My Type of Gratitude List, No. 5

June 2, 2023: I am grateful that I can walk out my door and find friends to walk with at lunch time. I am also grateful for friends who ‘feed’ me names of other writers like A.R. Ammons and John Steinbeck to learn from. Steinbeck I knew, but never read. Ammons I never knew, but will as soon as I acquire his book, Tape, which was originally written on a roll of adding machine tape, just like this.

June 7, 2023: I am grateful for mornings that I get to wake up and visit Nathaniel. He is a bright spot in my life.

June 8, 2023: I am grateful for my friend Sara — she is creative, kind, smart and loves animals as much as I do. I have learned a lot from her and the friendship we share.

June 10, 2023: I am grateful for change and all the unexpected blessings it may bring.

June 11, 2023: I am grateful for Pearl. She is such a sweet, fuzzy girl with lots of love.

June 12, 2023: I am grateful for my friend Wolfgang who is one of the most kind and considerate people I know.

June 14, 2023: I am grateful for this typewriter — I enjoy using it to record gratitude. Muscle memory lets me remember good days at Western Mennonite School, like using my watch to reflect sunlight toward John Fillmore.

June 15, 2023: I am grateful for fresh peas from the garden, with lemon, ginger and garlic. I am also grateful for the friends who serve them in a cast iron skillet.

June 19, 2023: I am grateful for cool summer mornings. Pearl and I get to walk in a quiet city, before traffic begins to intensify. She sniffs, I watch store deliveries. I am also grateful for Juneteenth. I am inspired by the strength of my black and brown American friends.

June 21, 2023: I am grateful for good memories of growing up on Eicher Road — playing in the creek, picking mint for iced tea, eating summer sausage sandwiches with Dad in the field he was baling that day. Grandma’s house was only a hop, skip and jump away. I loved her house.

June 25, 2023: I am grateful for water color art. Looking at it makes me feel somehow refreshed.

June 26, 2023: I am grateful for garbage service workers who take what we’ve thrown out, allowing us to distance ourselves from our own messes. Also, these important workers could have their hands crushed in the machines they work with. . . like today. May your hand heal swiftly.

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 4

May 1, 2023: I am grateful my eyes can see and my feet can take me places I want to go. (how’s that?)

May 8, 2023: I am grateful I can spend time visiting with my dad during this season of his life. Pearl is also grateful to sit on his lap.

May 10, 2023: I am grateful for Pearl. She keeps me on my toes. When she sleeps on the bed with me, I am comforted. I feel very lonely when she decides to sleep in her own bed.

May 11, 2023: I am grateful for Crystal Lake Park and the native plants that grow there– Fringe Cup, Native Plum, Trillium, Solomon’s Seal, Hawthorn.

May 12, 2023: I am grateful for old friends and neighbors who stay in touch with me and who invite me to the Uke Cabaret.

May 13, 2023: I am grateful for honest friends who acknowledge when things are painful and hard to understand.

May 15, 2023: I am grateful for challenges in life because it means I am continuing to grow. I am grateful for parents who wanted to help others and who taught me to care for others.

May 17, 2023: I am grateful that I grew up camping–Metolious, Beverly Beach, Seal Rock, Drift Creek. It’s not easy to get reservations these days and it seems so complicated. I am truly grateful for all the times I’ve had the chance to wake up in the cool, clean air and sleep in the comforting nest of a sleeping bag.

May 19, 2023: I am grateful for friends who share meals with me. Also, for friends who drive me through traffic jams without getting aggravated.

May 20, 2023: I am grateful for cool water on a hot day–the river and the misters at a friend’s yard in the evening.

May 26, 2023: I am grateful that I have learned I have no control over many, many things in this life–but that I can control or direct more than I think I can.

May 27, 2023: I am grateful for music–harmonicas, guitars and washboards; singing swine; dancing uninhibitedly with children.

May 30, 2023: I am grateful for the person who donated three pair of FLAX pants in my size to the Humane Society Thrift Store. I really love them.

My Type of Gratitude List, No. 3

April 5, 2023: I am grateful for friends that share food–taco salad–and watch good moves (Fantastic Mr. Fox) to help celebrate my 53rd year here.

April 6, 2023: I am grateful, so grateful, for Robert the laundry delivery person for the office below me. On my loneliest of days, he shows the face of God to my low spirit by stopping his work, sitting on his van step to give Pearl a treat and talk with me. I like to imagine God would do this very same thing, even on the busiest of days.

April 8, 2023: I am grateful for friends who encouraged me to keep going when I felt positive I could not.

April 10, 2023: I am grateful to have reached a point in my life at which I’m learning to leave cut flowers in the vase a little longer. . . even as the petals begin to collect on the table and dry. I’m finally learning there is beauty in aging and a certain grace in death.

April 13, 2023: I am grateful that I am getting better at recognizing grief when I see it, instead of mistaking it for anger or sadness. This does not remedy those feelings but helps me make sense of my internal landscape.

April 16, 2023: I am grateful for mornings because they bring me a chance to start over. . . to start again.

April 21, 2023: I am grateful for Nathaniel because he is a delightful little human and he can really make me laugh. He also gives lovely hugs.

April 23, 2023: I am grateful for Pearl. Almost every day she challenges me and keeps me on my toes.

April 25, 2023: I am grateful for this sweet clay whistle in the shape of a whale and which fits so perfectly in my palm. I love that I found it a second-hand shop near me and I love both of her flippers–the one that remains whole and the one that has broken off.

April 27, 2023: I am grateful that I can step out of my apartment and find more friends than threats on any given day.

April 28, 2023: I am grateful that I have no idea what surprise or delight is just around the corner. . . like this tiny, hand-knit frog in his sweater and holding a tiny Pearl-like dog.

April 29, 2023: I am grateful for the unusual set of stairs that lead up to my apartment. My friend recently told me that they may help me live longer. So far Pearl has been able to manage them also.

Personal Shrine Class: Using Art to Honor What Matters in Your Life

“I’m Not Asking For Too Much” by Eicher, 2021

The term retablo traditionally applies to a broad variety of religious images which are painted and sculpted over much of Latin America. The word comes from the Latin retro tabula, which means behind the (altar) table, where devotional images were typically placed.The Peruvian Retablo art form has evolved to include the depiction of secular scenes of daily life in Peru, and in some cases the subject matter might be political.

Materials:  Provided for use in class*
Facilitator/Teacher: Jaqui Pearl Eicher
Cost: $50/per person (class is limited to 12 people)

To register, please email Jaqui at:  jaqui.eicher@gmail.com

What to Expect: You will have all the freedom and guidance you prefer as you create your own one-of-a-kind masterpiece! Jaqui will lead you through the steps she has used in her own practice. This process of building a unique piece of art is deeply soulful and empowering. Your shrine may not be complete when you leave, but you’ll have the tools to continue the work. Jaqui has been working on hers for more than 2 years! 

Take Aways: You will leave with a unique piece of art all your own and resources (including news about future classes). Hopefully you will find inspiration to continue your own art practice. This world can be challenging and we need to gather energy and inspiration from each other.

If you’d like to bring your own supplies — we will be using cardboard or wooden boxes as the main structure of the shrine. If you have personal ‘talisman’ pieces to include, please bring them. We will use acrylic pens, E600 glue, hot glue, and/or other attaching methods to affix. As some folks are sensitive to the fumes of hot glue and E600, other materials can be substituted.

Send an email to Jaqui to request more information: jaqui.eicher@jaquieicher

Neurographic Art: Using Art to Process Thoughts

 This class is available for private groups

“Fine Words” by Eicher, 2023

According to Neurographic Academy, “Neurographica is a unique art form that uses simple, lines and roundings to create images that can be used to access and release emotional blockages. Neurographica is based on psychology, neuroscience and art.”

Materials: Provided for use in class*

Facilitator/Teacher: Jaqui Pearl Eicher
Cost: $50/per person (class is limited to 15 people)

What to Expect: You will have all the freedom and guidance you prefer as you create your own one-of-a-kind masterpiece! Jaqui will lead you through the steps she herself uses daily to collect her thoughts on paper. Part meditation, part processing, part prayer, part art, part poetry, this process is deeply soulful and empowering. You will amaze yourself with your finished piece!

Take Aways: You will leave with a unique piece of art all your own and resources (including news about future classes). Jaqui’s book, Neurographica (a book of art and poetry) will be available for purchase. Hopefully you will find inspiration to create a grounding practice of your own. This world can be challenging and we need to gather energy and inspiration from each other.

jaqui.eicher@gmail.com

jaqui.eicher@instagram.com