Tag Archives: making

On practice

I spent fourteen years of my life practicing – for ten minutes, for an hour, for four hours, always practicing: scales and etudes and sonatas and quartets and marches and orchestral excerpts. Hundreds of hours. I knew I wouldn’t be better unless I practiced. And I did get better. In inches and miles, fast and slow, and there was a joy in learning.

In spite of it, I think I can pick something up and be good at it first thing. If I’m not good immediately, intuitively, I can’t ever be good. As though we innately know things – how to paint, how to tell a great story, how to cook.

In the end, all things come back to practice. And then the “good” will come whatever way makes our hearts full. And almost never the way we expect.

So I am practicing. So many things. What happens next?

Hello!

We are people who make things: bread and beer, shoe racks and chairs, jewelry and art; who grow things: hops and orchids, succulents and vegetables; who try things: roasting coffee beans and aging moonshine in a barrel, calligraphy and cooking and cycling. Half of the house is fermenting. We have two cats: Teddi & Fantome. We live in Arkansas – a place I never meant to be, but find myself still here, four years later. It seems as important now as ever to remember to appreciate the things that make up our lives, instead of going day-to-day mad about this, that, or the other thing. Today is better than yesterday, and tomorrow will be better than today. Right? Might as well document a few things here and there, I think. I’m not sure what all this place will be made up of yet, but now is the right time to start chatting – at the very least with myself – about the world.