a little cork love from olive |
(and it is a proven fact that if one person says something, ten other people are thinking it, so I will trudge on here, plus I like to think ten people are reading this)
This word artist feels like something someone over there is doing - maybe someone with an art degree
(although I know many women with art degrees and some who teach art and call themselves teachers or art teachers, but still choke a little bit on the word artist)
maybe someone with a canvas and some oil paints
(although I know women who paint everyday and because they don't sell what they paint they choke a little bit - or a lot - on the word)
maybe someone with talent.
Gulp, yup, I think it's the "t" word that gets us.
(that little voice that says who do you think you are and not a sweet "who do you think you are?" like we are stumbling around with amnesia and a kindly little old lady asks us our name and hands us a cookie, but more like "who do you think you are?" as if the salesgirl at Bloomingdale's, maybe the one with the super elastic looking eyelashes - I just want to grab them and stretch them out and see where they end up - and the bottle of cologne perched in her hand mid-spiff - has spied us removing our coat with the saggy lining - wth has happened to my coat lining?? - and trying on that $800 leather jacket)
It's the talent thing.
Not, that we see ourselves as talentless, of course, we are damn good at what we do, we are makers after all - we are all in agreement on that one.
We make scarves and necklaces. We make e-books and soap. We make conversations and cookies. We make a business (maybe, maybe not). We make a life with our makings (always). Yes, we are makers.
In what way is a maker not an artist? Name one.
(I double dog dare you on this one)
I think
(a great release exercise, works for me with pain, too - based on accupressure points and psychology is the tapping solution - very easy to do, google it if you are interested, Cheryl Richardson has a video on youtube - I wouldn't do it in line at the post office, but it is strangely effective)
I say it in the grocery store.
"Paper or plastic?"
"I am an artist."
I say it in the restaurant.
"Lemon in your tea?"
"I am an artist."
I say it to hubs every night.
"Anything good happen today?
"I am an artist."
It's starting to work (I am an artist).
Anyhoo, if this is a conversation that interests you, Seth Godin has an excellent new book, The Icharus Deception, how high will you fly, that may get you thinking about "why we have decided we are not artists and whether it is worth considering why we made this decision and what it might take to unmake it."
No answers from Olive on this one, just more questions - I am feeling the need to relate the word artist to anyone living an authentic life and touching other people with their authenticity - someone focused on the journey and not the finish line - someone like us.
(I am an artist)