Monday, January 1, 2018

...spiders, flowers, and crafting...




I did not plan to take a blog-sabbatical for the last two months nor did I plan to return to blogging today. I suppose I am following my muse; and, today, my muse is Bane over at GIY: Goth It Yourself. I am terribly behind but her December theme is Anything Goes; and, well, I have been crafting. 

http://gothityourself.blogspot.com/p/craft-along-with-giy.htmlIf you have followed my blog, you will know that I LOVE Christmas! I also have a tradition of making Christmas spiders since my last name derives from the Polish word “spider.” Plus, it just seems to goth up Christmas a bit. 

Here are some older posts if you’re interested in reading about the legend, a how-to guide, and my beaded-spider-making habits: 



EEEK! gothidays!!! ...Once upon a Christmas spider...


It was an awful semester following a complicated and challenging year. I needed to craft this December and wow did I craft. I have made nearly 40 Christmas spiders, and I do not plan to stop anytime soon. Also, I continue celebrate Christmas until Candlemas so while the rest of the world has moved on and taken down their decorations, I do not until February 2nd. Without further ado, here are my spiders!


During my Christmas spider crafting, I made some beaded flowers.

I also made a Christmas top hat with Christmas spider in an Instagram friend Christmas exchange.


And, today, I swapped out a plan light switch cover for a more interesting one. It only required a picture and some sticky tape.

While this was a quick post, it’s still nice to be back.

Thursday, November 2, 2017

... more subdued celebration of death on All Souls' Day...





Today is All Souls’ Day, a holiday that is celebrated quite differently depending on one’s religious background and upbringing. Some say prayers for all deceased souls and visit loved ones who have passed.

While I’m frequently in the cemetery, I often visit other people’s families. Today I have a long to-do list and an evening class. I need to make appointments, grade papers, and prepare course lectures and activities. But, this is not what I need to do today.

Elementary School- we're in the middle with our brothers on top of the eagle
I want to go see Susan since she has been on my mind lately. She was my self-determined sister. We were childhood best friends forever with necklaces to prove it; then, before our thirtieth birthdays, birthdays that because they were only two weeks apart were celebrated together throughout grade school, she abandoned me to grow old alone. She drowned in a boating accident with her new husband. The captain of the ship lived to tell the tale of how her husband lied to her when she asked if they were going to be okay, and how she sang before hypothermia took over. 

child's grave at Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, VA
I try to remember such things when I'm walking through any cemetery. These people were loved fiercely by others.  The best inscription that I have ever read in a cemetery was for a little child in Hollywood Cemetery. Like family plots of the time, she is buried in a small cradle grave behind the other family members. With the elaborate fencing and the large grave markers before hers, it took me years to even notice she was there. If you look carefully on the foot-stone below the curled up animal statue you will see the epitaph which reads:

How many hopes lie expired here


Susan's church
Susan and I had had talks about being two old ladies sitting in rocking chairs together discussing life.  We were the first ones of our friends to get married; we were the first of our friends to divorce. We were often grouped together for Girl Scouts, Oratory, and Drama. When my first husband cheated on me right after my employer went bankrupt, she was the first to call me. She made me feel better when her first husband turned out to be a common robber. None of it seems real.

Now, she’s dead buried in a small graveyard at a church where she attended as a child. I would go to that church with her sometimes. I saw her get married there. I watched her funeral, and her father’s funeral there just a few years later. I sat in the very same pew.

6th grade
October was frazzled. It was too busy. I have made promises to myself about not over-committing myself next year. Fall is supposed to be a time of contemplation. Perhaps it was our summer-like temperatures or perhaps it was just all the Halloween activity but I did not think about the season changing. I was not reminded of death or transition. November changes everything.

This week I mourn the end of Hallowmas and I re-mourn my friends who were lost to this world. But, I’m also reflecting on my own soul. What does my spirit need? How should I nurture my spirit? What do I need at this moment? What would bring me peace and joy?

Thomas Moore writes, “Let us imagine care of the soul, then, as an application of poetics to everyday life.” 

How will I be more authentic today? 
How will you?

Sunday, October 22, 2017

... Poe, a historic graveyard, a haunted tavern, and one spooky event...




Don't we always write that October is terribly busy? I have so much to share. 

To start, last night, the River City Cemetarians, the MeetUp group that I host, attended the St. John’s Church Foundation and the Poe Museum’s “Fancy Me Mad,” their fall event “honoring the spirits of the season, All Hallow’s Eve, as well as master storyteller, Edgar Allan Poe.” While Poe isn’t buried at St. John’s church, his mother is.

This is the second year that I have attended the event. Last year was fantastic but this year they added more ambiance, a few more spirit-actors, and two storytelling sessions. Last year we were packed into the church; with the additional storytelling sessions, we had more room to relax. It also made it so that we were not so pressed for time.

Before we headed over to St. John’s Church, the group met at Patrick Henry Pub & Grille, which is one block from the graveyard. Patrick Henry Pub & Grille was built in 1850. According to Style Weekly, the location used to be a brothel and a speak-easy. And, like so many old buildings from that time, it also is allegedly haunted. The only spirits we saw were those placed on the table by our waitress.

After an amazing dinner where I was thankful that my friends let me try their onion rings, fries, and roasted vegetables which were all so delicious, we headed over to historic St. John’s Church, where Patrick Henry gave his famous Give me Liberty or give me Death speech.

We were each given a self-guided tour that included a map and an itinerary. We followed the pathways to various spirits who recounted stories of their lives and times. As we meandered our way through the churchyard there was tons of ambiance and even some fun puns, including the parish hall being named the perish hall for the evening. 

My coffin selfie
The event concluded with us entering the church to listen to the organist play some spooky music. Finally, we heard tales from Mr. Poe himself.