“Art will take you places” ~ from the video,”Art,” by Andrea Dorfman
If you’re anything like me, you’ve questioned the worth of your creative endeavors (be it writing or music, painting or sculpture) once or twice (…or more). But in times when budget cuts target the arts first, it has become even more important that we embrace – and encourage – creativity, for ourselves and others.
This video says it all.
Thanks to Dot Hearn, who introduced me to this video a while back. I could watch this over and over.
You won’t find me here for the next few days. It’s that time in the season, when we pack the car to the hilt, leave behind the bustling city, and head north, where pine trees line a two-lane highway and dirt roads lead to a small, spring-fed lake.
Right now, I might be sitting on the dock, dipping my toes into the lake’s water, which is crisp and cold, working up the courage to jump in and swim (that always takes a while).
Or, I could be inside, near the window, looking out into dusk, mapping the silhouette of the treeline in my mind.
If I’m lucky, I’ll see loons. I’ll catch a nap. I’ll bask in the sun on a day when the south wind pushes off the Northern chill.
It’s completely possible that I’ll load up on junk food. More than once.
Whatever the story, I can promise I’m having fun.
So, while I enjoy all-things-lazy, here are some links for your pleasure:
Laura Stanfill’s post, “Countdown to the Release of the Flipback.” If you haven’t heard of a flipback, check out her post (which includes links to all the research Laura has done on this new format of books). Flipback books, to me, seem like a mix between eBooks and old-school print: lightweight, but still a tactile experience.
Today, for your Fourth of July weekend pleasure, my friend and writer,
E. Victoria Flynn, stops by with a guest post on small town surprises.
Victoria blogs over at Penny Jars,and if you aren’t reading her stuff, you’re missing out.She whips up some amazing posts, especially on Thursdays. So, get your feet wet here, then click on over there.
The Small Time Philosopher’s Guide to House Listing
They didn’t tell us about the parade route. Maybe they didn’t think it was important in the middle of January, a day after a snow storm, when the only parades anyone seemed concerned with was the morning traffic heading out of town. Maybe they thought it would scare us away.
We started the 4th of July weekend playing poker, Mike and I, thinking about taking a walk down to the park where we could hear the bands and the hooting, where the kick off fireworks shot from their canons, where I felt we should be becoming part of this tiny town, beer and all. We knew no one, but I loved the possibility.
These were the weekends before kids when we could sit around comfortably surrounded by dusted bookshelves and organized cupboards. Going to bed early meant before the sun came up, and sleeping in meant anything at all.
Until the siren blasted us out of bed.
Until the steady honking moved slowly, slowly, slowly past our heads.
“There are people all over our yard,” Mike said. “It looks like we’re having a parade.”
“For real? How come nobody told us?” Maybe we should have made more of an effort to introduce ourselves to the neighbors, but I had been waiting for the bunt cakes and brownies to arrive. How come nobody brought us brownies? We love brownies.
We did have coffee, and we made it strong.
We pulled out our fold-up beach chairs and set them on the porch. Mike got out the video camera heretofore used for shots of “This is the garage. Here’s the back yard. Look, the neighbors have a pile of wood. And this is…I don’t know what this is.”
It was a dark day, drizzled and damp and dimpled with small town promise. We watched green and yellow John Deere tractors, shined up red Farmalls, Dairy Queens riding the backs of convertibles, horses clomping at the road. There was candy strewn across our lawn.
It was terrific.
By the next year we had invited our family, and I was fat in the belly with our first little girl. After the parade we ate brunch—banana bread, mini quiche, lemonade, and bowls of fruit. A year later, it was a tradition.
I’m pretty sure the four days of the 4th of July is what keeps us rooted in this town. We talk about moving back to Madison, closer to my husband’s job, closer to our friends and so many places and events we enjoy. We talk about it, but we can never decide–if we were to sell our house, should we tell them it’s on the parade route, or should we just leave it as a surprise?
~
You can find Victoria elsewhere: on Twitter and on Facebook and sometimes at a small ice cream shop just west of here, when the stars align and calendars sync and writers unite.