Showing posts with label AAQI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AAQI. Show all posts

Mar 16, 2024

In Praise of the Earth: Happy Spring Equinox!



In recognition of the Spring Equinox and 

"In Praise of the Earth"

"Let us bless
The imagination of the Earth.
That knew early the patience
To harness the mind of time,
Waited for the seas to warm,
Ready to welcome the emergence
Of things dreaming of voyaging
Among the stillness of land.
 
And how light knew to nurse
The growth until the face of the Earth
Brightened beneath a vision of color.
 
When the ages of ice came
And sealed the Earth inside
An endless coma of cold,
The heart of the Earth held hope,
Storing fragments of memory,
Ready for the return of the sun.
 
Let us thank the Earth
That offers ground for home
And holds our feet firm
To walk in space open
To infinite galaxies.
 
Let us salute the silence
And certainty of mountains:
Their sublime stillness,
Their dream-filled hearts.
 
The wonder of a garden
Trusting the first warmth of spring
Until its black infinity of cells
Becomes charged with dream;
Then the silent, slow nurture
Of the seed's self, coaxing it
To trust the act of death.
 
The humility of the Earth
That transfigures all
That has fallen
Of outlived growth.
 
The kindness of the Earth,
Opening to receive
Our worn forms
Into the final stillness.
 
Let us ask forgiveness of the Earth
For all our sins against her:
For our violence and poisonings
Of her beauty.
 
Let us remember within us
The ancient clay,
Holding the memory of seasons,
The passion of the wind,
The fluency of water,
The warmth of fire,
The quiver-touch of the sun
And shadowed sureness of the moon.
 
That we may awaken,
To live to the full
The dream of the Earth
Who chose us to emerge
And incarnate its hidden night
In mind, spirit, and light.
 
~ John O'Donohue ~
 
 John O'Donohue b. Jan 1, 1956 d. Jan. 4, 2008
An Irish poet, author, priest, and Hegelian philosopher.
This section is from "To Bless the Space Between Us"
 
Shown above:
 
"Changing the World"
Designed and quilted by Michele M. Bilyeu
for donation to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative.
AAQI ran from 2006 to 2013 and earned $1,000,000
for Alzheimer's research funding.
 
My small art quilt was purchased at auction by Bill Volkening for his AAQI quilt collection as a small part of his much larger "Volkening Collection", and featured in his book ( which he titled from my little quilt) it was published in Bill's book: Changing the World: Quilts from the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/3498527
 Thanks again, Bill, for all you did for AAQI and its quilt makers, like myself.
 
The quotation which is featured on my little quilt is from Margaret Mead and says:
 
 "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has."
 



Michele Bilyeu Creates With Heart and Hands as she shares her imaginative, magical, and healing journey from Alaska to Oregon and back again. Creating, designing, sewing, quilting, and wildcrafting, from my heart and with my hands

Aug 3, 2020

Butterfly Quilts and Out of this World Constellations




Thousands of light years away, there's a "space butterfly" colored with brilliant blues and clouds of purple and red. It's an image we've never seen in this much detail before.

So named for its resemblance to the winged insect, the "butterfly" is actually a planetary nebula -- a giant cloud of gas that forms around an ancient star that hasn't yet exploded. 

The European Space Observatory's (ESO) aptly named Very Large Telescope, stationed in host country Chile, recently captured a vibrant image of the interstellar object.


And check out the very "other worldy"Chilean observatory with its rather lunar living look about it!
Very Large Telescope | ESO United States:

https://www.eso.org/public/usa/teles-instr/paranal-observatory/vlt/

Ah yes, the very of this world textile artsy of many quilt makers "Butterfly Quilts Ideas and Inspiration".

Now wouldn't it be great fun to make a very artsy quilt based on NGC899?
We just might need to create a more inventive name for it than NGC889!




This is my only Butterfly art quilt made many moons (or perhaps even light years away) for donation to Alzheimer's research funding through the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative.



"Butterfly Quilts Ideas and Inspiration"
















Butterfly quilts are still much sought after and beautifully popular. As symbols of re-birth and metamorphosis, we are drawn to their symbolic imagery of awakening to a new life, new opportunities and the chance to be 'born again' into all that we wish and dream we might become.















I have been collecting free butterfly quilt patterns for some time, and was motivated by the beautiful butterfly quilts at the 2008 Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show in Sisters, Oregon to combine those quilt photographs with my free butterfly quilt patterns .















Butterfly Quilt:

filled with colorful butterflies & easy to follow pattern by Janel Lyles.
Download Instructions

Click here to download a .pdf.




B is for Butterfly:























Colorful Butterfly:

easy butterfly block





Batik Butterflies with a hint of an Amish look.





Fluttering Butterfly:
quilt block that is great for the beginner.















Applique Butterfly








Butterflies, Wonky Free Piecing Tutorial by Lynne of the Patcherie Menagerie

by Mrs. Schmenkman Quilts





Charming Butterfly Blocks

















Zen Garden Butterfly: free butterfly quilt pattern courtesy of Jane Sassaman















 Sometimes "patterns" ate simply drawings like the one above. Enlarge, print.



Butterfly Pattern
Butterfly Pattern



























Quilt Blocks 

See more pictures of quilt blocks.
©2007 Publications International






Butterfly Quilt by Alex Anderson for the Always & Forever collection at P&B Textiles.  Alex Anderson link no longer comnects but you can still be inspired or create something similar!


Hope you enjoyed these! Now to create and share of your own.

(Send photos of your creations and I'll add them in if you provide info.)








Michele Bilyeu Creates With Heart and Hands as she shares her imaginative, magical, and healing journey from Alaska to Oregon. Creating, designing, sewing, quilting, and wildcrafting... from my heart and with my hands.

Feb 14, 2019

Quilters and Quilting Make a Difference! (Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative)




I am thrilled beyond words that one of the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiatives funding of reasearch grants, this one at Cornell University, has contributed to reasearch discoveries in breaking through the blood-brain-flow barrier! This is amazingly promising!

My blog header consists of several of the 75 small format art quilts (among thousands of quilters) that I personally donated for auction by our amazing founder, leader, quilter, and quilt creator Ami Simms from our raising of over One Million Dollars earned by their sales from 2006-2013. 

Amazing, amazing work and kudos to all involved at every level of funding and this research and discovery at Cornell University!

And for all of you who joined my two internet groups and made and donated 600  8" x 11 " small format art quilts for sale by AAQI, thank you and bless you!

Everyone reading here, check out the link below by Science Daily! 

AAQI is thanked on Science Daily's release of Cornell Universitys discovery right along with the National Institute of Health!

Love it and all who were involved in any way!

One more example of how quilters and quilting makes a difference!



"The team has identified approximately 20 drugs, many of them already FDA approved for human use, that have potential in dementia therapy and are screening these drugs in Alzheimer's mice now.

Schaffer said he's "super-optimistic" that, if the same capillary-blocking mechanism is at play in humans as it is in mice, this line of research "could be a complete game-changer for people with Alzheimer's disease."

This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation, the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative, and the Brightfocus Foundation."

My personal links:


Liberated Quilting Challenge




Ami Simms current personal blog:

https://amisimms.com




Michele Bilyeu Creates With Heart and Hands as she shares her imaginative, magical, and healing journey from Alaska to Oregon. Creating, designing, sewing, quilting, and wildcrafting... from my heart and with my hands.Science Daily: Alzheimer's Research Breaks the Blood-Brain Barrier

Jun 21, 2017

The Blessings of this Summer Solstice


In honor of Summer Solstice and 

"In Praise of the Earth"

Let us bless
The imagination of the Earth.
That knew early the patience
To harness the mind of time,
Waited for the seas to warm,
Ready to welcome the emergence
Of things dreaming of voyaging
Among the stillness of land.

And how light knew to nurse
The growth until the face of the Earth
Brightened beneath a vision of color.

When the ages of ice came
And sealed the Earth inside
An endless coma of cold,
The heart of the Earth held hope,
Storing fragments of memory,
Ready for the return of the sun.

Let us thank the Earth
That offers ground for home
And holds our feet firm
To walk in space open
To infinite galaxies.

Let us salute the silence
And certainty of mountains:
Their sublime stillness,
Their dream-filled hearts.

The wonder of a garden
Trusting the first warmth of spring
Until its black infinity of cells
Becomes charged with dream;
Then the silent, slow nurture
Of the seed's self, coaxing it
To trust the act of death.

The humility of the Earth
That transfigures all
That has fallen
Of outlived growth.

The kindness of the Earth,
Opening to receive
Our worn forms
Into the final stillness.

Let us ask forgiveness of the Earth
For all our sins against her:
For our violence and poisonings
Of her beauty.

Let us remember within us
The ancient clay,
Holding the memory of seasons,
The passion of the wind,
The fluency of water,
The warmth of fire,
The quiver-touch of the sun
And shadowed sureness of the moon.

That we may awaken,
To live to the full
The dream of the Earth
Who chose us to emerge
And incarnate its hidden night
In mind, spirit, and light.

~ John O'Donohue ~

John O'Donohue b. Jan 1, 1956 d. Jan. 4, 2008
An Irish poet, author, priest, and Hegelian philosopher.
This section is from "To Bless the Space Between Us"

Shown above:

Changing the World
Designed and quilted by Michele M. Bilyeu
for donation to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative.
AAQI ran from 2006 to 2013 and earned $1,000,000
for Alzheimer's research funding.

My small art quilt was purchased at auction by Bill Volkening for his AAQI quilt collection as a small part of his much larger "Volkening Collection", and featured in his book ( which he titled from my little quilt) it was published in Bill's book: Changing the World: Quilts from the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative
Thanks again, Bill, for all you did for AAQI and its quilt makers!

The quotation which is featured on my little quilt says:

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has."


Michele Bilyeu Creates With Heart and Hands as she shares her imaginative, magical, and healing journey from Alaska to Oregon. Creating, designing, sewing, quilting, and wildcrafting... from my heart and with my hands.

Jan 1, 2014

What a Year!

 

My completed projects for 2013 included:

25 small format art quilts donated to The Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative
17 prayer flags
20 table mats or pot holders
7 pillow cases for donation to foster care program
6 Christmas stockings
3 sympathy art quilts
2 nursing aprons that fold into pouches..tutorial, soon!
1 baby blanket4 baby towels and 6 baby washcloths
1 toddler neck warmer
8 carry bags


www.with-heart-and-hands.com/2013/12/what-year.html

DIY Wedding for my youngest daughter: 

6 batches of home made paper (blender pulp, impressed with flowers and leaves-about 90 sheets)
75 home made wedding invitations using the paper plus cardstock, twine, brads, print offs etc.
14 burlap table runners
90 osnaburg cloth napkins
 9 large' thank you' burlap and homemade wooden buttoned carry bags

1 wedding dress for my daughter
my own pattern design and using 18 yards embossed silk and satin, 
with a 16 gore (double layer) handkerchief hem

1 wedding bolero jacket from embossed silk and satin


Photos of many projects not shown as I couldn't find them,  or the program couldn't fit them in. And if you count each item, that's 362 projects. Should I hurry up and make 3 more so it's one item a day for all of last year? I don't think so, thank you very much.I may almost never sleep and be more than a bit ditzy, but ....

It's keeping busy and being creative that got me through the hard, sad times of losing both of our mothers, an aunt, and an uncle and having two SIL's being diagnosed with terminal illnesses.


And yes, we (our family of 8) grew the flowers, created the floral arrangements, the bouquet and boutonnieres,  carved out the logs, and did all of the decorating, ourselves.

And no, I did not cook all the food, or make the wine and beer...but we wanted too ;-) And no, I did not play the cello, guitar, banjo, or drums. But the bride and groom made one of the three outdoor games!



 And yes, I'm tired, but there were so many moments of both light and clarity. So many glorious days of joy amidst all of the challenging days and hard times of sorrow.

I am also excited about projects in progress and the New Year ahead! Here's to 2014 and more creative fun! And...



January 1, 2014 presents the first of two supermoons to occur in a single calendar month. The second supermoon will come on January 30, 2014. We won’t have a single calendar month with two supermoons again until January 2018.

What, you say? Supermoon? But the moon isn’t anywhere near full! That’s right. These aren’t full supermoons. They are new supermoons; the moon is at the new phase for both the January 1 and January 30 supermoon. Follow the links below above (I am both numerically and spatially challenged, for real) to learn more about the supermoons of 2014.


Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sewing, quilting, and wildcrafting, with small format art quilts, prayer flags, and comfort quilts for a variety of charitable programs. And best of all, sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join her and make and donate quilts to charitable causes.   Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

Dec 1, 2013

Alzheimer's Illustrated: From Heartbreak to Hope..Final Auction Quilts for AAQI




It is an incredibly bittersweet experience to have my two small format quilts from the Alzheimer's Illustrated: From Heartbreak to Hope exhibit, up at the AAQI  December Auction.

This is my last chance to not only sell the 4 little art quilts that I still have available for sale at the AAQI website...quick link to mine, here...and look for the 'add to cart' buttons. And it also the last chance that we have to sell our quilts where the winning prices have the best chance of adding research funding monies to our coffers.

Alzheimer's Illustrated: My Own Heartbreak to Hope



The December 2013 Quilt Auction
Starts Sunday, December 1st.


(This auction website has been hosted, free of charge by BenefitBidding)

Please at least visit the site, and click on my two clicks to see them up close, and personal and see how they are currently doing at auction.  

This will be our last online auction... forever and ever.  AAQI closes up and finishes up all loose ends by December 31,  2013. 


Please support me, make at least an opening bid, today!,  on one of my two auction quilts to jumpstart their bidding, up their bids during the course of the ten day auction perio, or go for the goal by popcorn bidding and winning one of my two quilts up for auction during December 1-10, 2013.

Or please please please, spend as little as $33.25 and buy one of my four remaining 'sale' quilts, now! 



As for my two AAQI December Auction Quilts from the nationally touring Alzheimer's Illustrated from Heartbreak to Hope touring exhibit:

My first quilt was made in honor of my mother ,Mama's Brain Got Tangles...but Mama's Still Inside and my second one, The Alzheimer's Prayer, was made in honor of my father ,who literally died trying to lift my mother up from the bed, the floor after she repeatably collapsed, from mental disconnect over and over, and upright and sitting as we tried to feed her...over and over, day after day, for three years of her life that he and I tried so hard to care for her, together .

Both of my parents passed on during the next and final three years and it has been a heartbreaking experience to lose both of my parents when I worked so very hard to not only keep them alive and as mentally active as I possibly could. 


In Memory: Nell Grace Savikko
Born 9-1-1925 St. Martinville, Louisiana
Died 9-8-2013 Douglas, Alaska
Love you and miss you, my sweet little mama




Quilt #5211 - Mama's Brain Got Tangles...but Mama's Still Inside
Quilt #5211 - Mama's Brain Got Tangles...but Mama's Still Inside

.



My second quilt was made in honor of my Finnish father, Bernhart Michael (Ben) Savikko.  He died at age 93, after having two heart attacks as a result of the oxygen deprivation that comes from a combination of from sleep apnea and its resulting Vascular Dementia. The loss of my father was a kind of heart breaking, I can barely describe. I traveled to and from Alaska four times in 2010 to help care for both my mother and my father, and last saw my father, one month before he passed, when he had said to me: "Why do you have to leave so soon. Can't you stay a little longer?" and his final words after my own "I love you so much, Dad!" he replied "I love you dearly, too, Michele."

Bernhart Michael (Ben) Savikko
Born January 15, 1917 in Douglas, Alaska
Died August 21, 2010 in Douglas, Alaska
Love you and miss you so much, Daddy




Or simply buy one of my small format art quilts that range from the first one at $47.50 to the other three, each at $33.25.

 When The Heart Grieves...For Sale at AAQI...vintage fabric with art quilting effects and ink jet printing quotation.

13,891 - When The Heart Grieves
Regular price: $50.00
Sale price: $47.50
13891


My indoor/outdoor Prayer Flags:
Regular price: $35.00
Sale price: $33.25
14931




Regular price: $35.00
Sale price: $33.25






14,934 - Blessings of Love
Regular price: $35.00
Sale price: $33.25
14934

Natural Burlap (imported jute burlap from India with hand crochet, machine embroidery, and other accents) for indoor/outdoor prayer flags. Just thread some jute twine through the sleeve to hang on in your entry way, in your garden, or in your own healing and memory spaces in your home.

Alzheimer's Illustrated: My Own Heartbreak to Hope


Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sewing, quilting, and wildcrafting, with small format art quilts, prayer flags, and comfort quilts for a variety of charitable programs, including the  Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) . And best of all, sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join her and make and donate quilts to charitable causes.   Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

Oct 30, 2013

The Journey: Beauty Shared is Love Multiplied (AAQI)



The Journey

One day you finally knew
what you had to do, and began,
though the voices around you
kept shouting
their bad advice --
though the whole house
began to tremble
and you felt the old tug
at your ankles.
"Mend my life!"
each voice cried.
But you didn't stop.
You knew what you had to do,
though the wind pried
with its stiff fingers
at the very foundations,
though their melancholy
was terrible.
It was already late
enough, and a wild night,
and the road full of fallen
branches and stones.
But little by little,
as you left their voices behind,
the stars began to burn
through the sheets of clouds,
and there was a new voice
which you slowly
recognized as your own,
that kept you company
as you strode deeper and deeper
into the world,
determined to do
the only thing you could do --
determined to save
the only life you could save.
                             - Mary Oliver 



We must take care of ourselves, first. And then, and only then, are we in a position of body, mind, and spirit to help others and be there for our families. Crisis points in our lives change us. They can make us weaker where we take flight, or they can make us stronger, where we feel the beauty of spirit and our own power and from this place of en-lighten-ment, we bring that light to shine its path into the darkness,  and a new life, a new self is born.

Shown above: Another of my small format art quilts that was donated to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) and is heading off to Houston this week for IQF

13,841 - Beauty Shared Is Love Multiplied 

Will be for sale at the AAQI Booth: Houston International Quilt Festival 2013

13,841 - Beauty Shared Is Love Multiplied (Houston)
Michele Bilyeu
Salem, OR USA
Width: 11" Length: 8.5"

Materials/Techniques: Asian fabric, metallic free motion quilting, and glass beads.

Artist Statement: I found this beautiful piece of Asian fabric and was delighted to be able to feature this young pair of Chinese Crested Pheasants as they await the arrival of new love and beauty into their lives.
Contact Michele
 
Dedication: For those who love, those who give and those who nurture others. May the beauty of the love you share be ever multiplied.
This quilt has Fast Finish Triangles.

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PLEASE NOTE:
Still having custom domain issues. Please bookmark my old address of
 http://with-heart-and-hands.blogspot.com if you are ever unable to connect to my web domain of www.with-heart-and-hands.com
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Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sewing, quilting, and wildcrafting, with small format art quilts, prayer flags, and comfort quilts for a variety of charitable programs. And best of all, sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in her Liberated Quilting Challenge and make and donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

Oct 28, 2013

Birds of Sorrow: Our Blessing of the Messenger (AAQI)



"You cannot prevent the birds of sorrow from flying over your head, but you can prevent them from building nests in your hair". 

-- Old Chinese Proverb


I have received so many heart touching emails since I began blogging about the loss of my mother on September 8th.  I want you all to know that you are in my thoughts, and in my prayers.

None of us can stop the birds of sorrow's journey, nor their flying over our own heads. But we can, indeed, prevent them from building nests in our own hair!

My hair is 36" long. Or it was,  before I was blowing leaves off of my back deck in August preparing for the arrival of  family from Alaska, and my daughter's wedding.

You can probably guess what I did.  I bent over to blow leaves off the stone pathway off of our deck and my long braid fell into the air intake valve. I was caught! And no one was home for me to holler for help and I couldn't get me free no matter how I twisted and tugged on my hair!

I did pull out the power cord and stopped further damage. But it was quite the experience. And yes, I did finally pull my hair loose, bit by bit, by bit. It was a long, hard process. And just like all lessons, they take a while to learn .

I previously did this with a hand held Dirt Devil (that little devil!) vacuum cleaner under my sewing machine table in my sewing nook! It was a lot harder to pull its power cord free from the outlet or to reach its on/off button.  And oh, the hair that broke off from that long ponytail, then!

Such are all of  the losses of our lives that we go through.  Some are small but still hurt, and others are so large that all you can do is wish and pray that you could go back in time and redo everything!

Thinning hair from my own actions is now laughable. Laugh at me, too! Because I am ok. my thinning, and shortened braid is ok, and we will all be ok in the end!

We just have to learn an awful lot of lessons the hard way....

Think of me, my journey, and how the birds of sorrow now have a lot less hair to nest in!


 14,998 - Blessings Of The Messenger (Houston) 

Michele Bilyeu
Salem, OR USA
Width: 7.5" Length: 8"

Materials/Techniques: Batik fabrics with raw edge applique, free motion quilting, sequins and beading.

Artist Statement: I have been inspired, as well as blessed, by a pair of doves that have returned to our garden year after year. I eagerly await their return, knowing that they not only symbolize peace everlasting, but also eternal love.

Dedication: For all of who us who have faced, or will face, the challenges of Alzheimer's disease. May we always be messengers of love.


My small format art quilt #14,998, shown above, is titled "Blessings of the Messenger" and will be going to the Houston International Quilt Festival as part of my Liberated Quilting Challenge  to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI)  All profits from the sale of all of my quilts fund Alzheimer's Research.  Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

Oct 16, 2013

As My Heart Grieves (AAQI)



The process of grief and grieving is really quite amazing. As many of you have shared, and many of us have noticed in our own lives, it can hit you at the strangest times....and pop up long after you think you have accepted a loss, or moved on with your own processing.

The loss of a loved one from any cause is so very deep and so very hard. I lost all of my grandparents before I had children of my own. I lost my best friend of over 20 years before my last child had even grown up..... and she lost her best friend, age 12..the daughter of my best friend who had also died...in the same horrific car accident. We met in college, we built our houses side by side and we raised each of our three children ...together. It was very, very hard to lose an amazing mother, an amazing child and to watch the remaining husband and two sons..also in that car accident, as they grieved as we all grieved.

I have lost all of my aunts and uncles except for two aunts..one from each side. And our extended family was huge....so many, many aunts and uncles. And then, of course, I lost my father. And that was very, very sad..even though he was 93 years old and I could see that he began to fail the day he realized he was no longer strong enough to help me care for my mother, his own beloved wife of 61 years. My husband lost a brother to cancer, his father to heart disease and his mother, who we moved into a care home near us so we could be with her for hours each day, this January.  Many losses, many pains, great grieving in many forms through the years.

And now, of course...I have just lost my mother after eight challenging years taking care of her with advanced Alzheimer's. Alzheimer's Disease is known as the "Long Goodbye". The long goodbye because you lose the person you love, day by day, bit by bit.

I know grief in all of its ages and stages. I spent many years doing a volunteer form of lay counseling with others. I became a hospice-like friend to people I had never met before. People that were in intractable pain or in end of life crisis points where doctors or therapists could no longer help them in the deep emotional places that they needed helping.

So, several doctors that I knew personally as well as a highly intuitive therapist friend would send these people to 'come and meet me' at my own house, where I would use my gifts to simply become a friend to them for periods of up to six months or even year..on a weekly get together basis. During a time when they needed someone without judgment, someone who could help create a time and space more interesting and often even down right fun, during a time when most people want to moan with pain, or cry with loss and sorrow, we created a new space in memory and in time where it was literally a mind over matter place where miracles can, and did, happen.

One of the things I learned is that when anyone we know dies, all of the losses and deaths of our lifetime, all of the abandonment, all of the pains, are often re-triggered. At funerals, people will often be reduced to total sobbing even though they barely knew the person who passed. They are not really crying over the loss of our own loved one, but the loss of all of their own. And this is just how it is, and how it works, and how it is triggered.

In a way that only the heart can understand, each and every single one of us...'good' or 'bad' is connected. And this connection makes it possible to truly connect with another and to truly forgive another when they have wronged you to the depths of your own soul. This place of true heart is also a place can can hurt..really and truly ache with total pain during periods of loss.

So, when my own heart is facing the loss of a loved one, or healing from that loved one's passings, I am well aware of all of the stages and the places our heart may travel as I do my own healing. I know the landmarks, the dates of passage where grief seems to strike more often and how it can make not just our emotional heart hurt so much, but our physical one hurt and ache, as well.

Each time, with each loss of each and every loved one...I had to put my immediate sorrow aside, all of the crying I might want to do, in order to do what needed to be immediately done. To help another family plan a funeral, make arrangement for travel, buy plane tickets, pack a suitcase, get to the airport, make the connections etc.A forced delay to the grieving process can be a good thing or a not so good thing but it is just plain 'how it is' thing. And I have been able to do what needed to be done and get to both of my parents within the 24 hrs of their passing in order to say my goodby.

Perhaps, because this recent loss of my mother after her 8 long years of the ravages of Alzheimer's Disease, deep down inside I wondered if it might be easier to say goodbye. It was, and it wasn't.

My husband once told me that it was easier for me than it was for my brothers or their wives to physically take care of our mother during all of the stages, because I just accepted whatever place my mother was in, and made the best of it. I had no denial, I saw what was happening and understood why and I didn't fight or argue or resist that process.I really tried to make every day that I was with her as much fun as I possibly could. We sang, we arm danced, I played beauty parlor with her, and got out art supplies and we had art days. We did things long past when she could do them, but we tried and laughed and had fun anyway.

So, as much as I did..and yes, I did hard, dirty, awful caregiving too, things that most people never ever do for their family members because they have social services available and don't have to. We didn't and so we did it, instead. It's all awful and it's all hard.

But you change your mind to change your matter. You don't see only the awful, you see the love and the giving of that love...to someone else..and not just about you and your life, and all the fun you can have if someone else does the hard dirty work for you. And yes, it was so very hard, that if w had this chance again, and if there was a home to have put her into, we might have done differently. Might have.

But I have not let it, or them, or how anyone is now about 'who did more' rip into the fabric of my on healing. I will not blame others, mourn the loss of those years, or see anything...any single hard or challenging thing as being a waste of my time or my life. What is the point of any of that, you see?

I had such joy in the tiniest of moments. And I can treasure those moments forever and ever now. A moment of connection, a verbal response, a laugh at a joke she should not have possibly understood but somehow did. So, yes...it's somehow even harder now to allow this grief to overtake my heart and to hurt this bad.

But I am. I am doing the intense work that I need to do and I am still seeing the beauty of that process as it flows through me in all of its flows, and tidal waves, and even the wonder of the occasional ebbing into blessed moments of understanding, acceptance, and grief.

So, if I am missing a bit here, if I repost free pattern pages etc. ..well, that is why. I am doing my own deep inner healing work. It took 8 long very hard years of the what is known as the 'long goodbye' of Alzheimer's disease to get me to this point. So, of course, it will take a long time to fully say goodbye.

And while I am feeling all of this, saying that long afterwards goodbye, I am sewing. And I am sewing, as I always do...not for myself, or my family as most quilters do....but for others...because this is what I do that gives me the greatest joy. And boy, does the sewing help!

So, if you have lost your sewing mojo, just think of this and that yes, the doing of something is how we encourage more doing of something and less feeling sorry for ourselves or feeling stagnation, or depression, or sorrow. As that famous slogan says...'Just Do It'. Some times...a lot of the time...you have to MAKE yourself do it. But it works, trust me it is working.



13,891 - When The Heart Grieves

Donated to to AAQI (Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative) and heading for Houston( and the AAQI booth) at the Houston International Quilt Festival There is will be display for sale, with all profits going to Alzheimer's research funding.

Width: 12" Length: 9"

Materials/Techniques: Vintage designer fabrics, raw edge applique, machine stitching, oil paint sticks, watercolor paints, inkjet printing, and glass beads.

Artist Statement: Our hearts grieve for the loss of our parents who have passed on and our hearts grieve for the loss of who we knew those parents to be. But we are always, always grateful for whatever time we have been able to have with them....no matter how hard it is to see them this way, or having to do so much care giving

Dedication: For my father who has passed, and for my mother who we love and care for by ourselves in our childhood home in Alaska. We mourn the loss of our father, and we mourn the loss of the mother that we once had. We are grateful to still have our mother with us...in spite of all of the challenges of her full time care. It has been the hardest thing that any of us have ever had to do but we do it from full hearts filled with love and not anger.


Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska. Sewing, quilting, and wildcrafting, with small format art quilts, prayer flags, and comfort quilts for a variety of charitable programs. And best of all, sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join her and make and donate quilts to charitable causes.   Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!