Wonderful World

There are so many obstacles in life when you have mobility impairments. I find myself feeling bitter, at times, when there’s somewhere I want to go and the building is inaccessible. There are laws that are supposed to make more buildings accessible, but they aren’t always followed. One problem is with small businesses or art galleries I’d like to visit, but they’ve set up in old buildings that really can’t be safely modified for wheelchair access. I understand that. And I’d rather they be open to most people, than completely accessible.

I think everyone on the planet as gotten a taste of what inaccessibility really means from the restrictions we’ve had to live with during this pandemic. I hope it becomes part of the collective consciousness, that able-bodied people begin to identify more with people with disabilities as we move forward. Instead of getting bitter about it all, it’s a chance to learn, and to expand the way we think about limits and access.

There’s an old building down the street from me that I’ve always loved. Many, many business have opened and closed in it over the years. Most recently, it’s been occupied by Lucyja Hyyge, self described as

“Open since August 2021, Lucyja Hygge is a metaphysical gift store owned by Termaria “Maria” Tyszka; the name pays homage to Maria’s Polish mother in law (Lucyja), and the concept of Hygge – pronounced (hoo-gah)- a Danish word for creating a feeling of coziness, comfort, and well-being.”

From Lucyja Hygge website (store is at 48 S McLean)

I hadn’t called to ask them if they have a ramp in the back, pretty sure the answer would be no.

A few days ago, on a fine, spring-like day, I wheeled past, and several people were on the porch, so I asked. Maria answered no, and that she was very sorry, she wished she could get that done. I felt a little bit of bitterness tinge my heart. But they were friendly, and began to talk to me.

One of the artisans who makes jewelry for them showed me his colorful rings made with natural stones. He had ribbons around his wrist and a dreamcatcher bracelet he’d made. They were both warm and friendly. My resentment at the lack of a ramp evaporated, because friendliness is such a strong bridge builder. They looked me in the eye, didn’t try to hurry me along, and seem genuinely interested in me as a member of the neighborhood.

“I’m going to give you a gift,” Maria said and rushed back into the store.

A few minutes later, she came out with a gift bag – a box of Positive Vibes incense, a silky tapestry that matched my jacket, and a small enchanting agate mushroom. She’d taken the time to put some tissue paper in the bag, a lovely little gift that was entirely unexpected and magical. It’s a metaphysical gift store after all.

I thanked her and wandered my way home, singing.

So if you saw an older lady in wheelchair, navigating piles of broken limbs on the sidewalk from the recent storm, singing, “Wonderful World, Beautiful People,” off key and quite joyfully, that was me.

With a little accessible hoo-gah in my heart-ah.

From Lucyja Hygge Facebook

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This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

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Ah, the Subtropical Winter

What happens on a pretty regular basis here in Memphis in winter, is that it rains, then freezes, then melts or rains again, and freezes again. So we get covered in ice. The streets and sidewalks get slippery. It’s hard to put salt down on the roads because the rain washes it away.

That’s what’s happening now in Memphis and in a lot of the Mid-South and surrounding areas. Our beautiful old (and not so old) trees get weighed down with ice and shed branches. Some whole trees fall over. They knock out powerlines and we lose heat and electricity. Street lights are out; roads are slippery and dangerous.

Today’s storm has knocked out power for most of the area I live in, but I’m one of the lucky ones so far. I still have heat and electricity, and even internet. But until the icy weather clears, I’m stuck in the house.

My exit ramp is covered with ice and sludge and branches

I’ve had lots of calls from friends to see if I needed help. I got a few errands taken care of that way. We’re hoping this particular aspect of winter ends soon. But until it does, it’s good to know friends and family have my back.

It also makes me very glad to have not only art, but plants, in the apartment. So even in all this dreary February weather, a bit of a garden still grows.

My little studio garden. A hyacinth is in bloom and makes the apartment smell sweet, but it’s so top heavy it’s growing on its side.

Stay warm and safe, y’all. And keep a little garden in your soul.

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

You can subscribe to this blog by email in the link below this post.

If you find a typo, let me know at joyzmailbox@gmail.com, and I’ll send you a postcard.

The Sweetness of Winter

When I was a child and our family was still intact, we always got tangerines in our Christmas stockings. Tangerines and oranges are ingrained in my subconscious as the taste of winter. They are also my favorite fruit year around. I tend to go for mandarins these days, though navel oranges are my favorite. I get them in those red mesh bags and I eat one or two everyday with breakfast.

I have a photographer friend who has made some wonderful photographs of that red mesh, abstracting and adding mystery to it. I decided to try to do that with a painting, embedding it in different colors, painting over it, snipping it up into collage pieces, but all I ever made was a mess. Finally, I decided just to paint some mandarins and apply the mesh on top. Closer to realism and fun to create. This the result:

The Sweetness of Winter by Joy Murray, 8×10″, mixed media

It was fun to create a painting that made me smile, after so many that didn’t. And delicious image to start the new year.

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

You can subscribe to this blog by email in the link below this post.

If you find a typo, let me know at joyzmailbox@gmail.com, and I’ll send you a postcard.

Every Day is New Year’s Day

My winter garden

Today is the beginning of 2022. And this is the times of year I get an urge to evaluate, resolve, and improve whatever I feel is lacking in my life. But I don’t really improve, I think. I move forward on a path chosen for me by life, to which I’ve made diversions — some good, some not so good. I grow.

Last New Year’s, I was so looking forward to relief from the pandemic, a relief from the divisiveness that has colored many of our perceptions of everyone else. Instead, I still feel stuck and sick. The world seems divided and conversations still often fraught and disheartening.

I want to say 2021 was a tough year — but every year is tough. And every year has it’s golden moments.

Earlier this year, I got rid of 10 years worth of journals. I felt like they weighed me down and I didn’t want to keep thinking I’d transcribe them, or look to them for stories. I wanted to move forward. I kept my visual journals, which I write and draw in. I show them to others. The other journals are my morning write, where I write first thing in the morning — as a memory aid, to process complex emotions, but also to write my way out of dark and brooding moods.

I figured any stories from those past 10 years I needed to remember were lodged in my head and heart. (They are also here on the blog and in the visual journals.) The act of cutting the past loose, of letting go of it, was quite wonderful. It wasn’t the first time I’ve done that. I’ve moved around a lot in my life, so shedding what seems unnecessary is a regular occurrence. I don’t know if it’s good or bad. I do know I’m not the same person I was when I wrote those journals.

I still write almost every morning, especially when it feels like losses are stacking up, building walls around me, limiting my view.

A few days ago I had problems with my guts (or gutty works, as my son calls them) and very high pain levels. I could see no farther than my own sickness and limits and disability and weakness. I didn’t try to write my way out of that short vision, that tunnel vision. But I read whenever I had a chance and that took me out of myself. Yesterday, I felt better. The day was cloudy but it was warm and when I got outside, I reminded myself on bad days to remember good days. Bad days seem to carry more weight, but that’s only a perception.

I hadn’t gotten a 2022 calendar/planner yet, and I needed some things from the store, so even though it was New Year’s Eve and I knew it would be crowded, I went to Kroger. I saw a friend who works in the flower section, and seeing him always makes me happy.

It was stressful at the store, but I was prepared for that. I was happy to be shopping for myself, to not be sick, to people watch, and to participate in the mundane crazy of life.

I remembered the woman I met there a few years ago, before the pandemic, who was having so much fun looking at all the varieties of cheeses. She was on reprieve from chemotherapy and hadn’t been to a store for a year or more. She told me, with only a hint of sadness, she was in stage 4 of the cancer that was killing her. She introduced me to her mother, who was waiting patiently with their cart some distance away, a small gray haired woman with tired eyes.

The woman talking to me looked to be in her 30s. Everything might end for her, but she shared such delight in all the shapes, colors and potential flavors laid out in front of us, that it only made sense to enjoy those moments with her. She blew all seriousness away, laughed at how hard it was to make a choice, talked about how wonderful her next meal was going to be.

Yesterday, there were no such conversations, but when I got in line, a man whose cart was laden with beer, let me go in front of him in a line that snaked halfway through the store. “I was raised to at least appear to be a gentleman.”

I thanked him, and said at least he had plenty to drink if the line took an eternity. He told me he didn’t like champagne and told me a story about his champagne hangover on his honeymoon. “I think between my wife and I we drank a case in one night.” So it’s beer for celebrations for them from now on.

We celebrate the new year, we organize our lives in units, so we can keep track of how we are progressing, attaining, reaching, struggling, overcoming, aging, surviving.

But every day, every morning, is a new year. Every moment fresh and new, even if time is filled with what seems to be mundane things, every breath is in itself a miracle. How lucky we are to keep moving forward in this colorful, confusing world that’s so dark and so full of light.

In this moment, this beginning, I want, next time everything again seems dark and painful, to feel that pain, yes, but to remember and have faith in love and delight. To remember the other fragile humans who connect with me, share their stories, bring my own life into focus.

This morning, at the window, I watched a strong wind gusting through the front yard, making the limbs of trees and bushes whip around. Suddenly and seamlessly, a hard, slanted rain fell, pounding down on everything. Would we have tornadoes? Will we have deadly winds that rip apart homes — all illusions of permanence and safety blown away? But soon soon, it had stopped. The rain dripped softly from the sky, the wind ceased.

Now, everything gleams on the wet ground. Even though I can’t see the sun in the cloudy sky, I can see the light.

Violet Blossom

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

You can subscribe to this blog by email in the link below this post.

If you find a typo, let me know, and I’ll send you a postcard.