1. My friend said this length of linen, ecru, wrapped with hemp string, dyed with indigo, reminds her of the inner layer of abalone. Yesterday I took the fabric out of a trunk to look at it and wonder. Wonder, as in: what will I do with 5 meters of linen rippled and marbled as abalone, or water holding the light. I have no idea.
2. Swimming this morning, I thought of the linen, thought of shells, abalone shells, the pores of their outer edges. The one found on a wild beach, the one hanging from a string on the deck.
3. First thing, before the swim, before any kind of thinking, a link arrived for an essay: https://www.thetemzreview.com/kishkan.html Reading it, I am surprised to find string, swimming, a shell, watery light.
On the shelf in my bedroom, the tiny oyster shell I sometimes wear on my ankle in summer, a strand of 3-ply thread holding it in place. The shell and I both long for warm weather, the wild water of the lake I love.
4. What will I do with 5 meters? I wish I could hang the linen from the crown of a Douglas fir and let it flutter in the wind. Maybe curtains. Maybe a summer tent, light coming through the ripples of indigo.
5. In the kitchen, a big jar of shells, tiny lights on copper wire strung through them. Shells from Mexico, Tofino, Oyster Bay, Sechelt. Thick rope to hang the jar from a hook outside.
6. In the small hours I got up to pee and returning to my bed, I saw that moonlight had settled on my pillow, waiting for me. If I’d drawn the curtains before going to sleep, it never would have found me.

I’m a great fan of hanging it on the crown of a Douglas fir. Bit of a climb but I think you won’t regret it… (:
Will keep this in mind. (I watch a mama bear send her cubs up the one I have in mind so I know its climbable…)
An extraordinary and powerful essay, Theresa, illuminating so much of your widespread knowledge and delving into your many loves – family, nature, water, quilting, history, geography, poetry. I remember when you hinted at a frightening health scare in your blog; how beautifully you’ve told us about it now. There is no writer like you, anywhere.
Beth, thank you. Your words mean so much.
PS It’s Beth.