I believe that what we often call survival skills is simply creativity at work.
When I think about how my mother fed all seven of us, making us think that every day was a “different meal,” I still appreciate how much a creative cook can do with a single potato.
And it wasn’t just in the kitchen. She would flip her old Singer sewing machine upright, study pictures in books and magazines, then make ethnic versions of those same dolls and stuffed animals to sell at church fundraisers. Without a TV in the house to distract us, we made the dolls come to life, filling the hollow fabric sleeves one fistful of cotton at a time.
My mother made her own clothes, all my sisters’ prom and wedding dresses. I always knew when she was making something, because she would be singing or humming. She sang all the way through her home correspondence courses in floral design and interior decorating. She made being creative as normal as breathing and encouraged our participation by telling us that “idle hands and minds were the devil’s workshop.”
I believe that happy children are those given the freedom to be expressive, to discover, to create their own “refrigerator door” masterpieces. I remember mixing tempera paints with powdered detergent and painting the Baskin-Robbins windows every Christmas season. Not for money, but for all the ice cream I could eat. And every time I saw people look up at the window and smile I knew I was getting the best part of the deal.
I believe that the highest quality of life is full of art and creative expression and that all people deserve it. I believe in a broad definition of what art is and who artists are: Barbers, cooks, auto detailers, janitors and gardeners have as much right to claims of artistry as designers, architects, painters and sculptors. Every day, our streets and school buses become art galleries in the form of perfectly spiked hair, zigzagging cornrows and dizzying shoelace artistry.
My first collection of art was a milk crate full of comic books. I survived the projects and my teenage years inspired by my favorite character, the Black Panther, who had only his mind and no superpowers, and Luke Cage, the thick-skinned inner-city Hero for Hire. By the time my “bookish” reputation and thick glasses became a target for the neighborhood bullies, I responded by composing juvenile, but truly “heroic” rhyming couplets in my head.
Ever since high school, words have continued to serve as my first weapon of choice and my salvation. Many of life’s challenges need creative solutions. I believe creativity — in all its many forms — can change the way we think and operate. Celebrating the creativity around us helps maintain our sanity and keeps us happy.
You can check out more essays of This I Believe at http://thisibelieve.org/
OckyDub
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I knew this had to come from an older brother…Nice! Will definitely check out more of his work. Nice post.
Nice way to bring sumthin different to the table @ocky
Yoooooo, Yea Frank X definitely don’t get the exposure he deserves. Dude’s super brilliant. Definitely look up to his wisdom and approach to the craft. Good looking out!!!
Man, that takes me back to “the Country” where my grandmother would “tend” to a whole passel of grandkids during the summer, who needed a lot of distraction when not out in the fields “primin’ tabacco” on land that, incidentally, my family did not own at the time. We had an old b&w TV, but the facilities where a not-so-plesant smelling outhouse. Creek water used to quinch our thirst. We used to make our toys out of sticks, foil and those flexible, colored pipe cleaners. We thought it was fun. When I look fondly back at it all, it dawned me; we didn’t have very much, but it didn’t feel that way. I guess that’s the very definition of being not poor; just broke.
You took me back there with this post, Ocky. Good one!!!
I thoroughly enjoyed this piece.