As a child I dreamed not of being famous, being the next
Picasso or Monet. I dreamed of being a commercial artist. I dreamed of seeing
my designs printed on walls and cloth and brochures and posters. And that is
what I have been. Over the years I have been a textile designer and print
stylist, and then newspaper and magazine layout artist.
A couple weekends ago I asked myself “what do you really want?” I
meant art-wise. Of course I want world peace. I want the sick healed, the
hungry fed, the lost found. So, I made a list in my journal of what I want,
then I painted on top of it with my new watercolor set. Just a little color to
pretty up the white page. Just enough to enhance, but not enough to cover the
words. I said them aloud. I prayed on it.
A couple days later my name was on the short list of
finalists for the Cloth Paper Scissors “design your own stencil” contest. With
luck, my design, and stencil, will be in the May/June issue. I felt like my
prayer had been answered. I know not everything people pray for happens. But
this time, I really felt the universe was answering my call.
So, later in the weekend I finished an unfinished page. It
started with a Jane Davenport stencil (called the ¾ stencil) that I tested out
using an ordinary ballpoint pen on a white page. It was blah. So, I added some
watercolor. And a little more. Then some colored pencil and some scribbles with
marker. It started to shape up. Still, it was missing something, so I added
words. First I added the big ones. Then
I filled in with thoughts about going after your dreams, about how saying them
out loud and writing them down helps make them real. I wrote about failing and
not being afraid to fail.
As a little kid I dreamed of being an artist. That dream was
not supported by my parents. After I got a degree in another field, I went back
to school and did what I REALLY wanted to do. I knew couldn’t spend my life in
the wrong field, wondering what if I went New York, what if I had tried to have
an art career. So, I listened to my inner voice—not my inner critic—and never
looked back.