Hi everyone! This is Heather, Ellie's sister - the pretty, nice one. Ellie just wanted me to give all of you a quick update. Ellie has had a very tough three weeks. And unfortunately she is not getting better. We have taken her out of the horrible palliative care center, and we have her at her favorite little hotel that she has been coming to for ten years. Regrettably, Ellie can barely speak, can neither eat nor drink, and she can no longer hold up her head. However she still has her sense of humor and sharp tongue intact. Her favorite caregivers are here around the clock. All of her dearest friends will be arriving to provide love and laughter.. Ellie is doing her best to stay strong and will, by the grace of God, get better. Ellie wants me to tell all of you that she loves you and thanks you for your prayers and well wishes.
I will keep you updated on her progress.
Love, Heather
Bonjour from Paris...
Just wanted to give you a quick update because I don’t want
any of you to worry about me. I am still at the palliative care center in
Paris. ALS is giving me a good fight right now. Unfortunately, I cannot hold my
neck up very well, I cannot swallow food, and my voice is very weak so I cannot
do the blog (Gracie is typing this for me) … Oh, and I shit my pants every day
this week. So, my world is a little rocked right now.
I hate 90% of the staff here because they are stupid
and if you don’t believe me, I invite you to spend a week here. Let’s see,
where should I start… Nurse Francoise told me to stop talking to her but I
explained to her that I was talking to my computer, so she decided to close my
feeding tube with the back of her clenched fist. That is how the week started and ended
with two psychiatrists trying to medicate me against my wishes.
#BitchesWithAnOunceOfAuthority
There are some nice nurses like Nurse Sophie, who kisses me every
time she leaves my room. Then there is the big nurse named Yolande… who we will
obviously love just because of her name. There is a 26-year-old nurse who is in
charge of 13 terminally ill patients at night and the funny thing is she has
more competence and better bedside manner than all of the old hag nurses put
together. I also like the chief of nurses, Nurse Bernadette.
BUT THAT’S IT. The rest are bitches. I will be leaving the
center this week to move into an apartment to see if I can gain my strength
back. All of my caregivers are back, because it turns out they just hated
Provence. My sister, Heather, and my mother will be here within a few hours. I’m
not promising anything but I will try for the next month to live the best life
that I can. Hopefully it will be filled with flowers, gardens, churches, chocolates, and
perfume because after all, it is springtime in Paris.
I will not be able to write the blog very much, if at all.
However, follow me on Instagram for daily updates because I will eek out enough
strength for that.
Follow me on Instagram HERE
The good news is that because my mother is here to help me,
the shop is still open. Not sure if I will be able to do the shop in the future
so shop til you drop.
Gracie is helping me finish the book and I promise it will be
finished by the end of April.
Thank you all for your well wishes, prayers, and love. I can
feel all of your warmth.
Houston, We Have a Problem...
What a difference a day makes… Just last week I was cozying
up in my cute farmhouse in Provence with my favorite caregivers, Teddy the big
dog with a heart of gold, Valentine the little dog snuggled between my boobs,
and Iris the little injured black stray kitten holding on for dear life, 50
sheep outside, plane tree lined streets, Alpilles mountain views and the
promised Provençal lifestyle depicted by my favorite Impressionist painters at
my fingertips…
And today…
I am in a palliative care center in Paris.
But let’s back up… What could have possibly happened within
a few weeks for this drastic change? Well, it turns out I am a tad bit more
delicate than I thought. With the past six years that I have had ALS, I have
had everything under control, monitored and finely tuned… Caregivers,
medication, feeding tube formula, vitamins and my sanity… And then all hell
broke loose. My caregivers quit because I had too many animals and they hated
living in Provence. I stopped taking my medication, couldn’t find a good
masseuse, the kinesiologist never returned my calls, the post office couldn’t
find my little farmhouse to deliver my feeding tube formula so it got lost, the
new Moroccan Muslim nighttime caregiver was too busy smoking, drinking espresso
and praying to Allah to give me my vitamins, I didn’t have the energy to ask
for my regular chai soy latte and green juices. My husband, David, showed up at
the house on Friday with three new caregivers who, bless their hearts, were/are
idiots and I think one of them had elephantiasis of the balls… literally… which
was the straw that broke the camel’s back. My little body just couldn’t take it
anymore and I crumbled.
I couldn’t hold my neck up, I couldn’t even swallow water
or food, and on a TMI (too much information) level, I couldn’t go to the
bathroom without some powerful drugs. A recipe for disaster. Time for a little
hospital visit, wouldn’t you say? The paramedics arrived and got me ready for
transport to the hospital. Here’s the best part… They took me out through the
window like a fat person because my doors were too small for the stretcher but
probably just to humiliate me. The doctors at the hospital thought it would be
best to check into a palliative care center (whatever that is) that
specializes in ALS losers. David thought it would be best if I did so as well,
but… in Paris. Au revoir, Provence.
You can either give up like a coward or forge ahead and
prove to yourself that your life is worth fighting for. You just might have to
fight a little harder."
Massages, meditation, acupuncture, physiotherapy and
kinesiology.
XOXO
Well, Hallelujah!
Well,
hallelujah! Finally, an inspiring design magazine issue. Veranda did me proud this
month. Maybe, probably, Veranda magazine read my blog and all of your comments
and decided that they better up their game if they want any of us to subscribe
ever again. This month’s issue is definitely worth it. I thought it would be
fun if we flipped through the pages together…
There is
great page dedicated to Veranda’s favorite antique dealer's Instagrams. I love
this and started following every one. I hope Veranda does this Instagram round
up every month!
“Against a
field of green leaves or a confetti of vivid blooms, a garden planter brings an
appealing sense of focus: drawing the eye, grounding a vignette, crowning a
crunchy gravel path with symmetry.”
Some of
these garden planters come from my favorite sources… Authentic Provence, Dennis
& Leen and Formations. Can you believe that first gorgeous planter,
perfectly called Brugge, is from Restoration Hardware! I would totally buy that!
Great little
article about kitchen designer, Matthew Quinn, and his new book fittingly
titled, Quintessential Kitchens. That custom orange La Cornue range! To die for.
And if I don’t get that La Cornue Flamberge Rôtisserie, I’m going to kill myself…
Not that I eat chicken.
And because
I am on Season 5 of Downton Abbey, this article about Lancelot “Capability”
Brown, an 18th century English landscape designer, is right up my
alley…
Continuing
the garden genius theme, an article about Arne Maynard and his layered approach
to garden design complete with a knot garden, crab apples, oxeye daisies,
rosemary and germander.
The first
feature is of a house in my beloved hometown of Montecito, California. My first
question is, “Why don’t I know these people?” These are the type of people that
I would be friends with and to answer your question… Yes, I choose my friendships
based on decor. Why do you think I’m friends with Diandra Douglas and Hollye
Jacobs? :-)
Everything
about this dining room works. The pastoral grisaille Zuber wallpaper with the gray
moldings and the gray curtains! Be still my heart. Those French point-to-point
hardwood floors with that Italian dining room table! Again, that round dining room
table with those Christian Liaigare round back chairs! Are those chairs
upholstered in ivory leather? Fucking fabulous. That chandelier is so perfect on
so many levels. Yes, Hines family, I accept your dinner invitation.
Look at
those Swedish cabinets and thank God they put that zebra at an angle. For a
complete view of my opinion of zebra rugs you can read a whole blog I did about
it HERE. Love that Italian bench back there covered in what looks like lime
green satin.
While I am
not in love with the chaise or coffee table, everything else is perfect. That silk
velvet custom banquette with that Swedish rococo chair upholstered in
Scalamandré Le Tigre fabric. Divine! I am so in love with that chandelier, I
would marry it and never divorce it. Love the wall color… Benjamin Moore’s Dash of Pepper.
Love the
bedroom. Love the curtains, the bedside table lamp, the tapestry, the chaise.
While I love the bed coverlet, I don’t love the monogrammed pillows… Too hotel-ish.
I am sure there was a more subtle monogramm to choose from, non?
Nothing to
hate about this house. Antique oak paneling, antique Georgian eagle gilt
consoles, Christopher Spitzmiller blue lamps, Regency armchair with Rose Tarlow
fabric. Love how the outdoor stone obliesk draws your eye.
Octagonal
dining room with Sherwin Williams Butterscotch
walls! Heaven! If I am not mistaken, we had those chairs at our shop. Perfect
chairs for this room and I love the floors.
I can’t even
tell you how much I love these Benjamin Moore Cushing Green walls. And
I love how they painted all of the trim, including the baseboards, the same
color.
Oh hell yes!
That 17th century tapestry that picks up the red original ceiling
beams and the French chandelier! And the wood under the bench! Fabulous.
That teeny
tiny antique chandelier on that long chain! Perfect. The bench with my favorite
fabric company, Le Manach, in red check. Those doors! The Royal Copenhagen tea
set and look at those tall skinny lamps in the windows back there! Love!
Love the
enormous lantern.
So you can
see, this issue of Veranda magazine is totally inspiring. The Editor in Chief, Clinton
Smith, can keep his job.
By the way,
some of you have asked how I read magazines. I have an app called Texture where
I can read all of my magazine on my iPad or computer… Downloaded within
seconds. Even archives all the back issues! Totally genius.
*Something
you don’t know about me? Three of my caregivers quit this week because “too
many animals, Madame.” My thoughts? They can suck it. If I can live with ALS
for six years and yet three grown men cannot take care of two dogs and kitten… Don’t
let the door hit you on the way out… Morons.
Worth a read…
Good news! I have dotted my “i’s” and crossed my “t’s” on my
book! Can you believe it? It has only taken me three years to write the stupid
thing! Now I just need to finish the photos. Thank you for your patience and
well wishes… Give me a few more weeks and it should be ready. However, in the
meantime, I wanted to share a great article that I read in the current issue of
Vanity Fair magazine. It is titled The
Battle for Picasso and delves into the familial world of Pablo Picasso’s heirs.
A loaded lot full of sibling rivalry, inheritance rights, cataloging
discrepancies, trademark morality and drama… You know, the typical fodder for
dysfunctional families.
Definitely worth a read…
*Something you don’t know about me? In typical Ellie fashion,
I got married on a leap day so I really don’t know how long I have been married.
The good news is that I at least know whom I married. I married a man who
drives me crazy but still shows up bearing chocolates. We fight every day but he
still washes my hair and wipes my nose. He annoys me to no end but there is no one
I would rather spend my day with. He won’t do anything that I say but does
everything that I want. He hates when I buy expensive fresh flowers because he
thinks they are a waste but brings me (from Paris to Provence) gourmet Hollandaise
sauce for our Sunday eggs Benedict. He is a self-professed French atheist yet
lights a candle in every church that I force him to go into and begs God for a
cure for his wife. We have been together for 10 years, married for four (I
think) and I have been sick for more than half of our relationship. This past
weekend was our anniversary and we spent the day bickering Virginia Woolf
style, hunkered down under a Provence monsoon wearing matching pajamas and eating
our combined body weight in fondue. A perfect anniversary for a perfectly imperfect
couple.