Life is strange. Or maybe it’s me. Does it matter which?
I started making art when I was about 6, which comes so naturally to kids. And then of course I stopped. I stopped, in fact, for 47 years. I was busy doing wonderful things of course, and as a creative type, that never stopped. But mosaic art was to be my future, and I made my first piece at the ripe old age of 30, which, perhaps surprisingly, seems to be the usual path. And suddenly I fell hard. I loved the art form, and it loved me back. This in itself isn’t unusual — it was who I was and, I believed, who I was destined to be.
And then one day some years later, I stopped cold turkey and without a thought to the contrary. I don’t remember if this made me sad or happy. I don’t remember loss. The only change I remember was that I was working on some large pieces for a mosaic flower garden, and it was a kick ass project. I loved it. No matter that I had to drive five and a half hours to make the work/play dates — and then make the drive back home three days later. No matter that the roads were filled with big ass trucks barreling south down the interstate. No matter anything, I was in my fifties, in my prime, and it was pure bliss.
And then it happened like this: I was working at home on a piece, and the large center space was filled with beautiful, ethereal circles that pulled you into a distant paradise. My circles were perfect, and I loved them.
They loved me less. My glass grinder began emitting coughing noises. I added more water and solvent and kept working to make every curve perfection. I bought a new head. I spoke to it sweetly.
But the fingers . . . the fingers that had worked with me so well over so many happy decades …. I simply couldn’t control the budding arthritis in my happily toiling hands, and in a short series of hours, they just stopped working in the flawless way they had always worked. I got it done, delivered the piece and then another, but when I finished, I just walked away. I don’t think I’ve ever walked away before. It’s not who I am, and it didn’t feel right.
A few weeks later, I made it back to Virginia to help with the installation, and spent the weekend laughing and working. It was the best of times, but I knew my mosaic days were numbered, and I didn’t like that one little bit. But what do you do? Give up? Push on? Wait for healing? I chose the latter.
Last week I was teaching a class to a great group, and they were doing so well on their own that I walked over, sat down, … and picked up my tools. I picked up my tools for the first time in years. I looked at them with joy for the first time in years.
And then I started using them. No real pain, no backing off, no icky feelings — I just worked without worry or expectations.
And then I worked the next day.
I worked by myself in the studio. And … I had fun. Some very long-lost fun, and though concessions had certainly been made, it felt good. It felt really, really, REALLY good.
And you know, change isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Some times it’s just what we need. And sometimes it opens whole new worlds just when you needed them.
P.S. These pieces were created to fit together with those of other artists in a community project.

Artwork by Pam Goode
Beautiful. I enjoyed reading it🙏
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Thank you! I’m so glad!!!
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Thank you so much!
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This post makes me very happy!! Change is so hard… arthritis is a bitch. Somehow that creative spark of bc ours has to be fed, whether it’s decorating for Christmas to the max or writing or teaching or our chosen art form.
I am always amazed at how our muse brings us back around to show us what we love.
Laura McRae-Hitchcock Fine Art Paintings Website: http://www.LauraMcRaeHitchcock.com https://lauramcrae-hitchcock.com Newsletter Sign Up: Click HERE http://eepurl.com/ghoNzf *Instagram: *@lmcraehitchcock https://www.instagram.com/lmcraehitchcock/ *About my work: *Artsy Shark Article https://www.artsyshark.com/2021/06/08/featured-artist-laura-mcrae-hitchcock/
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It’s TOTALLY amazing, isn’t it?????
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You’re so right Laura! As someone once said — the hard is what makes it good. I do believe that!
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Beautiful!
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Thank you so much, and Happy Travels!
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a happy new year Pam!
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Thank you so much, and the same to you!
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