Downtown Revitalization Association (KDRA). I can "perform" my daily duties with a smile on my face thanks to my natural mother's "persuasion" to participate in beauty pageants throughout the US. I was a toddler in a tiara, but I never felt like I had to do it. I liked it. I didn't have to win. It was fun. It taught me to smile & be especially friendly towards men as they showed far more attention & gave a lot more money than the women. It was the 1970s, so men still controlled most of the money, too.
Today, I am still scared to go outside, but I am venturing more & more. I am trying to digest everything that happened from December 26, 2016 to now, & I feel like I'm drowning in tragedy, lessons, loneliness, & unconditional love. It's messy & complicated. There were two supportive people there for me for the duration, but they refuse public acknowledgement. I really love them. I'm trying to blog about it as it seems no one is hearing me, per usual!!! -- with the exception of these two people.
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