Icicles

Lately, I’ve been watching icicles form, grow, and melt outside my window. I find the changes dramatic. Sometimes they are fierce and jagged, and at other times delicate and beautiful. They are watchmen protecting the house, wardens locking me in, jewels glistening in the light, and mourners weeping with the thaw, drip by drop at the dismantling of their wintery presence. Are they aggressors or victims? Do they have to be either? Perhaps they are both.

The wonder isn’t why or how they change, but rather, what happens as they change. It’s the transformation, the morphing from one stage to the next that intrigues, because we, as humans, go through transitions too.

Do we melt under stress?
How do we act when winter seasons of life arrive?
Are we strengthened or do we weep?
How do changing circumstances forge new identities in us?

Time is moving, and with it, change. Our experiences are transitory, and we are influenced by our surroundings, which are inevitably beyond our control.

Lavender

This is an article. Lavender is pretty. Blah blah blah. Here is a new painting showing Jordan’s rendition of lavender at age 5:

When this was painted, Jordan was harvesting lavender amidst the buzzing bees. It was prior to any gallery showings or websites, tv shows, or radio shows. She painted whatever inspired her.

The following video shows her work from ages 5 through 8.

Resolve

One day I lost, for the last time, writing that I could not recall or recreate, and from that moment on I wore pen and notebook as garments, though they were much more vital to me than clothes. More than instruments, pen and paper were extensions — appendages even. Ink was blood, and writing, the contract it signed.