Home

  • MIRACLES ON MAGAZINE

    Merry Christmas, and bless to-go drinks, every one. 🎄⛄🎁

    For the record, I ordered the:
    – Snowball Old Fashioned, arguably the strongest and toastiest OF I’ve ever had.
    – Chrismapolitan, which drew an audible “Mmmm!”
    – and On Dasher, still TBD. Drink responsibly, y’all. Even on Christmas Eve. ❤

    #MiracleOnMagazineStreet #girlswhodrinkwhiskey


    where i wandered:

  • OUT OF LEFT FIELD

    OUT OF LEFT FIELD

    Went out wandering last night and in an effort to avoid Christmas rush hour traffic, took some back roads to “I don’t know where,” as I told my Mama when I called to let her know that I was okay, just lost. 😂

    Thing about Beaumont though (and most everywhere, really) is, drive around long enough, and you’ll end up someplace you know. Funny that this was the place. Just in time for one last sunset from the dugout.


  • FINDING SANCTUARY

    FINDING SANCTUARY

    Speaking of the Holy Mother, just a few steps away from the plaza, I spent some introspective moments with this timeless Lady during my visit to Santa Fe.


    where i wandered:

  • IN SEARCH OF THE SACRED

    IN SEARCH OF THE SACRED

    I tiptoed into Mike Vargas’ corner studio in the Old Taos Courthouse like it was a sanctuary.

    After ignoring endless trinket shops full of mass-produced turquoise jewelry and appropriated pottery, I’d caught a glimpse through the window of two worn, multi-colored hands, worshipfully toiling over something on the desk in front of him, and my feet did the rest.

    “If you want to know more about any of the paintings, please feel free to ask.”

    Damn. He’d noticed me creep in and already stood from the beautiful disaster at his desk before I could catch him in action.

    “If I’m being honest, I really just came in because I was curious about what your hands were so hard at work on.”

    “Oh, right now, I’m painting Saint Joseph. Most people know him, but almost all of my work features the saints and symbols of spirituality that sometimes need some explaining.”

    I took my first good look around the studio, realizing that my body and soul had known exactly how to move before my brain even processed the moment.

    “I certainly recognize a lot of your subject matter. I went to private school, but so much of what I see here are things I never learned there.”

    “Me either!”

    For an older fellow, he moved fast to my side to detail the painting just in front of me and swap school stories.

    “See this one? It’s the Seven Sorrows of Mary. You probably learned those, but never heard them called that. Nobody ever taught us the mysticism, but we sure knew to be quiet!”

    He got a kick out of how hard I laughed.

    One by one, he explained each of Mary’s Seven Sorrows and how they were among his most often painted subjects, spinning around the studio to show me seven branches, seven swords and all his other depictions of the Holy Mother and her pierced heart.

    There wasn’t a single empty space on his walls, and as I pored over each one, I had to tiptoe again, being careful not to upset the labyrinth of framed works leaning upright against every available wall like old vinyls.

    When I finally circled back up to his lovely mess of a desk, I wasn’t going to let the opportunity escape me again.

    “What about your materials? I see open oil paints here, but looking around the room, I never would have guessed that was your medium.”

    For at least a half hour, Mr. Vargas rewarded my curiosity with endless confessions. How he laid his oils by hand for the icons’ tempura look without the tempura mess, selected the stock himself from handmade paper, and personally framed each piece. How his icons were composed of oil paints, but his landscapes and crucifixions–which he also gave me a tour of–were in pastels and charcoal. And most intriguingly, how in a past life, he’d been a grocer, and then apprentice under master printmakers before dedicating himself to his own art.

    When his outpour slowed to a steady trickle, I knew it was time to take my leave. And after hearing for myself all of the heart in his work, I decided to bring it home with me. I chose his Sacred Heart of Jesus, the only one hanging in the room.

    With that same spry step as before, he had my painting down before I knew it, and just as he vanished behind a divider in the room that also doubled as yet ANOTHER wall for his work, he asked gingerly, “Would you mind if I sign it?”

    “Of COURSE not. PLEASE sign it,” I answered enthusiastically to no one at all.

    He rematerialized with my freshly bubble wrapped bundle, already bagged.

    I was just a few days from home when I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Vargas, so against
    every nosey fiber of my being, I left the painting carefully packed by its creator, and his inscription unrevealed until it was safely home.

    I can’t help but feel that’s how it was meant to be.


    where i wandered:

  • ROADSIDE ANGELS

    The grand gestures in small towns soothed my soul, but the smallest and most unexpected reassured me I was traveling with angels unawares.

    I’d pulled into a gas station to refill my tank and my cooler before hitting the road, and just before I wrapped up, the meekest peep called out to me.

    “Miss?”

    From a burgundy Subaru that had clearly earned its stripes, a frail woman’s voice barely broke through the roadside noise. She was the first Black person I’d seen in Taos, and judging by how she spoke, I was likely the first she’d seen in a long time, too.

    “I noticed you from the road, and then I saw your Texas plates, so I pulled over to talk to you. I been here a long time, but I’m from Gilmer, Texas. You probably don’t know where that is…”

    “Ma’am, I live in Austin, but I’m from Southeast Texas, and it’s north of there, but I know exactly where Gilmer is.”

    Her eyes lit up, and she sat straighter in her disintegrating driver’s seat, smoothing her wispy silver strands behind oversized coke-bottle glasses.

    “All the way from Austin? You not out here all by yourself, huh?”

    “Yes, ma’am.”

    She clucked at me and shook her head.

    “Oh, baby. Well… I guess I did the same thing when I was a girl. Here, you got a pen and some paper? Let me give you my address and phone number so if you need anything, you get in touch with me, you hear?”

    She asked where I was headed from there, and I told her I was running to Taos for a bite to eat before I got back on the road.

    She, on the other hand, was waiting on some new teeth before she ate in Taos again, but at her age, she told me, that might never happen. Then with an empty but totally infectious grin, she chuckled that if not, that’d be OK, too.

    It wasn’t until I drove away that I realized the paper she and I used to exchange contacts was a Little Debbie Fudge Rounds scrap from my road trip snack bag, and I couldn’t help a little giggle to myself about my sweet roadside encounter with watchful Miss Theresa and her future teeth. ❤


    where i wandered:

  • BLACK TRAVELERS MATTER

    BLACK TRAVELERS MATTER

    There’s traveling solo. Then there’s traveling solo, female and Black. All of which is wrapped up in one of the unfortunate truths of growing up Black and southern: “small town” is essentially synonymous with “sundown town.” And West Texas and New Mexico are nothing but thousands of miles of small towns. I hoped for the best, but steeled myself for the worst.

    Until these galleries greeted me on the main streets of Madrid and Arroyo Seco, NM.

    Madrid boasts a whopping 204 residents, and Arroyo Seco about 1800. There’s no “quietly blending in” for anyone, but especially not me. As small stops en route to more notable cities, Madrid and Arroyo Seco are both entirely reliant upon tourism. And right in the center of town, they’d posted their beliefs in bold-faced lettering, impossible to miss. An easy thing to do, but it meant the world to a Black woman claiming her right to discover every corner of it. 🖤


    where i wandered:

  • HELLO, HOME

    HELLO, HOME

    A girl and her CX-5, 16 days, 3 states, ~3200 miles (not counting the ones I spent lost, doubling back, and driving aimlessly), 1.5 tubs of Clorox wipes, 10 ounces of hand sanitizer, 1.25 boxes of Wet Wipes, 1733 photographs and 38 videos (not counting the instant deletes), more gallons of gas than I’ve gone through all year, and countless amazing sights, fascinating people, and quiet moments later, there’s no place like home!

    There wasn’t a single emotion this trip didn’t stir up, and some of the best moments were the ones I never expected on this journey I wouldn’t trade for the world. I’ve got lots more stories and pictures that didn’t make the feed along the way, so stay tuned for more from the road, and thanks for riding shotgun with me, friends! 🚙❤


    where i wandered:

  • TEXAS TOAST

    Last time my thermostat read anywhere near 100°, I was leaving Texas. I don’t suppose it’s too late to turn back around now… #WhyIsItSoHotHere


    where i wandered:

  • ADIOS, GHOST

    ADIOS, GHOST

    I raced the sunset from Santa Fe to Ghost Ranch yesterday and rewarded myself by watching it through my own eyes. What was left after the sun finally sank was pretty spectacular, too. 🔥


    where i wandered:

  • BEST LAID PLANS

    BEST LAID PLANS

    It was a simple plan: drive the hour and a half from Taos to Santa Fe to check out the scene. Little did I know that along that road, the Rio Grande Gorge had lots to show me, too 🍂🍁💦🌾


    where i wandered: