"An invisible
red thread connects those who are destined to
meet regardless of time, place or circumstance. The
thread may stretch or tangle but it will never break."
- Chinese Proverb
Seven months ago, I didn't have a podcast, blog, or rss
feed. But I had an idea in my head. I knew I wanted to
connect to creative people and chat with them about
their lives and their art and present those
conversations to the public. So I started sending out
e-mails to people creating interesting things and asked
them if they would chat with me for a podcast that
didn't exist. Surprisingly, just about all of them
agreed.
Six months ago, my husband and I posted episode 1 and I
wasn't sure there would be an episode 2.
Two months ago, I interviewed Chicago artist and
Red Thread creator Lindsay Obermeyer, a stranger
whose work I'd seen in a gallery a few years ago and
never expected to meet.
Two weeks ago, I got off my duff and started crocheting
a hat to contribute to her project.
Last week I finished my hat and dropped it off.
Last Thursday, I had a great lunch conversation with
Lindsay and her assistant Sam. We connected because of
art.
Then, last Friday, I walked around a spiral of 700 hats
connected to the Red Thread Lindsay knitted, searching
for my own.
Several others were doing the same.
I don't know the person who made this hat...
or this one...
To the steady beat of drums, my husband and I put on connected hats, held onto our daughters and danced along with with hundreds of people, mostly strangers, and enjoyed a shared performance art experience. At the end we did the wave and I'm sure it looked ridiculous, but it wasn't about looking cool. I mean, how could it be?
(left) Lindsay, me, Sam
And when it was over, the hats were happily used and scattered about, then gathered up again to be put on display at a local gallery before making their way into the hands of people with cancer. We had fun in those hats and we made them with love in our hearts. May they bring luck and joy to the people who wear them next.
Now that I have my CraftSanity podcast up and running, it's time to join the creative bloggers of the world and contribute what I can to the to the creative landscape.
Below is a picture of the "Knitted Babe" I made during my maternity leave. If you look closely, you'll notice that one of her eyes is bigger than the other. She's imperfect and fabulous. You can make a knitted babe, too. The pattern is in Claire Garland's book "Knitted Babes. " Claire gave me a "Knitted Babe" dress pattern to post when I interviewed her for episode 8. You can can find it on the project's page along with loads of other free project ideas. Enjoy.
It's funny because I don't really have time to podcast.
I work full-time and have two small kids. Heck, I
probably should be sleeping right now. But I keep
producing these shows because when I tape them I feel
like I'm doing this thing that makes total sense. I'm
best in one-on-one situations. I can't stand
meaningless small talk, and I love it when someone
tells me something wonderful that I didn't expect to
hear. I'm a story collector and I believe that
everyone, EVERYONE, has a fascinating story. As long as
people will share their stories with me, I'm going to
listen. It's what I do.
Speaking of story collecting... I caught part of the
interview with StoryCorps founder David Isay on
NPR's "Talk of the Nation." Hearing Isay talk about
his wonderful oral history project reminded me once
again how important it is to listen and record the
voices of our own personal histories.