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Cardinarla
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Birth Date: Thu, Jun 19 1947

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Grand Rapids MI, United States (map)

I am: Married

Schools: Oakdale Christian, Grand Rapids Christian High, Grand Valley State University

Jobs: Medical Social Worker, Professor of Human Services at University of Phoenix; (retired)


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Art and Balance

 

 

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  Cardinarla

Fri, May 16 08:26 AM

Art and Balance

 

Yesterday I went down to my glass studio to work on some projects I had in mind, and as always, I lost complete track of time.  I get "into the flow", and I don't think about anything excepting the complexities of the glass melt, how to set up the kiln for the melt, how to cut the glass, what shape and thickness do I want the final piece, which colors am I going to use.....before I know it, six hours have gone by, I havn't eaten nor have I had water, and worst of all, I start to feel my body again, as I come out of "the flow".  And I am one hugely massive body of pain.  I can't even climb back up the stairs.

That's my chief prayer time, one step at a time:" Oh God, Oh God, Oh God, Oh God."  My family is so used to hearing my moans that they have become deaf to them...

So I stagger to my room to find the giant sized bottle of Ibuprofin 800 mg.  I'm surprised I still have kidneys!

What to do?  I love my glass work, but it demands a lot of time and attention.  You just can't take a break when working with hot glass. 

Dabble, I'm going to take your suggestion and dedicate my next piece to PAIN:

The Great Teacher. Now what colors are pain???

 

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Ups & Downs

 

If the downside is that, after exercising your creative passion for six hours, you devolve into one hugely massive body of pain, there are also some upsides.  For six or more hours you have escaped to another realm where the pain is subsumed by the beauty and wonder of the creative process as you work your magic with fire and glass.  What remains, once massive doses of Ibuprofen have beaten the pain down to a manageable level, is the beauty and wonder of your delightful creations.  Not all bad.

 

What a great idea!  Dedicate your next piece to pain.  I agree.  Hey, Carla, you should do it. 

 

Pain colours

Hmm.  For me pain is often a gloomy purple, shot with scarring ripples of red and fiery orange - like the night sky before a really big storm...