I can't be good at
everything
Imagine my surprise when I
came to this realization. Society says we should strive for perfection in all
things. To boldly go where no writer/artist/knitter/printer has gone before. To
be different, unique. Special.
Fine and dandy, but I call
bullshit.
Extroverts and Type A
personalities run the world. They push. And push. More, better, faster. I
bought in to it. When you already operate from a brain that is attention deficient,
what are a few more things to rattle around up there? A busload of screaming
kids, all clamoring for attention. You get used to the noise and disarray. It
took a good long while before I realized I didn't want to get used to the
racket, especially racket of my own making.
In my arrogance, I thought
I could juggle all the balls and be equally good at everything. It took a few clues
landing on my head with a thunk to realize I'm not. I'm not good at everything.
And I don't need to be. It's not a race against the world to reach the top.
It's not a death march up Everest.
With realization came
planning.
What could I let go of? All
the juggling balls don't have equal weight. What was important to me? Important
enough to want to hang on to that, and not something else. Creating was
important, but what did that look like? I had way too many hobbies, I needed to
let go of some. I did, but I still haven't let go of the material things
surrounding the hobby. One step at a time. Into storage with them.
Writing stayed. It had to.
It's part of me. Novels, poems, and essays. Trying to write short stories and
flash fiction went by the wayside, they are not my strong points. I'm well
rounded enough without them, although it was hard to tell myself that. Write
all the things! That's what I used to believe.
Printmaking stayed. I have
a deep-seated love of the smell of ink and the creation of an image on paper
rolled through a press or rubbed by hand. I kept watercolors and drawing pads
to create ideas for prints, and to see if an image would be better suited to
another medium than printmaking. It's hard to let go of some types of art. I'm
never going to be the kind of watercolor painter I wanted to be, acceptance of
that made my painting better as I found my own methods.
Knitting and weaving.
There's something about the tactile nature of knitting and weaving that appeals
to me. The creation of something practical, useable. The design of a pair of
colorwork mittens, a hat, or table runners is a meditative experience. Seeing
the design come to life is gratifying. Knitting and weaving stay. They get
pushed to the side sometimes, but they stay in my repertoire.
Everything else that stays
is for a practical reason. I no longer design websites, except my own. Sewing
is for masks and quilts, but it's for fun when I feel so moved. Photography has
mostly gone, except for practical stuff. I majored in it, I shouldn't let it
go, but the truth is I loved working with a Rolleiflex camera and its square
format, and a 4x5 camera with its huge negatives I developed myself. Now that
the world is digital, it's really hard to work with old-style negatives and
development. It was another meditative experience swept away by point and
click. I still have the old cameras, just in case.
I really wanted to be a Renaissance
woman. I don't think it's possible anymore. That's okay, the last thing someone
needs is to pressure themselves into scattered interests with no time to improve
them all. I can't be perfect at everything, but I can do some things to my own
satisfaction. Most days, that's enough.
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