Reflecting on Two Years in Minnesota: Transformation, Healing, and Joy

When my husband and I first began planning our move to Minnesota, I often wondered how it would change my work. What I did not anticipate was how deeply Minnesota would change me. As I reflect on our second anniversary here, I'm struck by the profound impact this move has had on my life.

Shortly after we moved, I realized that the chronic pain I had endured since 2011 had vanished. It happened overnight. My neck, shoulders, back, and arms were pain-free. I woke up one morning and realized that for the past several nights, I had slept through without waking up multiple times due to numbness, tingling, or stabbing pain. It was simply gone. The pain didn't return, even as I unpacked and repacked boxes for our final move. I heard a quote: "You only know how much pain you are in when it is gone." This resonated deeply with me.

 Over the years, I had sought help from various experts and doctors, who tried different treatments without lasting relief. Looking back, I wonder how I managed to get through grad school with such a demanding workload while dealing with this pain. My high pain tolerance muscled me through, but it came at a high cost. Despite numerous trips to physical therapists, relief was always temporary. It wasn't until after grad school that I read "The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma" by Bessel van der Kolk. The book's thesis—that our bodies hold memories and trauma, manifesting as physical pain and illness—made sense to me, though I didn't fully grasp its meaning until my pain returned alongside old memories.

With the pain gone, I had more mental space to settle into a new state, new routine, and learn my way around. This relief lasted about six months before the pain slowly began to return, accompanied by resurfacing memories from my prior career in education and childhood. Moving away from a place filled with both wonderful and painful memories was freeing. There are no ghosts from my old life in my new home. Starting over was unexpected, but I am grateful for the opportunity.

Last summer, I began working with a therapist to better understand what was happening. We discussed my heritage, past events, and how they have carried forward. This work has been hard, painful, and rewarding.

Reflecting on my past five-year plans from college and art school, I realize that none of them came to fruition as expected. Things turned out better or worse, but ultimately, I made it through. I've had moments of regret for wasted time or missed opportunities, which is such a human response. Recently, my therapist mentioned that much of human development focuses on early years, as if we stop developing past a certain point in adulthood. Nothing could be further from the truth. We continue to grow, learn, and make leaps forward in later adulthood. I don't wish to return to any earlier age of my life.

One of the best changes brought by our move is how physically active I've become. I've always liked walking, but now I've added lake swimming, kayaking, and biking to my routine. There are countless opportunities to get outside here. The osprey, loons, and swallows have all returned, and it's like greeting old friends. Recently, my husband and I sat by our local lake, listening to the loons calling to each other. It felt magical, like encountering mystical creatures.

Back in January 2023, I wrote about a Finnish proverb I found on artwork in Duluth: “Minä istun iloissani ja annan surun huilata,” translated as “I sit here contented while sorrow catches its breath.” Finnish scholars later told me it was mistranslated and should be something stronger, like "delight." I've finally embraced those stronger, deeper feelings. My new life is filling me with endless delight, and I'm learning to stop anticipating the other shoe dropping. Sorrow is part of life, and some of us have walked with it for a long time. But now, in Minnesota, I'm learning to embrace joy and let sorrow catch its breath.

Minnesota’s Many Delights

Becoming

 Winter is a time for deep reflection and reckoning. This season has been a difficult one with a lot to sort through. Since the coming north, I realize that I’m still in the process of moving. Sorting, packing, and letting go, mentally this time. The distance has allowed for new insight into events of the past and in decisions about how things should be now, moving forward.

Work in progress - handwoven fabric, vintage linens and endless amounts of scraps.

I’ve had moments sitting in the dark not understanding which way to go. It is frustrating on many levels, but I must remember that it is often like this in the middle. Gradually, we can have a glimpse of the direction things are going. Becoming is a slow process and I can feel the pace of life starting to quake. In the studio I have been following an instinct to find ways to dealing with scraps, found vintage textiles and past pieces that never worked. I have been experimenting with them and have some works in progress. On my loom I’m still working with rag rug structure as a launching point for new work. I’ve been thinking a lot about the saying “sweep it under the rug.” As I work to uncover my family story, I’ve been pulling up the rugs and look for what was hidden.

Rag rug coming off the loom. The color mixing on this one surprised me. I want to make more.

This exploration on the loom seems to have legs. I keep having questions to answer, ideas to try out. I love the color potential of rugs with painted warps and my own hand dyed fabric. There are so many ways to bring color and texture to life. And there are so many surprises.

scraps get cut and joined together for rag rug weaving.

This year one of my overarching goals is to search out new communities to join. I’ve begun to wonder if I’ll seek out a studio space outside of my home to work in and to be closer to other artists. I’m looking for opportunities to join my passion for the outdoors, art and education.

One of the biggest surprises from the move is how much I have changed. This place, this Minnesota has worked some magic on me. I feel myself becoming more myself here. My attunement of place has heightened and I’m finding myself more curious. There is an audible psychic sigh of relief in our part of Minnesota. On Wednesday the snow began to fly in the afternoon and continued into the evening quite heavily. We woke up the next day to about six inches of snow. This is our first significant snow of the season. We had a seasonal total of four inches of snow until the other day (with over ninety inches last winter). The anxiety of Minnesotans was palpable. Though we may complain about the snow, it is part of what it means to be part of this place.

The sun after the snow. The light and shadows are so beautiful.

Watershed Moments: Art for Water

My project with Art for Water, a program of the Minnesota Water Stewards and sponsored by Freshwater and Hennepin County, has reached its conclusion. My exhibition, Watershed Moments, opens October 10 and runs through November 7th at the Hopkins Center for the Arts. The opening reception is October 26, 6 - 8 pm in the member artist spotlight on the first floor of the center.

Exhibition Postcard

Exhibition Postcard Information

The work is this eight-piece series composed of layers of handmade paper, painted and handwoven fabric, and embroidery. They form interconnected maps with each other and stand alone as well. My work has always had a theme of connection to nature. As a new Minnesotan, I have been thinking about what it means to be in relationship with the places and waters around me. There is imperative to care in this mutual relationship. The land and waters provide a home and life for us and we must do our part to care for them as well. The Water Steward program offered me a starting point of knowledge about how we as a community can protect our waters. This protection starts with our individual connections with places that we love.

Watershed I

12" h x 12" w x 1" d mounted

Mixed media - hand painted linen handwoven fabric, machine stitched with hand embroidery on handmade paper.

2023

This year has been marked by visits to water, forming new points of connection and researching what my Art for Water project would evolve to be.  I began in the spring by visiting Lake Superior and even having a quick dip. This summer I visited the headwaters of the Mississippi River. This was a place that loomed large in my mind. My husband made a trip twenty years ago, before we met, and told me stories of that trip. It was in part what lead us to move to Minnesota.

The trail to the headwaters

The Mississippi has always been a presence in my mind. I remember vising the river front a lot as a child – the annual fair, the McDonald’s riverboat restaurant, and the many floods that impacted St. Louis. My husband and I were married overlooking the river at a park. I’ve been the river’s other end point in New Orleans. At each point along the river, it changes, but all the parts that I’d seen before had been large, turbulent and full of barge traffic.

The Mississippi River from Bee Tree Park, St. Louis, Missouri

The Mississippi River at the headwaters is quiet. It emerges from Lake Itasca where wild rice sways in the wind. The boundary between the lake and the river is marked by stones. Some tourists scramble over the rocks to cross the river to the other side while others wade. At the time of our visit the water levels were lower than when my husband visited so long ago. We waded into the water to cross. The crossing water was shallow, cold, and clear.

Lake Itasca with wild rice in background, Mississippi River begins

Lake Itasca State Park is about three and half hours from the Twin Cities. The dive up set the stage for the trip up. The farther up north you go, the move wild the landscape becomes and signs for cabins and resorts reveal where Minnesotans spend summer vacation days. Minnesotans often talk about “up north.”

Standing along the bank and looking at the river it was startling to see it as a narrow stream. It snakes along in the north and gradually becomes the river that I’ve known. At the headwaters, it is a place of quiet contemplation. I’d like to go back at some point and spend more time exploring the park and seeing more of Lake Itasca.

While on the trip we ventured to Lake Bemidji State Park and walked the bog. The walk is a quarter mile stroll along a wooden boardwalk. I don’t think I’ve ever been in this type of wetland before.  It was a beautiful quiet place where land and water meet.

The lush growth of the bog, Lake Bemidji State Park

This summer I’ve had the chance to kayak the Mississippi River a few times. On one of the longer trips our guide ushered us into Lock and Dam Number 1. We grabbed onto ropes and dropped forty feet before paddling out to our end point. The River near the Twin Cities has been designated a recreation area and managed by a partnership of federal, state, regional, cities and private owners. The area has been managed to return the river to a more natural state and as a result birds, wildlife and the ecosystem have returned.

The shore along the Mississippi River - I collected a fair amount of trash. Leave no trace.

I have also spent a significant amount of time with my local lake, Shady Oak. It is a place that I visit often. Swimming season is at an end, but I still wade and enjoy the sunsets there.

The sunset at Shady Oak Lake

Wading in the water - can you spot the fish?

Minnesota is such an easy place to love. Outside in the fall is glorius.