how far I’ve come

It’s easy to look back at all the mistakes I’ve made, where I fell short, or let myself down.  I am always hesitant to let myself get excited about the good parts, or to share my personal celebrations with others for fear that it will somehow be jinxed or that I’m getting ahead of myself and will then later have to explain my defeat. But today I am going to look at the positive that came from the last year.

I decided to take control of my life. I came to the conclusion that I can’t sit around waiting for life to happen, and that doing what I truly wanted to be doing wasn’t going to magically appear.  I realized that I didn’t have to jump through the hoops of what I believed was always expected of me first– degree and a “real” career– before I was allowed to chase my dreams.  I remember sitting through a class at city hall the summer after high school to get my child care license to work in a daycare and the woman leading the class gave an introductory speech and (I have no idea how this ties in to working part-time at a daycare) she said, “Do what you love, and the money will follow.”  That stuck with me, but I never quite believed it.  I tried plenty of jobs, ventures, even studied towards a specialized degrees where I had the potential to be making money, and tried and tried to love it enough to really make the money come in, but it never did.  I resigned myself to the idea that maybe it was only something for the lucky few.

A few years ago I went back to school after having my second son to pursue a degree in the field I had been working entry-level in.  Despite near-perfect grades, I dropped out of college… for the second time in 3 years.  I fell into a deep depression and was drawn toward my art room where I subsequently spent any waking hour that I didn’t otherwise feel obligated to be taking care of my family or going to work.  That first piece I painted was small– barely a square foot– but probably packed with more emotion and more catharsis than I have put into anything else in my life.  That piece spun off an idea for another painting, and another, and another still.  Over the next year, the act slowly turned from purgation, to process, to pleasure.  I was reconnected with my missing piece.

That was my epiphany, not in the sudden and astonishing sense of the word, but in the arduous and painful way that life presents most of its important lessons.  Art has always been where I have felt happiest. It is challenging, it is rewarding, it allows me to be myself.  Isn’t that what everyone wants out of their career?

But then there’s the money part.

Like I have mentioned before, my husband and I have been working diligently toward financial security and because of his overall kickassedness he got a promotion that made up the difference of my part-time income, allowing me to feel a little less stretched between the demands of parenthood and everyday life and the calling of my art studio.  I got prints made of some of my existing work, was able to pick up a few commissioned pieces here and there, but even riding the enthusiastic wave of new-venture, things waned. It wasn’t until last September when someone in my group of mom-friends had mentioned hearing of a place where you could go out for an evening and paint, that I had the idea to try a similar idea.  Applying the same concepts I had learned in my dismal stint in direct sales of the Mary Kay nature, I convinced a group of gals to let me walk them through a painting over the course of a couple hours and as many bottles of wine.  The ease with which it came caught be off guard, it was something I never felt peddling my wares in another person’s home, not even my mother’s living room.  Another request for a party came along, and before I knew it, I am doing what I love and the money is following.

I still have a lot to learn, much growing to do both personally and as a businesswoman, but for the first time in my life I feel like everything is right.  There may not be any footprints ahead of me, but the path feels familiar and the further down it I travel, the more amazed I am with the distances I am covering.

With that, I am going to leave you with a bit of perspective.  The painting below is the first-ever acrylic painting I made. It is from one of my high school art classes with Ms. Younger (who will forever hold a place in the credit-roll).  It’s 12″x 18″ on illustration board, recreated from a photograph from Antarctica.  Oh, how far I’ve come.

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live and learn.

Well, I suppose I should start off with the obligatory New Year’s review of the last twelve months, so here goes:

Started a blog.
Sketching every day, blogging about it.
Big dreams and baby steps.
Small victories.
Surprisingly, no crushing defeats.
Life getting in the way.
Old habits dying hard… or refusing to die.
Seasonal depression.
Brad’s new job.
Quit my “real” job.
Summer.  Who actually gets anything done over the summer?
Back to school.
Extracurricular activities.
New business venture.
Weddings and vacations.
Buying a house (that one may not have even gotten a mention here, sorry!)
Learning as I go.
Moving out.
Moving in.
Unpacking.
Thanksgiving.
Repainting and decorating.
More unpacking.
Black Friday through New Years.
Brad’s 65 hour work weeks.
Setting up new studio space.
Trying to keep business afloat.
Cooking.
Cleaning.
Visiting family.
ER visit for one of the boys.
Cooking more.
Cleaning more.
More family.
New Year’s Day.
Kids back to school.
Breathe………….

Life got moving so fast there for a while that months seemed to blur by in the span of days.  2012 was a year of change, growth.  It was hectic, crazy, and stressful beyond words.  But looking back, despite how hard it got at times, it was all positive and I feel incredibly fortunate for the life I have.

Looking back over the year I will be the first to admit that I had short-comings and at times, outright failures (if I’m being honest with myself).  I completely stopped sketching, and then almost completely stopped blogging, I didn’t manage to stay on top of a lot of things in my life.  I am a little disappointed, but I am not too hard on myself.  That first step is the hardest, and after going back and reading my very first post on here I remember the flood of implications that came rushing though my mind as I thought about what it really meant to take a step toward doing art full time. I still have to give myself credit for even making it through publishing that first post.  After that, deciding to quit my regular job to pursue my art was a huge personal risk, as well as some risk to my family’s financial situation as well.  That isn’t to say that just by jumping off I didn’t open some doors that wouldn’t have come about otherwise, and that is what I am most excited about (all of that fantastic news will come in my subsequent posts, don’t worry!)

My take away from last year:  Live and learn.
I can look back at this last year with a critical eye and see where I stumbled and more importantly, what I tripped over.  Most of it doesn’t come as a surprise; as I’ve written, they are personal demons I have been battling since I was old enough to be aware of them.  I can push ahead with courage and determination and foresight that I didn’t have last year.

Here’s wishing you all the best in 2013– Cheers!

Happy Mess

Hi friends! I’m back from a pre-Spring Break vacation!

Okay, well I didn’t really go anywhere, but I took a long weekend away from most of my day-to-day responsibilities to indulge myself and recharge my batteries (oh, and it was my birthday yesterday, so I decided the entire weekend preceding was mine for the taking). 

Spring Break starts next week, you see.  Most people look forward to the reprieve, but if any of the past school holidays have been any indicator, it just means a whole week home with both of my boys who will be turning 4 and 6 at the end of Spring.  They are great kids and I love hanging out with them, but our house seems to get proportionately smaller with each day we spend cooped up inside it all together.  It has been a long Winter and with last week’s teasing with 60° weather followed by several days of rain/sleet/snow we are all plunged hopelessly into the vice-grip of Spring Fever.

Like you may have read in earlier posts, I have a lot going on pretty much all of the time. I’m not so great at prioritizing all the time, but I’m still pretty dang good at rationalizing and making excuses.  I will admit, with a heavy dose of chagrin, that I have not been as dedicated to this project for what it started out to be.  Although, in all fairness, I haven’t dropped the ball entirely, and have still been focusing way more time and energy on all aspects of this part of my life- the sketches, the finished pieces, the business end, the blog, the networking, etc. It just isn’t following the original goal I have set, but still certainly falls within some boundary etched in shades of grey, right? …Or am I rationalizing again?

Anyway, I digress. I had an amazing weekend, all 5 ½ days of it. I am ready to dive back into this craziness I call my life, pouring a little bit more of my soul onto some canvas, chasing the tornadoes that are my boys, catching the rest of the pieces of my life as they fling by, and just doing my best in the midst of my happy mess.

Reflection and Small Victories

I am patting myself on the back for making it through Week One.

One of my biggest personal struggles is motivation, taking that first step and keeping momentum.  I am exceptionally good, I have realized, at rationalizing.  I can pretty easily convince myself that, not only whatever excuse I have come up with for not doing something, but the bargain I have made with myself to make up for it tomorrow, are totally legitimate and acceptable.  Any attempt to convince me otherwise will be struck down with more rationalizations, excuses, or entirely dismissed as offensive.  It is surprisingly self-destructive.

I have faced that challenge more than once this week.  The big leap of actually starting wasn’t too difficult, I was (and still am) pretty excited about this project.  This week in my everyday life has been tumultuous and exhausting. I am back at work and the boys are back in school. Any semblance of structure, organization, or routine had been blithely shoved aside by the holidays.  This week has been a blur, and I have been changing proverbial hats more than a supermodel changes clothes– Mom, wife, employee, therapist, friend, volunteer, sister, chef, maid, chauffeur… eat, sleep, rinse, repeat.  At the end of the day it is hard for me to feel motivated, or particularly inspired.  (Who am I kidding? Even first thing in the morning it is hard to feel motivated or inspired!)  It would be so easy to talk myself into giving one weensy, little, drawing a pass for a day.  Most of the time my first opportunity to sit down for any real amount of time isn’t until after 10 pm.  I had a long day, I tell myself. I have a long day again tomorrow, I tell myself.  I really should just sleep, I say.  But I have persisted, and made myself work on a sketch. And those few seconds of mental sparring are a fight to the death, winner takes all, and the stakes are my dreams.

Who would I be letting down? Where’s the harm in letting just one day out of a few hundred go?

It is all too easy to let myself down in the beginning, to write something off as doomed from the start.  But this is an opportunity I have created for myself. Not just a whim, not just an passing phase, but a small step toward something greater for myself and for my family.  This is bigger than a New Year’s Resolution, this is truly about opening myself up to parts of my life that have mostly just lived in the part of my brain labeled as “wouldn’t that be nice” or been disregarded entirely to the cobwebbed center of the part labeled “will probably never happen.”  Perhaps one of the pitfalls of being so incredibly right brained is that I imagine all of these lovely fantasies and dreams and the creative ways I could make them happen, but my poor, atrophied, left brain isn’t given the chance to actually logically plan out and act upon them.  Besides, it’s much simpler to dismiss them and trade up for the newest dreamland scenario.

I can’t afford to give myself a pass, not even for a day.  I know myself well enough to know that. One day will lead to another day somewhere in the future, and then that day might lead to a couple days in a row, until a month later I look back and realize that I have stopped drawing again, and another dream has slipped away.  That’s when I get disappointed in myself.  I hold high standards of myself, and a little voice in the back of my mind slowly shakes its head and frowns while saying I know you could’ve done that, you can do better than this. And it is worse, even, than when I got that parental lecture in my teenage years. This isn’t someone else’s projection of their expectations or their perception of my capabilities.  This is the truth.  This is my Self, saying Wow, you really let me down.  Each time I have had to fight against old habits of my nature, and have chosen to do what I told myself I would, I feel a small wave of victory wash over me, energizing me, and building my confidence.

My confidence in this project still waivers, it is so new that I find myself unsure of the direction I want it to take.  My confidence in sharing this journey with my close friends, family, and the world at large is still shaky in these fledgling days.  But that I can handle.  Far more bruised, is my confidence in my Self that I can start a project both by myself and for myself and see it through.  It feels as though the more I reflect on what this project is and what it entails, the scope of the true meaning and the real impact this potentially has (on so many levels) becomes so much greater and more of a challenge than I would have imagined.

At this point, I guess I will just have to keep taking those small victories of Self over habit. I have to trust that I am inspired for a reason, that this is simply an opportune way to face down the challenges and growth that need to happen. And all I can hope for is that being able to focus on my creative outlet will help ease some of the growing pains.