Posted in Uncategorized

Silence is worse than the risk.

I sent to the editor of the local paper today. The republicans successfully sued to make voter registration available via a website the republicans operate. Being a criminal defense attorney, I work hard at hiding my address because having a client show up on my doorstep could be disastrous. Several years ago, a client tried to burn down my house. I checked the website, and my name, street address, party affiliation, and the last time I voted is available to anyone with access to the internet. I thought hard about whether it would be worth the risk to have the letter published. Today, I decided silence was too high a price to pay to avoid a potential risk.

This is the letter I sent.

“No one bothers to ask unwanted children about abortion. Ours are the only voices not heard when the topic is abortion. We need to be heard, and you need to listen.

My mother wasn’t married when she had me. That was a big deal in 1952, especially in the rural area we lived. I was never around kids until I went to kindergarten so I had no idea I was supposed to have a father. Out of the urge to avoid the embarrassment of sending me to kindergarten without a father, she and her husband married a month before my 4th birthday. I remember my grandmother taking me by the plum tree and saying: Your mother and father are getting married today. 

What followed was violent hell until I got married. My mother was a violent, drunken narcissist. Her husband was a violent drunk. I was hit, pulled around by my hair, beaten with a belt, yanked off a chair by my mother’s husband when he grabbed my hair, screamed at and told I was worthless. I knew full well that my mother and her husband hated me. I used to think that if I had been born a boy, they would have liked me. I’d come home from a sleep over and my mother would tell me, “It was so peaceful while you were gone.” I’d hear my mother’s husband tell my brother not to be like me because one like that in the family is enough. Once, he was arguing with my mother and told her, “Now I know why Debby is the way she is.” 

My mother and her husband had a cottage at Rushford Lake. My mother would take my siblings to the lake during the week. When I asked to go to the lake with them, my mother refused to take me. I had to stay home and babysit her husband. I’d spend most of the day going through cookbooks to find a recipe for dinner. Then, when the dinner was ready, I’d wait for my mother’s husband to come home.  He was always late because he had been sitting in a bar. He’d tell me he had already eaten and then go to bed. I was stuck with the dinner I had made. When I asked my mother to take me with her and my three siblings to the lake, she refused.

When I got married, the complex PTSD – although the diagnosis didn’t exist at that time – was so bad I couldn’t think about growing up without crying. 50 years later, I still have flashbacks. They aren’t debilitating, but recently for the first time I had an emotional reaction to a flashback. I saw the horror of what I went through. 

I put myself through college and earned two degrees, biology and journalism. I put myself through law school. I ran my own solo law practice. I moved 2000 miles across the country by myself. I’m the only one of the four kids who never had an abortion, got divorced or used illegal drugs. Obviously, I’m every mother’s worst nightmare. 

My father, who I never met until I was 35, is a drunken selfish jerk. I was 34 when I went to get a copy of my birth certificate and was told by a clerk in the vital statistics office that I was adopted. I felt as if someone slammed me against a brick wall. I remember thinking that even my feet hurt. Until that moment, I didn’t know my mother’s husband had adopted me.

After the revelation at the vital statistics office, I walked two blocks to the library and went through a couple rolls of microfilm to find a birth announcement and discovered my father’s name. I spent the rest of the day thinking I was handling the news well. I woke up the next morning and the shock hit me. This is real, and it’s not going to go away.  It took 5 months and a lot of determination, but I found my father. It took a year and a half for him to decide I was too much reality for him and he shoved me out of his life. I’ve no idea if he’s still living although I’ve never been able to find a death notice for him. 

When I talked to my mother about being adopted, I asked her why she didn’t have an abortion. She was quiet and wouldn’t look at me. I asked her if she tried to have an abortion. She said it was illegal. Later, when my sisters were young adults, our diehard Catholic mother told them that if they get pregnant before they get married they should have an abortion. 

My grandmother was horrified that I knew I was adopted and who my father was. She blamed the clerk at vital statistics for telling me I was adopted. Once my mother discovered that I knew I was adopted, I was shoved out of the family. I was never told that my youngest sister was sick or that she had died. I only knew my mother died because I subscribe to Legacy.com. I had to crash her funeral. 

I’m glad I’m alive, but being aborted is 1000 times better than the hell I went through. 

Every one of those right-to-life fanatics should be forced to raise all the unwanted children they just created.”

Posted in anxiety, bipolar disorder, Fiber, Photography

Making Some Progress

I finally got all my designs, all 210 of them, into my Spoonflower shop https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman. You have to click on “new” if you want to see my latest designs.

These are two that just went into my shop:

Ignore the squares on the photo above. This is the original shot. I cropped off the squares on the bottom so I could upload a design that had no blank space.

Getting all my designs into my Spoonflower shop took longer than I thought because I had to deal with Social Security. They insist on telephone interviews, but they fart around with their phone system so my phone won’t ring. My phone will have no record anyone called me. If I go to my voice mail, I might inadvertently find a voice mail from someone at the Social Security office. Finally, I managed to reach a human who wanted to call me back. So I went through all the reasons why that wouldn’t work and can’t we do this now? He agreed. I’ll start drawing on my Social Security account in October. I have been drawing spouse benefits under an program that doesn’t exist any more. While I have been drawing spouse benefits the last four years, my account kept growing. I’ll be getting about twice what I get now, and about $1000 more than what I would have gotten when I turned 66.

NMSU decided to switch where we get our prescription meds. As much as I hated Express Scripts, I hate CVS more. Not all of my prescriptions switched over. Jim had to talk to customer service to find out I need to set up my account within his account. I’ve no idea when or if the refills I ordered will arrive. I wanted to talk to customer service because any company that makes it so hard to do the simplest thing deserves to discover what a pissed off, bipolar attorney sounds like.

Only one thing to do when I have that much stress: grab the camera and find something to photograph.

Some of the cacti in my yard are blooming. I thought I wanted a shot of this cactus flower to make a whole quilt design. Then, I realized this was the absolute worst type of photo for quilting. Too busy and I can’t quilt around each of the petals.

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com/

My online store, Deb Thuman Art is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com

Posted in anxiety, bipolar disorder, Depression

The Trauma That Never Ends

I’m finally at a point where I can talk about what the misogynous judges on the Supreme Court did when they overturned Roe v Wade and sent us back into the 19th century.

If you don’t know what the items in the photo are for, you better learn because the Supreme Court has made pregnancy mandatory.

In the mid-70’s, I went to Planned Parenthood for my annual checkup. I got checked by a foreign doctor whose English vocabulary consisted of “you’re pregnant.” I was on the pill, and told the doctor that I wasn’t even one day late. He still insisted I was pregnant. After I gave a urine sample which showed I wasn’t pregnant, he still insisted I was pregnant. I got hysterical, and one of the Planned Parenthood workers led me through the waiting room to another room to discuss options. I was crying hysterically and felt like telling the women in the waiting room that it was okay, I didn’t have to have both breasts lopped off, I was only pregnant. I got referred to a gyn who performed abortions. I asked about birth control and the woman opened her desk drawer and brought out a handful of condoms in assorted colors. I told her I better use plain condoms because I couldn’t stand any more excitement.

At the time, a husband’s signature was required for a wife to get an abortion. I had no money of my own. I’d have to take off my wedding band, pretend I was single and had no health insurance in order to get an abortion. At the time, the cost of an abortion was about $180.00 and I only had a about 6 weeks to come up with the money.

I took the bus home, and got to listen to a screaming baby. I remember what I thought at that moment. “That’s what I’m going to get stuck with.” The next day, I had blood, lots of blood, in my urine. I weighed 110 at the time, and I lost 6 pounds in two days. Shortly thereafter, I got my period. Crisis averted.

I thought this trauma was just me until I found someone else who had the same horrendous experience with the same doctor.

As I write this, the horror comes back to me. No woman should ever have to go through what I went through.

Posted in Unwanted Children

I Refuse To Be Silent

No one bothers to ask unwanted children about abortion.

My mother wasn’t married when she had me. That was a big deal in 1952, especially in the rural area we lived. I was never around kids until I went to kindergarten so I had no idea I was supposed to have a father. Out of the urge to avoid the embarrassment of sending me to kindergarten without a father, she and her husband married a month before my 4th birthday. I remember my grandmother taking me by the plum tree and saying: Your mother and father are getting married today. 

What followed was violent hell until I got married. My mother was a violent, drunken narcissist. Her husband was a violent drunk. I was hit, pulled around by my hair, beaten with a belt, yanked off a chair by my mother’s husband when he grabbed my hair, screamed at and told I was worthless. I knew full well that my mother and her husband hated me. I’d come home from a sleep over at a friend’s house and my mother would tell me, “It was so peaceful while you were gone.”

My mother and her husband had a cottage at Rushford Lake. My mother would take my siblings to the lake during the week. When I asked to go to the lake with them, my mother refused to take me. I had to stay home and babysit her husband. I’d spend most of the day going through cookbooks to find a recipe for dinner. Then, when the dinner was ready, I’d wait for my mother’s husband to come home. He’d tell me he had already eaten and then go to bed. I was stuck with the dinner I had made.

I heard my mother’s husband tell my brother not to be like me because one like that in the family is enough. Once, he was arguing with my mother and told her, “Now I know why Debby is the way she is.” 

When I got married, the complex PTSD – although the diagnosis didn’t exist at that time – was so bad I couldn’t think about growing up without crying. 50 years later, I still have flashbacks. They aren’t debilitating, but recently for the first time I had an emotional reaction to a flashback. I saw the horror of what I went through. 

I put myself through college and earned two degrees, biology and journalism. I put myself through law school. I ran my own solo law practice. I moved 2000 miles across the country by myself. I’m the only one of the four kids who never had an abortion or got divorced. Obviously, I’m every mother’s worst nightmare. 

My father, who I never met until I was 35, is a drunken selfish jerk. I was 34 when I went to get a copy of my birth certificate and was told by a clerk in the vital statistics office that I was adopted. I felt as if someone slammed me against a brick wall. I remember thinking that even my feet hurt. I walked two blocks to the library and went through a couple rolls of microfilm to find a birth announcement and discovered my father was Don Harmon. I spent the rest of the day thinking I was handling the news well. I woke up the next morning and the shock hit me. This is real, and it’s not going to go away.  It took 5 months and a lot of determination, but I found Don. It took a year and a half for him to decide I was too much reality for him and he shoved me out of his life. I’ve no idea if he’s still living although I’ve never been able to find a death notice for him. 

My grandmother was horrified that I knew I was adopted and who my father was. She blamed the clerk at vital statistics for telling me I was adopted. Once my mother knew that I knew I was adopted, I was shoved out of the family. I was never told that my youngest sister was sick or that she had died.. I only knew my mother died because I subscribe to Legacy.com. I had to crash her funeral. 

When I talked to my mother about being adopted, I asked her why she didn’t have an abortion. She was quiet and wouldn’t look at me. I asked her if she tried to have an abortion. She said it was illegal. Later, when my sisters were young adults, my diehard Catholic mother told them that if they get pregnant before they get married they should have an abortion. 

A couple years ago, I discovered I have a brother I didn’t know about. He’s 6 months older than me. Our father walked out on him, too. His life while he was growing up was equally as horrible as mine. 

I’m glad I’m alive, but being aborted is 1000 times better than the hell I went through. 

Every one of those right-to-life lunatics should be forced to raise all the unwanted children they just created. 

Posted in bipolar disorder, Fiber, Photography

Art And Banging My Head On My Desk

I’ve been working on getting more designs into my Spoonflower shop. 82 down, 125 to go. It’s going slowly because there’s only so much time I can spend on loading designs into my shop before my eyes cross and my head hurts. My Spoonflower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

Some if my latest fabric designs…

I’d like to have a great shot of one of the cactus flowers in the yard. I’d like to have the shot printed on fabric and use the fabric for a quilted wall hanging.

If I crop out the extra stuff, then the photo is too small to print in the center of a yard of fabric. I’ll keep trying.

I’m trying to deal with Social Security. I turn 70 in August. That’s when my Social Security account stops growing. I’ve been collecting spouse benefits for the last four years. All the parts fell in place for me just before that program ended. You’d think it would be a simple matter to get an in-person appointment. Nope. Got to be a telephone appointment. That would work if the person who was supposed to call me actually called me. For the first telephone appointment, there was no record of any incoming call that entire day. Yesterday, I got calls, but rather than being from Las Cruces, NM, they were from Salt Lake City, Utah and Las Vegas, Nevada. I finally got someone to admit they hide the telephone numbers. They wouldn’t have to do that if they stopped jerking people around. After two hours, most of that time on hold, I was told I couldn’t have an in person appointment. The excuse is it would be illegal to let me into the office. Meanwhile, the Social Security Administration sent me a letter saying I could go into the local office. I was so upset after that horrendous two hours that I shook for four days. Brady knew something was very wrong and kept trying to help me. She left me a toy to play with so I’d feel better. She let me hug her. Usually when I try to hug her, she squirms. It took four hours before I was calm enough to find a novel, light a smelly candle, and soak in the tub. It was the worst manic event I’ve ever had.

I had another go round with social security this morning. After being hung up on three times, I actually got to talk to a human. Still no in person appointment. Still refusing to comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act, and someone will call me some time next week. Who do these people think they are? Even delivery people give you a day and a four-hour time window

I’ve filed a complaint with the Social Security Administration and the Department of Justice explaining how I’ve been discriminated against by the local office refusing to give me reasonable accommodations. I’m exploring the feasibility of filing a civil rights suit in Federal Court. The filing fee is $350. Plus the fee to file electronically. I think by grudgingly trying to help me, the local office is heading off a civil rights suit. If I win, which I would, I could receive back payments, damages, and I could recover attorney’s fees. I’m the attorney and I will be billing my time at $300.00 an hour. That’s a mid-range price among local attorneys.

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com/

My online shop, Deb Thuman Art is where I sell my jewelry creations and my yarn creations. You can find it here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com Look for a small link that says “shop.” It’s located at the top of the page and easy to miss. I’m going to be doing some major overhauling of my shop soon, so if there’s something you’ve been wanting, now is the time to buy it because it may not be available after the overhaul.

Posted in Law, Sewing

50 Years

Fifty years. A half century. Almost an eternity. The time went fast.

Fifty years ago, Hurricane Agnes roared up the east coast wiping out crops and caused major flooding. At the time, we lived in South Carolina. As I recall, it rained one afternoon, and that was all we got from Agnes.

Fifty years ago, Ms. Magazine came into being. It was a wonderful magazine that didn’t try to shove June Cleaver down my throat. Instead of recipes using boxed mixes, I read about the dalkon shield – an IUD that was taken off the market because it was unsafe. Of course, a few thousand woman had to have their uteruses perforated before the dalkon shield came off the US market. Leftover stock got dumped on Third World countries. “Let George do it!” Let George be in charge of contraception.

Fifty years ago, burglars broke into the Democratic Headquarters in the Watergate Hotel. The purpose? To screw with the Democrats so Nixon could be re-elected. Two young reporters at the Washington Post, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, brought down a president by telling the truth about evil in the White House.

Fifty years ago, Nixon signed Title IX into law. People think Title IX is about athletics. It is, but that’s not all it’s about.

“No person in the United States shall on the basis of sex be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.” 

No mention of athletics. It would take another 18 years before the University at Buffalo School of Law had a class that was 50% women. I was in that class.

Fifty years ago, I got married. I’m still married. To the same guy.

I’ve been working on designs for my Spoonflower shop. Today, I sent off 126 designs to have proofs made. A few days ago, I got back a set of proofs, and I’m working on putting 84 new designs in my Spoonflower shop. These are some of the new designs I’ve been working on.

I think I’ve found a use for all that fabric with proofs on them. Forty-two designs on one yard of fabric. I need to make myself shorts. I also need to make boxers for Jim. The last time I counted, I had 12 yards of proofs.

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com/

My Spoonflower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

My store, Deb Thuman Art, is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com

Posted in Fiber, Photography, Sewing

Fifty Years

We celebrated our 50th anniversary on June 3. We started the celebration a day early. Translation: we ate at restaurants two days in a row. Fifty years went by fast. I had hoped to take a special trip, but that’s going to have to wait. Until Brady is fully trained, she can’t travel with me. Once she’s my service dog, she flies free, stays in hotels for free, cruises for free. At the moment, I don’t trust air travel. Sure we’re told there are upgraded filters and the air is recirculated. When were the filters last checked? When will there stop being brawls in mid flight? When will we be able to be assured the flight won’t be cancelled at the last minute? There aren’t enough flight staff so flights are cancelled. The airlines blame the traffic controllers. I blame mismanagement and misuse of funds.

Jim bought me roses for our anniversary. I’ve been photographing individual roses each morning.

I’ve been working on a dress. This dress has only two seams because I had to eliminate the center seams in order for the pattern to fit on the fabric. Then, I discovered the V neck revealed far more cleavage than I’m comfortable showing. The pattern has a modesty panel, and I added that. I had to sew the panel by hand and I didn’t want stitches to show on the right side of the dress. I pushed a clear plastic template under the seam for the facing. That ensured my stitches would not show on the font of the dress.

The dress still looked wrong so I added ties to each side. I should have moved the ties closer to the center front. Too late now; I’m not about to rip out and reattach ties. I’ll make changes to the next dress I make.

Although we’re in no danger from the wildfire in the Gila Wilderness, we’re treated to the particulates and smoke from the fire. That’s not a cloudy sky. That’s a smoky sky. The crud in the air isn’t allergy friendly so I can’t spend much time outside.

There are no clouds today and that’s not a cloudy sky. That’s smoke, particulates, and crud from the wildfire.

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com/

My store, Deb Thuman Art, is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com

My Spoonflower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

Posted in bipolar disorder, Depression, Fiber, Mental Illness, Peripheral neuropathy, Photography, Sewing

Sewing. Depression. Eclipse. Wildfire.

1. Find pattern. 

2. Order fabric in one of my designs. 

3. Print out pattern. 

4. Discover the printer was set wrong and all 37 pages have to be reprinted. 

5. Print out pattern. 

6. Tape 37 pages together matching notches. 

7. Mark correct cutting lines on the multi-size pattern.

8. Trace pattern onto pattern paper. 

9. Make a muslin. 

10. Discover the size that matches my measurements is waaaay to big.

11. Adjust pattern pieces. 

12. Discover that the special order fabric has disappeared. 

13. Find suitable fabric in stash.

14. Iron fabric. 

15. Discover that 42″ fabric isn’t wide enough for the pattern. 

16. Find the sewing directions.

17. Find the instructions for the seam allowance. 

18. Remove center seams on the front and back. 

19.Discover I hate the dress. 

20. Discover one pattern piece is cut 4 and I cut 2. 

21. Discover there’s not enough fabric to cut 2 additional pieces.

22. Design begins when there’s not enough fabric. 

I’ve got the dress and interfacing cut out. I’m working on this dress in small increments because I’m afraid I’ll make irreparable mistakes if I try to make the dress in one day.

The wildfire in the Gila – due west of us – is causing haze, stinky air, triggering allergies, and hiding the mountains.

The wildfire in northern New Mexico has consumed more than 300,000 acres. It was started by a controlled burn that got out of control. The Forest Service didn’t follow their own protocol, set a fire on a windy day, and now we have a disaster. The governor wants the feds to pay for firefighting, cleanup, reforestation, repair and rebuild structures that were burnt. 

I’ve been battling severe depression for several weeks. My doctor tweaked my psych meds, and I’m much better. The depression is gone. I have energy and a desire to do things. 

I wanted to set up the tripod, use my 150-600mm lens and shoot the eclipse. I had a neuropathy flare up and had to use my TENS unit. I had leads going from my feet to the waistband of my pants. Using a tripod under those circumstances is both stupid and dangerous. I used my 18-400mm lens, leaned against a post, and shot the moon.

I’ve been designing more fabric. 

We’ve got blooming yucca – both white and red.

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com

My on-line store, Deb Thuman Art, is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com

My Spoonflower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

Posted in Abstract Art, Fiber, Quilts

Squiggles And Other Fun Stuff

I’ve been working on fabric designs. An app on my iPad allows me to sort of draw. I’ve made some designs based on traditional quilt blocks. 

That one was where I learned to remove the lines that guide where I put the colors.

This one I did without the annoying lines.

Other designs can best be described as finger painting. 

Some of the paint options I’ve got are metallic. I’ve no idea how those colors will work on cloth; I have to get a number of designs together so I can have them proofed. After that, they will go into my Spoonflower shop. 

I tried to make something that looks like the abstract painting I’ve been doing. So far, I haven’t gotten an abstract painting design that I like. One of the best things about these designs is they upload to Spoonflower a whole lot faster than my photographs. 

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com

My Spoonflower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

My on line store, Deb Thuman Art is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com

Posted in bipolar disorder, Depression, Mental Illness, Pain, Psych meds, Suicide

Help Me. I Am In Pain

One day, my neurobiology teacher asked the class what they thought about people who were mentally ill. 

“Scary.”

“Batshit crazy.” That was said by a graduate student who knew, prior to saying I’m batshit crazy, that I’m bipolar. I know he knew because I had told him. 

I’m not scary. I’m not batshit crazy. I’m in pain. The kind of pain that an OTC painkiller won’t kill. The kind of pain that is bone deep. The kind of pain that doesn’t go away. The kind if pain caused by 16 years of child abuse, by a violent, drunken, narcissistic mother who hated me, by her violent drunken husband, by a family that taught seeking help was the worst thing that a person could do. That kind of pain. 

The first time I tried to kill myself, I was 11. I stood at the kitchen sink holding the knife in my hand. “This is going to hurt.” That’s what stopped me.

Six times in my life, I’ve been suicidal. People who are bipolar have a suicide rate 20 times that of the rest of the population. I live in terror that my life will end by suicide. Suicide has been called a permanent solution. Bipolar disorder is a permanent problem. 

I’m on psych meds. They help. They don’t cure. They dull symptoms of depression and mania. They do nothing to protect me from the ignorance and fear of others. Some of the others are well meaning, but aren’t ready to look at mental illness. Some are repulsed as if I had some horrible, contagious disease. Some are terrified of me. Some try to push me back into a closet. Some, don’t want to hear me when I say that those who stay in the closet are a huge part of the stigma of mental illness. 

“If I read the words, why do I have to keep looking at this painting?”

You have to keep looking, because I have to keep living in this mental hell. I make you look because I refuse to live in a closet. If my painting were about a broken leg, would you have the same criticism? You have to keep looking because that painting isn’t abstract; it’s realism. It’s my reality.

May is Mental Illness Awareness Month. Look at me. Listen to me. I am not batshit crazy. I am not scary. I am scared. I am in pain. I’m locked in a mental hell from which I cannot escape.

Posted in Uncategorized

A World Full Of Unwanted Children

I hate mother’s day. My mother was a violent, narcissistic drunk who had four children she didn’t want and made real sure we knew she didn’t want us. By the time I was 10, I had myself and three siblings to raise.  She also hated me.  Why would anyone want to honor such a woman?

I don’t have children. That’s by choice. My choice. Not the choice of vile people who demanded I have kids. Not the choice of the jerk who tried to shame me into having children and asked what would have happened if my mother felt the way I feel.  Thinking I could shut him up, I told him she did feel that way. He told me I had a bad example. That was the closest I’ve ever come to hitting someone. I figured I could break his nose before he hit back. 

Another jerk asked me if I “had been blessed” while he patted my abdomen. I felt like breaking his arm. Unfortunately, I was in a courtroom where bone breaking wasn’t an option. What made that jerk think it was okay to touch my abdomen? My body. I decide who touches it. 

Other jerks told me I’d feel different after I had a child. Really? Then why didn’t my mother feel different after she had each unwanted child? And what if I didn’t feel differently? 

My grandmother tried to bribe me with a pink baby sweater telling me I could have the sweater if only I had a baby. That was the same pink baby sweater she had made for my cousin’s baby but my grandmother didn’t think the sweater was nice enough, so she kept the sweater. 

I had often wanted to tell jerks who wanted me to have kids that I couldn’t possibly have children. If I did, I’d be depriving ignorant jerks like you from being able to make ignorant comments like the one the you just made. But I was too polite. 

I’m hiding at home this weekend. I don’t want to be told to have a happy mother’s day. Apparently people think possession of a uterus means one is required to have children. I don’t want to explain not having children. I don’t want to and should not have to justify my choices. 

Posted in Abstract Art, bipolar disorder, Mental Illness

Mental Illness, Paint Sticks, It All Works Out Sometimes

May is Mental Illness Awareness Month. You can celebrate by reading Mark Vonnegut’s “Just Like Someone Without Mental Illness Only More So.” Mark is Kurt Vonnegut’s son. He’s also bipolar and schizophrenic. And a pediatrician. 

Although I didn’t have Mental Illness Awareness Month in mind when I pitched this idea to my painting teacher, the final critique and my explanation of my painting to the class is on May 5. For years, I’ve wanted to create art that showed people what bipolar disorder felt like. Meanwhile, the rest of the class painted a post modern piece. Post modern is supposed to be about rebellion. I had considered calling my painting “What d’ya got?” That was Marlon Brando’s famous line from the movie, The Wild One. I realized most of my classmates were born after I went through menopause and I doubt any of them would understand the reference. Instead, I call the painting, Inside Deb’s Brain. 

I had something else in mind when I started the painting, but I think where I ended up is better than where I was aiming. I aimed at smooth transitions between each part of the painting. I can’t think of a single smooth part of bipolar disorder. My brain has a mind of its own and never consults me before deciding to be manic or depressed. 

I have synesthesia. Synesthesia is when two senses respond to one stimulus and there are many forms of synesthesia. There are people who smell words. Kandinsky heard music when he looked at a color. I see energy flows as colors. I only understand two of the colors – purple and golden white. Purple is healing energy. Golden white is Divine energy. The purple in the painting represents both healing and center – the nearly impossible to attain place where I’m neither manic nor depressive. Depression is below center. Manic is above center. The painting also shows a mixed episode. The last mixed episode I had nearly killed me. I was bouncing off the ceiling while deciding how, when and where to kill myself. The terrifying part is I had no clue I was depressed.

I wanted to show golden white Divine energy, but there’s no oil paint named golden white. Nor is there iridescent oil paint. I remembered I bought Sennelier oil pastels several years ago. The paint stick origin story I read was that Picasso wanted an oil paint that didn’t dry out, didn’t spill, didn’t need solvent, was portable, and could be used on all surfaces. He almost got what he wanted. I, and a whole lot of other fiber artists, discovered oil sticks and fabric are incompatible. We were told if we set the paint with a hot iron, the paint would be permanent. Nope. That resulted in a mess on the bottom of the iron, and paint that washed out of the fabric. Plus, the sunflower oil used to suspend the pigments bled into the surrounding fabric. And so the paint sticks sat in a drawer for many years. Until I remembered I had them and they could be used over oil paint. I decided to add iridescent gold to my bipolar painting. That almost worked. I learned it’s best to plan where to use the paint sticks before starting the painting. I learned other things while not getting the expected result. I found myself putting Divine energy throughout the painting rather than in the healing part. I realized there’s Divine energy no matter what I’m feeling, so there are inexpertly applied paint stick color throughout the painting. Moral: It’s Good To Be A Packrat. 

I am linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com

My Spoonflower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

Deb Thuman Art, my online store, is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com

Posted in Abstract Art, bipolar disorder, Depression, Mental Illness, Psych meds, Sketchbook

Inside Deb’s Brain

Inside Deb’s brain is all manner of odd things.

My doctor knows I adjust the dosage of my antidepressant from time to time. Most of the time, I only need 100mg. When the depression gets bad, I go up to 150mg. When the depression is really bad, I go up to 200mg. Yesterday, I started with 150mg. When I felt dangerously close to suicidal, I took another 100mg for a total of 250mg. I’ve never taken that much before. 

If there’s a reason for my depression, antidepressants don’t do much. If the depression is a function of bipolar disorder, I need as much antidepressant as necessary to keep me above suicidal. A couple hours after I took the final dose, I felt normal. That’s how I know it was bipolar depression. My brain didn’t work properly. Why? Who knows? Certainly not the drug companies. Although they aggressively market selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, no one knows if there is an increase in the available serotonin. Or if any of the reuptake molecules are inhibited. 

It’s unsettling to live with a brain that has a mind of its own. To live with mood swings that aren’t caused by anything that is happening in my life. To constantly wonder if my reaction to something is a function of bipolar disorder or if “normal” people would react the way I’ve reacted. 

For years, I’ve wanted to do an art piece that shows what bipolar disorder feels like. So far, I’ve been unsuccessful. I’ve a final painting assignment for my painting class. We’re supposed to do something that’s post modern. I’ve talked with my teacher and I’m doing something that’s….I’m not sure what it is. I want to show what manic feels like. I want to show what depressed feels like. I want to show what the dreaded mixed episode – simultaneously manic and depressed – feels like. I want to show the thoughts that inhabit those episodes. 

The photo marked #1 is where the idea for the painting started. Using a brown sharpie, I wrote some of the crap my mother said to me. Using a blue sharpie, I wrote how I deal with that crap.  I thought about braiding the strips. Then I thought about sewing the strips onto fabric. I’m not sure what I will do with the strips. 

The photo marked #2 is a more or less final sketch of what the painting will look like. Most people who don’t live with a mental illness aren’t aware that there are levels of depression below suicidal. A depression so deep, you have to feel better in order to kill yourself. It sucks being that far down, but at least I’m safe there. With bipolar disorder, the choices for the mood swings are: Manic, Depressed, Mixed – where one is both manic and depressed. Mixed episodes suck.

I have a form of synesthesia. I see energy flows as colors. When I see purple flooding into my brain, I know I’m healing.

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com

My Spoonflower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

My on-line store, Deb Thuman Art, is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com

Posted in bipolar disorder, Garden, Mental Illness, Pain, Peripheral neuropathy, Photography

Ouch, WIND, and Iris

I’m having a major neuropathy flareup. I’ve taken gabapentin,  put CBD oil in a capsule and swallowed it, 5mg of THC and my TENS unit. I’m stoned and I think I’m having hallucinations. It’s hard to know how much of what I perceive is real.  I’m also staggering around the house. And I’m still in pain. Bleah!!!

Art reliably helps with the pain. I played around making fabric designs.

The iris are blooming. The original clump got overcrowded, so Jim split the clump in two.

No idea if this will work, but here’s a GIF I had to make for my photography class. We’ve been having WIND in the desert. Right now, there’s a low pressure system blowing in. I could tell by the pain in my arthritic knuckles.

I have to put together a narrative for my photography class. So….I put together a bipolar narrative. I might have stumbled onto a way to show people what bipolar disorder feels like. That’s the beauty of being a multi-media artist. When one medium won’t work for what I want, there’s another one or two that will work. 

Rather than listen to my photography teacher explain how to do a GIF in photoshop (it’s much easier using PhotoScapeX), I played around with collages. They turn into interesting fabric designs.

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com

My Spoonfliower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

My online store, Deb Thuman Art, is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com

Posted in Abstract Art, bipolar disorder, Mental Illness, Photography

Things Not Working Out As I Imagined

Odd bits of art this week. First, I got the self portraits done for my painting class.

This was the unrealistic realism painting. I suck at realism, but this has a goofiness that I kind of like.

Impasto.

Abstract. I have tried for ages to come up with art that looks like bipolar disorder feels. This doesn’t exactly accomplish that, but it’s closer than previous attempts. I’m bothered by everything being the same value.

I detested the optical illusion portrait, so I killed it and tried to show how a depressive episode feels. When I planned the two abstract portraits, I thought about paintings I had seen by Kandinsky and Kiefer. Not that anyone could tell by looking at my paintings…….

I’ve got at least one and possibly two more in this bipolar series – neither have been painted yet.

This is for my photography class. We had to insert a photo into another photo. We’re supposed to use photoshop, but I detest photoshop. It offers nothing that I don’t already have. Oddly, this photo stunt is easy to accomplish in Affinity. I started with a B&W photo of a part of the art building, and inserted a smiley moon in one window.

The original plan was to take B&W photos and insert a color photo. Except when I tried to insert a color photo of Brady, the color photo turned into B&W.

Artistic commentary on drought in the desert. I had to put an overlay onto the drinking fountain photo in order for the cactus to have any color.

Obviously I need to work on this idea a bit more.

I’m linking with Nina Marie here: http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com

My Spoonflower shop is here: https://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/deb_thuman

My online store, Deb Thuman Art, is here: http://www.DebThumanArt.com