
The Earth is My Mother
http://www.prints.com/prints.php?artist_id=1&print_id=907651&RF=&SF=&UF=&CF=
This face, printed on a box and standing upright in the back of the toy department, demanded my attention. I abandoned my destination, left the main aisle, and walked between Fisher Price and Preskool for a closer look at this interesting woman with the wise eyes.
She wasn't what she appeared to be at all. This face was a jigsaw puzzle, and the picture was of nature, not a human being. What I had mistaken for wise eyes were actually animals, twigs, flowers, and stone. Gravel and water formed the illusion of lips and teeth. A young girl sits beside the earth-constructed nose.
Even if I hadn't been a jigsaw puzzle fanatic, I couldn't have left the store without taking this picture with me.
My first mistake was in working this puzzle on my bamboo-colored dining room table, where there was little contrast between the colors in the puzzle pieces and my workspace. The second was in allowing the kids to help, even though it was a tough puzzle to work alone. I wanted to frame and keep this puzzle, but when we finished, a piece was missing.
We searched the furniture and hardwood floor, same color as the missing piece, for several days before I gave up and decided the piece must have been missing when I opened the box. Disappointed, I took the puzzle apart. Of course, as soon as I did this, the missing piece showed up under the piano.
The second time I worked this puzzle, it was much easier. I did it on a green board, for one thing. The real break was in familiarity with the individual components of the bigger picture. I remembered which eyes belonged to what animals, and where each of those creatures fit into the bigger picture. With little effort, I could tell the difference between bird feathers and tree bark, pebbles and pinecone petals. The puzzle was more pleasant the second time; so much so, I took it apart and worked it again.
I placed the green board and completed puzzle under my bed, waiting to find the right frame. The dog found my hiding place and ate a corner of the puzzle. I boxed up the remaining pieces, saved them a few years, and moved them to my new home, still hating to part with the brilliance of Bev Doolittle's art and vision, even though the puzzle was incomplete.
Today, a discussion about immigration and border control sent me to the bookshelf to pull this puzzle back out. I thought about how often people see a picture, without taking the time to look at individual components. We do it with border control, immigration laws, social services, tax dollars.
For every illegal who jumps the border with corrupt intentions, there might be 749 other puzzle pieces ready to create the wise face. One welfare abuser does not represent the flower garden under the chin, and the grizzly bear taxes in the corner probably are not related to the peaceful girl with her feet in the stream by the lips.
I ordered a new copy of this puzzle today. This time, I'm prepared to frame it immediately, and use it as a reminder to look at the whole picture in everything I do.
Thank you, Bev Doolittle. You've done a lot.


Comments: 49
disparate images form
a unified whole
Make it your own.
This puzzle you're drawn to
Has found a new home.
(I love this story. I would have gone looking for a print. You are so much more adventurous than I!)
WM H - LOL.. I wasted all those words! You summed it up quite nicely in so few.
DAWN - It is amazing. I hope you followed the link, because my picture lost a lot when reduced the size to fit it in here.
NANCY - I will do it this time. I did go in search of Bev Doolittle's work - way outside my budget. On second thought, however, I think having the lines of the puzzle pieces along with the other individual components adds meaning to this one for me.
CANDIDA - Your comments always make me feel successful. Thank you.
TONY - I almost fainted when I saw those two words behind my name. I know the brilliance and inspiration came from Bev Doolittle, but I'm going to stare at those words and enjoy them a few more minutes anyway. Thanks.
I thought it was interesting how it was so much easier to put together the 2nd and 3rd time too. And of course, you made such a wonderful analogy about how this relates to life, to illegal immigration, to social programs, in all the things we try to pull out the bad examples from instead of looking at the whole picture. GREAT!
Jan - thanks for putting the 'soul' in!!
Thanks for sharing.
CLARE - in case it isn't obvious, I'm rather ignorant when it comes to using anything more than the word processing program on this computer, so getting that picture in here, reduced to a useable size, without losing much quality was a major accomplishment for me. Thanks for acknowledging!
CHRISTOPHER - Thanks for your kind words. I saw a quote today - Better go to heaven in rags than to hell in embroidery - and thought about how much I appreciate the riches I do have in life. Disability brought a few good things to my life, and having time to appreciate something like this puzzle and all it represents is one of those things. There were times in my life when I was so rushed with commitments and activity that I might only have give this puzzle an evening or two. Now, I can stretch it out over years.
EDWARD - thanks. I'm glad they fit, too! In more ways than one.
JAKE - thank you very much.
CHARLES - thanks. And yes, it is interesting, and also very rewarding when something simple becomes something major. I grew to appreciate that phenomonon years ago when reading the lyrics of Kris Kristofferson's songs. Simply brilliant is how I described him. I still get excited when I read (or listen to) his work, or the work of anyone else who layers wisdom in simple words.
HANNAH - thanks. I love puzzles, too. I used to end up with at least one jigsaw puzzle each year for Christmas. Everyone tried to find the hardest ones out there for me. I've had the one with the same picture printed on both sides, the one with a white background and about a million stick-animal puppies drawn in fine black lines, the cinnamon candies... This one wasn't quite as hard as those, and only had 750 pieces, but it wasn't a one evening puzzle for me either.
WILHELMINE - thanks!
YASSER - Welcome again! Glad to see you finding your way around Gather, and especially to my little space here. I'm honored.
If we were not so close maybe if we really looked at our Mother we would see the same face thanks for the insight.
My grandmother introduced me to puzzles when I was a toddler. (I don't think one went without missing pieces thanks to my chubby little hands.) Grandma never watched television, and always, always had a puzzle going on a card table in the den.
My youngest daughter and I do puzzles together now. She has a severe sight impairment, but never ceases to amaze me in how she can spot the missing bits I'm searching for (which are usually right under my nose.)
Thanks for this - and congrats on the editor's pick!
Gisela, thank you. I was surprised to see the editor's pick! I didn't know they went back and found old publications this way. It was a nice surprise. Your grandma and I would have enjoyed each other. I don't work as many puzzles as I used to... and the story about your daughter will change that ;-) Thank you.
Jessie - My granddaughter said she'd bring me some. Unfortunately, she's four and can't drive. She also said she'd bring me a battery out of their kitchen drawer for my car. I hope to get out of here tomorrow. I'm getting a little stir crazy. Thanks for reading and commenting.
Clare - isn't she amazing? The puzzle is all I can afford ;-(
Hubby & I used to do a lot of puzzles together, but cats, lack of space, computer games, have all taken their toll. You make me want to pull out the table and start them anew.
I loved it! I was drawn deeply into the working of the puzzle, since you created a nice tension about whether it would get finished or not.
Then, unexpectedly, you cast the net wider and captured a new (to my mind) way of thinking about how our society fits together, and the intricacies required.
Excellent! I gave you a 10 for quality of the content, use of metaphorical thinking and impeccable use of grammar and style.
Dennis, apparently I needed this reminder myself, and I'm just glad I had the puzzle here to nudge me. Thanks for reading and commenting.
Loretta, when I went to the site, I thought for a minute how nice it would be to buy the print. Then, I decided having the jigsaw lines showing made the impact even stronger. I have thought about sending her a thank you for the inspiration.
Eric, Thank you!! yes!! I always hope what I write will help someone else find a new perspective or thought. Thanks for humoring me.
Donald, the link at the top of the page takes you to the puzzle.
Low Eye, I appreciate your compliments very much.
After some thought about what I'd read, it seemed that there was a puzzle being solved in the story itself: how many people, beginning with the shelf-stocker, saw that puzzle but were not moved to buy it or see the beauty within the smaller and larger images' interaction? So the puzzle was one piece, you were another, your interpretation was yet another, and then you put thoes pieces together with all who have read your writing here, which surely brought many to Bev Doolittle's site.
I think Bev would delight in reading your article, and you should send her that thank-you note you were thinking about, along with a link to your article. (When I wrote my review of Megan Whalen Turner's books, I sent her a link to it, and she thanked me!)
Thank you, Sandy -- an inspiring article indeed.
http://www.bnr-art.com/doolitt/earthmother.htm