Finding Your Anchor(s).

Some days you need to find your anchor(s).

Today, mine are the past (a photo of girls from my great-grandmothers’ Domestic Service class, that says “Don’t they look happy?” on the back) and the future (going forward despite trepidation or uncertainty with a quote from the epigraph of Smile at Fear: Awakening The True Heart of Bravery by Chogyam Trongpa).

past

future

As I move forward and agree to take on things I’m scared about (as we all are with new big things!) these are the reminders that I need today that everything will be okay and that the past and the future both began with the same stitch. So we continue stitching and threading and weaving our way forward, strengthened by all that has come before us.

May you find your anchor(s) today, too.

Activism Is Not A Four-Letter Word

This is a post from 7 years ago that a lot of people still visit. The farm is the lovely Beech Hill Farm and run by the equally lovely Julia Desch.

Dictionary.com defines activism as “The use of direct, often confrontational action, such as a demonstration or strike, in opposition to or support of a cause.” This is the definition I have often been presented with the minute I mention either craftivism or activism. At the mention of these terms, some people rear up and want nothing more to do with the discussion. When such a negative definition is so commonly applied, it isn’t hard to see why feathers are ruffled by even a whisper of activism.

But my own definition of activism lies closer to this, “Activism, in a general sense, can be described as intentional action to bring about social or political change” from Wikipedia. It continues with “The word ‘activism’ is often used synonymously with protest or dissent, but activism can stem from any number of political orientations and take a wide range of forms, from writing letters to newspapers or politicians, simply shopping ethically, rallies and street marches, direct action, or even guerilla tactics. In the more confrontational cases, an activist may be called a freedom fighter by some, and a terrorist by others, depending on which side of the political fence is making the observation.”

Activism (or craftivism) is less about a call to arms and more about a call to act for change. Although there are negative ways one can bring about change, the majority of activists I know are working for the common good, attempting to bring about illumination instead of darkness. By negating a construct and stripping it of its positive intent, the more commonly used definition only breeds fear and unwillingness when in fact every time you make a conscious choice, you are being an activist. In choosing to buy one brand of yarn instead of another due to the way it was produced or by choosing to ride your bike instead of drive, you are being an activist.

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The past two weeks I have been living in rural England on a small-scale farm. I can’t think of a time when I have been more inspired or been taught more lessons or been shown so much hope in such a short span. I have been connecting and meeting individuals who continue to farm despite all the obstacles in their paths. After all the governmental and financial restraints have been agreed to, there seems to be little reason to continue an agrarian lifestyle.

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As we send all of our textile needs to further shores where people are paid less to work more, resources that the small-scale producers have relied on since the Industrial Revolution have vanished, leaving them trying to fill in the gaps. And as it becomes more and more difficult for small-scale farmers to survive, traditions and methods are lost in the name of technology and progress.

But there is a sense of activism in the air here as people strive to continue to produce wool and fleece as they once did when all the factories where up and running and could take in small quantities of fibre to be prepared. Out of love and determination, activism is alive in its most positive sense- as individuals try and band together to keep traditional methods afloat despite myriad setbacks. In watching their strength and learning from their dedication, I am reminded again and again of why I am not ashamed to call myself an activist.


Interested in learning more about the state of British wool? Go check out Wovember, a blog celebrating all the great things about British wool! To go hear (!) more about British wool, go have a listen to The Sounds of Wool!

Discovering Craftivist Work Online

First of all, isn’t this xstitch piece lovely? It’s by Flickr user gothcomic, who kindly let me repost this here!

gothcomic

Secondly, I’ll admit it. I was already to ignore Pinterest, like, forever. But… I had a look the other day and realized just how many craftivism boards there were! Whoa! A few craftivist projects that Pinterest introduced to me the other day:

Jerilea Zempel’s Guns and Rosettes from an old We Make Money Not Art blog post.

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This piece of work (with apparent misspelling) from Solamenterocio about stopping evictions.

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This guerrilla doily that was posted over at Lanina Bipolar.

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This pin introduced me a lovely list of Powerful Projects:

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Along with repinning other people’s pins, I also pinned a bunch of craftivist-related work of people from around the world, including the political work of Hannah Ryggen:

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And Rosita Johansen:

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You can find all these wonderful things (and more!) pinned on my craftivism Pinterest board and on the craftivism boards of others!

Wanna follow me on Pinterest? You can find me here.

Also, I’ve posted this before, but Pinterest reminded me of it again, this lovely video of some public stitching from Miss Cross Stitch. You can read some lovely interview with her here.

Source: youtube.com via Betsy on Pinterest

Have a piece of craftivist work that you’d like to share with me? Either tell me about it in the comments or post it over on your own craftivism Pinterest board!

Forging Your Own Path In the Forest

When I was little, my grandmother used to tell me about Joseph Campbell. I’ll admit, I never quite got it; however, I kinda got it, in a that-sounds-cool-you-can-live-your-life-how-you-want-to-no-matter-what-anyone-says kind of way.

Lately, a reminder of this message has popped up in my inbox twice. Once via an email newsletter from Danielle LaPorte and then again via a daily quote sent by email from Elephant Journal:

The Danielle LaPorte post arrived in my inbox yesterday:

When the caterpillar becomes a butterfly, there is a stage in it’s metamorphosis where it is completely liquified. It is a “nutritive soup of enzymes.” Entirely unrecognizable. You can’t tell what it was, or what it will become. Soup.

Many of us are familiar with Joseph Campbell’s metaphor of “the hero entering the darkest part of the forest, where no one has entered before.” But what’s often left out of that teaching is this: “…and the hero moves in a dream landscape of curiously fluid, ambiguous forms.” More soup.

There will be a time, a passage when you don’t really know who you were, or are, or can be. It’s natural, it’s divine, and it’s the chemistry of beautiful, awesome change.

This passage can happen in big dramatic swells, as years of not quite knowing what you want to do; or seasons of confusion that aren’t quite depressing, but confusing enough to invite sadness in. This can happen in compressed bouts of uncertainty before you do something new or monumental.

While the full quote by Joseph Campbell referenced by Danielle Laporte actually had arrived in my inbox via Elephant Journal a few days earlier:

“You enter the forest
at the darkest point,
where there is no path.

Where there is a way or path,
it is someone else’s path.

You are not on your own path.

If you follow someone else’s way,
you are not going to realize
your potential.”

~ Joseph Campbell

And it reminded me of what happened when I started writing about craftivism. I thought I was bat-shit crazy. Like, seriously. I mean, really, comparing (at the time) knitting for charity in your house to activism where like people are yelling n’ stuff? Of course, as we all know, it wasn’t too crazy, and in fact, been done by people for many years.

However, at the time, I thought that using a new term to explain this was unnecessary as there were already plenty of new words in the English lexicon, who needs another? But, what I was missing was that there wasn’t a term that specifically embraced (and explained) this type of activism. That was what people caught on to, not the existence of something, but the naming of something.

So, when people contact me and ask, “How can I be a craftivist?” I generally have two answers:

1. The answers are already there. On Google. In history. You don’t need me to tell you. Not because I don’t want to tell you, but because you’ll be more fulfilled if you find your own path. If you find the best way that craftivism speaks to you. I want you to be excited to make and do and create and use your creativity to foment change. Your change, not mine.

2. See #1. Then ask yourself a few questions: What craft do I like? What cause do I feel strongly about? How can I use my craft to show people that this cause is important? Write these answers down on a Post It. Post it near your craft supplies. Have a think. Find your path.

Part of my path I think is to help you find your path. To help you see that you have all the answers, you have complete permission to make whatever you want, you have permission to make positive change. It’s part of my path not because I have all the answers, but because I don’t. Part of my path is to remind you that change is waiting for you to make it. Maybe we’re on the same path but in different woods. Maybe we’re on paths that will cross. (I hope so! Mayhaps then we could stop for a rest, make some cool craftivist work and meet for tea!)

But I do know one thing, that when we follow our own paths and go where there is no path before us, we become who we are meant to be. We just have to have the courage and the joy and curiosity to walk into the woods where currently there is no trail of breadcrumbs, where there are no footsteps to follow.

And we need to walk forward safe in the knowledge that we are making (literally and figuratively) our own paths because just as much as it may be scary, it’s also breathtaking as you can hear the crunch of the leaves under your feet, the sound of birds chirping, and feel in touch with who you truly are from the inside out.

Who What Where: Operation Sock Monkey

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Who: Operation Sock Monkey

What: Making, Adopting, Sponsoring a Sock Monkey for a Child

Where: Everywhere

Operation Sock Monkey’s mission is:

Operation Sock Monkey is a volunteer-run initiative in support of humanitarian organizations that provide laughter, hope and healing to communities around the world affected by disease, disaster and social/political turmoil. Handmade Sock Monkeys can be purchased or sponsored to be sent to children in need of a smile.

Funky Monkey
You can go buy a monkey like this now!

How to Help: (text from here)
Donate a Monkey: Send us your sock monkeys and we’ll find them good homes. Monkey delegates are sent to live in communities in distress to help bring smiles to folks who need them. (You can learn how to make a sock monkey here!)

Adopt a Monkey: Buy an OSM Sock Monkey and we’ll donate the proceeds to Clowns Without Borders. We have a variety of sock animals for children of all ages. Visit the sock zoo.

Sponsor a Monkey: buy a sock monkey sponsorship and we’ll send a sock monkey to someone in need of a smile. You will receive a colorful sponsorship card that can be given as a gift. (Check out the Sponsorship Gallery here!

Buy OSM Treats: Specialty items like notecards, calendars and D-I-Y kits for making your own sock animals at home! All proceeds go to CWB, of course.

Donate to OSM: We’d be happy to accept donations for monkey supplies and shipping, but we also recommend donating to Clowns Without Borders directly by clicking here. (You can buy OSM treats here!)

Become an OSM Operative: Start up your own Operation to make and sell sock monkeys in your community to benefit CWB or the charity of your choice.

To find out more, check out the Operation Sock Monkey website (you can also find out how to hold a OSM workshop or party here) or visiting them on Twitter, @woollybananas.