Friday, September 30, 2011

Boo Hoo

Boo Hoo
Today I painted most of the day and then went shopping.
I found something that I really like a lot. Usually I use Golden or
Liquitex Heavy Body acrylics however at my local Hobby Lobby
I found some paint that I like a lot. It is Masters Touch brand
Grey Purple it has a peculiar smell but it thick and buttery. Love it.
I also like Liquitex Basics Titanium White. Ok that's it ... My sharing
for the day.  4x4 acrylic on canvas panel
paypal available

Angels...

Finished Kobain's Angel today.  I'm going to have a necklace made for each grandchild with a photo of their Angel so they can keep their angel with them.  And then I'm going to have a big T shirt made with the photo of their Angel so they can sleep with their Angel over their heart.  I'm excited about this Birthday and Christmas present idea!  :)

Kobain's Angel

Blaize's Angel


Adian's Angel

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Blueberries and White Chocolate

Blueberries and White Chocolate
Wonder why the name? Well this is one of the little bears in
my collection and his name...... Blueberries and White Chocolate.
Love him......
4x4 acrylic on canvas panel
Unavailable

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Just Sittin

Just Sittin
Hope you are still following and like what you see. I don't know why buy sometimes
when I paint something I just kinda get stuck and can't get enough.
I am having so much fun with the bears and the pumpkins.
4x4 acrylic on canvas panel

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Silly Millie

Silly Millie
This actually shows up a little larger than life.
At just 4x4 this is somewhat smaller than my usual.
The blue cup a thrift store find and again
the pumpkin.
4x4 acrylic on canvas panel
paypal available
SOLD

Review of 50/50 - The Movie

The soon-to-be-released movie, 50/50, starring Seth Rogan and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, has been creating quite a buzz in the young adult cancer survivor community. It's unique and refreshing to have a blockbuster movie focus on such a rarely highlighted, but much deserving topic. Surprise, people in their twenties get cancer, too. Now there's a movie about it, and I think that's great because that means awareness, understanding and action. Let's hope it creates a buzz through the non-cancer world as well. 

I was wary that the movie would be overdramatized or Hollywoodized and would miss a huge opportunity to educate audiences about the young adult cancer world. After viewing the screening in Hartford, Conn. last night, I can assure you that that's not the case. Cheers to scriptwriter Will Reiser, who based the screenplay on his own adventure with cancer at the age of 27.

The film sheds a realistic light on the uncomfortable and frightening dichotomy that is trying to live your life in a world of seemingly invincible, carefree companions, while death stares you right in the face and treatment takes away your confidence and sense of belonging. 

Watching it as a cancer patient, I was impressed by the honesty and integrity Reiser wrote into the script. There were very tender and vulnerable moments that only someone who has been there could create. Reiser was able to write those in without being cheesy, forced or over dramatic – rather, just raw and real through powerful, subtle imagery.  

***spoiler alert ***

The concept of truth was pervasive throughout the film. Having cancer at any age is scary. Having it at a young age comes with its own extra set of issues. First off, it’s incredibly awkward because no one expects it – not the patient or the friends, family and strangers. This discomfort was well exemplified with scenes of Adam (Gordon-Levitt) trying to break the news to co-workers, friends, his mom and girlfriend. There is no easy way to do that and the resulting emotional reactions by each were classic, funny and heartbreakingly true. Several times throughout the film it’s Adam who is holding up for everyone else and assuring them that he’s “fine,” a word that he often quips back with when everyone is constantly asking him how he’s doing. This was often my answer as well.

Other people awkwardly and rightfully stumble on the “right” thing to say to him. This led to many comedic moments that made me laugh out loud in recognition as people assume he’s going to die and immediately start saying their goodbyes or they just fill the space with awkward silence staring at him trying to figure out what kind of freakish things are happening in his body.

There were many very funny moments in the movie and Seth Rogan’s comedic talents have a lot to do with how well they were pulled off. He is fantastic in this movie, and a lot of that probably has to do with the fact that he really went through the scenario that his character, Kyle, finds himself in. He is the screenwriter’s real life best friend and he was there with him going through his whole cancer treatment process: two single guys in their twenties scrambling to figure out how to handle the scenario.

The important message the movie effectively promotes is that there is no one-size-fits-all way to handle the scenario. There is much absurdity and in that absurdity is a whole lot of space for sick humor because if you can’t laugh at the insanely frightening scenarios that you find yourself in then you’ll never make it out alive. This bodes true for many life scenarios – not just cancer. It was beautiful how these two best friends were comfortable enough to be grossed out, confused, and scared together while still being “regular guys” trying to use the cancer diagnosis to score chicks. Admittedly, I thought the chick-grabbing plot was a little much, but I understand the necessity for balance and for making the characters relatable.

50/50 isn’t a medical documentary. There was a love story and relationship drama. There were bar scenes, drunk and high scenes, and sex. This grows the appeal to a wider audience than those living with or touched by cancer and makes the overall theme of the movie easier to digest. There’s much truth to those scenes as well. Even though they have a disease, cancer patients do more than sit around treating their cancer. We also live our lives and therefore it was appropriate to have some extra plot lines going to create a rounded picture.

Cancer treatment and recovery is so multifaceted. It would be impossible to include everything that comes along with a cancer diagnosis within the time constraints of a film. There were a few themes thrown in for good measure, but I wish they had the chance to more fully develop. These included: the friendships forged with older cancer patients, feeling like an outsider being the young one, the pride hit associated with allowing his mother in, his adopted dog’s role in the healing process, complications with sex and the possibility of infertility. Ovearall, I think the film did as good a job as possible at balancing all of the pieces and focusing on many of the right themes.

The humor in the movie is brave and ballsy, which I really enjoyed. There is one scene where Adam is high on marijuana-laden macaroons given to him slyly by a fellow chemo patient. His exit from the chemo infusion room is a series of blurred and slowed images of the sick patients surrounding him in the hospital corridors and the ironic positive messaging of the murals on the walls, all of which he finds to be ridiculous and hilarious.

He passes a covered body on a stretcher being rolled out from the hospital morgue. Rather than tearing up, he bursts out laughing, separating himself from the situation. There have been many times during the past two years of treatment that I’ve found myself laughing at the crude scenarios I’ve found myself in because to think too hard or too seriously about them was just impossible. The more dire my situation got, the more punch drunk and giggly I got in response.

Though the role was tremendously well acted by Gordon-Levitt, the character of Adam was a bit too vanilla for my me. In much of the movie he seems to just go through the motions, never questioning or really taking action to be a participant in his care. His character remains fairly static and too quickly accepting of his proposed fate.

This was the case until one scene where he has a screaming, thrashing, crying fit behind the steering wheel, windows rolled up, the night before his surgery. It’s the first time that his emotions come to a hilt and I was stunned at how well Gordon-Levitt captured that helpless, desperate moment. I wanted more of those moments in the film, but I suppose if it was littered with them, then that one superb scene wouldn’t have resonated as much as it did.

The isolation Adam – and I’d venture to say all cancer patients – feels is well portrayed through many scenes of him staring into space from his bed or his couch. There thankfully aren’t cliché scenes of him groaning or wrenching in pain and only one requisite vomiting scene, but you can read in his eyes and in his stiff movements that he is wildly uncomfortable and feeling defeated. The cinematography is very effective in accomplishing this as well. These scenes were true to life and much more real than I’ve ever scene a portrayal of a patient. It was very honest: a young man just trying to get through the day and feeling completely disconnected, self conscious, and ridiculously exhausted. 

The medical realities and hospital scenes were very well researched and accurate. I have a thick skin and rarely cry at movies, but I admit that the surgery scenes in particular hit very close to home. Watching his possibly last hugs goodbye with his mother, best friend, and mentally ailing father were very difficult to take. The lighting, scene staging and the sterile, ominous feel were very authentic. These scenes cued up difficult memories of my own and elicited many emotions.

The film isn’t done through any narration or switch in perspectives, but rather told from an objective standpoint leaving the audience to be able to put themselves in the shoes of each of the characters. This was a fantastic decision on the part of the writer and director as it allows the point to be made that cancer treatment is not just about the patient. It affects everyone close to that patient and everyone has his or her own ways of reacting and dealing (or not dealing) with the situation. He has the mom who wants to coddle him, the girlfriend who screws him over, and the bumbling best friend who tries his damndest to be normal in a totally abnormal situation.

I wanted to know more about Adam pre-cancer and post-cancer. I felt that his character could have been more well developed so that we had a better taste of what his life was like before: was this diagnosis a dramatic change to his lifestyle? Did he always have that relationship with his mother? Was he always a bit shy and removed? Always a push over? The film tried to establish this a bit by showing a scene of his life as a public radio producer, but it was a weak attempt.

The movie ends abruptly, though sweetly. There is no bow tied neatly to wrap everything up. At first I was disappointed. Then I realized that the ending was perfect because there is no clean resolution to a story like his. Once you have cancer it is always part of your life, the fear of recurrence is always there, and the journey isn’t over when the chemo regimens end and the surgery scars heal. It’s an evolving process and the audience is appropriately left to ponder where that process takes Adam and his relationships.

The film opens to the public this Friday, Sept. 30. I highly recommend checking it out. 

Monday, September 26, 2011

Not Very Scary Bears

Not Very Scary Bears
These I painted for the shear fun of it. I loved each of them. Hope you
like them also. This is larger than I usually do and was quite a challenge.
8x10 acrylic on canvas panel
paypal available

3 new Reiki Blessing pieces......

Reiki Blessing symbol hidden under tempered glass mosaic, French journal pages, old screen pieces, with antique rusted key....

"Blessing Key"
Reiki Blessing symbol hidden under tempered glass mosaic, French journal pages, rusted iron leaves, nautilus shell, red lucky seed, pieces of antique metallic netting

"Within the Heart"
Reiki Blessing symbols hidden beneath tempered glass, antique French journal pages, metal icon holder, coconut shell, iron fence post top, found in Paris flea market, amethyst crystal points

"The Offering"

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Pumpkin Glow

Pumpkin Glow
These days I am trying to paint a little differently. I am loading gobs of
paint and trying to be more concious of where each
 little stroke is placed. These are the same pumpkins I painted yesterday.
                                         Love the look and feel of these little veggies.
6x6 acrylic on canvas panel
paypal available

Rebirth and Redesign

Yesterday marked 100 days post allogeneic stem cell transplant, a tremendous milestone. That means that today is Day +101. Today began the next phase of my newly gifted life, courtesy of science and sisterly love.

I am happy. I am thriving. I am becoming comfortable in my new body. I am humbled by how far I've come. I look forward to where I'm going.

This newly designed website and logo represent the opening of the next chapters in my life as I continue to grow and stretch emotionally, physically, spiritually, and professionally. There is much healing to come, but this project has been a testament to what I've accomplished in the summer of 2011. This website development provided a solace and a focus during my first 100 days of recovery.

It has been a pleasure working with the talented artist Joy Nelson, my cousin, communication designer, and newly minted graduate from the prestigious Carnegie Mellon. Her fresh ideas and ability to bring abstract concept to reality with color and artistry was tremendously integral to the logo creation process. I am forever grateful for her patience, talents and devotion to helping me make this happen.

eyes peeled, always is a symbol of journeys that I have endured and of those that I have yet to experience. I will continue to share my adventures and illuminate those of others in hopes to inspire, educate and connect.


Saturday, September 24, 2011

Pumpkin Stack

Pumpkin Stack
I did it.... I stacked three little pumpkins and then I just applied loads
of paint just because it felt good. These are kinda loose and fun.
They are bright and I hope you like them.
5x7 acrylic on canvas panel.
paypal available

still painting Angels.........

maybe I'm done.....I'm not sure....Blaize's Angel

started a new angel....Kobain's Angel

Friday, September 23, 2011

I See Right Through You

I See Right Through You
A pumpkin, a snowman, why you may ask. Well I love them both.
Christmas is my favorite time of year. I found this little clear glass snowman at the
local thrift store and just had to have him. I couldn't wait till Christmas to show him
to you so here he is. He is quite content in front of my famous pumpkin. Just sitting
there..... hope he doesn't melt...
5x7 acrylic on canvas panel
paypal available

Mudding.......

Now to dry and then to glaze.....stay tuned.....  :)





Thursday, September 22, 2011

Pumpkin King

Pumpkin King
The pumpkin once again and then the little bear so
bold and beautiful. As many of you know I collect hand made teddies. This ones name
is Mother which was given to me by my mother for Christmas last year.
I just can't get enough of them even tho my collection only consist of three little honeys.
I am having so much fun with the pumpkins I bought a couple of days ago.
By the way! How long do they last? You will be seeing more of this little pumpkin series.
7x5 acrylic on canvas panel
paypal available

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Earth's Bounty

Earth's Bounty
There is just something about pumpkins, the cool air, the leaves as they drift
gingerly to the earth. It really does put a spring in your step. It makes you just want to
wait for a moment and smell the fresh air. Did I say that I love fall.
I picked these three up at the local Wal-Mart this morning and after working
12 long hours in ICU last night I just had to stay up and paint them. I am pretty pleased
with how this one turned out. I am always amazed that one day you paint and
everything just flows and falls into place and other days you struggle.
Today was a good day.
5x7 acrylic on canvas panel
 paypal available

Details before the mud........

More pieces....ready to add grout tomorrow.  It's a risk, covering everything with mud, but I usually love the results.....we shall see tomorrow.....then it sits for a couple of days and then I will had a tinted glaze, which makes a big difference too.  At this stage  the handwritten French journal pages, & the music sheets have been applied, a crackle glaze has been added....antiquing has been done, the reiki symbols have been placed.....the nautilas shell and rusted metal leaves have been attached and finally the tempered glass has been applied.  And the Reiki blessing has been done.  Then...it gets covered in mud.

Here's another one in the same stage...pre-mud.  This one has a large Reiki symbol under the tempered glass and over the beautiful French journal pages from 1881

And also this one.....there is a shell of a coconut holding a metal piece framing an iron top from an old iron fence probably.  Found in a Paris flea market....I've added some tarnished silver antique metallic netting to this piece and I'm interested to see how that will show up with the grout added.
Studio table....cleaned up and ready for tomorrow's grouting session.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Learning The Hard Way

Learning The Hard Way
I painted this for the challenge at DPW
Go to their challenge to read more.
7x5 acrylic on canvas panel.
This was more difficult than you would think. We were
to plan the amount of brush strokes the painting would take and
try to stick to that number.  I failed as I thought I could do it in
29 strokes but did it in about 34.



New Reiki piece........"The Key"
"Nest"

close up of "Nest"....found bird nest wrapped in vintage netting with Hawaiian seeds as eggs.

"Alter"

worked on my second Angel painting....

close up of "Blaize's Angel"

Monday, September 19, 2011

Resting Place

Resting Place
This little blue bowl was purchased at a local dept store.
I placed the pear in it standing and it just fell over.
Must be a sign to paint it laying down.
5x7 acrylic on canvas panel

angels watching over me.....

Studio.....
new reiki piece.....face painted on canvas with hidden reiki symbols under tempered glass mosaic....with hawaiian blessingsRusted metal leaves, red good luck seeds, fan coral around her face.
just started a new angel painting.  I've decided to do an angel painting for each grand daughter.  This one is for Blaize.  So there will be 7 angel paintings.
I think I'm finished with Aidan's Angel.  I think....maybe.....

Homecoming and Day +95 Update

I took a blogging sabbatical for a bit as I got my head screwed back on. This is not to say that it's completely in place yet, but it's many rotations closer than it had been.

I'm home. I arrived home on Friday night, September 2. I spent the entire summer of 2011 away: June 9-September 2; A summer in The Big Apple. My last days in the city were spent packing with the help of my mom who stayed with me for the last week and put up with my incredible moodiness as my exit day approached. The last day was primarily spent at the Sloan clinic and waiting in the pharmacy for all of my drugs to go home with. I said an official goodbye only to the Hope Lodge programs manager whom I had grown close with and two men on my floor who wished me well as I cleaned out our shared kitchen cabinet. None of my close friends were out on the roof deck when I left, and I think it was better that way. I was extremely sensitive and in an emotional torrent.
I took one last look at the common area and the deck at Hope Lodge Manhattan and Craig rolled in after trekking to NYC after a day of teaching to load up all of my belongings and whisk me away in a matter of 15 minutes. It was like pulling off a Band-Aid. My exit was all business. I had no capacity to handle sentimental moments. We were all focused on getting me out of there. Hope Lodge had been the perfect solution for me during my convalescence period, but when it was time to go, it was time to go. I knew that the relationships I had formed there would remain – and they have.

My reaction to coming home was not at all what I expected it to be. I had no idea how fragile I still was until we pulled up our driveway. Except for the former brick front walk being now completely buried by grass, nothing had changed. This was comforting and terrifying all at once. I had gone through this tremendous physical and emotional transformation and by some strange logic, I thought that our house would have, too. It terrified me to think that I was expected to just slip back into the same roles, duties, place in the world that I was prior to leaving because internally it all had changed.

I sat in the car in the garage and sobbed as Craig began to unload a summer's worth of bags. I sobbed for a good long while, afraid to enter. I knew that behind the door was Sammy Dog slobbering and wagging away as also was our kitchen, our living room, our bed, but completely unexpectedly, I was so afraid to see them all.

I made it about a foot into our dining room entryway and Sammy hesitantly came over to sniff me. She had a bacterial infection, so it was especially important for me to not cuddle on her too hard. It was mortifying and heart breaking because I wanted her to know so badly how much I missed her but I was paranoid about contracting anything. I pet her with my latex gloves on and it just wasn’t the same not being able to feel the silkiness of her fur.

I was paranoid and uncomfortable with everything. My reaction took me completely by surprise. I was yelling and crying, nitpicking and breathless. It was too much all at once. The sense of responsibility and fear I felt walking back into our home was completely consuming. I kept yelling: “It’s too soon! I’m not ready!” I felt as if I had been crushed into a ball and thrown full force at the wall to splat and slither down to see where I landed on the bottom. It took me a full week to peel myself back off that floor.

A big solace in the homecoming scenario was the welcome home banners my friends had come in and created for me, the balloon and flower bouquets that they brightened the place with. They’d also spent days cleaning our home for us. As I walked into the kitchen Craig played a video for me of several of my friends dancing to a mix of “welcome”-themed songs right there in my kitchen the night before. It helped me to realize that no matter where I was at that point that my friends were there for me, and celebrating for me, even if I wasn’t ready to celebrate for myself.

I went into hiding for several days. I did not want to see anyone but my husband and my dog. I was angry, paranoid, confused, sad, and felt out of place. My family and friends have been tremendously respectful of that, and I realize now that I needed a mourning period. I’ve been home for two weeks now and my outlook and mental and emotional stability are much improved. I’m more comfortable in my skin again and once again feel at home in my home. It’s no longer a foreign, unyielding place, but

I’m realizing that it’s a place that’s accepting and safe. I didn’t know how I was going to function without the security of constant monitoring and isolation, but once I had a few days to test myself out, I realized that I was both stronger and weaker than I thought and it was just a matter of figuring out which areas needed to catch up. I guess I’ll call this my incubation period.

For several weeks I hated who I had become and how I was treating the people around me. I now realize that I was fragile and incredibly sensitive and I was rightfully so. I have been through as close to hell as I would ever like to go. Adaptation, processing and reevaluation will be a long haul, but I’m finally back to that point of self love and refocused on healing.

The mind shift happened around Day +80 or so. I got out of the streets of Manhattan, began walking around the neighborhood at home on my own and I drove to a local doctor’s appointment on my own. My independence was coming back along with my self-confidence and respect for the healing process. Then, on Day +87, September 11, I broke my foot. In a cruel twist of fate, just when I got back on my feet, I was literally knocked on my ass.

I wasn’t even doing anything cool or adventurous, which is the real kicker to me. I had just returned from a solo 1.5-mile walk and was standing on the edge of my driveway talking to Craig and our neighbor. Sammy was chasing after a ball and apparently I got in the way. She was tearing after it and I had my back to her so couldn't see it coming. She went to take the corner but her weight slammed right into me. Her height was at just the right level to take me out at the knees. Down I went, ass to the grass. The guys helped me right back up and I felt fine, just thought I had overextended my ankle a bit.

I looked down and saw a superficial cut on the top of my foot begin to bleed. When I realized that the top of my foot had rotated so much that it scraped the pavement I knew that wasn’t a good sign. As soon as I tried to walk on it the pain was incredible and my foot started to swell immensely. I cried and swore the whole way to the emergency room. This was not because of the pain – though that certainly contributed to the sobs – but more because I knew that it wasn’t going to be a good scenario and that the whole situation was just a slap in the face after everything I’d been through. It was a fluke accident that would set me back so much.

X-rays revealed that my left fifth metatarsal bone was fractured. The way it broke is also called a “Jones Fracture” or “Dancer’s Fracture.” It’s a very common break in athletes who over-rotate their foot while jumping or falling and the tendon ends up pulling off a piece of the bone. It’s a hairline fracture and all the other bones around it are in place, but it’s broken, just enough to be incredibly annoying. It’s been one week on crutches with my foot in a hard walking boot. I’m just getting to the point where I can bear some weight on it and limp around the house. I go up and down the stairs on my butt and get up and down with the help of the crutches. My upper body is still very weak from transplant, so it makes the whole thing extra difficult. No doubt I will have rocking shoulder muscles and a bulging right quad after all of these dead lifts and squats I’ve been doing.

The loss of my walking ability is incredibly discouraging. I also can’t drive as we own two standard cars and it’s impossible for me to operate a clutch. So, I’m at the mercy of others for another six weeks or so as this bone heals. There’s not much else to say about that … . I’ve never broken a bone in my 29 years, so why not now? The scenario was worthy of an SNL Weekend Update “Really?!?!” segment with Seth Meyers and Amy Poehler.

Other than that debacle, my intestines have been quite a wreck. I was having severe stomachaches, diarrhea, and lost my appetite completely. For the past few weeks, eating food has become a mental game. After just a few bites of anything I tried to force down, I would feel as if I could vomit. I shed another five pounds and now weigh less than I did coming out of the hospital. None of my pants fit and it hurts to sit without a cushion, as I have nothing but bones to put my weight on. It’s depressing, frustrating, and very, very scary.

This past Thursday it was decided to try taking me off of the Vorinostat chemo drug that I’m currently on in hopes that that was the variable causing the anorexia and diarrhea. If it is not that, then we need to worry about Graft vs. Host Disease of my intestines, which is a bigger issue. I have been off the Vorinostat for four days now and I feel hunger again. The debilitating stomachaches are gone and food no longer seems like an enemy. This is HUGE. I think that we found the culprit.

I am traveling back to Sloan-Kettering every Thursday for bloodwork and check-ups. The 3-hours-with-no-traffic drive is a lot and requires coordination of a driver as I’m not allowed on public transportation, nor can I drive myself now. Thank goodness for great family and friends. My reports have all been positive besides the stomach issues. My blood cell counts are at normal levels, meaning that my sister’s marrow is creating everything that my body needs. In the next few weeks we will check another PET Scan to see if it’s also eliminating lymphoma. All the signs are encouraging that it is.

The post-transplant fatigue is still tremendous and daily naps are a must, but this is to be expected. I’m coming to terms with it and beginning to better understand my needs and limitations. In the first two weeks home I wasn’t giving myself enough credit. I was mean to myself and frustrated with my progress, but now I realize I’ve done a damn good job and I’m so proud and feel so fortunate to be where I am. I am alive and functioning. There were times when I really questioned whether I’d ever get to this point. I need to be grateful for the path I’ve traveled.

The weather here in Connecticut has been something out of a Norman Rockwell painting. It’s perfect crisp, cool air that’s warm in the sun and brisk in the shade. The sky has been an untainted blue and the leaves are just starting to take on a tinge of bronzed color. It’s an ideal time for renewal and rebirth. I’ve come out of my timid shell and have started seeing friends again and enjoying being outdoors and am thrilled to “just be” with Craig and Sammy in my beautiful home listening to the birds from the porch and watching the rhythms and routines of the neighborhood. The broken foot has forced me to slow down and let my body catch up to where my mind is at. Maybe sometimes it takes a bone fracture to teach the ultimate lesson in patience.