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A Softer Summer

Friends, I’ve been fighting summer…for many reasons. The heat is bothering me greatly (and my doctor told me the other day it may be because of a medicine I take). But it’s more than the burning sun that sets off the strange oasis of rippling waves on my driveway, it’s the never-ending pressure.

You see, in New England, we only have 2 solid months of summer (and one sketchy month called June which can be chilly and rainy). There is such squeezing tension to fit in so many things in a few short weeks that it makes my head spin. And I see and hear it outside my door too…the traffic is crazy, the parking lot to the liquor store is like vehicular musical chairs, the kayak center is overrun and there isn’t a parking space to be had in the village, I hear sirens and fireworks every night – and now there are even wandering black bears in my environs for the first time since I’ve lived here. Not to mention all the books I want to read, the fall knitting I want to start, the friends and family I want to see. With the unusual heat bearing down, it’s all been too much.

Every morning I check the dewpoint on my weather app. That’s my daily good-day-or-not barometer. Imagine building your day on two little digits? If it’s over 65, I nearly despair and it’s been as high as 77 this July. I’ve been parched and cranky and worst of all, confused.

I’ve asked myself, “what do you really want today?” and more often than not, the response is “to be left alone”. I don’t mean by people but by noise and chaos. I’ve asked myself how I can make the day lovely for myself and sometimes I think that I might want to swim. I am lucky to have access to a nice soothing aqua pool but the traffic to get there has been horrendous. Other answers that come to mind are to rest outdoors with my books on the new rattan settee I was able to buy last month. I think of my books and of naps, letter-writing, and baking fruit pies. And I’ve done a little of that but only with an eye to the deep woods nearby where bears have been lurking.

But real relief for my summer angst came in the form of an artist I’ve discovered. I know that sounds terribly simplified but the images that impressionist painter David Hettinger creates are of soft summertime days like the kind I long to have myself. Amazingly, many of his depictions are of women napping on settees or reading books under enveloping trees. He includes children in his works too, like the hushed image above of a sleeping girl in pink shorts. Until I saw that illustration, I had forgotten how much I love my pink shorts. Sometimes it only takes a spot of beauty to turn one’s brain. That’s why beauty is so important in our world, today and always.

After a few nights of researching Hettinger’s art, I decided to shut the outside world down. Not my beloved tribe but the clamor and pandemonium. I’ve had some days where I haven’t gone anywhere but to my own backyard, bears be damned. I placed an old white rocker on my small front porch where I’ve had iced tea a few afternoons when the sun finally moves to the back. I baked some Nantucket Morning Glory Muffins even though no one was visiting. They were delicious, and then I passed the remainders on to others. I made lemonade and drank it all in two days. I’m sitting in my winter spot, the living room chair, and reading library books in the cool comfort of air conditioning and once that’s running, I no longer hear the afternoon sirens. When I go out, I leave later in the day to avoid the beach traffic or my sister generously collects me in her car. She knows how sensitive I am right now.

Am I loving summer yet? No, not this one. But I’m finding joys by slowing down, taking a breather from all the summer shoulds, crafting my own way of seasonal living. Next week I plan to visit a lavender farm that’s been on my radar. I’ll bring a vintage parasol I bought years ago and wear my pink shorts.

I urge you to find David Hettinger’s muted watercolor paintings online and study them. See his soft hues, the half-eaten pie and the ripe peaches, the mother in her kerchief talking gently to her children in the outdoors? Look for laundry on the line, plump pillows on chairs, and the overall summertime ease on everyone’s face.

~

Shut-out to my good friend Karen who challenged me today to create a “Victoria Summer Day” in the manner of the old Victoria July issues of yore that we all loved so much. 

 

6 Comments

  • SUE K BLANEY

    Loved this post and thank you for the information anout the artist and his work.

    I have never been a fan of outdoor Summer.
    Summer has recently grown on me through watching my garden bloom like crazy during July heat.
    THis year I planted some nastertion, cosmos and zinnia seeds and what i’ve learned is they need the long days and hot soil to succeed….and they are so fun to watch grow.

    But i still gaze a lot from my inside kitchen window 🙂
    I celebrate the Summer Solstice because this means the days will begin to shorten.
    And have learned to appreciate August because before you know it its Labor day and Septermber.

    Your posts speak to me in so many ways.
    Thank you!

    Gratefully,
    Sue Blaney

  • Linda Scott

    The lovely painting of the young girl in the pink shorts looks just like my granddaughter. Do you have a link or the name of painting. I would love to purchase a copy of the painting. I searched on line to no avail.

  • Tracy

    Firstly, thank you for introducing us to an incredibly talented artist.

    The pink geraniums on the windowsill, with a grove of birch trees set in a winter backdrop, have captured my attention. It is a wish of mine to one day have a small greenhouse attached to our home. Geraniums would definitely be part of the plan.

    I get the summer blues too.
    Here in the Midwest summer is usually hot, humid and oppressive.
    I joke that it might as well be -20F because we would be staying inside for that too.
    We can sit on the deck at night, but only when it’s breezy, keeping the mosquitoes at bay.
    Sometimes it can be beautiful though and that can be pretty wonderful.

    Very glad you’ve forged a new direction in moving out of the haze. That takes determination and patience.
    Sadly, at my age , I’ve just learned the concept : “You can either move around a problem or through it “.
    Easier said than done.

    Hoping the rest of summer is restful and joyful for you.

    • Diana

      Run a fan on your deck, it mimics the breeze and keeps the insects away.

      I am trying to slow down this summer too because it is a short season. It’s the humidity that makes me miserable. These paintings help me to appreciate it.

  • Karen

    Such lovely paintings! I love the colors and the mood! What a wonderful post! I love how you shared your heart here and found a way to turn the corner on some of the ways summer can make us miserable.
    Yes, I am having a Victoria summer day by listening to a beautiful, lilting piano music CD, eating a light, prettily arranged saladl for lunch, working on needlework, and resting. No demand, no traffic, no craziness. We in western New York have a very short summer season too, so I am embracing each sunny day, and savoring every idle hour, and being very grateful I have a Victoria-style home in which to do it.

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