Ernie

August 8, 2007 by luckypennies

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This painting is called “Notes from Ernie.”  It probably seems incredibly cryptic to anyone who doesn’t know the story behind it.  Ernie was a family friend of ours.  She was my grandma’s roommate in college.  I’ve caught myself so many times referring to her as a relative, even though she actually wasn’t related.  She may as well have been.  Ernie was both a surrogate grandma to me and one of the best friends I’ve ever had.

There are so few people who are truly, deeply, sincerely good, the kind of good that radiates from within.  Ernie was truly, deeply good.  She never said a word that wasn’t kind, helpful, or concerned.  She was an incredibly good listener, and she always made you feel as if what you were saying was the most important thing she could possibly be listening to at that moment, even if you rambled or were talking about the weather or something similarly dull.  She would focus all of her attention, energy, and love on you even over the phone. 

The pot in the painting above is a gift she sent once.  The card and the Braille note under it were also things that she sent.  Ernie was blind.  But she never wanted people to recognize it or offer her sympathy for it.  Once when I was young, I corrected myself when I asked her if she’d “seen” a particular show on TV, and asked her if she’d “heard” it.  She told me not to do that.  And I didn’t again.  It drove her nuts when people were extra careful around her or overly sensitive to the fact that she was blind.  Some people would even talk louder around her, as if she couldn’t hear either.  Ernie’s blindness wasn’t a disability to her.  It was just something that was, a fact. 

My mom loves to tell this story.  There was one time, when my mom was three years old, that Ernie was visiting at their house.  She’d unwrapped something and was looking for a place to throw the wrapper.  She asked my mom where the trashcan was.  My mom pointed at it and said, “There!”  “Where?” Ernie asked.  “There!” my mom said again, pointing.  Ernie was tickled at this.  “Where?” she asked again.  “Right there!” my mom yelled, upset and flabbergasted that Ernie couldn’t see the trashcan.  That was what Ernie liked, a childish assumption that she could see, even though she couldn’t.  She liked that from everyone, young and old. 

Ernie type-wrote all of the cards she sent, like the one in the painting, which was quite an undertaking considering how many she sent to us.  We kept up by phone, letter, and the occasional visit.  She had a reader, Jessica, who would go through her mail with her and read what people had written.  (Jessica was wonderful.  She made the best lemon pound cake in the world.)  I’d always been amazed at how fast Ernie could punch out Braille, and I’d looked so many times at her magazines in Braille, which were thicker and bigger than a Webster’s Dictionary.  One day when we were at her apartment, I asked her to show me how she did Braille.  She got out a little plastic grid, called a slate, and a metal-tipped punch called a stylus.  She went back to her bedroom and got a card explaining Braille that she’d gotten when she’d worked at the Library of Congress.  She showed me how you had to punch your message in backwards into the wrong side of the card so the dots would be in the correct direction on the other side.  Then she punched something short out with a snap-snap-snap, and handed it to me along with the explanation card.  I sat on the floor and decoded it slowly.  “It says…I….love….you!” I said.  Ernie smiled.  “Now you write something,” she said.  She waited patiently for me to punch something out, and showed me how to use the capital sign and punctuation.  Finally, I handed her what I’d written.  She ran her deft fingers along it.  “Cattepies walk on leaves,” she read.  “Cattepies?”  She grinned.  Turns out I’d left out a couple of letters.  We wrote messages back and forth the rest of the night, and my brother learned to write Braille too.  Later, Ernie sent us each our own personal slate and stylus.  We started a Braille correspondence, which touched Ernie a lot.  She loved it too because when she got our mail, she could tear it open and read it right away, instead of having to wait for Jessica.  I’d send her notes and poems I’d written for her, all punched out in Braille. 

I’ve experienced a lot of loss and death for someone so young, and Ernie’s death a couple of years ago was probably the most devastating of any I’ve ever been through.  I think of her so often and miss her terribly.  I always will. 

Blog clog!

August 4, 2007 by luckypennies

So what do you call a traffic jam in cyberspace?  A blog clog!  Hahaha!  Wait, that’s not so funny.  But hey, I think it was pretty good considering how sleepy I am.

 Lucky Pennies celebrated a milestone yesterday, when it passed the 1,000 total views mark.  In fact, today it hit 1,024.  Which is pretty good for a blog so young.  It’s also pretty good considering I don’t post everyday.  Lucky Pennies is by no means a high traffic blog, but I have several kind, devoted, and patient readers to whom I am very grateful.  And I’m pleased and amazed at the  depth and thoughtfulness of your comments.  Thank you so much for your time and thoughts.  I really do appreciate them.  And please keep reading.

Duck, duck…goose?

August 2, 2007 by luckypennies

No geese made an appearance in this photo, but they did pose for my friend and me further down the bank.  I like this photo for its spare quality.  It looks a little like a old Japanese print.  I think it could stand to be saturated and warmed up with a filter, but I’m feeling far too lazy, sleepy, and stupid to bother with that right now. 

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Take a hike! (I did.)

July 30, 2007 by luckypennies

We went on vacation this weekend.  Here are a couple of the photos I took.  We hiked a lot, and it was wonderful.  The sky was low and brooding the entire time, and there was a shifting mist over everything that made ordinary objects and plants glow. 

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Glimpsing glory

July 23, 2007 by luckypennies

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Believe it or not, this shot used neither a filter nor Photoshop.  My little Olympus has a spot-metering feature that allows it to focus and meter on a tiny spot in the middle of the viewfinder, which meant that I could meter on the bright edge of the clouds and get the equivalent of a underexposed shot. 

This is the sky above my house.  You can just barely see a mountain on the right.  I’m so blessed to be living in a place like this, and I realize it everyday, especially when I’m able to step just outside and see something like this. 

La musica

July 20, 2007 by luckypennies

I’m a little behind on posts, and while this may be a cheap shot, I’m going to post the first 15 or so songs that come up on my MP3 player.  Which I can guarantee will be very eclectic and interesting…

–The Flaming Lips:  Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robot.  A stupid song if there ever was one, but fun nonetheless.

–Coldplay:  Yellow.  If you don’t listen too hard to the words of this song, then it sounds pretty good.  If you do listen, you might be disappointed by the fact that it really doesn’t mean much.  Ain’t no substance under the pretty guitars.

–Mary Chapin Carpenter: 10,000 Miles.  I love her music in general and first heard her version of 10,000 Miles on the movie Fly Away Home.  She’s coming to Chapel Hill, which tickles me to death.  I’ll be on those tickets like white on rice. 

–Amos Lee:  Bottom of the Barrel.  He has a wonderful voice.  This song reminds you to make do with what you have.  After all, “The world is so much meaner when your heart is hard.” 

–The Duhks: Heaven’s My Home.  I got to hear the Duhks and Mammals together in concert at Merlefest.  Good pair, eh?  The Duhks have more soul than any other bluegrass/newgrass band I know of. 

–Goo Goo Dolls: Iris.  Not a big Goo Goo Dolls fan, because I feel like a lot of their music is a little soft or sappy.  But Iris is a good song. 

–Lovin’ Spoonful: Lovin’ You.  A very happy song, off a CD a friend burned for me. 

–Stevie Ray Vaughan:  Texas Flood.   One of the absolute most incredible guitarists in the entire world.  He plays a lot of Hendrix covers, and beats the hell out of Hendrix.  You’ve gotta be good to do that.  If you doubt me, try SRV’s Little Wing.  Heck, try anything by him.  He’s amazing. 

–Girlyman: Speechless.  A great group with tight harmonies and smart lyrics.  Both of which are lacking in today’s music market…

–Weezer: The Sweater Song.  Another stupid song.  But Weezer never fails to cheer me. 

–Simon & Garfunkel: The 59th Street Bridge Song.  You can’t help but like it.  If you don’t like it, you’re probably a miserable, grostesque curmudgeon.

–Wilco: Pot Kettle Black.  Wilco is in my top 5 favorite groups.  They can change their sound dramatically from album to album and get away with it, because they’re so good. 

–Soundgarden: Like Suicide.  A cheerful ditty!  I like pretty much all of the early 90’s grunge rock bands.  Unfortunately, most of the bands that tried to follow in their footsteps failed miserably.  I’m not a huge fan of today’s “new” rock.  There is a good song here and there, but most of it is desperately unoriginal. 

The Winterpills: June Eyes.  Also in my top 5 groups.  They have the most beautiful harmony.  This isn’t my favorite song by them, though…try A Benediction and Hide Me.  You won’t be disappointed. 

Eva Cassidy: Fever.  I think Eva Cassidy has the most beautiful voice of any woman in the whole world that I’ve heard.

The Shins: Weird Divide.  I adore the Shins.  Also in my top 5 bands.

Mountain dew

July 13, 2007 by luckypennies

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I love the darkness at the top of this photo and how it makes the tips of the blue spruce needles stand out.  I don’t know if you can see it in the small version, but in each dewdrop is a tiny reflected version of the branch behind this one. 

An angry rant*

July 9, 2007 by luckypennies

I have a complaint to make. 

The town where I live has always been known as a mecca for Floridians and various other retired/obscenely rich folk.  I knew I’d have to deal with that when I moved here about four years ago.  But a new, more vicious breed is springing up.  And unfortunately, they live next door. 

There are two families in particular—a bunch of Floridians with dyed-blonde hair and a similar bunch of people from Charlotte.  Now, don’t get me wrong, I don’t resent people for coming here to get away from things.  However, I DO resent it when I feel like I can’t get away from them. 

These are the kind of people who can’t tell the difference between money and toilet paper, so they send them both down the potty. Both of these families own vacation houses about three or four times the size of our regular house.  They both have a prodigious number of children, all of which were reared with the horrible good-job-mom mentality, you know, the kind of kids whose mothers praised them for every word, burble, burp, fart, etc. that they ever made.  As a result, these unpleasant children spout noise tirelessly, day and night and every moment in between. 

And their parents are hardly better.  Said Floridians take regular walks up the road past our house.  On the way down the road, Florida dad starts hollering at the top of the hill and encourages Florida kids to do likewise all the way down the road to their driveway.  Who knows what prompts that.  Florida dad must think, Oh, what a nice little rustic community!  I’m sure the rough locals won’t mind if we return to return to our primal roots in front of their houses! 

Well, guess what, buddy?  We do mind.  Really, we don’t care for it when we meet your Infiniti/Lexus/Acura in the middle of a blind curve halfway across the center line.  Really, we don’t care for it when your golden retrievers romp through our yards and tear up our flower beds.  And really, we don’t care for your sense of entitlement. 

Yesterday, for instance, I was headed into town when I encountered some of these vacation folks in the middle of the dirt road.  There were four of them and a dog, but they managed to take up the whole road.  And they DIDN’T MOVE.  Eventually, when I was right on them, they sort of swaggered out of the road, the girls on one side and the guy with the dog on the other, and left a barely car-sized gap for me to get through.  I can’t help it, I think mean thoughts about these people.  The devil in me wanted to accelerate hard and leave a cloud of dust for them to choke on.  Part of me wondered what a flat Floridian would look like. 

So what is it that gives these people a sense of ownership over a community that isn’t theirs?  Why do they think that it’s okay to disrupt the quiet for people who moved here to have quiet?  Between new construction and Floridians/Charlotteans, there is no quiet in the summer anymore.  Why is that alright?  I know it’s hard for them to understand, but believe it or not, a lot of normal people can’t afford to take a full month of vacation like they can.  A lot of us don’t have the money to take vacations elsewhere.  For a lot of us, this is all we have.  And it is ours, not theirs. 

*Disclaimer:  No Floridians or Charlotteans were harmed in the making of this angry rant. 

Windy day

July 1, 2007 by luckypennies

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We’ve had a lot of thuderstorms up here lately, after a really long dry spell.  I reckon they compelled me to do this painting of a tree before a storm.  This is the first decent acrylic I’ve done in quite a long time.

Mr. Toad

June 27, 2007 by luckypennies

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I almost stepped on this toad when I was taking pictures of the sunset.  Turned out that the pictures I took of him were better than the sunset photos anyway.  He was a very cooperative and photogenic fellow, even though I must’ve scared the snot out of him.