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It feels like I have been sick since April. I have a weak immune system I’ve been told so growing a toddler can be extra challenging for me with all the germs present.

Better after the last bout of flu I took a walk this morning. Very low temperatures with completely deceptive crisp blue sky and piercing sunlight.
I looked up to breath the roofless space in.  I then realised I rarely look up. My neck actually felt uncomfortable lifting my chin up.  I spent the rest of my walk looking up.  A simple concept which taught me a lot about trees.  They all have unique ways of reaching out and grabbing light.  I mentally noted some different branch structures I observed carrying them with me all day to jot them in my journal tonight.

 

Yesterday I went back to Montesorri School. It has been 21 years since my Montessori days.  I am building a Blog website for Emma Park Montessori in Linden here in Johanessburg.  Looking for the perfect web background at present.  I photographed the directresses as they guided the kiddies with there work.  Out of my depth as my husband is the photoMan but I think I got some good images.  I did not want the kiddies faces to show so I had to fit in and not distract the kiddies too much.  I chose no flash which made capturing the quick fleeting moments hard.  The pictures are for the web and not print so they should be good.  Here is one…

Emma Park Montessori School is my dream school to send my little man too.  After spending a day there and hearing their “no shouting” policy in action by the directresses, I was inspired to keep my voice down when disciplining.

 

Oil on Canvas with drawing detail in the wet paint

 

a Gift for my dear friend Bronnie – who is bed ridden because of complications due to Cystic Fibrosis.  Happy Birthday Bron.  I know you love Narnia.

(this was really hard to paint as I’ve never seen snow)

 

These are some of my illustrations I have been working on for a children’s book.

Ink and colouring pencils like a child would use.

 

My Mom had a strict way of making her bed for years.  It felt like 20 different pillows and stuffed ornaments that had to be strategically placed when you wanted to do the favor of making Mom’s bed so I rarely did. (it was my Dad’s bed too and I had a secret love watching him tear up the entire Biggie Best Bazaar of a bed before getting into it. Sometimes he went to bed late no doubt to avoid the battle of harvesting a meadow of tiny florals and frills to get to bed.  It was also required by Mom that Priscilla bear and her friends, one a fat hen, were gently removed from the bed and placed gently on top of the double meter high piles of scatter cushions also from the bed.  I caught dad more than once smacking ‘Henny Penny’ off the end of the bed in the middle of the day just for a secret laugh.  I’m sure I rugby tackled Henny a couple of times too)

Thus from the past is my present bed making philosophy derived – shown above – simple and every day different like painting a new picture to invite me to bed – that is on the days I get around to making it!

 

The creative juices flowed for my little man’s first Birthday.  The party theme was Soccer as our nation was hosting the Soccer World Cup at the time.  My solution for the cake was a double chocolate sponge iced in butter icing and Smarties to create the soccer ball pattern.  I wanted it to be ‘homemade’ like as those were my best cherished cakes and birthdays from childhood.  I needed to be economical too.   I had fun planning the design and got to eat a whole box of Smarties in preparation.

His reaction was face planting himself straight into the cake coming away with a whole mouthful and icing mustache - professional plastic icing would never of allowed such a fun reaction!

 

Painting…. again – I began at age 18 with a painting that I still have not finished.  I’m 27 now – shows the speed at which life flows.

The part of the painting with me in it

 

Creativity took me to the backyard at my Mothers house yesterday.  The backyard were my dreams were formed and created as a child.  I felt sure that this simple place was something profound I was introducing to my son.  He sat not moving and careful not to touch that tickle stuff grass (A completely absurd gene he inherited from his father who never takes his shoes off???)

The backyard was the first place I baked – mud pies with the dog. (My husband would wrinkle his nose at mud)  My relationship with animals began in the backyard.  My first cat mysteriously appeared there and stayed for 15 years.  Peace reigned in my back yard.  My cat and dog were the deepest friends to one another.

My first house was built there, with a bright yellow roof painted with red tulips as a trim.  It was complete with picket fence and a sweeping kit.  I had a table and chairs in perfect proportion to my little house and parents and friends were most welcome to tea.  The dog had a matching miniature of my house.  That was important.

I miss that house.

I’d lie on the small patch of grass staring to the sky till I saw those comical little dots moving around which I’m convinced are actually the bacteria on my eyeballs.

The whole world existed for me in that backyard and when I was my cousins backyard I never felt my lot was inferior.  They had the rolling hills of Scotland for their backyard with a six foot Basset Hound who thought he was a short cow as he matched the cows in the neighbouring field.  Yes I learnt freedom there in how to ride a bike and far, but my home was cherished perhaps because it was mine (and probably because it was warm – all year – Love Africa)

© 2012 from the Hall at Home Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha