This is my bedroom. The walls of my bedroom are pink, and the walls of Peggy's bedroom are green. Every two weeks, we clean house, and it is then that I change out many of my decorations. It is for this reason that you might see the same item in two locations. We bought the silk painting atop the mirror in
Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, in 1972. When silk-paintings of John Wayne
and Elvis Presley became popular, Peggy wanted to discard our desert scene. I go along with most of what she wants, but on this occasion I demurred. The cat
painting to the left of the mirror came from a St. Vincent de Paul Store in Eugene, and the wall-hanging above my BiPap is a pressed-plastic picnic scene that came from a junk store in Wisconsin.
The brown heart to the right of the second photo was a gift from a British
blogger. I call both Peggy and the sleeping squirrel to the left of the photo, Fluffy,
Fluffer, or Fluffy Squirrel.
I used to have 44-plants in my bedroom, but am now down to the ones in
the photo plus an Aglaonema that stays in the den. The white cat was a gift from an elderly neighbor named Helen who has since died. In front of the white cat are wasps' nests (I love wasps and bees), petrified wood, and ceramic pieces by the same British blogger who gave me the heart.
In January, my collection of Civil War books reached the point that I paid $50 for the above bookcase at a Habitat for Humanity
store. When the ensuing book shuffle was complete, my Civil War books were in the hall, and my new bookcase contained books about cats, knots, and domestic plants. The poinsettia
blanket is one of several bed-coverings that I use to keep cat fur off my spread.
Our youngest cat—five-year-old Harvey—is relaxing amid my cat library. His luxuriant ruff isn't visible, but his snarky expression is. He is so beautiful that I long ago become the world's first bitch to a cat.
I bought the white rabbit holding the carrot at a junk shop sixty miles from town while on an outing with my friend Walt (https://snowbrush.blogspot.com/2023/11/invitation-to-suicide.html). Determined to maintain my manly image, I didn't buy it that day, and so it was that Walt had to drive me back for
it the next day. The plaster-of-Paris animal to the right of the rabbit was so well-cuddled that it's identity is no longer decipherable. I love many damaged
possessions. For
example, I used to collect broken-legged horse knick-knacks because I couldn't bear the thought of the store throwing them away. I didn't realize that my father knew about my horses until he started crying about them the year he died.
The dark-colored cat below the stuffed cat is Bastet, my only overtly religious symbol. I bought the fox to the right of Bastet at the Jackson, Mississippi,
zoo when I was seven in honor of a wolf the zoo had, and who spent his nightmarish existence pacing rapidly back and forth inside a small cage. I thought my fox was a wolf until twenty years ago Peggy realized my mistake. The blue mug to the
right of the "wolf" contains bookmarks that I cut from Christmas cards.
My mother made the needlework tree as my Christmas present in 1976.
The wolf in snow came from a long-forgotten antique store run by a delightful lady named Penny who died of Alzheimer's. The rock on the floor fell from Symbol Rock, a 40-million-year-old Cascade Mountain basalt formation that an extinct Indian tribe used to worship, as do I.
Albert Schweitzer well-expressed my own delight in cats when he wrote:
There are two means of refuge from the misery of life, music and cats.
15 comments:
It's nice to see your treasures within your home, including the red blooded ones.
I love this post Snow, describing your beautiful bedroom with cherished possessions and cats. In the evening now, no TV, I listen to music with a light show provided by a device I got that produces waves of colored lights and stars on my ceiling. It's supposed to help one relax and it does.
Thank you for the tour of your room. I especially like the cardinal above the door. And I would love to get my hands on your civil war books.
Thanks so much for the "tour" ... I love how you describe your feelings surrounded by so much of what your cherish. Feline and otherwise. Cheers.
So many things with so much meaning.
I love cats too. We had four of them at one time plus three dogs. Now we have just the memories and that is nice too. I read that you are from Eugene, OR. We used to live in Portland back in the 80s and 90s. Our daughter still lives there. Been to Eugene a few times to visit a friend and loved it. Thanks for stopping by and leaving a comment.
i'd like to send a gift to go with the treasures in your room but everything i think of would be stopped at quarantine.
You are really very sentimental, aren't you? and everything is in it's place, as I expected
"It's nice to see your treasures within your home, including the red blooded ones."
Thank you, dear Andrew.
"In the evening now, no TV, I listen to music with a light show provided by a device I got that produces waves of colored lights and stars on my ceiling."
That sounds lovely. Do your cats enjoy the lights?
"I especially like the cardinal above the door."
Peggy might know where it came from, but I don't. It's made of metal, and I too love it.
"And I would love to get my hands on your civil war books."
In case you missed them, here are some posts on the subject:
https://snowbrush.blogspot.com/2024/03/a-son-of-south-looks-at-civil-war.html
https://snowbrush.blogspot.com/2024/06/what-vicksburg-means-to-me-part-1.html
https://snowbrush.blogspot.com/2024/07/the-siege-of-vicksburg-as-experienced.html
"I love how you describe your feelings surrounded by so much of what your cherish."
Thank you, Helen. I hope you're staying warm out there in the High Desert (it's Spring here in Eugene).
"So many things with so much meaning."
I appreciate your kind words, Liz.
"I love cats too."
I'm guessing that you would enjoy the movie "Cat Daddies."
"i'd like to send a gift to go with the treasures in your room but everything i think of would be stopped at quarantine."
I wouldn't turn up my nose if you gifted me a 4.5 million year old rock from Australia's Jack Hills, but because I don't even know where the Jack Hills are in relation to you, and because it's also true that the shipping cost for sending a rock might be astronomical; I will be ENTIRELY CONTENT if all you ever send is an occasional email and blog visit.
"You are really very sentimental, aren't you? and everything is in it's place..."
You're right and then right again
Belated Happy Birthday, Snowbrush! I just came by to wish you. The house looks lovely!
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