Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Musings From a Idle Educator

Due to Hurricane Isaac that blew through here a week ago, my school has been "on vacation" for a full week and going into its second. Most would welcome a break such as this, but, for me, it's been tedious to say the least. We spent the better part of the week without power in the New Orleans late-August heat, and when we finally did get it back on, spent the latter part of that time trying to clean the mess we discovered we had made. Still, though, it was a time for me to stop for a little while and be still. (I had no choice.) Truth be told, I came to enjoy no power. The windows were open and, though it was humid as could be, there was something in that which brought me back to childhood and warm breezes blowing in my bedroom window, as the scent of peonies drifted in and lulled me to sleep. There were no peonies, but the hint of something simpler was indeed. I couldn't help but imagine what it must have been like for people in this area before the days of air conditioning and tvs and computers. Stripped of all that, what was left to do? And I relished it. The time also gave me time to reflect on life lately. We still have no church that we are attending, but slowly we are beginning to heal, though I doubt we will ever look at "church" the same way. I did realize, though, that the things that connected me most to my lovely Jesus had gotten buried under a layer of busyness and being "plugged in." When was the last time that I simply sat down to write and let my imagination create a tapestry of word meanderings? When was the last time I slowed down enough to let my thoughts carry me away into a world of talking trees and dancing grasses? When was the last time I prayed? "Uh oh" was pretty much all that came to mind. So here I am, taking a few minutes before I have to go in to another school in order to have a meeting to find out what the plan is for the week and getting our school year back after this Isaac train wreck. I've got my Civil Wars album on (always conjures up something fun in the back of my mind). I've got a view of the empty lot across the street, which is about as close to nature as I'm going to get any where near our house. And I've got legitimate mosquito bites that create an annoyance every 5 seconds, but are evidence that I have actually spent time outside in the recent past. And still, I have trouble developing a though. I have determined that I am several creative types, without the skills developed to actually call myself any of those things. I'm a musician, without the time to hone the skills or buddy with which to play. I'm a writer without a developing thought. I'm an artist without a steady hand. I'm a seamstress who can't seem to figure out how to keep the bobbin on the machine. What do you do when everything creative is screaming inside of you and there is no way to release it? Apparently, I give up, only to end up huddled into a ball, crying on my floor. When I grow up, I want to do something well.

1 comment:

Jonathan said...

Good thoughts. A few people have brilliant artistic ideas young in life, but I think most of us require extensive life experience before we really have anything worthwhile to say.

However, as Chesterton says, "Anything worth doing is worth doing badly." I have mostly stopped writing, because I discovered there was far too much vanity in it (for me), and will probably resume it only when there is some significant cause (beyond enjoying the look of my words upon the page), but I otherwise think it is just good to do it -- to make music, write, draw, sew; badly perhaps, but to the best of one's ability and for the glory of God. Such things can be a wonderful form of prayer, if done so consciously.

With writing, wonderful things can come from the crucible of persistence.

Glad you made it through the storm in one piece!