watercolor of dahlia by emily weil

daily painting | the rut

For about a month every year, starting now, the elk rut gathers steam here in the Rockies. Testosterone-crazed elk bulls seek females and mate. The males “bugle” to attract females. It’s an other-worldly, high-pitched call that echos through the valleys of Rocky Mt Nat Park. Later this afternoon as a park volunteer I will assist rangers who roam up and down the Kawuneeche Valley (“Valley of the Coyote”, named by the Arapaho nation, pron. “caw-wun-ee-chee”). We look for elk herds that may block traffic and assist the animals by stopping traffic temporarily and allowing them to cross the road. The skilled rangers also protect humans from themselves as many folks, wanting a good photo, put themselves in harm’s way, getting too close to the animals. As often as elk males display prowess and power and dominance, humans display abject stupidity. The park rangers do their best to prevent injury and harm to people who make careless decisions and underestimate the power of these magnificent, powerful, sex-crazed creatures.

Last night I went out on my balcony to listen for bugling. Yep — I could hear the male elk calling. It was magical and amazing, hearing nature play itself out. The calls were not close, but were clear.

Nature here in Colorado heals me. Whistling Yellow-bellied Marmots (who will hibernate in a few months), elk, deer and moose, chipmunks and ground squirrels, Osprey and Bald Eagles, Black-billed Magpies who collect peanuts I put outside in a dish, Robins, busy grasshoppers (so many of them right now). Snowshoe Hares that are now brown and turn white in winter — one was hopping around near my condo driveway the other morning. Aspen leaves turning golden and pink. Cooling nights. The gorgeous nearby lake with its friendly residents and perfect library. Rocky Mountain sounds and calls and beauty comfort me in my grief. These are powerful forces that surround me and I tell them thank you. It’s working. I am getting exactly what I’d hoped for when I made this crazy-ass move to this craggy, dramatic corner of the world.

[This painting was commissioned by a neighbor]

 

 

mural bird-shape abstract by emily weil

daily painting | weather report

Summer in Colorado. Can be lovely, can be stormy. Today in the park in Granby, at the “Art in the Park” event I was one of about 10 artists selected to make art on a bird-shaped cut-out provided by the art association (every year is a different theme; not sure but last year’s might have been fish). The individual pieces will be on public display in Granby on an “art wall” alongside the highway.

Birds? Really? Perfect!

Had a ball, great to meet other local artists, and while yesterday was a fine day to paint outside, for today’s event of showing the art to the public the weather was tumultuous (rain, thunder, lightning, squalls, hail and blustery winds). So the usual crowds didn’t show, but I still enjoyed myself. We had moments of sun here and there, which was lovely, and I admit that, while the lack of attendance was disappointing, part of my fun of being in the Rockies is weather-watching. I am not disappointed. (The Granby group loaned me a canvas canopy so I was sheltered, mostly.)

Getting my feet wet (today, literally) in the local art scene. Kinda different from California; the populations here are small. Which frankly makes it more fun. An art event when you paint in a park and they give you lunch? And money for art supplies? Seriously? To feel appreciated as an artist was lovely and frankly that kind of treatment is nonexistent in CA, at least in the Bay Area. Very refreshing and I am appreciative. I don’t care anymore about art success — tried for that in the Bay Area and it was a grind and I got burnt out.

I’m sure my age has a lot to do with dwindling art ambition. I’m just too tired. I’m glad to continue to paint and teach and be part of local events. Never saw myself happily living outside the Bay Area but this slowed-down life is terrific. Sometimes getting old is great.

 

 

abstract painting by emily weil

daily painting | event type: birth

Today’s process: I feel like a ball in one of those wire spin thingies that spits out lottery winner numbers. Recently I’ve learned of CPTSD, which is Complex PTSD, a version of PTSD for people who have experienced long-term trauma (ongoing childhood abuse, for ex.): www.beautyafterbruises.org/what-is-cptsd

This is turning me inside out.

I read the list of symptoms. The resonance is horrifying.

I hope this new light shining on old, still-tender bruises will be healing. Like sunshine is a disinfectant.

Anyways it’s painful to look at (I just typed “paintful” which is kind of hilarious), but so true to my experiences I can’t look away. It’s like a neon light poking a pink fluorescent finger into a dark corner.

So I’m writing away in my journal, which helps me sort out feelings that hit me like a tsunami. When the words flow in the journal, my head starts slowly sorting things out, and I am somewhat calmed.

Later I went outside my door and sat on my favorite boulder and put my bare feet in the dirt, releasing pain into the rocks. Into the Rocky Mountains. A few more spoonfulls of hideous trauma absorbed into the earth (she’s generous that way).

Then a fire sparked in my belly and I practically ran back upstairs (at a 72-year old’s pace) to pull art supplies out to express more grief and shock and whirligig emotions.

After painting and drawing I needed paper to make it into a sort-of collage; the closest, most relevant print I found was a letter from the state of CA that came when I ordered a dupe of my birth certificate. Felt kind of perfect.

It all poured out of me. I didn’t even sit down at my art table but stood — couldn’t interrupt.

And here I am, a tiny bit more whole this afternoon. I worry about too much navel-gazing, but sometimes these moments just happen and I trust them. Healing truths kind of fall out of the sky sometimes. I am deeply grateful and a bit stunned.

8″ x 8″ mixed medial on paper = $95

 

 

 

abstract mixed media painting by emily weil

daily painting | delicacies

I don’t exactly toil away at writing, as I keep a log of my move to Colorado, but sometimes I bore myself and start over. And over. But just now a Broad-tail Hummingbird paused outside my window, where I’m perched with my laptop a few feet away, seemingly peering in and looking at me. The feeder is close, and the riot of brawling hummers beefing up for migration makes me laugh, often. So fierce! Especially the Rufous hummers who, like tiny, coppery speed-ball warriors, chase off other visitors to the feeder (even bees).

But a hummer has never come to the window and looked in and said hello. She floated out there for a good couple of seconds.

I’m meant to be here. I’m supported. I can relax, I haven’t made a horrible, stupid mistake.

In fact, I can embrace my life here. Coax my neck muscles to soften a bit.

The bullhorn is my new visual image. I employ it to out-yell my dad’s critical voice that is in my head. He was a dyed-in the wool, old-school, abusive and contemptuous misogynist. Females had little value; males ruled the world and deserved respect. So I’m treating that brain-infection with booming, loud announcements of self-respect. It’s working. The beautiful, plentiful hummingbirds help. Beauty is replacing darkness and self-doubt.

The Rockies heal me, fortify me. This is a place of summer abundance — chirping Marmots, omnipresent Osprey scouting the lakes, adorable, furtive chipmunks, brilliant cerulean Mountain Bluebirds scooping bugs out of the air, even Snowshoe Hares, on a lucky day (they are amazing — brown now, with white paws, enormous snow-shoe back feet; their bodies know to start shedding brown fur and replacing it with white, for winter camouflage, when days start to get shorter and I freakin’ can’t wait to learn to ID tracks in the snow out my door).

No, I have no idea how winter will be for me. But I’m not worried as I will learn cross-country skiing and will borrow my friend Amy’s snowshoes to try out and maybe return to nearby slopes to do some downhill. This charming town has lots of winter activities too, and I may even try ice-skating on the lake, but I never learned how to stop at the ice rink other than grabbing the railing, so I’d best duct-tape bubblewrap to my already well-padded backside before that attempt. And there’s always that marvelous library with the stone fireplace.

I’m good.

8″ x 8″ ink, watercolor, pencil, acrylic, oil pastel on paper = $95

 

 

 

watercolor of bald eage by emily weil

daily painting | air

Gusts suddenly gain power and slam around up here in the mountains, and I rush to close doors and windows as a downpour may be imminent.

It’s exciting and amazing.

Then, 20 mins later, it’s like nothing happened. It’s calm. It’s sunny.

How do those Aspen leaves hang on, anyways? So resilient and structurally sturdy. But they make a wonderful sound as they get blown about. Shoosh. Shooshing.

The healing swirls around me too, like the winds. Moments of insight pop up unexpectedly, and I can let go of tired old tropes I learned as a kid. Like loneliness is a part of my world. It’s who I am. Might as well adapt to the isolation, humans will certainly betray and disappoint. Beliefs inhaled as a child become a kind of protection, a cloak I put on to help me tiptoe through life, stealthily. Invisibly. Desperately seeking safety.

But sometimes I find grace, and can let the exhausted, musty old ghosts go and embrace love and connection. This is a miracle. Amazing, when it shows up.

[Worked on this painting to hopefully sell in an Estes Park gift shop; sometimes I see local Bald Eagles engaged in in-air battles with Osprey, seemingly in territorial battles]

5″ x 7″ watercolor, ink, acrylic pen on paper

 

 

 

watercolor of wild rose by emily weil

daily painting | wild rose

Thunder clouds are sneaking up on the edges of blue sky out my window. I love them. Weather — magnificent (I should have been a meteorologist?). For years I’d fantasized about living in the Rockies and experiencing all the seasons. One down, three to go. I’m kinda sorta but not really worried about winter. I bought a colorful $35 second-hand throw rug from a friendly, lovely young woman in a nearby town (it’s under my chair right now, to protect the carpet from paint spatters and spills). We chatted and she let me know she moved from Anaheim two years ago. I asked her how she adapted to winters here and she said, Oh, my goodness, no problem. They are beautiful. They plow the roads efficiently. You’ll be fine.

I took a photo of this wild rose in the grassy, fenced area near my front door. Growing season is brief here, and just now the alpine wildflowers are booming and blooming. The hills are bright green. The mountain meadows filled with life, from little ruby-crowned kinglets to mother moose and her calves. Yesterday I explored a trail along the Colorado River. Drama and beauty.

I’m in love. Colorado has stolen my heart.

I’ll frame this guy and shop it around to gift shops in Estes Park. Have to head over the pass anyways soon to the east-end of Rocky Mtn Nat Park to get my federal ID so I can complete my park volunteer training (so many hoops to jump through and no I’ve never been convicted of a felony unlike our dear leader). The road to Estes through the park goes over a 12,000+ foot pass. It literally takes your breath away. It’s only open, because of heavy snow, in summer months.

My grief is still fresh. I miss my brother. I worry about my family. On days when I feel sad and scared, sometimes I practice 12-step slogans I learned eons ago. Let Go and Let God. Turn It Over. It opens my heart a little and I feel less alone and frightened. When I did that prayer and meditation earlier today, hummingbirds showed up out my window. I put up a feeder a few days ago and there are are Broad-tail hummers that buzz and whistle all the time while in flight. This morning a Rufous hummingbird, with glowy rust-colored feathers, started perching in a nearby aspen tree, launching itself at its rivals looking for a sweet sip. It seems to think it owns the feeder. It’s hilarious and the Rufous is quite a fierce warrior.

OK. Colorado Weather update soon. Stay tuned.

5″ x 7″ watercolor, ink on paper

 

 

 

abstract painting by emily weil

daily painting | completion

The swirling release I felt when I painted this today kind of took me by surprise. Don’t know why it should, making art often is healing. This one is a mix of things — paint, pencil, sand, ink, ashes. A part of my process of embracing a new path in Colorado and letting go of California life (not that I’ll never return; who knows?). Another puddle of grief and catharsis. This afternoon I am a little bit lighter. More whole and clear-headed.

It was a powerful few hours, working on this. I got swept into it. When it was done I took it outside and found a boulder to sit on to pray and let go. A release.

The Rockies literally hold me. I loved going to Reinhardt Redwood Park in the Oakland hills, and in those magical redwood groves I would lean on a tree and feel it absorbing my grief and pain. The Rockies here do that now. The power is palpable.

Today is a reminder to be true to my heart, my spirit, and to what calls me. To let go of what the world thinks I should do and my self-criticisms. Today my heart is a little bit bigger and more open. I honor these mysteries. I read a story where a spiritual seeker asks a wise one, “What is the meaning of life?”

“To live,” was the reply.

9″ x 9.5″ acrylic, pencil, watercolor, ash, ink on paper

 

 

 

watercolor painting of blue columbine by emily weil

daily painting | blue columbine

OK so I’m distracted. A few mins ago thunder and lightning rolled in and now there’s a hefty rainstorm here in the Rockies. The coolest!

I’m in the painting groove again, doing small paintings for local gift shops. This is a Blue Columbine, and next I’ll do the wild iris that grows in the mountains. Then maybe a Bald Eagle.

I’ve been paralyzed with fear for a week now, after crunching the numbers for retirement. A little meager, is the outlook. Not as robust as I’d hoped. So I’ve had on one shoulder the angel telling me to trust and all will be OK. On the other shoulder sits a sniveling shitball of a little demon telling me to be afraid. To be very afraid. Because clearly I’m a complete failure.

I sink quickly into fear, panic, and self-loathing. The engine that ran my childhood home was money. Dad was a dyed-in-the-wool misogynist. Women can’t be trusted with money, was his view (when he married mom his father told him to never tell his wife how much money he had as she’d just spend it all on shoes). I’ve lived with this for a lifetime, and feel overwhelmed with shame if I feel (evidence or no) that I’ve made a mess of my finances. That I’ve taken a wrong turn. That I am completely and thoroughly incompetent and a useless female when it comes to money management. I can’t tell you how many sleepless nights I have had over the years, criticizing and doubting myself. [Hello, dad? If you’d taught me a few basics when I was young, rather than dismissing and ridiculing me, it would have helped? Like, a lot?]

So. Now is the time to embrace healing, clear-eyed planning and to love that terrified little girl who was taught she was worth nothing (sounds extreme and dramatic, but believe me it’s accurate).

Truth is, all has always worked out in my life. Now I will trust that will continue. The way the stars lined up to buy my floating home in Alameda? Incredible. The apartment I had in Oakland that just kind of showed up one day? With a view of the Golden Gate Bridge? And at the same time, at a very low point in my freelance graphic design career, I had no clue how to find new clients. The dot-bomb had exploded in the Silicon Valley and my clients either had gone belly-up or the big companies had reined in their budgets for contract designers. I was broke, scared, and clueless. And then Bon Appétit fell out of the sky and I worked for them for 20+ years and had steady work (they ran the cafeterias at Google and other companies and needed menu boards, logos, brochures etc.). That came through when I felt I’d hit bottom and that I’d made a dreadful mistake, choosing graphic design as a career. A somewhat woo-woo friend had encouraged me to practice faith in the Divine. To Turn It Over. To trust. To call on helpful angels. I rolled my eyes but I did as she suggested (seriously I had no other choice; I was at a dead end).

So again in my life I am not sure how things will work out. But I can paint, I can teach art, and I know other ideas will formulate. I’ve been catastrophizing for days. Amazing, glorious things have turned up in my life when I felt cornered. I’ll be fine. And oh the lovely pitter-pattering of rain on the roof! Delightful.

7″ x 5″ watercolor, ink on paper

 

 

 

watercolor of black bear by emily weil

daily painting | black bear

My neighbor Dave here in Colorado convinced me to go into town and introduce myself to Heather who owns a local gift shop that’s all about birds and wildlife. As a result I’ve been working on small paintings to sell to tourists who can bring home souvenirs that easily fit in a suitcase (I’m told visitors will be here by the thousands in the summer which launches this weekend even though we still get snow flurries). Today I dropped off the first batch which includes this bear. Black bears are seen regularly here as are moose. Many moose. They are all amazing (haven’t seen a bear yet). A few days ago I drove into Rocky Mountain Nat Park to explore and two huge moose were crossing the road. Slowly. On their own schedule. One was a male, my first, who had small, visible nubs of the beginnings of this season’s antlers. Enormous creatures. Gorgeous. Gob-smacking. Unperturbed by humans in cars.

One day last week after buying groceries I pondered going right from the store into the park for a short walk. In California, if I had that urge, I had to consider the sun. Would I find a spot in the shade so the food wouldn’t spoil? Was it worth it? Here I had to wonder if the milk would freeze or Buster’s lettuce would ice up or if bears might sniff out the chicken thighs in the back of the car. I decided to risk it. As I walked up the trail signs were all over not to carry food as bears were frequently seen in that part of the park.

No bears. All was well. Next time, though, I’ll put the food away at home first, though, unlike Tahoe, bears here have not learned to remove car doors.

Today I’m thrilled to see violet-green swallows zooming around chasing bugs. They are as beautiful as their name suggests.

I’m settling in. My health is much better as my trusty body adjusts to the dry mountain air. I keep finding new and spectacular trails to hike; yesterday I found one along the lake and overhead was a pair of osprey, hunting. The glories here are breathtaking. I am very content here. And I miss my CA friends. Hands down the biggest loss of relocating.

5″ x 7″ watercolor, ink on paper

 

 

 

abstract painting by emily weil

daily painting | panes

Well, damn. Back in the grief boat again. Or in a bathtub sheltering from a tornado. Or a Cuisinart®. Emotions swirling and blowing around me after the death of my ex-husband a few days ago — sadness, anger, regret, relief, depression, shock. I know this storm. Have lots of experience. Got some nav skills. We married when we were babies (18 years old), had our own babies, divorced in 1987. I still have moments where I’m washed over with relief that I divorced him and took over the reins of my life.

I had no recent contact with him though my two kids did, so I knew his heart was bad. I wish rational thought could sweep away grief and sadness — we hadn’t been in touch, he was a shite dad and husband, glad I ended the marriage. Doesn’t matter though. Can’t think away the sad. We were connected, once. We were high school sweethearts. We entered adulthood together.

Yesterday while on a drive to pick up a painting that was in a show and also meet with a friend in Sonoma County I listened to Anderson Cooper’s podcast on grief. I have found his series very encouraging and healing. We all go through loss. We all experience the disappointment of fair-weather friends and feel the isolation and loneliness of loss even though every human goes through it. Or will. Self-compassion helps, a lot. And getting outside.

I’ve also been getting my paints out as the therapy of making art helps me surf these turbulent waters of loss and cleaning out my home and relocating and embracing my aging self. Often the outcome is meh, but this one felt colorful and a bit whimsical.

OK off to the redwoods. Cleaning out cupboards can wait until tomorrow.

7″ x 10″ watercolor, ink on paper