Sunday, February 24, 2013

Gray, Weather, & Mood

I won't lie.

I started writing this post weeks ago and it's been a constant battle, much like the one taking place between the clouds and the sun these days, with the clouds being declared the undisputed winner.

It's not like I've run out of things to say, or that I dislike gray days.

I quite like the achromatic neutral color gray, seen as boring to some, but quite impressive when placed near its counterparts black and white, with an additional hue thrown into the mix.


But my love of gray fades quickly when it's no longer part of a painting, photograph or segment of a wall, but instead becomes the color of sky viewed outside my window, day, after day, after day. Then my view of it and my mood changes quickly, turning my once clear brain to fog.


Gray, grayer, grayest... sadly, this has been the grayest of winters.

So I write and rewrite, while 'singing' & 'listening' to the blues, mostly 'Boogie Street' sung by Leonard Cohen and Sharon Robinson. First played over and over again on CD then replayed on a loop inside my head.

Unlike Bill Watterson, creator of the comic strip Calvin and Hobbs, who said, "I like these cold, gray winter days. Days like these let you savor a bad mood."... I like the occasionally cold, gray, snowy winter days that give me permission to remain indoors to lounge about in pajamas or stay in bed under the covers with a good book or movie, while sipping hot cocoa. Those are happy cozy times.

Unless the few days turn to many, then cozy and happy become slothful and depressing.

Right now I'm feeling somewhere between lazy and pessimistically sad.

Leonard Louis Levinson once said, "A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them." 

I'm the impatient realist who sees the clouds and knows there's a sun somewhere, but refuses to wait, and chooses to pout.

Rather than pout, I should be pleased that I live in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania instead of somewhere like Cold Bay, Alaska where clouds appear 354 days a year!

Years ago, I saw a curious show in New York at the 'Ten in One Gallery' on the topic of mood and weather. The artist Stephanie Brooks did these conceptual text pieces called, 'Five Day Outlook' which consisted of small 10 X 12 inch panels in acrylic and vinyl with statements like these:

"Mostly moody in the morning, with scattered drama and perhaps a few tears. Increasing loneliness in the afternoon, with a slight chance of happiness throughout the day. Areas of regret and remorse in the evening, otherwise pleasant."

"Record high ambition in the morning, with polar confidence continuing throughout the day. Areas of regret and remorse in the evening, otherwise pleasant."

"Gale force zeal expected in the morning and continuing throughout the afternoon, with SW to NW optimism. Overcast doubt likely in the evening with a 20% chance of satisfaction."

I know I'd be 100% satisfied if the sun made an appearance and stuck around for a while. But like a child's game of peek-a-boo, one minute you see the sun, and the next minute, for a few weeks, you don't.
    

UGH!

All this talk of clouds and lack of sun is making an unpleasant situation worse.

Time for chocolate!...  the cure for whatever ails me, even if only temporarily.

But to paraphrase Onslow, a disheveled character in the British sitcom 'Keeping Up Appearances'... I'm completely surrounded by no chocolate"... in his case, no beer.

So I search the house and all I find are two poor excuses for something sweet... both being unopened and unappetizing fortune cookies from who knows when. I tear into one, eat the 'so called' cookie and read... LEARN CHINESE - Beef (niu) (rou), Lucky numbers 24, 23, 2, 27, 21, 18 and this message...

"Your smile always brightens the cloudiest days."

Aww... my sweet in print.

So with a grin on my face and determined to be happy, I sit in front of the computer and spot this interactive piece by Rafael Rozendaal called, "Electric Boogie Woogie" based on the Piet Mondrian painting called "Broadway Boogie Woogie". Watch the 'Boogie Blues' turn 'Jive Boogie' here.

Then I notice this series, called "Nebula Humilis", by Spanish artist Lola Guerrera. She artificially creates colored clouds and photographs them in the Mexican desert.


While in the background, I play "Here Comes the Sun" and "Good Day Sunshine", two songs by The Beatles, again and again.

With this post nearly finished, and the resolve not to reference the achromatic, neutral color previously mentioned, I begin to feel a bit better. Whether this pleasant mood lasts, will depend mostly on the weather. A seven day forecast for plenty of sunshine should do the trick.

What tricks do you have for improving your mood when the weather gets you down?

Any weather related stories to tell?

Love it? Hate it? or Ambivalent?... your opinion on the color gray.

Here are a few links you might find interesting:

View clouds photographed 365 days a year here.

Check out the current moods of others from around the world here.
Click 'We Feel Fine', inside the heart, wait for it to load, then click on one of the many colored dots moving about the screen. To learn more about the project go here.

Listen to Leonard Cohen's "Boogie Street" here.

Listen to The Beatles "Here Comes the Sun" here and "Good Day Sunshine" here.

Untitled (Mountain / Cloud / Sun) by Mamiko Otsubo


Sun, sun, sun... here it comes.

XOX... Dyan




Friday, February 8, 2013

Love & A Cookie

February is a short month... 28 days.

Here is a short post... about 280 words.



Love and a cookie.

I ate a cookie not too long ago and now I wanted another.

Only... calories are often on my mind.

So I broke one in half.

Only... it didn't break evenly. One half looked like a waning gibbous moon, 3/4 full, with the other half, a waxing crescent moon, just a sliver.

My head went left to the larger piece, then right to the smaller one, and back left, then right, again and again. It was like having an out of body experience, aware of the craziness of my actions but unable to do anything about it.

Then... I noticed Michael, and in an instant my right hand went out to him with the minuscule portion and asked..."Do you want a cookie?"

In that second, I made the decision to keep the larger half and screw the calories.

Only... unknown to me, Michael had been watching my exorcist head turns for some time and chimed in...

"Looks like you're having a 'Lucy' moment."

The absurdity of choosing to eat just half a cookie and deliberating over which half to eat was definitely episode material for the I Love Lucy Show. Both of us started laughing. Then came the laughter tears, laughing so hard my back started hurting... which of course felt fine once I devoured my 'big' half a cookie.

I guess you had to be there.

Only in my kitchen could the 'unfilming' of sharing a cookie between husband and wife seem so ridiculously funny.

Ever have one of those simply ridiculous moments?

What is love? Some answers by children given here.



Happy Valentine's Day!