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About two or three years into my “having a serious go” at weaving, I knew the new gallery had opened, but I hadn’t paid a visit, saving it for a special occasion. I also hit the bottom of my
financial barrel about then, and got a part time office job. As hard as my head tried, however, my heart wasn’t in it, and six months later I was asked to resign, which I did with relief. And that’s when I started to visit the Red regularly.
I don’t remember when I first noticed it, but near the staff desk in the corner of the gallery is a display of magnets with interesting sayings, and the second or the third time I perused the collection, I noticed a black one with white Arial type, which read, “This too shall pass.” Amidst all kind of funny ones I normally preferred, this one hit the spot.
It was head-down-bum-up from then on, and I liked chanting my new mantra while weaving, designing, reading about weaving and weaving some more. It gave me a gentle but steady source of energy and inspiration.
After a year, I started to gain small successes; I started to like my weaving; I started to sell my work to friends; I sent one piece to an exhibit and it was accepted and later sold; I got three commission works; and one piece sent to another exhibit was awarded First Time Entrant award. Now, I am a hopeless optimist, but I like my new mantra, “This too shall pass.” It reminds me to proceed with caution, when I am going at full speed.
My plans for 2006 include modifying the looms to suit my body; going to the gym to get fitter to prevent weaver’s back and hopefully slimmer so I can showcase my work; tackle the hap-hazardous accounting/business non-practice I have, and finish two projects I started long time ago.
I joined a gym at the start of the year. From early on, I observed one of the arm machines was not working well for me; where the stress/weight fell on the arms for everybody else, because I am so short, it fell on my hands. Call it what you will - Convent school mentality, American Puritan work ethics, or just being a Japanese female – the more it hurt, the harder I trained until one Saturday I lost the use of my right, opposable thumb.
I have been seen by a physio and an acupuncturist for a month now, and my right arm tendonitis is getting better, but the movement is still restricted. I have been extremely frustrated about not having woven seriously since January; I have a dozen pieces I finished last year that need ironing and labeling (I never thought I'd ever complain about not being able to iron, but here I am); I am disgracefully behind in my sample exchange group, and even more so in a course (although this tardiness started long before gym); and I missed an annual exhibit to which I had hoped to send one or two pieces.
Last week, when I could no longer stop hallucinating about the swish-swish of a shuttle traveling through warps, I went to the Red Gallery and bought the said magnet, and set it on top of my high, small window frame in my wool room. It’s reminiscent of a small cross one Irish nun drew on the centre top of the blackboard whenever she entered a classroom. And I like being watched by this saying.
Meanwhile, I finally sat down with my husband to get my web site up, (amazing how one can learn to type with just one hand), I’ve started to experiment with dyes, and I still try to get to the gym three times a week. And I know, “This too shall pass.”
But hopefully not all of it.
*****
Red Art Gallery, Nelson, New Zealand, www.redartgallery.com – visit it.