[BTW,
did you know that the word "suzan" in Farsi means "needle"?
See?!]
-
One, because it keeps me from being an irredeemable couch potato. As long as I am Productive, I don't feel like my evenings in front of the TV are a complete waste.
-
Two, because it keeps me from eating from boredom - it is impossible to eat and sew simultaneously.
-
Three, because it impresses the hell out of almost everyone. A well-executed sampler or project as a gift will pretty much make every other gift look tawdry, cheap, and ill-considered. "See? I love you more than everyone else!"
-
Four, because it is beautiful.
-
Five, because it is real.
Four
and Five deserve some elaboration... some "embroidery,"
if you will. All day long at my IT job I manipulate bits of nothingness
- I produce NOTHING except documents that more often
than not
never even get printed - ghosts of words that are read
by someone
in an email and then deleted, never to be made tangible.
Needlework
is the one inescapably real thing I do outside the
office that
actually displays talent and skill beyond my ability to
hook up
a user laptop on a DSL wireless network and connect via
VPN to
the office network, or add a show venue address to an
enormous
database.
It
used to be that most of the things produced with needle and thread
were useful in some way - you made clothing or upholstery or bed
linens yourself. But now there's no need - it can be done more
cheaply and quickly by machines in factories, or by women at home
on sewing machines. Almost the only hand-sewing done now is for
art's sake - quilts, cross-stitch, needlepoint. And when you use
real linen, and cotton or sometimes silk thread, there is a tangible,
beautiful product completed after many hours. It takes focus and
it takes patience. Except for little projects, most needlework
projects take weeks or months.
It's
sometimes my only grasp on what is real, what matters, what is
meaningful - with a TiVo, iPod, and Blackberry, I can literally
spend HOURS on intangibles that have little value or benefit (unless
it be to inspire or educate... but for me, usually it's just for
entertainment). I come home after herding invisible bits and bytes
around an unseen network all day, and I pick up a piece of fine
linen with threads of scarlet and purple, and I am making something
far more enduring than the report on client earnings I generated
that morning, or the software installed that afternoon.
And
of course, like I said - it impresses the hell out of everyone.
No comments:
Post a Comment