As a youth I
loved to draw. I even dabbled with
watercolors a little, but I was never very good. My senior year in high school I took an Art
humanities course which I enjoyed immensely.
Drawing was a release for the challenges of the day and I found great solace
in loosing myself in the task of creation.
In college I worked on a secondary teaching degree with a major in math
and I was deciding between a minor in Art or Spanish. Before leaving on my mission and changing to
an elementary teaching degree I took a class in drawing and a class in ceramics
to help me decide. Once again, I felt
the solace and relief that allowed me to free up much of the stress in my
life. And then, life caught me and took
me on some incredible journeys that didn't allow much time for art.
I served an LDS
mission in, Rio de Janeiro Brasil. It
was an experience of a life time. With
the closeness of the spirit, stress seemed to dissipate. When I returned, I continued my education
only I changed from secondary education to elementary, eliminating my need for Art
classes. In my push to get done with
school I didn't take time, even for extra classes in Art. Two years after returning from Brasil I
married Jeremy and graduated college.
Then work and family life took over.
Occasionally I would pull out some paper and pencil but I didn't put
much time into my projects. When my
girls came along time for drawing seemed an impossible idea. I did work on some crafts and sewing projects
but the feeling of freedom just was not the same. Probably since the projects I was doing
served a purpose to better my home and family.
It wasn't something I did just for me.
A few weeks ago
while signing my daughters up for dance, at the recently opened Leavitt Center
in Pocatello; I noticed they were offering an Art class for teens and
adults. I hadn't drawn in years and the
prospect thrilled me. Sure I could just
get out some pencils and go buy some nice paper and draw at home, but with
three busy daughters and a hard working husband needing, time for just me,
doesn't happen. If I had an obligation
to go to a class I payed for, I couldn't escape it. There would be no girls or husband to demand
my attention. I jumped on the chance.
This Tuesday, the
day I started this blog, I went to my first class. My day had been super busy as I ran all over
getting tools, parts and training to fix some leaky water lines in my
home. I was ten minutes late as I barely
finished the water lines so I could take the shower I desperately needed. Even though we did a basic drawing exercise I
had done in every other class I had taken, I couldn't believe how freeing it
was. I don't claim to be a good artist,
but I sure love that medium of expression.
It wasn't necessary for me to think about anything, other than where to
put a line to form the figure in my view on paper. When the class was done I couldn't believe
how alive I felt! It was like taking a
deep breath of air that continued to fill my lungs for the remainder of the
evening.
And so this blog
began. Feeling so alive, I had to find a
way to release some of that vigor in a creative way, a way that would only involve
me, my thoughts, and a form of expression.
I didn't have any drawing paper so writing became my outlet for the
night. I was excited to feel the same
sense of release and freedom in writing as I had felt earlier in my art. In nine years I haven't felt this kind of
freedom to create. That doesn't mean I
haven't been happy, it has just been a different kind of happy. The joy I have felt over the past nine years
has mostly been joy in serving my family and others around me.
Taking time to
serve myself has been an eye opening experience. It is one I look forward to experiencing more
often, as I explore the possibilities these two creative mediums will put forth
along the path I follow in life.