Saturday, August 18, 2018

The Art of Hearing Heartbeats by Jan-Philipp Sendker

The Art of Hearing Heartbeats is a book review with sections of the book selected to give the reader a sense of the beauty of the book.




This book is poetry set to a story.  First, I listened to the book on audio tape.  There was such a richness that I needed to read the text to catch each phase with my eyes and imagination.  It is a story that begins in the USA with a lawyer and his family and comes to conclusion in Burma. 
Julia comes to Burma to find the answer to her father’s disappearance.  She hears the story of her father, Tin Win, (Teen Ween) from a Burmese man named U Ba.  When Tin Ween was young, he became blind from cataracts and a friend, Mi Mi helps him view the world.


Page 145 Tin Win took no pains to hide his jubilation.  They were squatting again by the side of the street, and he could hardly keep still.  Mi Mi had opened the door a crack.  She had let a shaft of light into his darkness.  He would have liked nothing better than to run off with her then and there.  To investigate every tone, every sound, every noise that he could find.  He had learned his first word.  Now he knew the heartbeat of a chick in the egg, and eventually he would discover how to recognize the wing beats of a butterfly, why there was gurgling all around him—even when there was no water in the vicinity—and why even in a dead calm he still could hear a rustling.  With Mi Mi’s help he would solve one riddle after another, and in the end, perhaps a world would emerge.
“Mi Mi,” asked Tin Win, “why didn’t you want to look into that nest by yourself?”
She took his hands and laid them on her calves.  Tin Win had never felt skin so soft.  Softer even than the moss in the woods that we had previously so loved to stroke his checks against.  His fingers moved slowly down her legs to her ankles, which were slender, but then oddly misshapen.  Her feet were immovable.  They were stiff and turned inward.

This passage lets me, the reviewer hear the children singing in the mountainside.  The voice in first person is Julia with U Ba responding.
          
Page 233 In the distance I heard singing.  Several voices, faint and barely reaching my ear.  A wave melting into the sand before even washing over my feet.
              I listened hard into the silence, but heard nothing, picked up the song again, then lost it, held my breath and sat stock still until I heard the notes again, somewhat louder now.  Loud enough that I would not lose track of them again. It could only be a children’s choir untiringly repeating a melodic mantra.
“Is it the children from the monastery?” I asked
“Not the ones from the monastery in the town, though. There’s another in the mountains, and when the wind is right, their song drifts down to us in the morning.  You are hearing what Tin Win and Mi Mi heard.  It sounded no different  fifty years ago.”
 


                       

Page 234 Music, my father often said, was the only reason he could sometimes believe in a god or in any heavenly power.
              Every evening before going to bed he would sit in the living room, eyes closed, listening to music on headphones.  How else will my soul find rest for the night, he had said quietly.


Page 240 It was oddly familiar to me.  I closed my eyes and tried to imagine my father walking along the road.  I was startled by the many and varied noises I suddenly heard.  Birds. Grasshoppers. Cicadas. And unpleasantly loud buzzing of flies, the distant barking of a dog.  My feel got mired in the holes and ruts of the earth.  I stumbled but did not fall.  It smelled of eucalyptus and jasmine.


Page 243 “Why? Love has so many different faces that our imagination is not prepared to see them all.”
              “Why is it so difficult?”
              “Because we see only what we already know.  We project our own capacities—for good as well as evil—onto the other person.  Then we acknowledge as love primarily those things that correspond to our own image thereof.  We wish to be loved as we ourselves would love.  Any other way makes us uncomfortable.  We respond with doubt and suspicion.  We misinterpret the signs.  We do not understand the language.  We accuse.  We assert that the other person does not love us.  But perhaps he merely loves us in some idiosyncratic way that we fail to recognize. I hope you will understand what I mean once I have finished my story.”

Page 307 The sun would be coming up soon, Tin Win knew from the song of the birds.  He laid his head on her breast.  He had not been mistaken.  Her heart sounded weak and weary.  It was ready to stop
              He had come in time. Just.

Page 325 “Death,” U Ba had said, “is not the end of life, but a stage thereof.” He would not have had to explain himself to a single person there.
              I hung back, motionless, in one corner.  Darkness had settled over the yard.  Through a crack in the wall I could see that the whole place was now illuminated by candles.
 
This story sent me to another land of honor, love, beauty.  I hope that you may have the divine delight to read or listen to The Art of Hearing Heartbeats by Jan Phillip Sendker.

 

Sunday, August 12, 2018

Kayaking in Southeast Minnesota



There are so many great ways to get out and enjoy the beauty all around us.  Bob and I got out for a paddle on Lake Winona this afternoon.


























Photo by Bob Stuber

This was a monumental paddle for me.  Two months ago, I broke my elbow in a biking accident when Bob and I were biking to Fountain City. (More about that another time.)  Today, we were paddling a short, easy one on the lake to see if I could join him for the Mike Munson & Ben Weaver Concert on a sand bar later in the afternoon.

Here are a few of the beautiful plants on or near the water.


























These look like a hibiscus.  They have a soft fragrance. And cat tails


































These pretties may be swamp milkweek.


































This little orchid type plant grows near the shore of the lake.


























A little bud


























Yellow water lilies

Oh, the water and paddling were lovely.  No sand bar concert for me today.  Another day soon.  More strength and healing on deck.

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Summer Flowers and Memories

This mock orange bush in full bloom yesterday when I walked by it sent a rush of memories to me of my Grandparent's garden.  They lived in the town that I grew up in  Sleepy Eye, Minnesota and they had the largest garden.  Some things that I loved about this garden were the stepping stones that we got to hop from foot to foot to keep the fresh tilled soil ready for planting.  They also had this amazing bush, a mock orange that created a lovely fragrance.  A person needs to come up close to take in the fragrance.  It is not as fragrant as a lilac.

I'm also back in my studio and looking at things to create next. Check out the Ancestry Art Works to take a look a some old pictures  of my grandparents that I incorporated into quilts.

Here's the mock orange bush at its full height and beginning to rain down some petals.  These beauties won't be out long.  Hope you get a chance to find one in your neighborhood.
Flowers are blooming.  These next couple of pictures, I don't have an identification, but I like them all the same.


                                   This blue wild indigo grows in my yard. 

Happy exploring the neighborhoods.  Let me know what you find on your walks.



Monday, May 28, 2018

Floating Concert

The Yellow Bellied Sapsuckers played their musical magic on Lake Winona on Sunday, May 27, 2018.  This duo from Soldiers Grove, Wisconsin played and sang on a floating raft.  They had a little generator to plug in their amps and microphones.

Bob and I and a whole group of people paddled kayaks or canoes or stand up paddle boards or motorized boats or inner tubes to take in the show.  It was a very fun event to experience on a very hot Memorial Day weekend.



Nikko, Trish, Willow and Paul in their canoe.

Bob and many more

Trina and Tove

Mary Lee and more, photo credit Bob Stuber.

Feet up, boats together


Gratitude for the arts and Winona, Mary Lee.  Photo credit Bob Stuber.




Sunday, March 25, 2018

Amaliya's Quilt

My daughter had her 35th birthday on Friday.  Wow, amazing and wonderful and I can't believe that time goes by so quickly.

She's been asking for a quilt, gentle suggestions or requests since she turned 30 year.  I thought this was the time to get one created for her. Its made up of colors and designs that I thought she would like and appreciate and ones that I chose for color and softness.





The size is 52" x 66".  It is called "Fly and Soar."  It is made with all cotton fabrics that I stitched together and machine quilted the three layers together.  I finished it on 3/23/2018.  She'll receive this gift of love on Sunday.

Here are the top and bottom of the quilt before it was quilted with the batting in the middle:



My studio space is rather small.  To the left off this picture is my sewing machine and to the right is the ironing board.  The lay out table has two arms to make it larger or smaller depending on need for size.  When the table is full size, I have to squeeze around the table.  My sewing machine table also has an extension table to allow for quilting larger pieces.


















Some pins to hold pieces in alignment.


















Sewing the tiny berries in the middle section.  I call this machine drawing.




















Back of the quilt with the quilting creating a design.


 The hand embroidery was on an old dress of mine that I up-cycled for this quilt.

Lots of good work and love in creating this quilt.

 Quilt detail




















Back quilting detail
















































I love you, Amaliya Rose.




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