Going to Caro-Fornia in My Mind
What shapes the writing you’ll find here, and what gives it the impetus to emerge, are my two homes—North Carolina and California. Like James Taylor, when I am away from one of them, I travel to the other one in my mind. I carry with me the invaluable friends I have found in both those places everywhere I go. Periodically, the pets that have owned me on the opposite coasts of my country step out from behind the shrubbery in my brain to keep me sane. When I am confronted with the surly, often contemptuous, attitudes I find many individuals in each of these two states direct toward the other state, I feel like someone who has married into a family and doesn’t quite fit. I search for some kind of windshield wiper control. I want to clear the debris, so that one state can see the other as I do.
The truth is, I have never felt quite at home in California and when I return to North Carolina, I am not sure I belong there anymore. I long for Silicon Valley to become more neighborly and for North Carolina to embrace its multiculturalism—for heaven’s sake, even in my hometown you can find good Thai food now.
Like the clean air vehicle I am allowed to drive in the commuter lane, I have become some kind of hybrid: no longer exactly a Carolina girl, neither am I a California one. As I slowly integrate the better features of my two homes, in my mind, I’m going to Caro-fornia. As I make this journey, I am posting these thoughts, hoping you will be one of the kindred spirits that discovers them.
…in North Carolina…
So much green that will blaze bright with color in the fall…
..in California..
A flash that might have been a mountain lion.
Buckeyes dropping everywhere.
Being up at night, all night, every night,
is worse than lonely.
It robs me of waking to bright mornings that promise warm days,
and chilly mornings served with snow.
Neither am I able to appreciate being sopped in by dark clouds
that bring rain and time for reading.
..the year my mother was failing a brown tabby and her dreamsicle-colored sidekick began frequenting our yard. Before we became wily enough to trap her, the brown tabby presented us with two litters of four kittens each. Not one of the kittens in the first litter resembled any of the others. We speculated they had four different fathers. The second litter was a matched set. When the brown tabby brought them on the deck for the first time, I quickly took pictures and forwarded them to my husband Tom. He turned to a colleague at work and remarked, “My wife has just sent me photos of tribbles.”
Where is Portulacca Sleeping? or WIPS, as I call it for short, is actually one of the very first cat-centered picture books I ever thought about putting together. It has taken decades to finally fall out into book form. The idea came from my parents’ cat, Portulacca. She used to sleep in the oddest places—a roasting pan, the dish drainer. My dad put a shoebox on his chair to keep her from usurping his spot while he went to pour himself a cup of coffee. He returned to find her asleep in the shoebox.
She was half the size of the other kittens, the runt, a tortoiseshell---so difficult to see in shadow---and as I later came to know, every bit as wiley as her mother. She rode home with me because, as I told my mother, “he pulled her by the leg, she was limping---I’ll take her to the woman who took the other kittens tomorrow, when I know that she is all right.” Twenty-two years later my father snapped a picture of Portulacca, basking in the sun on the brick sidewalk behind my parents’ house.
There is poetry where families pull together when death comes to separate them,
some kind of song that needs to be written.
(This blog post is a poem I wrote for a poetry-in-art class . The collage shown with this blogpost is the companion work I created to express the poem visually.)
…As I stitched my two routes through San Jose together in my mind, it occurred to me I have never felt I know San Jose the way I knew my home town, even though, by now, I may lived in San Jose longer than I lived in North Carolina. Routes in San Jose feel like a network of acquired knowledge that I have put together like a puzzle, something I’ve had to do to pass a professional exam or get along at a job. This information is not innate. It is not a part of me. I carry it…
Sometime during my high school years and college, Bradford pear trees became the horticultural rage in the U.S. They had a nice straight trunk with a round crown, scads of beautiful white flowers in the spring and no messy fruit to clean up. They were the quintessential flowering lollipop tree. . .
There is something visceral about combating evil. When it accosts you, standing up and fighting back is important. Even if you only get to do it vicariously through a cartoon, or with the magic you imagine when you read about Harry Potter. There is something to seeing justice prevail in a mighty way.
I wondered about that alien. It was shorter than our teenaged artist, and much more vulnerable in appearance—and so happy to stand there holding its head. The little alien’s happiness in the face of headlessness must have been an expression of this young girl’s resilience.
I’ve been selling art for a while now. I’m counting the years in my head—18 perhaps—not quite two decades. When I’m searching for documents on backup drives, I run across whole folders of paintings I’ve completely forgotten about. I see them and recall the details of my path more precisely than I ever would have, had my memory not been jogged by those images of paintings that left my life long ago, because other people wanted them.
My mother told me once, “Julie, if you pick at your friends, pretty soon you won’t have any.” I don’t recall my age. The memory is far away, as if I were 7 or 8, but my twisted, uncomfortable frame of mind, the fatigue I felt and the frustration with one of my friends makes me think I was older—perhaps 11 or 12.
I write about “kid pods,” small groups of children that come together to form strong bonds of friendship. They face everyday problems like overly strict teachers, not being as good as someone else in sports or math, the death of a grandparent, the illness of a parent.
At home, being a tomboy was easy. When my father was around the house, he was happy for me to help him and, fortunately, most of the time my mother was preoccupied. She taught, she worked on her Masters degree, she frantically cleaned house with what little time she had left. I was free to roam the woods with my dog, a black and white border collie with an Irish setter mother that froze in a perfect point when he spotted squirrels, but barked madly when we stumbled upon land terrapins in the woods.
To my right, a two-year-old sits on a high wall while her young mother ties her bright red sneakers. The little girl’s short dark curls bounce, telegraphing her impatience.
I just finished framing a pastel painting of Hardpan and Tarmac sniffing the air at our back door. I am flooded with the feeling of them and their stories. Those were the halcyon days of cats and humans in our household. Four cats, two humans—there was plenty of time to enjoy each other.
Through the years, on my aunt and uncle’s farm, were also a variety of farm hands. During the final years, before I moved away to start my own life, were a pair of high school girls that my uncle swore were more dependable and worked harder than any of the young men he ever hired.
I find it ironic that my generation now harangues younger folks with tales of how we played.
When we took [my mother] to site see in San Francisco, she remarked, “Look at all the foreigners!” My husband and I gently explained that most of the people she spoke of as foreign were probably American citizens.
I would like everyone to experience the brightness and hope I receive from the translucency of sunlit leaves and the busyness of tiny birds.
Shop Books and Greeting Cards
Books
Come Walk With Me is the distillation of a myriad of hikes. If you have ever paused to watch a lizard sunning on a rock, you will be drawn to the content of this book. The vocabulary will be challenging for toddlers, but the pictures and the rhythm of the poem will carry them along the trail with their older siblings. The illustrations are full of things to discover, so be prepared for questions!
Kotobuki is a tiny kitten who gets into everything! His family saves him from mishaps and rescues their possessions from his playful curiosity. He exhausts them—but despite the havoc he causes, they believe he is “just perfect.”
The poem, Bubble!, floats along, following bubbles where they travel during their glistening, though short, existences. The illustrations show most of the world from the point of view of bubbles, looking down upon the earth and its curious inhabitants.
A kitten attempts to approach older cat, Portulacca, while she is napping in her favorite spots. Of course, the older cat flees each time, with various consequences for the kitten. Told in pictures without text, final illustration reveals what the kitten has intended to do all along— if ever he has the opportunity to reach Portulacca while she is still asleep. (pronounced (POR-choo-LAK-ah, in case you are wondering)
Greeting cards
Sold individually or in a package of all 6
5 x 7, Blank inside, envelope included, eco-friendly packaging
5 x 7, Blank inside, envelope included, eco-friendly packaging
5 x 7, Blank inside, envelope included, eco-friendly packaging
5 x 7, Blank inside, envelope included, eco-friendly packaging
5 x 7, Blank inside, envelope included, eco-friendly packaging
5 x 7, Blank inside, envelope included, eco-friendly packaging
Package of 6 cards: Spelunking, Solar Collecting, Progressive Dining, Synchronized Grooming, Blogging and Social Media Consultation, Rug Surfing
Blank Inside, envelopes included
Fine Art
Due to the difficulty in determining shipping costs for wall art, please contact Julia to inquire about purchase of the her fine art.
Seven years ago, a skinny gray cat appeared in our yard. He rushed from bird to lizard to rustling plant, not focusing on any single thing, except for our feral cat, Mommy, the mother of all but one of our house cats. Rudely, he nosed her out of her food dish, he appropriated her favorite sleeping shelter, and plopped down in the middle of every one of her sacred sunny spots on our deck. He duplicated her every move. Yet, despite the invasiveness of his actions, the young gray cat seemed not so much aggressive as desperate to belong.