Notes on Kicking Alcohol


In late May of 2020, I was driving through my neighborhood in Maryland and decided to just go home instead of stopping by the local beer store.

Earlier that week I was sitting in my yard drinking a Corona, looking out at a fig tree and a Japanese maple that I had planted. I really missed my friends and family. I’d cancelled a vacation in March to avoid coronavirus woes, and I hadn’t been back to the office since March either.

I realized that drinking in my yard was the epitome of pointless - alcohol wasn’t going to bring my friends closer to me or make me feel better about how alienating COVID-19 measures had become. If anything, I would drink a beer and read a book, and sort of feel relaxed, but mostly I felt anxious, still.

And if beer was pointless during COVID, wouldn’t it be pointless all the time?

It is not beer that I wanted or missed, I missed people, I wanted interesting conversations.

So, I stopped. In the upcoming days where I had a choice to buy more beer or not, I just skipped it.

The other reason I stopped drinking was my careful tracking of my running goals on Strava. I saw myself running and getting faster and better, and drinking just didn’t seem to be something that would help my running goals. Earlier in 2020 I had hit a personal goal of running 6 miles in 60 minutes. While I was still having the occasional beer or two while hitting that goal, I thought about how well I could do if I just nixed beer altogether, and I got pretty excited about what I envisioned.

The improvements I’ve seen in life are very good, I’ve detailed them below.

Financial:

I estimated that I spent at least $40 a week on alcohol. This would probably be much, much more if I had a week where I would go out with friends in DC and pick up even one drink on my tab. ($40 sounds laughably low when cleverly-named DC cocktails roll in at $15 each).

I used to stay out until 1 am at DC bars with friends, talking about nothing more than - you guessed it - politics. So, if I had a 1 AM Politics Night, my weekly alcohol spend would be more like $70.

I think if I were to do the same thing now and kick alcohol, I could, I’d just stay up until 1 am drinking kombucha or diet coke or something.

Fitness:

Even with stopping alcohol, I have some issues with sleeping. My sleep got better, but it’s not perfect yet. Admittedly I pump too much caffeine into my system, and I have a kind of undercurrent of anxiety about COVID that I can only occasionally shake off with exercise. Sometimes the COVID anxiety just doesn’t shake off, but if I do stuff, I feel better. The main improvement right now is that if I feel myself getting anxious, I start doing tasks or reaching out to my network instead of drinking a beer. I did just order a Sleep Number bed too after about 10 years on an old mattress so I will keep you posted on that, too.

When I stopped drinking my running performance went off the chain. I started running 3-4 miles on weekdays and built up towards a 10 mile run every weekend. The 10 mile runs were a challenge because I became so dehydrated - Maryland/DC in the summer heat is pretty tough.

Not everything went perfectly when I started to run a lot, though. One day I became so dehydrated and sick after a 10 mile run that I ended up throwing up (losing even more water), and struggled to even keep down water and ibuprofen, and had to sleep for the rest of the day. It was pretty nasty - 10 miles isn’t a marathon or anything, but it’s the furthest I’d ever run, even after training for 5ks in high school and for 10ks in my 20s, I’d never really hit a 10 mile run until 2020 at age 34 and alcohol-free.

Life:

For me there are two levels to being alcohol-free: Deep and shallow. I am able to handle deep and shallow problems with equal measure, instead of drinking them off. The problems might be as small as deciding how to sort and organize my clothes, or as big as deciding where I want to live and who I want to spend my time with. Either way they are way easier to solve.

I am a very visual person and I thrive on activity and momentum. I typically read three books at any one time, I don’t finish a book and read the next one. I also do the same with work that I produce - I don’t finish a painting and start the next one. I will work on several paintings at the same time, and rework paintings from years ago.

This mode of operation can be at risk for distraction - something which is reduced by quitting alcohol.

So with one distraction down, I was able to solve problems both in art and life. I realized I would be happier back in my home state of Colorado, so I took steps to make the move. I probably wouldn’t have realized this if I had kept drinking. I would have been ensconced in whatever was right in front of me, instead of taking the time to realize that I could make a change. I imagined myself getting too settled and realized that it wasn’t what I wanted.

Artwise, I’ve made a lot of my ‘happiest’ art this year while being sober, mostly in the form of animated gifs and low-risk illustrations. Sobriety has taken me back to a more pure place as an artist, which has been really enjoyable.

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Artists are often perceived and cast as people who drink a lot. Or, there’s the trope of the drugged-out artist, too. Even when I did drink, I rarely would drink and produce good art. If anything, I would drink when I had thrown in the towel on making anything good that day.

Many artists produce a ton of great art after a beer or two - I am not one of those artists. I do my best stuff after a cup of coffee on a weekend morning, like Saturday Morning Cartoons only as an adult making the cartoons.

I can tend to seem like a very random person to some people, even dead sober. I think this is because I live life very fully and with a lot of love - a lot of people are caught off guard. Ultimately, I don’t need alcohol to be a free-spirited, loving, kind person.

The biggest question I answered for myself after a few months of being sober was: Why not me?

I spend a lot of time fawning over other people’s accomplishments… their artwork, their fitness journeys, and I decided, why not just stop hiding and be out with who I am? What on earth am I waiting for? I am talented, smart, I’ve helped a lot of people, and I’m pretty proud of how far I have come. So I’ve started posting grids on Instagram of all of my work - paintings, comics, and bikini photos alike.

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To sum up:

Fitness:

Slept better. Started running 7 - 10 miles, up from 3-4 miles.

Financial:

Saved at least $500 over three months, probably much more.

Life:

Big and small problems were easier to solve. I sorted my clothes effectively and also decided to move back to Colorado. I made art that made people happy and started asking “Why not me?”

Advice:

For anyone who wants to kick alcohol, I have advice, but I am a person who doesn’t like to tell people what to do unless they ask for advice explicitly.

I never want to make one of those Youtube videos or Medium posts that are titled “Stop drinking alcohol!” or “Women Who Drink Too Much are (insert demeaning XYZ trope here)!”

For this reason, my story will probably never be very popular and will definitely not get millions of views. I want to stick to my code of being non-judgmental towards others. I wouldn’t presume to judge people who drink or people who don’t drink.

So, if you would like any advice or have any interest in this, please message me any time by tweeting at me: @beckyjewell.


Who wrote this?

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I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!

- Becky Jewell



Sketchbook Confessional: August and a Half 2020

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Welcome to the Sketchbook Confessional for August-to-mid-September 2020!

It’s the future and we live in the time of COVID-19, let’s live heroically, let’s live in style. #jewell2020

August represented a bit of an art slump for me since I am in the middle of packing, moving, and driving across the USA back to Colorado.

Many years ago I realized I went through times of art production and times where I would absorb, rather than produce, art and information. I try to not beat myself up for falling into a series of weeks where I don’t make paintings or comics, and intentionally categorize this time as Learning Time, or an absorption time. August and September have been absorption months for me so far. I have been reading more than writing, and looking at art more than creating it.

Art:

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In terms of art I have been making 2-4 frame GIFs and uploading them to Giphy: I added a few GIFs here to Giphy: https://giphy.com/beckyjewell6

Overall Giphy has been super interesting to participate in as an artist. My whole set of GIFs had about 1.1 million views in early August. Later in September, the number ratcheted up to 20 million as one gif took off like a rocketship, for some reason. The GIF that got the most views was an animated version of Be Nice Make Art.

I don’t know what this means or why it got so many views. Instagram? Giphy front page? I’m glad it was popular as original art, and wasn’t a spongebob cutout or something. Though, those are pretty cute, too.

Writing:

Usually I don’t write very much about, er, writing in these updates. This month I did work on writing some key moments in my comic Tilted Sun for future reference when I get back into art production mode after my move. Ultimately I know what Tilted Sun is about, I just am disappointed with how slow I am moving imagistically with the comic. Someday, I might move back to writing, or start writing a fantasy book in addition to writing and drawing Tilted Sun, simply because writing moves faster. It is way harder to draw a flowing scarf than describe it.

So, I have the themes worked out in my head and the characters, it just takes me longer to complete than the ideas hit me. A lot of good paintings are like this. They look like they just zapped into existence, like Athena from Zeus’s head… yet they actually took years of work and failure.

So, the allure of writing has been fun for me lately while I am moving boxes around and energetically am not working deeply enough in my head for drawing.

Reading/Watching/Playing

Reading:

I finished reading the Jim Carrey book, Memoirs and Misinformation. This book probably isn’t for everyone, but if you’ve read and liked Pynchon or other absurdist-bent books you’ll like this. Ultimately the book does a great job of recreating what it is like to be an artist with a capital A - reality and art blur together, until you’re not sure which is which, and you can hardly afford to care. Distinguishing art and reality isn’t the point of this book, the point is wholly something else, which I will save for you if you read it! I personally loved this book. I just loved it.

I picked up Barking Up the Wrong Tree at a Fedex hub and read it in a couple days. It’s a good success-anecdote book, something I’d usually read on an airplane. There were a couple good paragraphs on art specifically, and the Dunning-Kruger effect which I thought was interesting:

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After learning about Adele’s weightloss and seeing one of her Instagram posts, I finished reading: Untamed by Glennon Doyle. I really like this book. I think the earlier that women read a book like this, the better their lives will be. Mostly, I am all for making a life that belongs to you, instead of adhering to tradition or doing things by the book so that other people will like you. This book takes readers through a journey of Glennon’s life as she starts out following tradition and adhering to grueling perfectionism, and she ends up blazing a new path.

I empathize with the sobriety points. I can’t say my own experiences in love and life have been as terrifying as Glennon Doyle’s experiences - it’s one of those books where I read it and think “Wow if this person can get through all this trauma, most of us can do anything!”

While reading this book, I realized how the pursuit of art is a get-out-of-jail-free card for women. In art, you are praised and loved for pursuing new and different ideas. There aren’t many other paths in life, aside from athletics or study, that can help women transcend deeply pervasive misogyny. A lot of American and Christian default narratives that are supposed to apply to womanhood are pretty harmful, and discarding these narratives early, as early as possible, is a good idea. Whatever helps women do that is good, whether it is art, study, athletics, anything.

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I also finished reading Braving the Wilderness by Brene Brown. I thought it was good after the introduction, which was a bit too namedropped for my tastes. Written in 2017, there are a lot of aspects of this book about racism and the racist divide that apply to struggles that we are still confronting in 2020.

On the fantasy side of things I am enjoying Cradle: Ghostwater by Will Wright. I like all of the Cradle books and am making a ton of fanart about the series. There are parts of this book that are so F*ing metal, man. They’re fun to read as an artist, and in a weird way, the books read a little bit like playing a videogame. The powers and characters’ skills in the book are clearly tiered, like advancing levels in a game. Plus there are flying clouds, giant turtles, sprites, treasures, and I do have to say I like the main character a lot, and his bff.

I read Business at the Speed of Thought by Bill Gates and it turned out to be an absolutely wild read because it is pretty much 400 pages of convincing you to turn your paper-based office into a computer-based office, which makes sense for the time. At first I didn’t realize the book was written in 1998. Reading it now feels like reading 400 pages of someone convincing you to purchase an automobile instead of riding a horse. I admit I had to skim parts of it. Interesting read in 2020.

The other book I read in the Bill Gates realm was the book by William Gates or Bill Gates SR - Showing Up For Life. I liked this book, it’s about 1-2 hour read. William Gates is about the same age of my late grandpa and had a similar life - both William Gates and my grandpa were in Japan after the bomb dropped. It is interesting to read books from people in this generation.

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Finally, I finished reading I May Be Wrong, But I Doubt It by Charles Barkley, after finding a copy in a local Little Free Library. One of my favorite things in the world is Charles Barkley Shut Up and Jam Gaiden, to the extent that I wrote a please-play-this-game blog about it four years ago. I love the bravado of basketball and basketball references, and though I don’t follow the game right now, I follow a lot of what I call Basketball Drama. I love basketball shoes.

The saddest thing about this book is how it was written in 2002 and things aren’t much better when it comes to race in America. Barkley has several prescient talking points about confronting racism instead of sweeping it under the rug.




Playing:

I’m in the middle of a super fun D&D campaign with some friends online. D&D kind of works like … therapy for me, or how I’d imagine the perfect therapy to be. It takes me out of my day-to-day, gives me fresh perspectives, and, since D&D is so collaborative, I don’t feel like I have to mercilessly whip someone at something (ala Magic the Gathering.) Time just flies. We’re about 10 sessions in and it’s been just awesome. I think everyone should play this game at some point in life.

I also started playing Paper Mario: Origami King on Nintendo Switch. This game is a perfect game.

First of all, it’s funny, and about as random as Katamari. Nothing makes sense, yet, gameplay is perfect and easy to navigate. And it’s fun to look at. It’s also funny how confetti fixes everything.

The beginning is a little hand-holdy but it’s to be expected with how strange the battle system is. The line-em-up strategy vaguely reminded me of the group-and-attack battle methods in Radiant Historia.

Fitness:

Overall, August has been hot in Maryland-shy-of-DC and I’ve been staying indoors. The most exciting thing about August and September is that September 1 marked my third month of no-alcohol, which is huge for me.

I quit drinking sometime at the end of May. There was no momentous breaking point, no dramatic bottle-smashing. I just didn’t want to drink Coronas in my yard any more. I miss my friends a lot during COVID-19 measures, and realized I didn’t need alcohol the whole time, COVID or not.

I can’t remember the exact date, so I am calling June 1 my sobriety birthday.

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I’d say for me personally, I’m much sharper mentally without drinking. The sharpness and competence permeates everything I do, from my professional career to drawing silly things like cat gifs.

The allure of alcohol for me, artistically, had to do with trying to relax my inner critic and fitting in. Similar to how, I guess, drinking can be a good way to lose inhibitions socially, when it comes to art, relaxing the inner critic feels good because self judgements can be shaken off quickly. I’d rather just try to ruthlessly ditch, to utterly abandon my inner self critic without drinking, which is going pretty well.

Not everything has to be perfect, and, I don’t have to fit in.

That’s it for now peeps! Next time I write I will catch you in Colorado.

Related blogs:

Sketchbook Confessional: June and Half

Sketchbook Confessional: July

Making Animated GIFs in Procreate

Who wrote this:

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I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!

- Becky Jewell












Sketchbook Confessional: July 2020

Welcome to the Sketchbook Confessional for July 2020!

It’s the future and we live in the time of COVID-19, let’s live heroically, let’s live in style. #jewell2020

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The last half of July was interesting for me on the personal side - I’m in the process of rethinking my studio location with COVID being so extant. More news on that side too, readers, just know that change is in the air for me! Just like it is for so many of us.

This month I made a few more animated gifs, like Mr. Blue Cat over to the right. I am learning more about making small drawings come to life in just a few frames.

Check out all of my gifs here on Giphy!

Other than a couple gifs, I did some sketches in Clip Studio Paint below, and the rest of July is in my June-and-a-Half update.

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I’m putting a lot of content on Instagram IG TV of my processes in Clip Studio Paint on the iPad Pro. It’s been a fun way to connect with people from all over the world, and friends new and old, while staying at home for COVID measures.

There are a ton of great and amazing art video timelapses out there, where you can watch art come to life at a rapid pace.

What I aim to do in my Instagram art videos that is DIFFERENT from silent timelapses is to narrate my decisions and choices as I draw, so that my thoughts, not just my motor skills, are captured in the video.

I think that understanding artist thoughts, not just physical talents, is the ticket to developing art skills and becoming better artists overall. If we can investigate our thoughts, we can learn and grow in meaningful ways.

Instagram Video Directory:

Digital Collage - How I use photographs of abstract paintings and layer them into Clip Studio Paint to create textured, varied artwork.

Character Development - Drawing a couple character busts from scratch.

Animated Gif Process - How to make animated gifs in Procreate.

Smiley time on the IG!

Smiley time on the IG!

IG TV is fun and it’s been a great way for me to get my work permanently into the world. I probably will go onto Youtube one of these days. For now, Instagram is where it’s at for livestreaming and art tips from me - plus you get to see my smiley face!

Life and Fitness:

I’m super pumped to say I’ve hired triathlete Alex Willis to be my running trainer. My goal is to eventually run a few long distance races, such as a marathon, and if I get there, a 50 miler.

At a certain point I realized that the longer I run, the better I feel about life. So at this point I am positively addicted to running in the purest sense of the phrase.

I’m two months free of alcohol at this point, however I’ve gone back on to caffiene. I could give up alcohol but not coffee!

COVID stay-at-home time was and is a perfect time for me personally to kick alcohol - otherwise it is just me in my backyard drinking Coronas, which is kind of, er, well it’s not very fun.

The good thing about kicking alcohol completely is that I am taking steps to solve problems in my life instead of just drowning them out. Things that I don’t like about life or myself, I am working to fix deeply, instead of bandaid. It’s been good so far.

To make life fun, I’ve gotten into treating myself by dying a strip of my hair various colors.

My hair changes just about every week. Right now I’m only using two colors from Manic Panic to get a range of pinks, purples, and blues.

Related blogs:

Sketchbook Confessional: June and a Half

Would love your support on Patreon

Print Shop

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Who wrote this:

I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!

- Becky Jewell


Sketchbook Confessional: June and a Half 2020



Welcome to the Sketchbook Confessional for June and for the first half of July!

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It’s the future and we live in the time of COVID-19, let’s live heroically, let’s live in style. #jewell2020

The sketchbook confessional is a ritualistic art process blog where I go into ALL of what I am making, thinking about, reading, and doing fitness-wise during a specific month - only, this month I didn’t get June finished, so I am blogging about June and half of July!


Making art:

Geddy the Poodle Gif!

Geddy the Poodle Gif!

I’ve been working on learning how to make animated gifs and have uploaded a few to Giphy! Thinking and creating in terms of animation has helped me create better artwork over all. It’s been fun to think about how things ‘move’ and how weight and direction affects art.

I’d recommend trying animation in Clip Studio Paint or creating layer-based animated gifs in Procreate if you never have - I learned a lot from this and have found that gifs are a great way to bring life to my static drawings and designs.

The GIF I am proudest of is the one at the top of this blog, I made about 6 or 7 four-frame gifs before drawing and animating an entire scene. Here is my process for the island gif

  1. Drawn in Clip Studio Paint

  2. Exported as a layered PSD File

  3. Imported into Procreate

I watched a ton of great youtubes on how to animate via layers in Procreate. Someday I’ll make one too when I get a bit more time!

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In addition to GIFs, I made some Colorado-based art in the form of a Topo Map of Leadville, Colorado. I also drew a patch of Columbine and added rainbow gradients in honor of both Colorado and Pride Month.

Both pieces are available as prints and more on my shop on Society6! Check them out here:

https://society6.com/beckyjewell





I worked a bit on Tilted Sun in June and am planning on finishing the first 100+ pages and releasing a print version. Keep an eye out for a future Kickstarter and an opportunity to support the print version of Tilted Sun!

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For now, read the whole comic online at:

www.TiltedSun.com


Start at Page 1 here:

https://www.tiltedsun.com/comic-1/2018/5/5/page-1


Reading:

I got a new Kindle Paperwhite and am cruising through books almost as fast as I used to when I rode the D.C. Metro each day. Here is what I am reading:

Call Sign Chaos - General Jim Mattis

This is a great read about leadership in general, and the leadership that goes into being a Marine and a Marine leader.

My favorite part in the book is a moment where Mattis goes into the importance and value of reading, where he states that if you don’t read hundreds of books, you’re probably going to fail. Well … he sort of puts it like if you don’t read or try to read and expand yourself, you’re kind of a moron. It’s nice to hear this from a Marine, and even nicer to hear it from one of the most loved and respected generals of all time.

Too Much and Never Enough - Mary Trump

This book is an empathetic look into the family that created Donald Trump. I think a lot of bravery went into this book. I’d had the book purchased for a week before it was released - it was recommended in my Kindle library after I read Call Sign Chaos by General Mattis.

This book is a tough read and I have to intersperse it with happier books to get through it.

Autism in Heels - Jennifer Cook

This book is a GREAT read for anyone who has an autistic family member, friend, coworker, or is autistic themselves. It is also a GOOD read for anyone. Even if you feel you have never met a person who is on the spectrum, you probably have, if you’re over 12 years old.

A ton of stereotypes get blown away by this author’s kind and funny narrative style, especially because she goes into such depth on the experience of being an autistic girl and woman.

The depth is important because most diagnoses and understandings of autism are built around how autistic boys and men navigate the world, where the diagnostic range needs to catch up with how autism is experienced by girls and women.

“Autism in Heels” is a perfect title to describe some of the hiding, mirroring, and acting that autistic women do in order to fit in - something that happens all too commonly since autistic women tend to fly under the radar, even to themselves. The author wasn’t diagnosed until she was in her 30s.

Please read this book.

Memoirs and Misinformation - Jim Carrey and Dana Vaschon

I love Jim Carrey and have been watching him in 2020 even more fervently than I watched Ace Ventura ever since he started painting and drawing. I also follow him closely on Twitter. I was excited to see this book being released and picked it up on the first couple days it was out.

This book is like Jim Carrey himself - it’s funny, wildly expressive, borderline absurd. I like the book a lot because it knows it is borderline absurd and, like Hollywood itself, sometimes it doesn’t try too hard to make things seem real. There’s a part where Jim Carrey and Charlie Kaufman and Anthony Hopkins get into a fight while eating Chinese food and, long story short, this anecdote almost killed me, it was so funny.

I think you might need to have a supermassive sense of humor for this book - otherwise it might seem too sad, but that’s also kind of what I think about life itself.

Cradle: Foundation - Volume 1 - Will Wright

I started reading the Cradle series in March and picked them up again in June after falling off my book game for a couple months during COVID.

I LOVE these books, they are so fun. There are spirits, warring families, mystical paths of study and skill, monsters, wealthy rulers, impossible goddesses, dragonbone cities… I’m all about it. The narration and plot reads a bit like a video game - the fantasy world has a very clear hierarchy of superpowers, and items and actions that help characters achieve those powers. The main character’s inventiveness is almost as charming as the second main character’s skill and power, and there’s a lot of deeper moments about invention vs. power, or the unstoppable teaming of invention + power.

Playing:

I’ve picked up a D&D campaign on Discord/zoom with some friends from Twitter and new friends. It’s been so fun to play D&D and have a couple hours each week where I don’t think about work, art commissions, or exercise. In a way it’s my main social time aside from zoom happy hours at my company and zoom family calls.

On one of those family calls, I explained a bit of D&D to my mom, who remembered kids in the 80s playing it when she taught high school English. It’s interesting, but not surprising, how storytelling and team efforts are attractive game concepts.

While explaining D&D to my mom, I realized that D&D, to me, is ultimately a bit more positive than Magic the Gathering - I used to feel bad about whipping people at Magic, and would also feel bad about getting whipped.

There are clear winners and losers in Magic, and Magic is a bit more about antagonizing others. On the other side of the fantasy game spectrum, D&D is about group survival - rather than beating your friends, you’re working together with them. The DM is not an antagonist (usually) either. Ultimately, I can see why D&D has had a resurgence and why it is sticking around. It’s a game about team/group success rather than competition.

Fitness:

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Art and fitness for me are interlinked, both inform and balance each other. If I am stuck on an art idea or overly stressed, I just go for a run for a while and usually have my art issue worked out, and my stress melts away.

The myths that artists are physically weak, or that you can’t be both a jock and an artist, are myths that just sort of need to go away.

I think we are stuck with the myth of artist-as-unwell because artists would actually talk about their ailments, as opposed to being silent. So we have rich information about when van Gogh was in an asylum, but we forgot about the letter where he writes his brother about how his doctor mistook him for an iron worker. Same thing for artists like Frida Kahlo - artists themselves aren’t more sickly, they are sick at the same rate of everyone else, and they just make a painting about it.

Sometimes, the more stress I have, the more I run - because running helps me stay away from the computer and away from getting TOO invested in my phone, it helps me mentally reset.

June and July so far have been big months for me for running and biking. I have completed two ‘big’ runs at 10 miles and 10.5 miles in the past couple weeks - these runs are big for me right now, in the future they may be more standard. A year from now I might be reading this blog and fitting in 20 mile training runs on a Saturday. We will see!

I am training for marathons, and eventually, I want to do 50 mile ultra race. Who knows what racing will really look like in the future? I might just do a marathon and capture it on Training Peaks/Strava, and that will be good enough.

In other fitness news, I stopped drinking alcohol around the end of May, so I am calling my Soberversary June 1st. I feel… a lot better without alcohol. It was a good time for me to quit, because with stay-at-home orders, drinking just didn’t seem like something that needed to happen.

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Now that hanging out doesn’t really happen, and therefore social anxiety doesn’t happen, I quit drinking and I feel like I am just thriving, soaring mentally and physically beyond my own wildest dreams.

Where I used to write a couple sentences, I now write a couple paragraphs. I identify problems sooner and come up with solutions faster.

I was thinking earlier this month that the last time I felt this sharp, this intelligent, was in high school when I was working with calculus and studying particle physics. I also wrote long science fiction fantasy books when I was in high school - sounds insane, but I remember looking at the word count in Microsoft Word and there’d be something like 180,000 words there.


So, I am off my own personal chain now, it seems. The dollars I save from not buying beer are one thing, but the time I save from not drinking is invaluable. I can’t put a dollar amount on that.

Ra, more art! xoxo catch you next time!

Related Blogs:

The importance of Personal Work 

Art Therapy is Too Late 

In Praise of Low-Stakes Art  

Sketchbook Confessional May 2020

Who wrote this:

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I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!

- Becky Jewell








Daily Post: April 6 2020 Kingdom Hearts and My Summer Job as a Roofer


Some of the roofs I worked on in Leadville were old. Well, not this old, but still pretty old!

Some of the roofs I worked on in Leadville were old. Well, not this old, but still pretty old!



In the summer of 2005 I left CU Boulder and went back to Leadville to work as an assistant in a local construction business.

My job was to gather up old, discarded roof tiles and put them in my truck, a red 1980s-era Toyota with golf-themed upholstery that my grandpa had gifted to our family.

On my first job I went up on a roof and caulked roof tiles. On the second job I cleaned up a bunch of debris that other roofers were stripping and throwing off of the house. Old roof off, new roof on.

I would picking up slats of rotted roof wood and centipedes would scatter from underneath. Sometimes there were dead animals, creatures that had lived in or on the old roof wood and had been thrown to the literal wayside of each home. Other things would happen - like I would almost accidentally step on upturned nails, or I would scrape myself on dry, unsanded wood, or get a sunburn.

The idea of a desk job seemed nice. Yet at the same time, I loved my roofing job. I liked it a lot.

It felt good to get exercise and to see the tangible effects of my work. I would often talk to the homeowners and they would bring me snacks or water. I’m sure it looked pretty weird - a construction crew of mostly grown men and then a teenage girl lifting and throwing debris into a vehicle. As a roof-tile-gatherer, that summer I learned that there was always high demand for work that nobody else wanted to do.

I would return to my parent’s house each evening fairly exhausted and would play the Playstation 2 in my brother’s room. I spent hours and hours playing Kingdom Hearts, the first Kingdom Hearts. Alice in Wonderland, Tarzan, Hercules, Pinnochio … I can still hear most of the levels in the game. It was simple and familiar enough for me to latch onto after busting my ass on rooftops.

In Kingdom Hearts, the two main characters seemed to be about 15 years old. I was 19 at the time and remembered thinking “Am I too old for this? Should I be more mature by now?”

It was sort of the same with roofing - I wondered if I should be doing some other kind of job, but I enjoyed it nonetheless.

It was a good summer to realize that it was fine to just love what I loved, even if it seemed off the beaten path of my age or gender.

Who wrote this?

becky jewell.png

I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!

- Becky Jewell