Rain On Parade I.F.
May 11, 2009
Illustration Friday’s prompt this week was “parade.” I doodled this while messing around with ink on my preccccciouuuuus hot-pressed watercolor paper. Please do use your best Gollum voice when saying precious. Thank you.
Interpret the drawing as you will, of course. What I felt when I was drawing…
(Excuse me. May I interrupt? No this is not “what I felt when I was drawing…” This is me interrupting myself. Let me just tell you that sometimes when I’m writing, I type out a few words and “…s”, then I go back and fill in the spaces of thoughts later. What I did just now, for that last sentence, was this:
agitation…inspiration… desire to change the conversation… I’d like to rain on the parade.
Hello, lyrics. Can someone please write a song or a rap or something with those, please? Thank you.
You know what… No. Not a rap.)
Where was I? The drawing. I was thinking about motherhood, and I was drawing women, feminine doodles, apple tree buds. Again–motherhood! Motherhood, motherhood, motherhood! I cannot escape this theme, it invades everything I create. So, when I did half-heartedly consider the “parade” prompt, it was a parade of women–mothers. This is the lineup. The same old story, the same old labels, the same old conversations: good, bad, working, at-home-ing, TV, food, ballet, soccer, blah, blah, blah. God, it bores me.
It’s like a parade. I’m easily amused. Not easily impressed, but so very easily amused. I love the floats, I love the bands. I tolerate the politicians, I wave to the candy-throwers. But after a while, the floats and bands and floats and bands all get a little repetitive. Maybe this explains my embarrassing crush on the Wacky Wheeler, or why I love the stilt people so much. They change the conversation. The parade would be nothing without bands and floats, of course. Likewise, this parade of mommy conversation requires that we discuss issues of feminism and child care. I just have a few things to add. I want to talk about the creative potential of motherhood. I want to talk about inspiration and creativity and fulfillment and leadership and activism and contribution. I want to start a movement, Dammick!
I’m not asking to be the Wacky Wheeler. Maybe that’s just a stupid (and impertinent) analogy. Maybe I just like to say Wacky Wheeler.
Maybe I just want to change the conversation.


Yeah, I know. Medusa is myth, not legend. But the line between the two is so blurry, we can just pretend that this applies, right? Last Friday’s