New Friends in a Small World

The sweet smell of country grasses and the music of nature as clouds drift overhead spark my imagination. An unexpected friend pokes his head out from the blades of tall grass, for a moment we judge each other - a friend we both surmise and carry on. Unlike the grey mice that end up in the traps that Mom sets out when the weather gets cold, this one is smaller and brown like those in the picture books Dad read to me. I watch as he climbs a golden blade of grass and fills his cheeks with the seeds at the very top of each. His world is so small in this field of flowers and grasses. A million, no, a billion blades of grass and here he is making his home where I rest taking in the clouds and blue sky. A hawk circles above looking for my new friend. He, too, sees the hawk and races down the blade of grass he’s on with his cheeks rounded with seeds. He disappears back into this small world of his. 

In the distance a black bird warns me from a weathered fence post to keep my distance. As best I can, I add my new friend to my other friends in my sketchbook, but not too close to the garden snake that lives in Ms. Martin’s garden. Even in my sketchbook I like to keep my friends safe. 

              

Inside Another's Shoes

Poems and vignettes written with paint are expressions of the artist. White hair and beard catching the sunlight silently greets the artist from a park bench. A nod becomes a warm feeling we pass on through our painting. Hope, in another painting, of a young mother breastfeeding her baby. Painting is sharing moments and feelings. Sunsets and waves against the rocks. The rewards are tears and smiles for the trips in time we give people. Colors that blur hate, or lift those weights calling us to stand straight. We open our ears while putting people inside another’s shoes. 

Each day artists move people to see and feel. Norman Rockwell shows us who we are and could be. Lifting a paint brush for the first time frees up feelings in us. Whether it be an abstract, a painting of a child or that remembered sunset, we are expressing ourselves. We learn the language of painting through desire. There is no right way, no wrong way, no perfection. Art is a gift we give to strangers, the helping hand when someone is down.