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eine Saite

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about texture

Receding wavelets’ shimmering smoothness

Walking on the winter beach a couple of months back, I was thinking of previous experiences and what I wrote about them. I went to search for these writings, by typing in the title of my website and the word ‘beach’. (This is the easiest way to find something in here, if you can remember key words - pair them with ‘einesaite’ in a search, and it will find posts that include the keyword, or that use that tag.) This time, I forgot to add “-ai” to the end of my search, which removes the automatically generated AI results (and, I can only hope, reduces the environmental strain by a drop), and so I got the following overview: ‘“Einesaite” appears to be the name of a blog/website focusing on nature, poetry and textures (forests, landscapes etc.) not a specific beach itself.’ Of course, I hadn’t realized it looked like I was searching for a beach named Eine Saite. What intrigued me though, was that this machine-guided language hunting determined that my blog is about “textures.” No mention of textiles, or weaving, which is interesting, but - textures. Yes, this is a blog about textures, more often than not.

Rock surface and bark surface interacting

I wrote in November last year, “Today every detail looks sharp and eloquent, each texture speaking its richness, particular and wise.” I think about texture most of the time - it’s inherent to fiber work and collage, and garden work, also just the work of seeing, noticing, differentiating.

I think about how a lack of texture is presented as a good or desirable thing, especially in this time of digital enhancement, the increased capacity to erase anything considered faulty or blemished in a surface or image. Something Bayo Akomolafe said about industrialization in an interview on the Emerge podcast comes back to me: the land “was smoothened and flattened, and all the sacred & bumpy and groovy places were rejected and pathologized.”

This process continues, with newer products smooth, slick, frictionless - as our bodies are also supposed to be, advertisements tell us: no snags, no ripples, no bumps or wrinkles. A perfection of limbs based on Barbie doll ideals and supermodel svelteness, all of which denies the reality of growing, which makes marks. Bearing children, being chldren, interacting with a tangible world that leaves scars in undramatic ways - a stray spark from a fire, a brief moment of inattentiveness in a kitchen, a young animal’s scratching, biting exploration of their world - all of this makes marks, leaves behind a language of experience which the digital ideal would smooth away. Give you instead the countenance of an anime hero, large-eyed, pale and smooth, sword-wielding and scarless.

Lap view of quilting in progress… large appliqué hands reach out

Textured winter estuary, Skagit Bay Wildlife Preserve

This comes up for me when reading or watching futuristic fiction, where people in outer space live in rounded, smooth-walled spaces and plant or animal fiber clothing is a thing of the past. I can’t help thinking it’s a textureless fantasy promoted by those who would “smoothen and flatten” all surfaces. Never mind the kitchen, the laundry, the garbage, the need to rake leaves or shovel dirt - your texture-free existence spares you all that! But how would that actually work… and is it any wonder that people disassociate or feel untethered when faced with this so-called ideal? We need grounding in those textured activities, the scratchy and crumbly and ragged-edged reality of the natural world. I’m not going to cite studies or expert analysis - you know this. You know that to get your hands dirty in soil or sand or clay, to simply hold a stone, or a cat, or a ball of yarn — it helps. Something real asserts itself, and you feel more alive, and more a part of everything (rather than apart from everything). You feel the texture of something, and you feel the texture of yourself.

Mossy firewood stack, speaking its own language

The friction of your interaction with the world — even against the air, or in water, or walking on asphalt, that point of contact is never utterly smooth or frictionless. (I remember in Physics class, our teacher had to specify that certain things were occurring on Frictionless Pond, in order to use equations that could disregard the variables caused by friction. The point was, it doesn’t exist.) Friction is always there, it defines our participation as a body. Your texture is your language of interaction with all that surrounds you.

Tide trails on the sand, like tiny rivers.

Another quilt in progress, quilted lines furrowing the surface

Your texture is what I love about you; it is who you are.

Pablo Neruda, in “Toward an Impure Poetry,” wrote:

The used surfaces of things, the wear that the hands give to things, the air, tragic at times, pathetic at others, of such things — all lend a curious attractiveness to the reality of the word that should not be underprized.

In them one sees the confused impurity of the human condition, the massing of things, the use and disuse of substances, footprints and fingerprints, the abiding presence of the human engulfing all artifacts, inside and out.

Let that be the poetry we search for: worn with the hand’s obligations, as by acids, steeped in sweat and in smoke, smelling of lilies and urine, spattered diversely by the trades that we live by, inside the law or beyond it.

tags: textiles, quilts, beach, texture, stones, wood, poetry, decolonize, nature, beauty
Tuesday 04.21.26
Posted by Tracy Hudson
 

wonder and amazement

There’s been a lot of wonder and amazement in the more negative, disbelieving sense lately… as in, I wonder how people can be so insensitive to the suffering of others, to the ongoing genocide in Gaza and continued targeting of immigrants and indigenous folks everywhere. And I wonder how anyone can be so selfish and short-sighted as to prioritize tax cuts for the insanely rich, at the expense of social programs that benefit everyone…. But this train of thought could lead to madness, given the amount of fodder being generated every day. Instead, I wanted to share some wonder and amazement of the more wide-eyed, receptive and enthralled variety, in part because I believe it’s what can ground us in the sanity and compassionate care that is needed, always.

These images are from a visit to the Painted Hills of Oregon, where the various mineral deposits and volcanic action of the land have left layers of unusual color, some of which are only exposed through erosion. The lavender in the next photo is true color - purple dirt!

Against the deep cinnamon hills, the delicate greens of sagebrush and juniper gained potency. And the sky seemed to intensify its blue.

Some of the rocks were also blue, or an interesting blue-green that almost matched some of the sage, and was close enough to my sweater color that I had to pick up a sample, just for a photo.

Amidst all this far-out color and trippy landscape, I was also entranced by the basic, gentle blooming of a cherry tree on the land where we stayed.

A large part of my amazement these days is simply that spring happens, that all these plants bubble over with life in the form of buds and leaves and blossoms and so much outreaching growth it’s almost hard to handle. The giddiness of perceiving what all is going on - especially when the birds are calling, chasing around, busily gathering nest materials. It’s so energetic and happening, and yet so peaceful. The waving of bright green fir tips and flitting of warblers carries deep peace because it’s just so right, so much the way things are.

I have very few words these days, to counter the deliberate destruction going on, but to be still and look and listen continues to feel like a crucial practice.

True emptiness is clear and always present

masked by delusions for reasons we don’t know

how could what is real and what is false exist apart

flowers bloom and flowers fall when the spring wind blows

- Mountain Poems of Stonehouse, 92 - Red Pine translation

PS - I do keep adding to my poetry page, this one posted as a typewritten image on instagram last fall. Still working on the weaving blog post, and the weaving as well.

PPS - I wrote some commentary, added to yet another page. My virtual house of words, it is sprawling. Also just read this please - Arwa Mahdawi telling it like it is.

tags: outside, nature, beauty, poetry, strength, life, decolonize, resist, resistance, stopgenocide, freepalestine
Tuesday 05.20.25
Posted by Tracy Hudson
Comments: 2
 

awe

Intrepid mushroom

Somehow, reading about Chinese Internet celebrities who spend hours editing selfies and make millions by attracting followers to look at the selfies made it seem urgent to post about a few things I've seen and photographed lately. (None of which will be edited, except to resize.)

The mushroom above was growing by the road near my house, in the ditch. The ground would have been completely closed over it, but for the strength of the mushroom's growing, which pushed up a thick pile of mulch, leaves, and vines. It created its own cave as it grew, making space by spreading and pushing up, and I could see how fairy tales imagine entire worlds taking place underneath mushrooms just like this.

Where the Elwha meets the sea.

And this is the mouth of the Elwha, which I've visited several times now. It changes dramatically every season, reshaping the beach. At this time it was running high and muddy, about twice as wide as it was last time I was here. The river is carving out the shore so that the stones on the surface go right up to the edge of the water and stop abruptly - the shore is being scooped out beneath them where the sand is soft.

Elwha river shore

There are so many sights and experiences around here to incite awe, wonder, astonishment. And they are happening all the time. All I have to do is be there and keep noticing. The sharing of it feels urgent, though, especially while the 'attention economy' thrives on the sharing of drivel. As a counterbalance, just consider the mushroom, the mouth of the Elwha, and the last images for which I have very few words.

I recently saw that Annie Dillard and Mary Oliver say much the same thing about this type of experience and its value:

You were made and set here to give voice to this, your own astonishment. - A. Dillard

Instructions for living a life. Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.  - M. Oliver

And in describing Denis Johnson's books, Will Blythe says that they "embodied an astonishment at the very nature of life, an attitude that is in itself sacred."

Light and the surface of water.... it transfixes me.

 

 

 

tags: nature, wonder, beauty, elwha, river, sea
Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Tracy Hudson
Comments: 2
 

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