Sunday, December 28, 2014

How the weasels reinvented Christmas

The nativity, err, um nortivity, as enacted by weasels from Celestine and the Hare.
New rabbit, M. Kelly.
In the weeks leading to Christmas, I fell under the spell of a FB page called Celestine and the Hare.  Created by felting artist Karin of Monmouth, Wales, it is home to her felted creatures including a great many weasels and the stories and videos of their antics.  It seemed the antics reached a pinnacle during the holidays with an animated advent calendar and ongoing saga of the animals' attempt to stage a nativity pageant.  Karin added to my vocabulary with her words "norty" (translation: naughty), and "choklit" and "sekrits," of which there were many at this time of year.

Finding her page, looking forward each day to generously and frequently posted photos, videos and accounts of nortiness, I abandoned myself to the magic of play, of silliness and the delight of surprise as a child might experience it.  Celestine gave me a world in which I did not have to believe that Christmas wonder was solely a thing of the past.  I laughed out loud every morning and read comments from others who were doing the same.  With a lightened heart, I drew the softer rabbit (above) and began to experiment with a slightly altered illustration style.

There was emotion connected to this Christmas, welcome, warm feelings, that nearly undid me.  To take in the miracles, the magic, the quiet yet bursting gladness, demanded, still demands, stillness and sleep.  What is enormous cannot be digested quickly.  As the metaphors rage on, I have the sense of being a river reduced by drought to a narrow and turgid pretender, which suddenly gains volume and again races swiftly, reaching from bank to bank.

A dormant or possibly missing aspect of me-doing-Christmas was revived or restored, as though through elfin craftiness, by a combination of surprises and benevolence.  That renewed, low-key glee continues to require a soft tread, an avoidance of sudden, startling moves, not because I fear it will flee but to acknowledge its precious nature.  I continue to be a mystery to myself, as does the Christmas of a seriously mature adult.   So little, really, is what we once thought it to be.

4 comments:

Mary said...

Oh now i just have to go look for her facebook page! I myself even like to be norty once in awhile. :) I really believe that animals have secret lives.. (real ones and felted ones,) and no, i'm not crazy. I just have a vivid imagination...

susan t. landry said...

i will check out this new weasel world when i have a free moment. in the meantime, i am rather wondering what this kind and gentle but quite clever-looking rabbit is thinking of. she has a slight resemblance to Miss Marple, as portrayed by Joan Hickson...

Marylinn Kelly said...

Mary - I believe you will fall under the spell of the weasels (and other of Karin's creatures). She is one of the rare, natural magicians who, with bits of this and that and enormous talent instantly lifts us from the ordinary. Of course they have secret (or sekrit) lives. Did someone suggest they didn't? xo

Marylinn Kelly said...

Susan - Your wondering about the rabbit suggests an assignment for her. I've been planning to have her be the model for my tiny dream outfits but clearly she is capable of much more. Perhaps the game is afoot. Thank you. xo