“Making.” “Seeing.” “Being.” Boldly.

When I was in 10th grade in 1990, one of our assignments was to do a report on an artist, someone we admired. I remember that everyone else chose people like John Lennon or Jerry Garcia, and I chose Keith Haring, who I had read about in Sassy magazine. That was the moment when I truly realized that people are emboldened and intrigued and excited about pushing the envelope, speaking up for what you believe in, for following what makes your heart skip a beat and question the big picture all at the same time.

In 1996, Keith Haring: Journals was published by Penguin Putnam in a building I would work in 5 years later. Reading his journals, while in one sense voyeuristic, gave me the permission and planted the seed to create without fear or worry. I think lately I’ve been caught up in so many things that I forgot that fierceness and joy that comes with not being afraid or worried. Somehow I got wrapped up in external chaos that had me doubting and unsure and therefore, idle. I stopped listening to me and got caught up in the thoughts of everyone else leaving me apprehensive and afraid. So, in case you might need this reminder, too, I thought I’d share the bit from one of his entries from October 1, 1979, I have circled, with a star:

THINKING ABOUT BOXES
WHAT DOES IT MEAN
TO MAKE “GOOD” ART?
MEANING IS A
PRESUPPOSITION OF FUNCTION.
WITTGENSTEIN.
WHO CARES IF YOU DO
OR DON’T. SOMEONE
IS IN THE SUBWAY
TALKING TO THEMSELF.
TALKING ABOUT
TALKING. TALKING
ABOUT NOBODY
LISTENING. WHO CARES
IF YOU “MAKE” ART.
WHAT IS “MAKING”?
SEEING IS MAKING
ONLY IF SOMEONE
IS SEEING. THE PERSON
IN THE SUBWAY
IS SCREAMING, “NOBODY
IS LISTENING,” BUT
EVERYONE IS LISTENING
AND SEEING AND
MAKING AND BEING.

Thirteen years later after making that star and circling those words, I come back to them as my cat always picks his Journals to knock off the bookshelf when she’s hungry. Morning after morning, I pick up Keith Haring’s Journals and put it back on the shelf, even though I haven’t opened the book itself in over a decade.

Yesterday I decided to not put it back on the bookshelf, and this morning I decided to have a look at the passages that had moved me back when I was 21. This passage jumped out because it speaks to how everyone “makes” and “sees.” Elementary? Yes. But I think sometimes we forget the importance of “making” even if we think no one is “seeing” it. Because just like the person screaming on the subway, we all have deep currents of thought running underneath that are, from the outside, invisible.

Therefore, we never know who truly “sees” our work and how it resonates. We only see the person screaming on the subway or hear “Nobody is listening” in our own heads. We forget that our creations have nothing to do with either of those things. They have to do with the “making,” which leads to our “seeing” the deepest and most loveliest truths of “being.” We “make” because we “see” through the cracks and perceptions of “being.” We “see” because we “make.” So we step can forward fearlessly and safely into that place and create, knowing that it allows us to truly feel the depth and weight and joy of “being.”

Hurry Up and Wait.

Being in a hospital is kind of like being in a really really depressing casino. You’re left in this timeless space where night and day mean little. Somewhere in my wake-up at 3.30am sleepiness the other morning, I decided to take photos of two of the three waiting rooms we spent time in.

I keep on writing little bits and pieces over the past week and then losing track of my thoughts. All I can think about is healthy thoughts and make sure no machines are beeping weird and staying awake while keeping them company, even when I’m not here at the hospital. A true one-track mind.

Just keep busy. Keep moving. Keep pushing forward. Go, go, go, make sure everyone’s eaten, slept, taken care of themselves. It boils life down to just the essentials, and makes the rawness and fragility of life clearer than you ever thought imaginable. And, of course, a few months from now we’ll get complacent until something else happens, then life will go under a microscope again where every thing’s cherished and sacred, as it should normally be.

Soon we shift from pinpointed to easygoing and become predictable. Is it possible, however, to have that point illuminated and in the forefront at all times? Or would the sheer weight of the quickness and realness of it all make us crumble? If we truly cherished our loved ones and life long-term and not just in these moments of chaotic and palpable clarity, who could we be?

I’m betting that at first it would seem daunting to truly and honestly as Emile Zola wrote, “live out loud,” would seem out-of-control and visceral in the stark reality of our lives, that they’re passing, moving, marching on. But I also think that if we dare ourselves to hold firm and stick with it, it would eventually show us the strength we thought we didn’t have, love so deep it seems boundless and the wide open joy we deserve. It would make us who we would truly like to be, but never quite fully seem to embrace and unveil to the world. It would help us remember that due to the passage of time and intricacies of life, we owe it to our loved ones to show them the best, the brightest and the boldest we can be.

The lamp painting was the first pass on a piece that will be in The Scrap Exchange’s show, Domestic Spaces: Art and Artifacts for the Home, which will be up March 20 through April 11.

Have found some lovely new links lately discovering all sorts of people who are merging creativity and politics! For starters:

Art Threat
Eyeteeth
Just Seeds
Groundswell Collective
Irregular Rhythm Asylum
Tel Aviv Graffiti and Street Art
And check out this link to some amazing craftivist works, link thanks to Toronto Craft Alert!

*And on the subject of waiting, Fugazi’sWaiting Room” won’t stop playing in my head. Thankfully, it’s one of my favorite songs.


And in Knitting for Good book news, there was a lovely post on Whipup about it yesterday, which you can read here!

And if you’re curious about what’s in the book, look no further than The Unique Sheep blog as Laura has posts about the first five chapters! Chapter 1! Chapter 2! Chapter 3! Chapter 4! Chapter 5! Wow!! Thanks so much Laura!!