Henry Ward Beecher said, “Every artist dips his brush in his own soul, and paints his own nature into his pictures.”
Reading, reading, reading . . . followed by writing, writing, writing. A seemingly endless project due by the end of October is only relieved by bountiful moments of quilting or knitting. Today I began reading, my toes curling before the fire. The chill of the room was muting and my coffee was deliciously . . . warm! The reading was interesting, but after three hours, lines began to blur, letters popped from the page, and I knew I had to put it down. No matter how crucial it is that I get to the next portion of the project, I cannot go on if I am having difficulty reading. I tooled around the house putting away books, throwing away trash, doing dishes, all mundane but necessary tasks.
And then I realized what I was doing - avoiding, of course, the task at hand. How to get those creative juices flowing again? I walked into the craft room, turned on the iron, sat in the swivel chair, and picked up border and block, and began to sew. Within an hour and a half, I had put together two complete rows of a soon-to-be quilt in delicious tones of pink and green! How soul fulfilling the play is!
I went back to my reading, a relieved smile on my face. Creativity spurs on creativity. The one feeds the other, and the host is satisfied!
Beck
And iron sharpens iron!! LOVE it! Good word, Beck!! Glad to see you among the ranks of "us" bloggers! LOL
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Mary Lou