I am temporarily ensconced at a friend’s house. I am having a terrible flare, and I just needed some hot shower access and the internet to make my life a little easier. My partner, who has been my full time caregiver when I’m sick, isworking full time now, and I just couldn’t stand the thought of being alone in the woods ith the kids, when at any second, I might have to rush off to the ER to get catheterized. I am sad to leave my pretty forest, but grateful to have such good friends and it’s so nice to have a hot shower when I’m in pain, or to use the juicer and make decadent veggie juice drinks to pamper myself.
The thing I dislike the most about being away from home is that all of my needlecraft/jewelry/art supplies are there. I’ve been focusing on personal art so much now that I’ve been sick. It’s the one thing that this sickness can’t take away from me. Even if I’m sick in bed, I can still knit. And I don’t know what the hell sick people do if they don’t have a knitting project to get thorugh all of those doctor’s waiting rooms time. I would go crazy if I didn’t have something to focus energy and passion from.
I had the most incredible crafternight last tuesday. I made two necklaces,
finished up a pair of fingerless mitts, and made a fabulous dread band. The mitts and hairband were in my native crochet–there seem to be so few crocheters compared to knitters online, that I think it’s easier to network and get good feedback for your projects. My mom taught me to crochet when I was eight, and I loved raiding her sewing box and the stash of odd ends of yarn. I really started getting into it serious a little while after I got into activism–nothing helps get through long winded consensus meetings like a project in your lap. I really want to start publishing patterns and figuring out how turn these skills into a way of making a living–especially now that it seems like I have to stop farming, both for money and for self-sufficiency. I’m always scared that I’m not good or lucky enough, and hide behind my own fear and lack of confidence.
The necklaces brought me way back, because I had a friend as a tenager who taught me how to bead and all about semi-precious stones. e had the faux hippy nineties asthetic and listened toa lot of jam bands and got way too wasted. We used to make necklaces and peddle them at shows, or on the street while traveling. She was equally profoundly brilliant and disturbed. She was more spririt than human, and her amazing alchemy turned out some of the best jewelry, drawings, clothing and sculpture I’ve ever seen. I cleaned my act up, and she didn’t, and we lost touch, but I always think of her when I’m
beading, and miss her and the scratchy vinyls we’d play on the stereo.
I am sending out pictures of this week’s work, a small prayer that I’ll be feeling better soon, and gratitude for the women in my life who are with me in my heart for always, who gave me the skills and tools to execute some of the recent art that has been so healing for me.





