The only balloon that would work was a clear one with silver curls and snowflakes decorating the outside. I kind of knew it, but I still thought it was a little too fancy. My 6-year-old Sebastian, however, insisted on it.
We walked to the top of a park overlooking Pismo Beach and I, holding the top of the balloonās string, and Sebastian holding the bottom, counted to three.
One. And I looked out over the ocean as our arms swung upwards.
Two. As some strangers nearby took notice and turned to watch.
Three. And we swung our arms in the air, Sebastian letting go of his end, but I, at the last minute, was still holding on to mine.
āMom?!ā Sebastian yelled.
The stranger and his kids looked at us confused as to what we were even doing.
Ron, who was standing there, camera poised, asked what happened.
āI wasnāt ready,ā I said, not realizing the gravity of what I had just said.
To most of my family Iāve been the girl who was a little bit flamboyant, a little bit sassy, a little bit āout there.ā Nearly all of my aunts have compared me to this or the other ā80s quirky teen queenāJustine Batemanās Mallory Keaton in Family Ties or Lisa Bonetās Denise Huxtable in The Cosby Show. Itās probably because I embraced the decade in all its big-haired, electric-hued, pop rules decadence. However, at my core, Iāve always been someone who was a bit of a misplaced soul, a flighty, floaty, color-loving someone who shouldāve been a hippy but missed the Summer of Love.
Somewhere, somehow Iām sure my Aunt Patsy had a sliver of influence on this. Maybe she wasnāt a hippy, but she was insanely creative and talented. When I was a child sheād make me and my sister chalk paintings of dinosaurs and other educational topics. Once she even painted Strawberry Shortcake characters on the wall of our bedroom. I got Strawberry above my bed, and my sister had Blueberry Muffin. Those things impress upon a child.
About three years ago, my husband was traveling a lot for work. It seemed like every month heād be sent somewhere for a few weeks. As a somewhat restless person, with no one home to tell me to go to bed, I decided to work on a āproject.ā
I have always hated the shade of green my husband painted our master bedroom, but I had seen an incredible picture in a magazine, and I had to recreate it. It was nearly the exact green color as our room but on one wall was a gnarly cherry blossom tree with brilliant pink blossoms. Somewhere in the picture was a pretty dancer draped in flowing pale pink jumping on a piece of furniture.
I decided to recreate that cherry blossom tree. With a heavy dose of Jimi Hendrix on the stereoāand of course a six-pack of Stella Artois (Iām not that hippy), I began to paint the wall behind our bed. For hours I painted with Jimiās encouragement and Stellaās support, until about 6:30 a.m. when I had an epiphany: āOh wow. What will Ron say about this?ā
I hadnāt told him Iād painted a mural on the wall. And it really doesnāt come down to permission but rather courtesy. I painted a mural on our wallāa wall that is attached to a house we knew weād one day sell again in exchange for our dream house on the beach. The new buyers may not want a giant, gnarled cherry blossom tree highlighted by a lime-green background in their master bedroom.
Then the kids came into my room sleepy eyed and anxious to see someone other than themselves in trouble. They asked me what was going on. I silenced Jimi and, as casually as I could, said I was painting a mural and told them to get ready for school.
They turned to comply but then asked, āØāDoes Dad know?ā
It turns out āDadā just chalked it up to my quirkiness. When he came home, he didnāt say anything about it. In fact the first six times he returned home from business trips he didnāt say anything about it. Then he asked, āWhen are you going to finish it?ā
In hindsight, I wish I wouldāve asked my Aunt Patsy for help. I didnāt admit it then, nor for a long time after, but I was stuck. What started out looking like a beautifully mature cherry blossom tree started to look like an aged octopus with a medical condition.
Itās cool enough to pass though, and sometimes, when Ron and I are sitting on our bed practicing guitar or even paying bills on our laptops, and the kids take our picture, the crazy backdrop makes us seem a little hippy-ish, Ron has said. Though he likes his analytical, well-organized sensibility, I think on occasion he really does like being seen as quirky and alternative.
My aunt taught me how to make pumpkin chocolate chip cookies, how to appreciate art, and the importance of not being judgmental. When she was at her sickest, I flew in to see her. That was not the Summer of Love but it felt like it. It was in March of 2014, and I was still in a bit of denial, only traveling to support my mom. On that trip, my aunt was her funny, slightly sarcastic roll-her-eyes-and-chuckle self. In a selfish way, Iām glad I get that trip as my final memory.
In December on what would be her first birthday after she passedāthe day she wouldāve been 60āfamily all over the country released a balloon in her honor. Sixty of them in all.
On the second try, I raised my arms above the ocean I love so much and let go. I watched as a single silvery balloon and the message I wrote on it in gold marker made the 23rd, 24th, 45th, or I donāt know, 56th trail toward the clouds that day.
Though I didnāt say it in the message, I hope now that sheās goneāand though, I know that she wouldāve finished the muralāsheāll be OK with me blaming some of my creativeness on her. Like my cherry blossom mural.Ā Ā
Ā
Shelly Cone hopes to one day finish āØwhat she starts, but probably not todayā āØthere are other projects waiting to begin. āØContact her through the Sunās executive editor, rmiller@newtimesslo.com.
This article appears in Jan 22-29, 2015.


