When it comes to clothes I'm all for
comfort. I don't like lace because it itches. I like my t-shirts
because they are soft and I like sweatpants and jeans because I don't
have to worry about what my skirt is doing or not doing when I sit
down. To me, clothes and hair should be easy to take care of and
stay out of my way so I can get on with life. Pants or shorts should
have lots of pockets and ones deep enough to actually put stuff in. I
do carry a bag or a backpack for the larger items but there are some
things that should just be handy in a pocket, my keys a handful of
tissues because I hate having to wipe my nose on my sleeve and you
never know when you're travelling if the pit toilet will actually
have paper in it, assuming that is, the presence of a pit toilet.
There is one category of clothing that
I'm an absolute sucker for though: clothing that makes me feel I
belong. When I was teaching I always bought school clothing, fleece
vests for draughty classrooms, wind jackets for walks in spring and
fall and even drama club jackets. Wearing this sort of clothing was a
way of saying, “Here's where I belong; my friends are here; these
people accept me.” When I was running I proudly displayed my race
shirts. They said to the world, but mostly to me, “I've done
something I'm proud of.”
The day after completing the Honolulu
Marathon my running partner and I were walking, no make that
hobbling, down the street and a man stopped us. “How much does one
of those cost,” he asked pointing to our finisher's shirts. My
response was, “It cost's 26.2 miles.”
In my mind, I earn the right to wear
certain types of clothing. When I cycle I wear the brightly-
coloured jerseys and road shorts. The clothes say to me that I'm a
cyclist. For a while I cycled in whatever I had but cycling clothes
are designed for the sport and as the rides got longer I began to see
the wisdom in the padded gloves and shorts and fabrics that wick
sweat away from the body. At some point I decided that I qualified
to wear the gear.
It was the same with running. It was a
few years before I bought my first running cap and that symbol was so
important to me that when the hat blew off my head I immediately spun
around to chase it rolling my ankle on the side of the pathway and
tearing a chunk of bone off my foot. I simply didn't think about
where my foot was. I just wanted my hat back.
It's Labour Day, a day that used to be
sad for me because I had to go back to teaching the next day. I had
many good times teaching and I liked the kids but I always felt a
heaviness descending on me when I anticipated all the work that
needed to be done and the attendant feeling that I was just barely
keeping my head above water no matter how many hours I worked. Today
Labour Day means only that I need to pay attention to school zones
while driving. It has been six years since I left the classroom and I
don't call myself a teacher anymore.
It's been ten years since I took my
first woodworking course and I think it's now time to call myself a
woodworker. Woodworking is my delight and I'm getting better at it.
When I started down this road I'd hardly ever held a hand saw and
none of the tools seemed to behave the way I wanted them too. I was
doubly frustrated when I looked across at the guys at the other
benches whose tools seemed to be extensions of their arms. They had
been sawing boards and pounding nails since they were three. I
hadn't. I had a lot of practice to catch up on. There were many
times when I felt like quitting but I really loved the wood and
wanted desperately to be able to make beautiful things so I
persisted. Now, these ten years in, I have enough skill and
confidence to tackle many of the projects I can think up. They are
rarely as well executed as I would like but they serve a purpose and
mostly don't fall apart.
In the last couple of years I've built
drawers for my computer desk and drawers to store CD's in the living
room. I've built a cabinet to hold my sharpening stones and a small
cabinet with a drawer to sit behind the driver's seat in Flopsy the
old brown camper. On our trip across Canada this summer it made
accessing maps and electronic bits and pieces much easier and I put a
toggle on the drawer so that it would stay closed when we went around
corners.
With much instruction and a lot of help
I've built a workbench and a tool chest. I wouldn't have attempted
either of those projects on my own. I've made Christmas ornaments,
puzzle boxes, picture frames, door harps and pens and some of my work
has sold. I make incredibly stupid mistakes and most of the time I
can figure out a way to fix them. If not, I start over and make a
different mistake the next time. I have more projects in mind than I
can complete in the next two years and I'm always adding to the list.
The important thing is that when I'm in the shop time stands still. I
look at the clock to see how long parts have been in glue-up and
marvel at where the time has gone. The hours are never long.
At times I wonder what it would have
been like to have a job that provided the same kind of magic. Some
people are lucky enough to experience that. I'm grateful that I have
the time and the place to indulge in a pastime that gives me so many
rewards. So this year, as teachers said goodbye to their holidays for
another year, I went out and bought myself a carpenter's apron. I
feel like I've earned the right to wear it and it has lots of
pockets. My tape measure and the wax for my hand planes have a place
to live in the apron. I'm not sure what other tools will find their
way into the pockets but that will evolve as I work.
When I taught I carried my pens and
keys around my neck on a lanyard. It may have looked dumb but I
always had a pen within reach. Each morning when I went into my
classroom I took the lanyard and put it over my head. It was part of
the ritual of getting ready to work. Each night before I turned out
the lights in my classroom I took off the lanyard and put it in my
brief case before putting on my jacket and heading home.
Now each morning when I walk into the
shop I can put on my apron. It's a way of connecting, a way of paying
homage to my grandfather and my great uncle who were woodworkers.
It's a way of belonging.
2 comments:
It's been great watching the transformation! You've been a woodworker much longer than you've given yourself credit!
(And I'm not just sucking up because I want you to build some drawers for me.... grin!)
I loved this post Marian. I relate, as you well know, to so much of what you said. The clothing, as emblematic of who we are at the moment, was especially significant. To think I went so many years without owning a swimsuit, yet now, it is a daily pleasure to wear it in the pool. I used to worry about chalk dust, but now it is the flour from Pratt's homemade bread that dusts me regularly. That I can tolerate very well.
I do envy your identification as woodworker, six years from the classroom. I am only 3 years out. Capricious best describes me but I am enjoying the journey.
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