Rejoinders for pesky bicycle questions

Warning! Extra salty post ahead.

Starting a file of answers for questions with unwinnable answers. In no particular order.

This question was prompted by constantly being asked by so-called environmentalist, so-called liberals constantly asking me how did you get here, did you ride your bicycle here, etc.

And I was constantly answering them with an irritating diatribe that usually included the idea that “if you — being the people with the clout and the wallets — had been pushing for public transportation and walkable neighborhoods all along instead of moving out to the rich, fake-environmentalist suburbs, you would not be treating nonmotorists as some kind of novelty. Which is really fucking offensive by the way.”

And you need to stop NIMBYing out the apartments and townhouses as soon as possible, because you are going to be needing those people to clean your giant houses and wipe your asses in the next few years if you keep insisting on living out there in the Home Creepo zone.

Anyway! Fellow activists, anarchists, middle-class dropouts, and other associated misfits: Some all-purpose answers for you in case you need them in your own exchanges with the perennially irritating “liberal environmentalist” tribe.

PS. Extra demerits for you if your housing development has “plantation” or “preserve” in the name.

Why do you want to know?

There’s no answer I can give to that question without making things worse.

I’m not here to be your sideshow freak or zoo animal. Satisfy your curiosity elsewhere.

I give out that information on a need to know basis.

I have stopped answering that question because people keep getting the wrong idea.

Stop it. I’ve already talked to you about this.

Mu.

MU!!! Which part of “mu” did you not understand?

You’re asking the wrong question. The question you should be asking is…

No. I do not need a ride. With you. Ever.

Further Exploration:

“The Japanese word Mu,” by Robert Pirsig. “Mu becomes appropriate when the context of the question becomes too small for the truth of the answer. When the Zen monk was asked whether a dog had Buddha nature he said “Mu,” meaning that if he answered either way he was answering incorrectly.”

Graciously declining invitations to participate in faraway events

Over the past couple of years I have been refining my wording in order to be able to get my point across better. Here is one example. A person across the state has persistently invited me to an event that I love the sound of but do not want to physically travel to. (I have helped them boost their social-media posts as I often do with like-minded people and events.)

I stacked functions by making the response public — responding in a comment to the post instead of responding privately by DM — and tagging other public permaculture people.

Here is what I said:

That’s really nice of you to think of me as an artist that you would want to invite to your event. And extra sweet of you to offer overnight hospitality to a person who does not have a car and would be arriving by public transport.

But that would be a very long and energy-expensive trip for me. (Talking about human energy here, not just fossil energy.)

And, I stay busy with art events & other events in my local area. And also I need to save my carbon/eco-footprint budget for the long train trip to see my family.

However, I will be happy to keep my ears open for local artists for you. If I hear of anyone in your part of the state who is looking to participate in art events I will tell them about your event. And I bet <fellow permie teacher activist person> and <other fellow permie teacher activist person> know lots of potential people as well. Also possibly <yet another FPTAP> would know some artists if he is still living in the area.

And, although I believe both <yet another FPTAP> and <yet another FPTAP> have moved away from the area, I imagine they may still know some people who are artists and /or connected with the art community. Who would probably be very interested!

Woodstock Boomers Revival Manifesto

Or how we can get our groove back. This is a work in progress. Just posting here because I am decluttering my Notes app. And also because things can be useful even in rough draft mode. (Note, if anything sounds totally weird or nonsensical it’s because I missed something while proofreading my talk-to-text.)

Woodstock boomers revival manifesto

This is for all my fellow what I would call Earth Day boomers or Woodstock boomers, who are genuinely horrified and distraught at the state of the planet and the effect it is having on people and all other living things.

This might be a manifesto, might be a kind of Ted talk, we will see what it turns into.

We spoke up against the war in Vietnam. We Spoke up about environmental crisis.

Then, fast forward to the 80s, somehow we became tame and venal. Caught up in affluence and prosperity. Some of us didn’t last for long and dropped out. But no judgment on those who didn’t drop out; we all get caught up in things sometimes. And some people had kids into the equation and that weighed in favor of them taking the corporate route.

But, now it is now.

I see a lot of my fellow boomers crying out against climate change, pollution, but then not being willing to do the things that will actually help unravel the structure.

In no particular order.

First and foremost that came to my mind, we need to acknowledge that the way we went about our war protests was wrong. Spitting on veterans and calling soldiers baby killers was wrong. Our focus needed to be on the government that was doing the wrong, not on the people who were conscripted and not able to take the college loophole.

Or, not on the people who felt like they were doing the right thing by signing up because they didn’t want to just leave it to someone else.

So we need to make some kind of amends to veterans. Saying thank you for your service is problematic in a lot of ways, as others have already pointed out. What we could do is join Veterans for Peace; donate to organizations that provide mental health care for veteran; and other services. And, we can also refrain from persuading our young people to join the military. We never wanted to live in a world where the best chance that a kid has for a stable life is to sign a contract where he promises to kill on the orders of the government. That is no deal. And we need to stop being all happy when our nieces and nephews and grandkids etc. I thinking of that as a path. We need to support them in their hearts path.

I also want to talk about the smug memes that we are posting. Oh look at the simple life we lead, look at the dangerous stunts we did on the bicycle. And yet now we won’t even let go of our fourth house, or take our 401(k) off of Wall Street. And order the others they simply have something like a basic life.

Some steps we can do.

We can stop the consumerist travel. Yes we can just stop. Most of the fun we’re having is on social media, not in the reality. We are old as dirt and we need to start just being happy at home like our sensible grandparents did.

We can stand up to our husbands about the lawns for god sake. Seriously? We’re going to tell our grandkids that we let the planet die because our HOA wouldn’t let us have a wildflower yard. Or our husband liked to mow? What the hell is wrong with us. Tell the man to stay the hell out of the wildflowers.

We don’t get to have it both ways. We don’t get to think of ourselves as some kind of cool revolutionary, and not be doing any of the work right now.

We can stop being members of so-called “liberal” congregations who ridicule people who actually walk the walk.

another big thing, we need to stop making ourselves wrong and saying that we were being unrealistic and impractical and idealistic back in the 60s and 70s. We were not wrong. The way that we went about a lot of our stuff was erroneous in various ways, but we were not fundamentally wrong and we need to stop making fun of hippies and saying that we were impractical and then finally we grew up and now we’re being practical. Because we are not being practical, we are being basically murderous with our habits.

Yes, we got caught up in drugs, and some of that involved sexual exploitation. but there have always been hot hippie boys that made a mini harem or cult around themselves. We needed to deconstruct the patriarchy and we did not, now we can.

We should not throw the baby out with the bathwater as it says.

I used to wonder why my dad was so contemptuous of hippies. Toward the end of his life he told me that we never should’ve been in Vietnam. That was not what I expected to hear from a 22-year career Navy officer, but I found out after he passed that he and many of his classmates that Annapolis has opposed the war. So if you feel a certain way but you/squash your heart’s voice, what are you going to do but be contemptuous of people who are acting on their heart?

We can stop living in car dependent cities and suburbs. We need to move where we can walk to our needs. Or else we need to invite people to live with us. We cannot keep being these entitled elders who expect everyone to wait on us hand and foot.

And we need to stop NIMBYing apartment complexes and town houses out of the neighborhoods. Hey who knows, a lot of these people might end up being our home health care or yard care.

And we need to stop pretending that our fancy electric cars are going to save the world. That is bullshit.

Not facing the truth makes a person cranky. I know, I’ve done it. Done it both ways.

We can protect our grandkids from getting into college debt. Encourage them to pursue a trade, pursue their heart. The so-called practical path is not practical it has made us into a murderous society.

Further exploration:

“Decades after Kent State shooting, the tragic legacy shapes its activism” (Jonathan Edwards; Washington Post). “The university where 13 student protesters were killed or injured during the Vietnam War era worries that other schools have learned nothing from its history.”

“How to support student protests; the history of Cinco de Mayo; environmental hazards in Gaza; and the racist history of the filibuster.” (Nicole Cardoza and guest writers; Anti-Racism Daily 5/5 weekend edition). “Over 2,000 students and faculty have been arrested as student-led protests grow at college campuses across the U.S. Many of these demonstrations are being misinterpreted as generic acts of solidarity with communities in Gaza. But, in reality, students have clear and comprehensive demands from their universities – and they’re not budging. Although each school has it’s own focus, here’s what’s common throughout their demands. …”

Earth Day 2019 playlist

Came across this in my Notes app while I was doing some e-decluttering. A lot of the stuff is still things I would recommend, even though obviously I’ve seen & recommended a video or two since 2019! This playlist is some thing I set up for the earth day event that I organized in 2019 at Cinematique theater on Beach Street, downtown Daytona Beach.

Earth Day Playlist 2019

• Backyard Native Plant Pocket Prairie https://youtu.be/JbCb5ZlxHoE

• Cherise – Doula music video

• Ocean-Friendly Gardens CPR 1:29 https://youtu.be/UB3tUmO8PFQ

• Urban Wetlands Make Cities Liveable 1:55 https://youtu.be/v3GXlESxaR4

• Ocean-Friendly Garden Tour 3:40 https://youtu.be/GO4Zmm05FRs

• The Living Machine 2:40 https://youtu.be/fmdsBlWwSTU

• Rain Gardens: Stormwater Pollution Solutions 5:47 https://youtu.be/Bv0O2UcP2_s

• Urban Forests: How Do Trees Benefit a City? 4:20 https://youtu.be/A6miJ6YEOdI

• Placemaking in Detroit 2:55 https://youtu.be/1zi8rCiDrl4

• The Story of Bottled Water 8:05 https://youtu.be/Se12y9hSOM0

• The Story of Stuff – intro https://youtu.be/OqZMTY4V7Ts

• China’s Green Roof Revolution https://youtu.be/N8L1hDWACKQ

• Scythe vs Mower https://youtu.be/1I4RNenmfFI

• DIY Outdoor Solar Shower 3:52 https://youtu.be/2JW87R0WxP8

• Village Homes – City of the Future – Mollison 10:37 https://youtu.be/QmFVxPjG2JI

• Meet the Rainwater Harvesting Champions of Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda (RAIN Foundation, 9:54) https://youtu.be/xJLTuJZ2vL8

• Rainwater Harvesting on Open Oceans (Kevin Chiang, 13:38) https://youtu.be/rMfeQJMSRzY

• Overview of Lancaster-Homestead Water-Harvesting Strategies (Brad Lancaster home, 12:12) https://youtu.be/xdvmJ-AFlRA

• Planting the Rain To Grow Abundance (Brad Lancaster TEDx 17:53) https://youtu.be/I2xDZlpInik

• A “Laundry to Landscape” Greywater System (Greywater Action 1:50) https://youtu.be/WdV_gbOipQs

• Mulch Basins Catch a Stormwater Rain Bomb (Oasis Designs 4:03) https://youtu.be/6ylVDvfm1G4

• Composting in an Apartment 5:08 https://youtu.be/E5kGAxHsesY

• This Monster Plant Is Trying To Take Over – What If We Let It? https://youtu.be/_1Qj4Bm47hA

• Beyond the War on Invasive Species: Quick Review https://youtu.be/8-QDC6RxzfU

• Theaster Gates: How To Revive a Neighborhood (with beauty, creativity, and…) https://youtu.be/S9ry1M7JlyE

• Artist Theaster Gates Turns Chicago’s Open Spaces into Incubators for Culture https://youtu.be/j3izd9U9xm4

• Dr Vandana Shiva: Solutions to the Food and Ecological Crisis Facing Us (TEDx Masala 11:40) https://youtu.be/_eLi_PJKUoo

• Composting Toilet Creates “Humanure” (Austin American Statesman 2:56) https://youtu.be/F9JgpVbDbHM

• Poop in a Bucket Frank Meyer 2:53 https://youtu.be/t_pFAMSv6pM

• Eco-Friendly Wastewater Treatment System 2:46 https://youtu.be/pXaXjzbccPo

• You Will Never Throw Away Grass Clippings After Watching This (GoGreen 3:56) https://youtu.be/PSAZu1yiJ34

• China’s Greening of Vast Kubuqi Desert https://youtu.be/kp4PikdJhKM

• Greening the Desert – Geoff Lawton 5:21 https://youtu.be/sohI6vnWZmk

• Greening the Desert – 10 yr timeline 3:54 https://youtu.be/W69kRsC_CgQ

• Can the “Great Green Wall” Stop Desertification in China 9:37 https://youtu.be/pSn6S-H7m-8

• Make Basket from Palm Leaf — Cambodia https://youtu.be/VP-zd6T8CLM

• Palmetto Basket Class – Making a Basket from 1 Leaf Lafayette LA https://youtu.be/ErgbcOhVgT0

• Make Bioplastic by Yourself! Science Luxembourg 1:03 https://youtu.be/Cqg-QpaF1lk

• “Edible Glass” made from Seaweed https://youtu.be/nva6MGqArFU

• Whole Foods, Gentrification, and the Erasure of Black Harlem https://youtu.be/onU2p0fU_J4

• Urban Permaculture Oasis at St. Pete Ecovillage 8:21 https://youtu.be/-OPkuGozcl8

• Can Locals and Transplants See Eye To Eye on Gentrification 11:41 https://youtu.be/UIGXgWifPyI

• Michael Pawlyn: Using Nature’s Genius in Architecture https://youtu.be/3QZp6smeSQA

• What Is Fleet Farming 2:21 https://youtu.be/RWucD9jslkM

• Fleet Farming Inspiring Future Urban Farmers 4:09 https://youtu.be/MxN6xXpinVI

• Passive Cooling Your Home 2:14 https://youtu.be/-pO4w1Qt6pE

• Less Walls, More Life — Design in the Tropics TEDx 11:46 https://youtu.be/Heb9l59L6ZU

• Can Tiny Houses Save Detroit 5:53 https://youtu.be/qY4s5T6cLSw

• Can Urban Farming Spur Job Growth and Better Health https://youtu.be/oEauo21ELD4

• Floating Farms of Bangladesh BBC News https://youtu.be/CONfhrASy44

• How To Make a Floating Island 3:03 https://youtu.be/-LQqjKLwG7I

• Woody Tasch: Slow Money 4:32 https://youtu.be/WJuUcaVtifg

• How the Urban Community Can Stop Gentrification and Restore 2:52 https://youtu.be/H-XI3-loRys

• What We Don’t Understand About Gentrification Stacey Sutton 13:53 https://youtu.be/XqogaDX48nI

• Superblocks: How Barcelona Is Taking City Streets Back from Cars 5:31 https://youtu.be/ZORzsubQA_M

• How Highways Wrecked American Cities – highway removal projects 4:39 https://youtu.be/odF4GSX1y3c

• Carfree Cities: The Gritty Details 5:47 https://youtu.be/j9qUvTTlF2Y

-30-

end marker

So there!

Beach-toy plastic musings

Had a beautiful walk to the beach for a dip just now. Around 7 PM. The sun is setting these days around 8 so it was a nice time to go.

When I got out of the water and walked up the sand, passing by the trash cans as I headed up toward the road, I noticed a bunch of new-looking beach toys had been stuffed in the trash. The people who had put them there said there was nothing wrong with the toys; it was just that the family was getting ready to fly home.

One small motel on the A1A up towards Ormond has a toybox where the tourists can leave their toys for the next people. It would be cool if some of the big hotels were to do that too.

Well, I gathered up the toys and brought them home and added them to my beach toy library.

I was glad that I had happened to be there to rescue them, but it was kind of sad too. All of this plastic. And so much prosperity, so much income disparity, that buying things and throwing them away is some thing that people don’t think twice about anymore.

Suddenly a forgotten memory popped into my mind’s eye. The inflatable rafts that we had had growing up. They were navy-blue on one side, red on the other, and made of canvas. I am pretty sure they lasted us through 8 or 10 summers. I can remember having them when I was seven, and I think I can remember them still being with us when I went off to college.

Somehow the memory had a deep quality. Like, it might sound corny, but we had an actual relationship with those rafts. The rafts went with us through several moves, rode the waves of Pacific and Atlantic and floated in some lakes and maybe even a pool or two. I’m pretty sure we have at least a photo or two around still, of us kids with those rafts. I can feel the texture of the wet canvas on my skin.

Now, lest this should sound like some sort of bombastic boomer bragging — it’s not. I’m not putting down people for having plastic beach toys. And not saying I will look how great we are for having these artisanal authentic canvas inflatable rafts. What I’m saying is that people deserve better, the same as we had better, way back then. At a much less affluent time of our society, to boot.

On a related note … Yesterday I got an email newsletter from the apparel company Patagonia, which is known for its eco-responsible policies regarding well-made clothing, and repairing and recycling clothing. And even discouraging people from buying more than they need.

The Patagonia newsletter had a link to a film that has been made by Patagonia. The title: The Shit-throp-o-cene: Welcome to the age of cheap crap. It was pretty funny, if a little too painstakingly clever at times, and it made some really good points. You can watch it for free.

It struck me that my little beach-toy lending library is a way of somehow elevating and redeeming what would otherwise be trash plastic. I’ve turned the little buckets and scoops and shovels and boogie board and plastic inflatable life-rings into a bit of cheerful bright-colored art hanging on my fence. Usable art, that anyone can borrow and enjoy — and, I hope, make a sweet and lasting memory.

Rearranging furniture in the “front porch room” and livingroom

Yesterday all of a sudden got the idea of moving the bookcase from the living room into the front porch room, and some assorted other changes.

Living room:

With the bookshelves moved out to the little “front porch” room, the living room now serves more of its original intended function of overflow guest lounging/sleeping space. The hanging rack that has the blue triangle pattern quilt on it is where the bookcase used to be.

(Yes, we have our fridge in the living room, not in the kitchen. It’s kind of weird, but neighbors had a huge fridge they were getting rid of, and this was as far into the house as we could get the fridge. If we had wanted to get it into the kitchen it would’ve had to go around multiple corners and skinny hallway. Modern American fridges can be gigantic, and this house was obviously built in the era before gigantic fridges.)

Front porch room:

Moved the bookshelves from the livingroom to the front porch roomette – love the update so the books & games are more front & center. #communallivingprototype #ornateminimalist

Detail notes:

Lampshade – If you’ve been following me for a while, and have an eye for certain details, you may have noticed this lampshade over the years. I made it from one of those moisture-proof, vacuum-sealed bags that coffee comes in. I was glad to find this reuse, but even happier to later find a local coffee roaster who sells us coffee in mason jars. (And bonus, gives a significant discount for us returning the jar each time.)

Mug sitting on the bookshelf – This is my favorite coffee mug. I use it daily. It’s decorated with an illustration and quote from my cousin Jim Kay, an artist-activist born and raised in Fall River, Massachusetts. He loved his hometown and did so much good there in his 87 years. His daughter, my sweet cousin Alix, designed & commissioned commemorative mugs for us.

You can see pics here on my deep green Facebook page. Living room; and porch room.

A 2014 Facebook memory, and my Mom

Lately Facebook has been serving me up a bunch of memories from 10 years ago. As it happens, this time of year 10 years ago was a very challenging phase of my life.

Spring 2014. My mother had had a heart attack and had triple bypass surgery, with other medical complications such as diabetes as well, and I had gone up to Virginia to stay with her in her house while she recovered. If I recall correctly it ended up being about three months.

My siblings live an hour or so away from the rural place where Mom & Dad had retired to, and they had always been steadily helping Mom with all sorts of things after Dad passed, so I felt like the least thing I could do would be to go up there for a spell and try to contribute some hands-on support such as helping with driving to appointments, cooking, complying with meds etc. And trying to provide some joy and pleasure.

I actually feel like I did nowhere near enough for my siblings and our Mom, but in my mind at the time it was the best I could do. If I could invent a time machine there is a lot that I would do more & different. Most of it has to do with communication; that would’ve solved a lot.

(My siblings, whose names and other information I withhold out of love and respect, because they are very private people as was our Mom.)

Financially this period back in 2014 was a very hard time keeping up with my apartment and other bills, as I had started to depend on income from location-dependent work (pedicabbing, general labor, retail side-job etc) in my home city of Daytona Beach.

Emotionally it was a very very hard time. Having to navigate between the doctors’ advice, hospital discharge instructions etc., and what our Mom was willing to comply with. Being afraid that my mom might die if I happened to be the only one of us with her and was not able to say the right thing to convince her to comply. It was big because I always felt like I was my mother’s most difficult and troublesome child. From the very beginning of our childhood, the other siblings were always so much better behaved and gave her so much less grief than I did. So there was definitely some history there. Sometimes a parent and child can just have personality differences and it’s nobody’s fault.

Nonetheless, Mom and I did genuinely love each other no less than the other family members. In a different way perhaps but I would say no less. And, we managed to have some genuinely good times even during that rough phase.

One of our pastimes together was watching all sorts of things on TV, such as Criminal Minds and CSI, and Call the Midwife, and The Bletchley Code, and documentaries on the history channel.

For the first time ever, I became dependent on online sales of my artwork to pay my rent and other bills. There were some close calls, but I managed, thanks to many friends and strangers who purchased my artworks. I even went to the farmers market of the little town and managed to sell one of my artworks to the mayor of that town! (Or maybe she was the deputy mayor, I don’t remember.)

At one point my mom asked me, how much do you make from selling your art. I took a deep breath, mustered all the put-on dignity and brook-no-discussion determination that I could, and responded, “ENOUGH.”

It must have been enough brook-no-discussion vibe, because she didn’t say anything back. I couldn’t afford for her to have her attention on that, could not afford to let this become a topic. For many reasons. Dignity was seriously at stake. As well as a legitimate wish to protect my Mom from financial anxiety. (Even though she had always had financial anxiety despite being well-off. There was nothing I could do to help her get past it — I had tried many times — but at least I could do my best to avoid adding to it.)

Having been raised on a middle-class path with the expectation of college and always a cushy office job with all the security, I had always felt a bit in the closet ever since I had dropped out of the middle class in the early 2000s. Actually, let’s be honest, I started dropping out of the “professional” middle class almost as soon as I started trying to endure the office thing, it just took a while for me to muster the courage to fully disengage.

The finances, harrowing as they could be, were never the hardest part of it. The hardest part of it was the fear of disappointing my parents. Of becoming — or maybe already being — that embarrassing weird family member no one wants to talk about.

I never did really fully come out of that closet, although they always knew that I wasn’t working any kind of steady job, let alone one of those “professional office jobs.” What would be called a “real job.” I tried it for a few years right out of college but it just didn’t feel like me. To the point where it felt like death. So I had to choose life, and if that sounds melodramatic, so be it.

This photo shows a few of the artworks I made during that Spring 2014 time period. The period of my mother’s heart surgery and recovery. All of my artwork before had had a very strong Texas flavor –and then later on when I moved to Florida, a Florida flavor.

It’s kind of startling to look back and see this little batch of artworks that were influenced by my surroundings in Virginia. The garage one is inspired by my parents’ garage, and was very much filled with the legacy of my Dad’s memory. When I look at that piece of art I can still smell the garage.

Dad passed in 2010, and Mom in 2017, but I can still smell the garage. It smelled like ancestral sawdust and multigenerational carpentry, rust and petroleum, car interior vinyl, road atlases, our family’s whole life together. It smelled of stored dreams and archived hopes. It smelled, too, of course, of everyone else’s impressions which were out of the bandwidth of my sense of smell’s range.

It smelled of memory-traces that I guess follow a person or family over the years from one garage to the next: It smelled of snow and cigars and little organized jars of screws in Grandpa Nazak’s basement in northeastern Pennsylvania; it smelled of tarry pilings in Yokosuka; it smelled of a swimming pool on a military base in Long Beach; it smelled of juniper bushes on a manicured desert suburban street in San Diego, it smelled of cut grass from different lawns of the different houses we had occupied.

During the “Virginia 2014, Mom’s Heart Recovery” phase, there was a point when I was selling my artworks for $13 apiece. It was tough, but it got people buying, and it added up to pay my rent, and there is no feeling like the satisfaction of that! That at an extremely challenging time of my life, I was able to pay my bills entirely with pens and pencils and paints.

If I had not been able to find a way to make money, I would’ve had to give up my apartment and then had to look for a new place when it was time to come home to Daytona Beach. Thank God that did not have to happen.

For many reasons — mainly because of my activism — my mix of work nowadays, and throughout most of my life other than some unusual times like spring 2014, has generally included multiple activities in addition to my art.

However, I remain grateful, and I also remain a strong advocate to fellow artists who are trying to earn their livelihood purely from their art. I’m here to tell you it’s totally doable.

There were a variety of emotional pressures but it still worked. Art IS a way to make a living. The arts ARE a way to make a living. I believe Kurt Vonnegut said that, and I totally stand by that.

Artists are needed in this world. All types of artists and artisans are needed, no less than roadbuilders and architects and lawyers. It really does take all of us, and if any of us aren’t showing up, it’s like if you were a paint brush trying to be a hammer. You might be able to hit a few small nails with that paint brush but really the paint brush needs to be making paintings, and if you have a big nail you need to go get a hammer.

Back in 2014 when I first posted these, some rando on my feed commented that they were crap and even his kindergarten daughter could do better. Well I totally believe that, because kids are great artists and I’m a decent artist but I’m really not all that.

But the fact remains that my art paid my bills and kept me from having to give up my apartment, and nothing can take that away. From me or any other working artist. Fellow artists navigating life, I salute you!

By the way, my mother was an artist too. She never had to depend on it for her livelihood, but she was no less an artist. She made outstanding sculptures of dogs and horses and other subjects. She drew and painted as well, and made jewelry. I always think I got my artistic side from her, and from our cousin Jim Kay.

If you want to see my drawings that popped up in my Facebook feed today, you can go here to the post on my art and design page.