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Friday
Dec042009

Writing Italy

I expected to fall in love with the language..the culture..the history..the food. I expected to be romanced by the ancient religious stone, and inspired by its accompanying Renaissance art. In Venice – I expected that the winding canals would sweep me away, and that the colors and light would bedazzle. I was not disappointed. It was everything I expected..and so much more. 

It wasn’t  the picture-postcard views and sights that captivated and caught my attention. As so often happens with me, it was  the art of the everyday ordinary that most intrigued me..and that I most loved. In every corner and alley, I found  lines of colorful laundry softly blowing in the autumn wind. Across canals, the lines appeared to lace and hold old buildings together. Between balconies, these same laundry lines tied neighbors into a community of intimate friends.

Soon, I began to make up  stories about the invisible people who lived behind the hanging wash. I’d heard of the Venetian ‘casalinghe’ – the traditional housewife – who raised the children and ruled the home. It was clear to me as to how this century’s old ritual and tradition had begun, but I did wonder why it is still practiced in these days of such modern convenience and amenity. There had to be more to this than what caught my eye. I imagined  - perhaps - it to be some sort of ‘art’ form passed on from one generation to the next. I thought that – perhaps – it was something that daughters learned from their mothers… who learned from their mothers before them..and those before that. It was not an ‘art’ that was studied, but one that was learned thru observation and osmosis, much like ‘mother tongue’. 

And – I thought about my daughter, and what it is she’d observed and absorbed along her journey. As a young child,  she was often found perched on a stool beside me, assisting and helping with daily dinners. In the afternoons when she returned home from school, she’d sit in the chair next to mine in my office, imitating my drawing  with drawings of her own. She watched..she listened..she learned.  Now 20-years old and living her own adventure and semester abroad, it was my turn to visit and follow her in her life. Studying in a language that I have never mastered, and living in a country and world that is foreign and new, I expected to learn as much from she as she’d learned from me. 

It was my chance to observe..to look..to see. I was curious to discover  what it is she’d held on to…and what it is she’d let go. I thought of the centuries old traditions of the casalinghe – how each and every one had had their own language of ritual and routine. Some – I imagined -  liked to put their clothes out to dry sorting them by color… others by order of size. Some hung in the sunshine..others in the shade. Some – I was quite convinced – hung their clothes out in the light of day..whereas others did it secretly in the darkest hours  of the  night. I thought about all of the unspoken little things and day’s rituals daughters learn from their mothers.  I wondered what mine had learned from me…and hoped that just a little piece of whatever it was, was good enough to take with her as she embarked upon her adult life.

Without question, Italy is magical. My travels and time there met and exceeded all my wildest dreams and expectations. The little girl who once clung to me…who cried when I left the house…who shadowed me wherever I went – had found wings and learned to fly. She’d grown up and  into a more adult version of her childhood self. From that little girl, a young woman is emerging. One who is beautiful, strong, self-aware and self-assured…and is very slowly finding her own voice and means of self-expression.  In our very last moments together I glanced out her window, and noticed the line of hanging clothes suspended there. It bore a familiar resemblance, yet – it was a creation and ‘art’ form that was all her own.

That was the best gift of all.

If any of you have travel stories and experiences you’d care to share..would love to hear about them here.

Image and words courtesy of Honorary Sister / Guest Blogger Marcie Scudder of Daily Practice.

Reader Comments (23)

The colours are amazing, a truely beautiful photograph and your comments were a joy to read. I envy you and your trip ;-}

Si x
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSimon Lawrence
What a wonderful post! I can see my daughter and I traveling the same poignant road...thanks Marcie. You are as wonderful with the pen as you are with the camera. Namaste.
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterPuna
So... Jealous. THat is definitely my dream trip. Sounds like you had a very tranformative experience.
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKellee
beautiful beautiful!! this image is amazing. and your words and story really resonate with me right now as i look back to my mother and find the things she passed on to me.

thank you for sharing this today.
Great post!
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered Commentermelissa
Wow great shot and great post Marcie! I love it. I have seen some great travel photos working at CanvasPop. If you are ever interested in printing your photos on canvas you should check us out at http://www.canvaspop.com. Great quality, fun prices.
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJenn
We're planning a trip to Italy next summer and I cannot wait!!
We recently visited Colorado and our days were full of adventure:
http://shirley319.blogspot.com/2009/08/225365-lost-lake-remains-lost.html
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered Commentershirley
Marcie
Your words are just as beautiful as your photography! And your daughter sounds like she will be just as creative as you!
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKatja
I recently traveled to Paris for my honeymoon and found it to be truly magical. The light, the food, the people -- it's all a photographer's dream!

Here are a few photos from the trip. Just looking at them makes me want to go back!

http://artcetera.squarespace.com/artcetera/2009/9/28/tour-de-paris-part-1-bon-appetit.html
http://artcetera.squarespace.com/artcetera/2009/9/29/tour-de-paris-part-2-the-city-of-light.html
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterdarrah
Someday I hope to visit Venice and I hope it's as magical for me as it is for you.
December 4, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKimberly
Italy and Venice in particular is one of a few places I would like to travel to. But in the meantime I have photo blogs as yours and others like it to take me to places I have never been.

Thanks for that Marcie!
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterFrida
as my family, and in many ways, my life started over here in italy - i so appreciate your beautiful images and words. so lovely, marcie. warmly, s
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered Commentersperlygirl
Marcie, as you know I follow you on your blog and have been enthralled by your recent travel to Italy. Now I know why you were there and I too love those clotheslines and your story of the casalinghe. Beautiful story to accompany your beautiful images.
December 5, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterDiane
Now I do understand much better your posts on your Daily Practive blog!
Thanks for sharing.
December 6, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterStandley
I love this Italian vision, helped with a great treatment
Keep going, Marcie!
December 6, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterCharlesC
A truly wonderful post Marcie! I'm sorry I'm late in getting here to read your wonderful words, which brought a tear to my eye - they were so heartfelt and touching, and informative, too! I especially love the words about your daughter. Your images are always fantastic, but your words (which you rarely share on your blog) are equally so. I'm gonna email, just to make sure you know I've commented. =)
December 6, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterToni | Daily Vignette
As a regular "Daily Practice" blog follower, I enjoyed the images as well as the accompanying narration. Thanks Marcie for sharing your story.
December 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSue Henry
I didn't realize that was your daughter when I first saw this lovely picture on your blog. I love her bright colors . . . thank you for sharing such a wonderful story about your trip, Marcie. You're a wonderful writer!
December 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterLisa Ruokis
Very graphic and superb colors, here !
December 10, 2009 | Unregistered Commentermartineb
Very nice to read about your trip Marcie. Interesting site with some very talented photographers. I do have a couple of things in common with a few of them. 1. canon camera 2. I hate ironing. LOL
December 12, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAussie
Marcie, your words made me cry (when you spoke of your daughter). Your photographs from this land reflect the creativeness that you bring to all your beautiful work.
January 11, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterDiane - Daily Walks
This is beautiful. As is that laundry hanging. We have a Luciano photograph, enlarged very big, of laundry hanging in a patio alcove in Italy, framed on the wall. I've always found hanging laundry beautiful. I'll never forget my mother coming home from Italy and talking about the "Neopolitan Flag" as some call it.

As for mothers and daughters, I've had a constant hum of longing in the past few weeks for a life where women and daughter lives together in community, and with their men and sons, aunts, uncles, grandparents, friends. Bartering, growing, raising, cooking, sewing, trading, building, repairing. My heart aches for it so much that I may just have to make it happen one day (retirement?). We have lost something vital in our time clocks and airports, and I just wish we could get it back. The rhythm that belongs in humans and keeps getting rubbed out. It's hard to get centered now.

Well you see what your gorgeous essay evoked . . .
April 16, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterRuth

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