It has been a crazy past few weeks here, our family just having lost great friend and mentor Neil Ostberg. It causes a body to look down the road to perhaps one’s own demise and what will happen to a life’s work.
There are plenty of things in these modern times telling us to be minimalists. It’s the “in” thing. How to downsize your closet. Never have more than thirty books. If you haven’t used it in a year - get rid of it. All of this while simultaneously selling mass consumerism - get every gadget you probably don’t need super fast by telling Alexa you need it so it appears on your doorstep the next day.
| Neil's Diagram of the Button Lathe that is now mine. |
Here are my notes on the subject -
Where a minimalist probably would have had a heart attack, there was a gathering of people and their minds to pour over Neil’s collection. Even in death this gathering of thoughts continued. What if the point is not the mountain of stuff he accumulated during his life, but the mountain on knowledge he accumulated? What if the point is not the buildings packed with tools, artifacts, and broken things, but instead things to be fixed and skills learned. More importantly, the people who learned so much from him over the years. What if it is the same is for you? Not the things in the back of your closet or the junk in your craft room, but the skills and knowledge you accumulate in your mind and hands- and, most importantly, can you have one without the other? I don’t think so.
We are all taught in some way or form to work. How to keep a tidy space, how get our school work done, how to apply ourselves to an extra curricular activity - but at the same time, few are taught what they are capable. How to make and create with our hands the way our foremothers and fathers did. Laura Ingalls Wilder committed her whole girlhood to stacks of legal pads with a pen, by hand, and I am reminded of my shortcomings as I type the story of mine on my MacBook. While I think we can take this all too far, I mean, Laura didn’t make her ink and use a homemade quill. Perhaps it is a bigger accomplishment, or even a bigger self satisfaction results in staring at a stack of legals pads filled with ones own story verses my product which is a one inch icon on the upper left corner of my home screen. No matter what way the writing is done, there are still tools and a finished product in evidence. Is it really clutter?
Somewhere is the mess of consumerism and minimalism, we are loosing skills. Mama never learned to spin by throwing her spinning wheel onto the burn pile. Pa never learned anything because he owned less than 30 books. Even though progress demands that more skills be honed, it also demands that some be lost - unless we hide them away in out closets, craft rooms and workshops. Important to save because newer is not always better, and because there is always more than one way to do something and some things are just plain enjoyable. Too enjoyable to throw away.
In my journey through the world of historical things, I settled into sewing and dressmaking as a comfortable spot. Through the years I have made many beautiful dresses and tailored items for menfolk. But! In 2019 I made my first gown entirely by hand sewing. An adventure into eighteenth century impressions, left me with the need and want to make a gown with the appropriate techniques. I began the intimidating project by investing in quality fabrics and turned out a nice gown I am rather proud of. So far- out of everything I have made, my eighteenth century clothing is that which I am most proud of because I made it with my hands. My many times great grandmothers sewed with the same techniques and stitches I hadn’t heard of because Singer made it easier, but not necessarily better. So, I relearned the stitches, and the gown is better for it.
| The recaned chair |
Given my experience and that of my family, I invite everyone - no - I challenge you all create with your hands. Make great-grandma’s pie recipe from scratch and bake it in her old pan - no premade crust, no instant pudding. Build that book shelf you always wanted, and don’t be afraid to carve those joints out by hand - our forefathers had spectacular tools for this that can still be found if you are willing to look. Sew the dress with just your needle, thread, and thimble. Will it be hard? Yup. Will you get super frustrated at some point? Also yes. Will you learn something? Absolutely. And will it become one of your most treasured things because of all of the challenges? Defiantly!
When someone close to you passes on, take one of their torches and keep it lit. Light someone else’s torch with yours, and pass it on. Lest we forget what out hands and minds can do.
This was so beautiful, Hannah! I think you're right, we can't really have too many things that help us to create.
ReplyDeleteWonderful, Hannah! I have my mom's house to clean out and I will be thinking about this.
ReplyDelete