Thursday, January 25, 2007

Memory Lane

I've been thinking recently that my memories are most often related to what I remember hearing at the time...as in a song on the radio triggering memories of where I was when I first heard it. This morning I was catching up on reading my cousin Eva's blog and followed her link to this picture:



The train station in Bastad, Sweden.
I cannot begin to tell you the memories that instantly flooded my mind when I saw it: automobile horns blaring, smells of candy and freshly baked breads and brewed coffees, the frustration (at missing the station completely and having to go to the next stop at Laholm and turn around and come back to Bastad), but most of all a feeling of eager anticipation! When our daughter Kristin and I first traveled to Bastad in 1993 (I think) we were meeting our Swedish family for the very first time. You see, after my maternal grandmother Augusta had passed away in 1963, we had lost all touch with her remaining family in Sweden. Through the help of friends and a lot of genealogy searching, we had gotten back in touch, so Kristin and I were off to meet them. What a magical trip it was! They greeted us with open arms and treated us like queens. I felt like I had always lived there....and a part of my genetic code seemed to pick up where Augusta had left off. I feel so fortunate to have found my family again, and to have Eva as "one of my very best friends in the whole wide world"!!

Just a little trip down memory lane in January 2007.

I've been playing catch-up around here since returning from my idyllic week of classes at John C. Campbell Folk School. So much to do here on the home front! Cindy, one of my classmates, has formed a Yahoo group for us, so we can all keep in touch and view eachother's works. Thanks Cindy!!

Here is one small piece that I have been painting:


It is going to be part of a new Radiant Suns wall hanging that I am working on. When I get it incorporated into the body, I'll show you a pic.

It's cold out this morning....34. BRRRRR! I have some silk "dyeing" in a crock pot and will hang the pieces out on the line in just a little bit...after I finish my coffee and summon up the courage to go outside to my little clothes line.


Last night my friend Barbara presented the second in a series of programs on walking the labyrinth at our Great Wednesdays at Grace program at church. She and husband Chuck have a portable labyrinth, which they brought and set up in one of our rooms by the Parish Hall. After the program, those of us who wanted to, were given the opportunity to walk the labyrinth. It was so powerful for me. I had first seen and walked the labyrinth at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, quite a few years ago. I've never forgotten that experience. Last night was even more amazing. Thanks Barb and Chuck.

Speaking of San Fran, C and I watched the documentary The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill last night (I'll bet you've watched that Debra). And what memories came flooding back then...seeing Coit Tower in the background of so many shots. We both agreed that a trip West is looming on the horizon. Yummm: lunch at Swan's Oyster Depot and dinner at Spenger's, the site of our first date some 36+ years ago!

OK, I'm off to hang up that silk to dry and tackle the new quilt block! Thanks for indulging me with my walk down memory lane.

Hope you have a wonderful day wherever you are, doing whatever speaks to your soul.












2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ha! It is in the 50's here. Strange weather this winter. Trinity has a labyrinth in the floor of the parish hall. Once a month they have an open afternoon and evening to walk. I really need to get down there.

Silk in the crock pot? That is a new one. Is that for using acid dyes?

Anonymous said...

Yes, it was 1993 you and Kristin were here =) I remember it as it was yesterday. It wasn’t only you who had eager anticipations. We were all very curios of the American relatives who was coming to visit us. People we didn’t knew nothing about and their existence until your letter to Sune had arrived.
Signe and Sune was mostly confused and a little bit suspicious, but we, the yuonger generation, thought it was exciting and interesting to get to know you.
Apropos of relatives and so on. Have you made any futher atempt to find Harold Anderson, Carl-Johan’s son? If he’s alive he will be 90 years old the 20th of March. He was born 1917 just like your Mom.
If you put one (or more) of the pictures you got from me on your blog, someone perhaps will recognize him!? Maybe he has/had children. Who knows!

/Eva