Are those my shoes?
Hey Doc remember those shoes I wanted so badly
in Italy. If only I had the $1200USD. These were a cool pair of shoes. If they had of been my size and I’d have
tried them on I think the cool feeling would have entered my heart and headed
straight for my credit card. I would be
the coolest guy on Talbot Street here in Aylmer the cultural capital of East
Elgin County. Make that the agricultural
capital. Well I’d certainly be the talk of the town.
I need to
tell the story from my book entitled “Are those my shoes?”. I got contacted
yesterday by a teacher at the old high school 200 kilometers away that I taught
at some 35 years ago. They are doing an Empty Bowls fund raiser. A very good
cause along with a thousand other equalling worthy causes I could give to. Only 25 bowls!
The story
goes:
I am buying
a pair of Birkenstocks at my local shoe store. The owner is serving me and a
young woman walks in and asks if he would like to donate to “yet another worthy
cause”. The owner looked down at her feet and simply asked “Are those my shoes?” He knew
full well they weren’t and she blushed and said “No, they are not!”. He said “I
always give generously to those that wear my shoes!”
Why is that
we are artists always get asked to give? Let’s say 25 bowls @$ 30 each that’s a
mere donation $650. Go next door and ask your neighbours to give you a cash
donation of $650.
If I’m
sounding cheap, I’m not. I give generously to those that wear my shoes.
Actually I do more than that- forest fires in BC and now take your pick of some
of the devastation in the south of the US, the Caribbean, the humanitarian
crisis in Puerto Rico. My dad and uncle were orphaned and helped by the
Salvation Army so Christmas always has me giving to the Sally Ann money pots. I
always find change in my pockets for the homeless.
When you
donate your pots you are donating money. I think we that make the least perhaps
give the most and most often don’t get invited for a bowl of soup or to the
gala fundraiser our work is being highlighted in. Man, I would look cool at the gala in those
shoes. One of life’s regrets is leaving them behind in Italy. 50 bowls and they
could have been mine. As I write this
and think of all those people whose lives have been shattered I think I may be embarrassed
to sport those shoes outside of The Cactus Lounge. Another time, perhaps!
Comments
just getting back into pots again.
haven't even done a glaze firing and
i'm already behind on 2 requests for freebies.
At least now I know what it costs to build and equip a studio from scratch.
I could have shoes for a lifetime and money to buy you a good splash
Also: do business with the ones who 'wear your shoes' (buy your pots).
Hey Tony, hows it?
Keep on burnin that mud. -emon