Something new…

So it’s Groundhog’s Day and to no surprise, considering I woke to the overcast skies and the inch or so of snow on the ground, Phil has seen his shadow and there shall be another six weeks of winter. Though I still find it strange we dictate science and nature through a groundhog, I think many of us knew this would be the outcome. It’s the repetitive joke during this time of pandemic, shutdowns, and stay at home orders that we’re all Bill Murray in the movie, captured within the walls of our homes and cut off from what once was the hustle and bustle of active and connective life, another six weeks feels daunting. But I think I’ve finally reached the point of decision Bill Murray does when he miraculously learns the piano, french poetry and ice sculpting through the repetitive nature of reliving the same day. It’s time to push myself to immerse myself in something new.

I started teaching myself watercoloring in April of 2020. I thought it would help get me through the slump of time away from work, which I thought would only last a couple months (oh how I laugh at that thought now). Little did I know 10 months later it would be the main form of expression keeping me sane. However, I’ve hit the limit on how much I can do with the limited foundational knowledge I have on painting.

The first watercolor journal I began to truly fill in April of 2020. Mainly an exploration of shapes. An early example of my beginning skills and a few YouTube tutorials, and something to compare after I complete the Udemy courses I’ve purchased online.

Now I may not be able to knock on the door of a piano teacher and offer her $1,000.00 for an hour lesson as Bill Murray’s character did, but I can go online and find a developed course (at a discounted rate) to jump into rather than binging another episode of Bones for the gazillionth time.

Today I jumped into learning, starting two courses through Udemy, an online learning school with courses on a variety of topics to explore. I chose two courses: The Drawing Master Class and The Watercolor Painting Series, both for beginners and both by the same instructor who goes by the name The Art Mother. So far, I’ve only made it through the introductions to each course, and I’ve realized a few new art supplies will be needed to fully immerse myself in the drawing course, but I hope these courses will provide a boost in my creative expression, a better understanding of patience, and a project to fill my day, explore my new found intrigue and stress relief in watercoloring, while giving me a finished product at the end (an art students journal of drawing and painting). I’ve never taken a course online before, preferring the social interaction within the one on one classroom format, but in times of need you sometimes have to move out of your comfort zone.

I’ll keep you posted along the way of my creations within this new learning experience, and you can always follow my crazy adventures here or on Instagram. But I’d love to hear from you. I wonder how many of us are doing this in 2021? That depression and isolation in 2020 that many felt (or are still feeling) and we’ve had enough. Who else is taking small steps to get out of the funk? Who, besides me, started a new project or creative journey they never anticipated they would try and want to learn more? Are you also wondering where will it lead each of us? If you’d like to share what you’ve been learning during this time and how you’re finding new methods to delve deeper into expanding your creative expression, I’d love to hear about it. As I’ve learned sometimes seeking advice and knowing you’re not alone is exactly what we all need in this time.

PS. I’m happy to report I’ve made it through 33 days of my new year resolution to write and read for at least 20 minutes a day. The twenty minutes made it seem possible to fit into the day. Only 332 more days to go 🙂

Adjusting Environmental Routines: It’s a creative necessity

Raised by a father who is an environmentalist and a mother who is a storyteller, it shouldn’t be a shock that each plays a significant role in my passions and creative process. For years I’ve enjoyed discussing stories with my Mom, and finding inspiration for my writing while on a hike with my dad as he attempts to explain why a plant is called “doghobble” (it took awhile for us to fully communicate the history and reasoning behind this recently).

What is surprising is how much I’ve recently learned how the environment, or I guess I should say, my environment, affects my writing.

I use to have a routine. I’d be out in the world, on a hike or in the city interacting with nature or people, and I’d get an idea. I’d either jot it down on a piece of paper or make a note of it in my phone. Then I’d head off to the coffee shop (I like noise while I’m writing), talk with the barista, order my latte with about half the amount of almond syrup normally put in, and then I’d belly up to the bar looking out the window and open my journal or computer, take a sip off my latte and I was ready to begin.

It use to feel like a waisted day if I didn’t make it to the coffee shop. Then life changed. The pandemic hit, and living in Oregon we were under the “Stay Home, Save Lives” order. My creative environment, my comfort zone, wasn’t available any more. Like many, I felt lost. Wandering to find my place, while continually sequestered in “my place.”

Writing didn’t feel right. It felt foreign. Reading was the same way. It was as if I forgot how to do either. With the added oddity of not interacting with people, I didn’t feel inspired or motivated to continue with my past passions.

So, I guess it isn’t that odd that, knowing I needed a creative outlet, I tried something new. Isolated in my little apartment, it felt right to learn a new skill. I started watercoloring. It started with simple shapes, then moved to my investigation of youtube watercolor tutorials, to getting comfortable with sketching a scene on one of my social distance walks to the park.

My environment changed, and so did my focus.

So did my desk. Plants became needed. Office organizers were acquired and filled with paint brushes, artist tape, and paper. Colorful tiles were placed just so, in order to distinguish between the mason jar that held the water for my paint and the mason jar for the water I was actually drinking out of. No longer did I leave the junk mail on the top of the desk, I needed space to create. The computer was near if the urge to write came about, but it would take another environment change before that happened.

Just getting comfortable in my environment, everything finally feeling as though it had a place, I tore it all down having to make the long cross country move across states (though I’m still trying to say that it’s simply an extended winter vacation from Portland in the hopes to keep my sanity). It was a move I didn’t want to make, and one that I never intended or expected. Arriving in Tennessee, I recognized immediately what needed to be done. I needed to find my space of comfort. My environment that makes me feel creative. I needed to set up my space (an important concept this pandemic has taught me).

Of course, I used my trusted resources and allies. My dad set to work on making me a desk (it’s beautifully stained blue for the color I need in my life) to write, paint, or simply sit and look out the window from. My mom, I’m so thankful for her suggestion to Dad to make the desk for me.

To be able to write, I realize now that I need color. I need noise. I need interactions and movement to feel as though I have something or someone to write about. I need space. I need a plant (the first thing I bought on my arrival to this state). My environment is imperative to my process.

I’m still figuring out my place here. There is still more work I need to do to make myself feel fully comfortable in this new found environment, I’m working on it. I’m writing. I’m reading. I’m painting. And every day, I make an effort to build this room into the creative inspiring space I need to keep me going. As much as I can’t wait for the day that I can return to my coffee shop and order that latte, my journal and pen in hand ready to sit hours at the bar in comfort. I want the environment I live in every day to be just as inspiring and comfortable if not more so.