The cat and I have curled up in my little room under the orange, woollen blanket to keep warm and think about things. We're not complaining about the damp and rain because for a while this month it seemed as though we were living in another country, one with endless cerulean blue skies, arid hillsides smelling of coconuty gorse flowers and heady bluebells; things even started to wilt in the shady part of the garden so the rain has been welcome ( for now). I'm not fond of daffodils, May is the month for more subtle and delicate flowers, so I was happy when the acid yellow was replaced by carpets of bluebells (why didn't Wordsworth write about them instead?) and now the Hawthorn and Cow Parsley frothing along the hedgerows. As ever my walks are slowed by the need to sniff May Blossom and discover that it does NOT taste like "bread and cheese" or examine, on hands and knees, like a Hemulen, the Dog Violets and Heartsease hiding amongst the grass. For the first time I realised that Wild Garlic flowers actually smell of sweet honey unlike their delicious leaves which I've been using to make pesto.It's been a slow month in some ways ( financial ways of course!) and rather than panic I tried to make myself take the advice from the last blog post and draw more. Draw anything, for no reason other than to be doing something constructive rather than procrastinating. Even though it is the hardest thing to begin an empty page and to mute the negative inner voice that is mumbling "stop it, go and find a real job, you're not good enough, it's all been done before...". Isn't it sad how we measure our "success" and relative happiness in monetary terms so that even on a day when I've made loads of ok artwork and baked a good loaf of bread and marvelled at the clouds and the light on the mountains, I can still feel like the day was a disaster because I didn't sell anything. Someone asked me this week what I would do if I was suddenly rich and I really couldn't think of a thing I would want to change - except of course to be secure in my home rather than at the mercy of landlords - so why the discontent?Anyway, the pages of doodles gave me lots play with in Photoshop and it really was playing, because I discovered I could build little worlds to endlessly rearrange ( using the layers ), like my beloved model farm or dollhouse from childhood, I could design my own indoor garden. Rupert likes to tease me about my love of creating "little scenes" on windowsills... a few found objects and a miniature bear in a doll's chair perhaps, or glass bottles with tiny flowers. I made some virtual shelves to display my virtual pot plants and then got engrossed in the great excitement of making a moving GIF with Spirit Bear (who is usually a card or a wooden necklace) . I may get completely carried away with this idea now - about 25 years too late to become an animation legend!The blue prints continue and a story seems to be emerging- although I think Coralie Bickford-Smith already cornered the market on foxes and stars... I haven't read her beautiful book but I was aware of it so I wonder whether I was unconsciously remembering the link or whether it was genuinely totally random that I found the star sequin on the floor just as I was setting up the print...Well it's nearly time for some more coffee and some more drawing before an evening in Grasmere for Polly Atkin's poetry book launch. Last weekend we went to a Royal Geographical Society lecture about Indian Shadow Puppets so living in the Lakes is definitely making my social life more cultured, or maybe I'm just growing up...good grief!If I was good at arguing persuasively I'd tell you how important it was to vote those mean old Tories out next month but instead I'll just leave these two pictures here. PR gurus tell us not to mix politics with business and sometimes I worry in case someone is put off buying my work because I'm a bit of a Lefty (I guess this sticker would be earthy brown if I mixed in a hearty dose of Green policy too ) ...but I reckon if Rob Ryan is prepared to nail his colours to the mast then it's better to live fearlessly and keep believing in a better world. The picture below was taken after an evening swim in Rydal Water, where all the sad and cynical people, all the greedy, fighty, selfish people, should be dipped in the crystal water and made to breath in the bluebell air until they see that we only have one world and it's beautiful and it's time we stopped pissing about and looked after it- and each other. xReading:- ” Work and Love” Tuula Karjalainen ( About Tove Jansson) Listening to:- Skylarks and UPDATE! since the evening in Grasmere I'm listening to Jenn Grant who played a lovely live set amongst the Pre School toys and Brownie notices and almost me me cry. http://www.jenngrant.com