Friday, June 30, 2006
















Lady of the Dahlias by Ariana Richards

(www. galleryariana.com)

This is my newest artwork for my beautiful big walls. I took the photo before we hung the painting today. It's technically a "giclee," if you know that term. I fell in love with this piece of art when I was in Oregon this March, and when copies (done in the giclee technic) became available, I ordered mine. Today was the official hanging, and oh my, she is beautiful.

Ariana Richards is an acclaimed young painter at 26, and she is also known for her work as an actress. She played the young girl, "Lex," in the first Jurassic Park movie. I knew her as a painter before I realized about her acting career. I expect her art career to take her to international heights and someday this painting will be worth even more than it is today...however, I plan to keep my Lady of the Dahlias with me forever. Ariana uses her sister as a model!

Do you love it? If so, please follow the link to her website and see more. There are some beautiful paintings there.

Sentence of the day:

"The Virgoan heart is not quickly melted, but when once it finds itself in love's furnace it glows with a pure white heat and takes ages to cool."

(Guess who's a Virgo?)


Good morning!
I took this self-portrait early this morning. A friend was coming over to spend time together, and I was up bright and early, even though I stayed up late finishing a proofreading project.

It's been a hard week or so, emotionally, but I am more peaceful and together about things today.

It helps to be done with the pain medication post-surgery. I honestly believe that I am hyper-susceptible to mood swings and temperament changes when on prescription meds. I have never been diagnosed with anything that required psychotropic medications, thank God, because I don't think I could handle that. I swear, even Vicodin or Oxycodone does a major number on me.

I believe that the pain meds. accumulated in my body in the two weeks after surgery and made me emotionally hyper=intense, fragile, and rather manic. I am relieved to not need them anymore and actually HID the Vicodin.

Has anyone else found themselves reacting badly to such pain meds.? For me, the Oxycodone was great for that first week, taking it regularly for the pain after the surgery. Then when that was over, they switched me to Vicodin as needed, but I found that the Vicodin, which I took at night mainly, was not helpful for pain regulation and instead made me hyper and sleepless. So I ended up not sleeping enough, and being a real manic foolish woman!

I made some poor decisions along the way, and I ran into serious trouble romantically speaking. All in all, it was a lesson.

I would rather cope with pain than with that sort of emotional instability.

So here I am, pain-med-free, and much more myself.

Hugs to all of you,
Brina

Wednesday, June 28, 2006












I left a part of my heart behind on this beach, in this place, with this man.

I'm learning so much about love and loss. They are not opposites, but coexisting processes, I think, in my life. While we are loving, we are also giving up, and losing parts of us which we will probably not get back. This is part of the beauty of life as feeling, loving human beings.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Enough about me! That's really what I feel like saying, after writing mostly about myself on this blog lately.

Question for my blogger friends:

What is the most impulsive thing you've done lately? It can be big (told someone "I love you" for the first time aloud) or small (bought a new outfit you really didn't need) or anything in between (you fill in here __________).

Promise: If you share yours, I'll share mine, and it's a really good one I did today, impulsively!

Love, Brina

Sunday, June 25, 2006


This is a photo of my mom, Joanna, when she was a happy little girl.

My sister just reminded me that today is the anniversary of Mom's death, five years ago.

It's perhaps a measure of her integration into my everyday thoughts that I hadn't remembered the date this year. I do think and speak of Mom nearly every day. Just today in the "battery store," A.J. and I were getting him a new battery for his cell phone, and we laughed together about his Gramma Nana, my mom, who had a deep mistrust of all things electronic. Her distaste for electricity extended to lamps, cords, VCRs, you name it, and she was famous for saying, in all earnestness, when plugging something in:
"I don't trust that outlet!" She never became accustomed to modern-day technology. When she moved from New York to Minnesota, she was delighted to hear that "the same woman who does the message on John and Carmen's voice-mail phone does it on mine here!" I tried to explain to her that it was a computerized recording of a woman, not a real woman sitting in an office somewhere plugged in to a switchboard, but Mom would have none of it. "I recognize her voice!"

She was also a deeply feeling person, compassionate to everyone, fussy and rather impossible to please when it came to food, a lifelong flirt, a lover of nature and especially early spring flowers, the ocean, and Lake Superior. A talented cellist and pianist. Very intelligent, with dreams that never ended. She used to talk about moving to New Zealand, or becoming a speech therapist, or adopting a special-needs child when she herself was past the child-rearing stage. She had this cute little skip in her walk, and she was devastatingly beautiful. All of my guy friends had crushes on my mom when I was a teenager. She was the best listener in the world, and growing up, our apartment was a place of music, poetry, late-night talks, and sincerity.

Mom taught us girls to look for the good in everyone and focus on that.
Joanna would find the kernel of good in someone and then hold onto it like a dog with a bone. My friend Joe, who knew Joanna when he and I were teenagers together, has a saying: "As Joanna would say, Hitler had nice eyes."

I make her sound a bit daft, but she wasn't. It's just that she didn't quite fit into her place in the century. My aunt Carmen says that Joanna was born in the wrong era. I like to think that heaven has turned out to be just right for Mom and that she's very happy there, still finding the best in everyone.

Saturday, June 24, 2006















Feeling good! Though I still need extra rest, I really wouldn't know that I had surgery 10 days ago. I think I've had a really easy recovery, all told.

Wednesday, June 21, 2006


Pacifica is calling to me tonight...I took this photo on my last day there in May. Already I miss it. This is "my" little parcel of beach, Rockaway Beach, which I adore. I have had so many meaningful times there, deep and sustaining.

Today was a day for healing, and it was a positive day, but tonight I learned something very upsetting. I learned about a very big and hurtful lie which someone I care about has been telling me for the past month. I learned it through the grapevine, not from my friend.

I wonder why we lie to each other.

I know that we all do tell lies, but one that is so carefully crafted seems to hurt especially bad.

So while I am healing from my surgery, I feel like a new hurt has been opened in my heart.

Tuesday, June 20, 2006





The summer's begun. The kids work so hard during the year. I'm happy to see them just hanging out. Here they are in A.J.'s room (note the teenage boy clutter look) yesterday before A.J.'s friend Nate had to leave for the airport. The girls are Tasha and Kelsey.
I like A.J.'s friends and that they are comfortable here.


Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Tomorrow is "D-Day" for me...to be explained later...just keep me in your positive and healing thoughts and all will be revealed after tomorrow!

Hope everyone is doing ok tonight. My cousin Laurie is here with me, from Virginia, and she and I are both very "sleepy-tired" girls after a long day, so it's to bed a bit early now.

I'll check in tomorrow.

Did anyone see Rachel's special live today on the webcast? (I missed it due to the very busy day.)

'night!

P.S. Still riding high after the news of my 4.0 for the final paper, class, semester, and first year of grad. school. I keep thinking, "Wow!"

Saturday, June 10, 2006


While I was in Vancouver, I went to part of a three-day Narrative Therapy conference at UBC. I got to take workshops and hear presentations by leaders in the field, and I learned SO much. I think this photo captures the "wow" feeling that the conference inspired in me.

Friday, June 09, 2006

The girls had fun with their cousin Brina's wigs!



and I had fun, too!














Chocolate!

and the whole family at the indoor pool. See how the girls are preparing to jump in? They are both fearless about the water. Really amazing! Well, they are part mermaid, I suppose...




A beautiful afternoon at the beach in Vancouver with my cousins. Just a lovely early summer's day.



My w0nderful aunt and uncle, and me, in Vancouver this week.

I've just come home today and miss them very much.

Monday, June 05, 2006

Sentence of the day, from the Vancouver Sun newspaper:

Musgrave is married to acclaimed author and bank robber Stephen Reid, who is in jail for the botched holdup of a Victoria bank.

* * *

Don't you love it?

Earlier in my visit, there was a review of a show which, according to the article, included songs from the famous Gershwin musical "Porky and Bess".

I kid you not!