Now I know I have told this story at least two or three times but I love the story so much and it is such a good illustration of me and my kids that I shall tell it again.
A few years ago Lily found something at a thrift store most likely, and I cannot remember what the item was but it was eye-catching. That I know. She sent a picture of it to the group text and said something like, "I really love this but I don't know what to do with it."
To which Hank replied, "Have you learned nothing from our mother? Hang it on a wall."
Oh, Hank knows me so well. He should as we sort of grew up together but that has nothing to do with those Seminole Indian dolls hanging on the wall in my room except of course it does. I decided to actually clean our room today and in that room I have a vanity I bought many years ago at an antique fair at the mall I went to with my friend Sue. I love that vanity. It was one of the few things I really spent some money on back in those days when I was a single mother in nursing school but it was just one of those things you know is meant to accompany you through life from here on out.
It was made to be yours and has just been waiting patiently for you to come around, recognize it, and take it home.
Which is what I did. I've now had it longer than I've had Glen or Lily or Jessie and that is a lot of years. Still, I love it and am so glad I bought it and when it gets very dusty, I am shamed and get out the furniture polish and rags. And that's what happened today.
For a few years now, those Seminole dolls had been on the vanity, arranged carefully to all fit in but the problem was, very little else could fit and I thought about what Hank had said and in just a few minutes, Bob's your uncle, and those ladies were hanging on the wall.
These dolls used to be found and sold all over Florida at many different venues. All of the theme parks like Jungle Gardens and Monkey Jungle and Cypress Gardens and Parrot Jungle (we were big on jungles for obvious reasons) and Weeki Wachee and Rainbow Springs and Homosassa Springs sold them in their gift shops and so did many roadside citrus shops where you could also buy marmalades, citrus candy, honey, orange blossom perfume, and ceramic alligator salt and pepper shakers.
The souvenir business in Florida was strong before Disney came in and fucked it all up.
You could even buy necklaces and earrings with scenes depicting mostly Florida sunsets made of butterfly wings at restaurants right by the cash register next to the York peppermint patties wrapped in silver and green foil, along with the toothpick dispenser.
This is not the time to start a discussion on using butterfly wings to make jewelry with. It was actually pretty amazing but...yeah.
I always loved the Seminole Indian dolls but only had one, I think, and I wish I had held on to it. Now they are "vintage" and as such, worth far more (monetarily at least) than they were when the Seminole and Miccosukee women created them out of palmetto fiber, tiny beads, and fabric scraps.
I began to be fascinated by and realize how much I loved them when I was probably in my fifties and began to buy them when I came across them priced so that I could rationalize the purchases. Linda Sue has also sent me some because she is not only an amazing and precious human being, she is also what I would call a "finder."
And okay, let's just carry out this theme while we're at it.
The vanity has a sort of shelf bottom near the floor and that is where I keep my sweet old babies whom no one would really want but me. They have a special pillow and a stuffed duck I made with cashmere from a sweater I had that basically fell apart due to age and moths. I brought them up to the bed today so I could clean their bed and the area around it. Many of you know these bebes and please, I beg of you, if you think they are creepy, just keep it to yourself.
They are rescue dolls and I care for them very much. I may even love them.
Whatever.
And that's a part of what I did today. Clean our bedroom, hang dolls on the wall (I did not damage them in the least) where I will look at them with more attention every day. I will also take more notice of the three dolls on the vanity below them which Linda Sue also sent me.
I've made more soup tonight and achieved something I've never achieved before which is that I did not have to change pots in mid-soup-making because I let the soup grow to proportions inappropriate to our needs and the pot I started it in.
I am so fucking proud.
I am really not kidding.
Clean sheets are on the bed and actually, they are not only washed and dried, they are new.
Thanks, Costco, for Egyptian sateen cotton sheets that cost less than two good ribeye steaks.
It did indeed freeze last night and was about 29° on the back porch when I got up. There was ice where we let the garden sprinklers drip.
And do not fear- martinis are DEFINITELY involved.
Love...Ms. Moon





I love things hanging on walls. I’m not too keen on dusting it, though. I have quite a collection of pictures here and there. Mostly on window ledges, a mantle or two walls i claim as my own. My husband hates stuff hanging all over. I think of the Richard Dreyfuss scene where he says, ‘i don’t like panties hanging on the rod!’ I did tell my husband that if he dies first i’m taking all his artwork off the walls and hanging something with color.
ReplyDeleteDusting? What is this of which you speak?
DeleteWell, my husband has a room filled with deer heads and fish and ducks and other things which have been stuffed and mounted so that's what I live with. Honestly, I never really even notice it.
Mary, I absolutely love those Seminole doll, and think that your way of displaying them is absolutely perfect! (You should be darn proud 🙌)
ReplyDeleteThere's really nothing to be proud of. I just put nails in the wall (don't worry, the plaster's cracking all over that room) and hung the ladies from them.
DeleteI dusted today too, something I hate doing. That vanity is very beautiful. You were wise to get it way back when.
ReplyDeleteThe dolls are sweet and what a good idea to hang them on the wall. Stay warm my friend.
I wonder what I paid for that vanity. I cannot remember. That was back in the early to mid eighties so...
DeleteWe are staying warm. It's not very chilly today.
Gosh Mary- My favorite things- the dolls of course and the ice drips! AND the cloth behind the bed babies. I am so comfortable in your house! AND it smells so good, I just know it. Do I have your permission to haunt your house when I am dead and not quite gone?
ReplyDeleteYOU gave me that bark cloth, Little Missy! I love it. And a lot of the dolls, too, of course.
DeleteI think the house smells good when I'm cooking something delicious smelling or after I've cleaned with Fabuloso and white vinegar. It mostly probably smells of mold which I don't even smell any more. But of course you can come and haunt this house when you are dead and not quite gone. I'll be dead by then anyway. The only problem is, I've never seen evidence of any ghost here at all so you might be lonely.
I love dolls, any dolls. Your old bebes are lovely. And I'm the queen of hanging stuff on the walls because I don't like cluttered surfaces. Cluttered walls instead.
ReplyDeleteMy walls are FILLED with stuff. I have no idea where I got the idea that things should be put on walls. It's just another surface, albeit a horizontal one.
DeleteI kind of hope your walls are vertical ngl!
DeleteI love dolls, any dolls. Your old bebes are lovely. And I'm the queen of hanging stuff on the walls because I don't like cluttered surfaces. Cluttered walls instead.
ReplyDeleteYour dolls are so cool. I think I sent a pic(s) once of my mom's doll collection that I inherited.
ReplyDeleteParrot Jungle. OMG! That brought back memories. When I lived in Miami, I went all the time. It was fairly close to where I lived. I worked in ICU at Baptist Memorial Hospital. Anway, back then if you were a Miami resident and purchased a ticket at any of those venues, you got in free then for the rest of the year. What a deal. I have no idea if that continues. I kinda doubt it. I also worked at something called 7/70. You worked 7 straight days, 10 hour shifts and that was it for the month!! Full pay. Full benefits!! They had a critical shortage of ICU nurses and nurses were moving to Miami to take advantage of this. Here I was right out of college, living in Miami and only working 7 days a month with full pay!! Oh boy...did I have FUN! Spent a lot of time in Key West. You can fill in the blanks! LOL!
Wow. You really did get some freezing temps. Monday and Tuesday we're to have wind chill factors at around -22 below!! Maybe I should have stayed in Miami and left Ohio in the dusk?
Paranormal John
Yes, John. I think you did send me that picture.
DeleteRemember the parrots who rode on the little train? And the one who could walk a tight wire? Actually, that's about all I remember because I was very young.
I do remember that 7/70 thing. I can't believe you ever left your Miami/Key West life behind. I can only imagine the fun you had and the trouble you probably got into down there.
I doubt you'd recognize Miami now. Key West is probably far less over-developed. At least I hope so. And of course we're just a horrible state when it comes to politics and human rights and racial inequality and...
But yeah! Even though it does freeze here it's only a few days a winter. So come on back!
Those Seminole Indian Dolls are adorable, and they are set off to perfection against that white wall. But you know what caught my eye the most about them and made me go squeeeeee? Rick-rack! The rick-rack on their dresses! It was so popular as a decorative trim when I was a kid in the 1960s and now you never see it anymore. But back in the day, it was everywhere!
ReplyDeleteI love rick-rack too! How can you not love something called "rick rack"? Yep. We all had rick racked garments. I made my granddaughter a dress with rick rack on it when she was a little thing. It was adorable on her. Maybe we should start a Bring Back the Rick Rack movement. You think?
DeleteThat dripped ice looks like skeletal bones. I like the Seminole Dolls and wonder HOW are they hung on the wall? Did you bang in a few nails or what? I like their skirts and might copy that simple style with ric-rac braid for my little redhead dolls.
ReplyDeleteYep. I banged in some of those tiny nails. That room's walls are all cracked and messed up anyway.
DeleteI'm sure your redheaded dolls would love some rick rack in their lives.
Hey, I love your dolls, all of them, not creepy at all, Joy x x x
ReplyDeletePeople get weird about old dolls. I'm sure it's due to movies. Glad you don't think mine are creepy. 😏
DeleteThose dolls are wonderful. I love Hank’s comment about you and the fact that you lived up to it again. I can understand your immediate love for the vanity. What a treasure. Stay warm.
ReplyDeleteIt is a beautiful piece of furniture. When Glen first started staying over, he actually oiled that thing! That may have been the last real housework I ever saw him do. Well, he does wash dishes.
DeleteCashmere at the ready.
ICE in Lloyd? Has it really come to this? I knew that Minneapolis, Portland and Chicago were having problems with ICE but Lloyd? Come on now.
ReplyDeleteFucking ICE has been in Tallahassee. And Monticello too. These were just hit-and-run immigration snatches. They have't stayed around to torment us. Florida is a Republican state so Trump has no reason to try and punish us for our left-wing sins.
DeleteLove your Seminole dolls! Yes, there were so many little trinkets in the past for tourist types...and now the market has changed to things I don't recognize at all. Such sweet little dolls of all kinds you treasure!
ReplyDeleteYou're right. Tourist souvenirs were just better in the old days although many of them were as tacky as tacky can be.
DeleteI love my dolls.
Oh my. I had one of those dolls as a very small child. Your description and the pictures are giving me very visceral sensory memories of handling it. The black head dress, the beads, the colore skirt, the tiny, tiny rickrack. Only because of you, I just now realized that it had to have come from a trip my parents took to Sarasota just after my 19-year-old war bride mum had arrived in New York on the Queen Mary in 1946. Lots of pictures of her looking young and sweetfaced in those bulky 40s clothes and shoes. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteOh, you are so welcome! I'm glad I could bring back a good memory.
DeleteI love those dolls hanging on the wall. They are so lovely.
ReplyDeleteI think they're pretty swell.
DeleteYeah, big business ruins lots of small enterprises. I like the dolls hanging on the wall. And I think I need a better picture of the vanity. Our one night of below freezing is coming tonight instead of Sunday night so I guess I'll be covering shit today and bringing the small delicates in.
ReplyDeleteWe're supposed to have several more nights of below freezing temperatures. I'm not unwrapping a darn thing yet.
DeleteIsn't it interesting how you direct your rescue impulses toward dolls and I direct mine toward abandoned houseplants? We're both rescuers. (I'm afraid I may eventually direct mine toward dogs and I'll have about 600 of them and wind up in the newspaper.)
ReplyDeleteThe dolls look great on the wall. I remember those old souvenir shops with the rattly wind chimes made of shells and the turtles made of cowries. Stuckey's used to have great Florida souvenirs along those lines. I have never heard of butterfly-wing jewelry, though! I guess I just didn't pay attention to it.
Well, I haven't really rescued that many dolls. I'd rescue plants too but hardly ever seen them the way you do on your walks around London. I do love a cutting though.
DeleteDo you remember the wind chimes made of glass rectangles? We called them Chinese wind chimes and I have no idea if they really were or not but you can't find one now for love nor money.
Yeah. You probably weren't that interested in butterfly wing sunsets over the water.
I remember those windchimes, my mum had them on front and back porches. I wonder if Amazon has some?
DeleteYour dolls are carefully selected, and each one has meaning which makes them cherished and loved. Dolls hanging on the wall is a new concept for me but making them visible every day makes perfect sense to me.
ReplyDeleteBuying something you immediately love is wise, otherwise, in my experience, you will regret not buying when it has sold to someone else. The dresser was an excellent purchase, and it is lovely.
Ice in FL is somewhat shocking to me. Stay warm MM!
Well, north Florida is far more like south Georgia when it comes to weather. That really doesn't mean much, does it?
DeleteI am so glad I bought that vanity.
Lovely display - see, some people have a knack. If I did that, it would definitely not look that nice. And the dusting would be astronomical. Whenever I look at anyones collections of anything, all I think of is dusting because I live in a horrendously dusty house.
ReplyDeleteDusting? That's probably not going to happen for a very long time. This house is dusty too but I have learned to ignore a lot of it until I just can't.
DeleteThose icicles fascinate me. They are like sculptures! We protested today, dropped a box of books to friends and ran to a store. As we came out, Tim noted that a storm was moving in. We made one more quick stop and it turned in to a white out. It was a hairy ride home.
ReplyDeleteOh god. Please be careful and stay warm, Debby!
DeleteIn our house, the solution to the too-much-soup-for-the-pot problem is to just start with the monster size pot — The soup always grows to fit it! And then we don’t have to cook for the rest of the week, which suits our lazy souls…
ReplyDelete