Monday, June 17, 2019

Swapping Hats

Photo by KPS
The other day I was having a conversation with a colleague. She asked about the piece I was wearing. It was a stonewrap – one of the little hoard I have of pieces that are “mine” and I won't sell. We talked about stones, and I told her what I could think of off the top of my head. It got me to thinking about how often I am “on the spot” about things and what my brain holds and what it buries.
One of the problems with wearing so many hats is keeping information to hand. While I have studied most of the aspects of what I do in some relative amount of depth, keeping all that information to hand on the top of my head fails me. When I am working with something, the information tends to filter to the surface if I am immersed in it for a while. But when I am focused on a different aspect of what I do it goes deep into the filing cabinets of my brain and trying to recover it is often a futile exercise.
This is true for many of the things I do.
Photo by Darrell Markewitz

When I am working with my partner on an iron smelt, the processes that take place as I understand them are generally something I can describe reasonably well. When I've been smithing for several days all that stored knowledge starts to be in the forefront of my brain because that is where it is focused. When I am working with stones and immersed in their energy I remember their geology and their properties and their unique characteristics with more clarity. When I am building a wig I remember how it all goes together and the order of operations, and how I like to finish the edges. When I am doing paperwork and bookkeeping I know how to figure out the bits that go together for the reports and how to create the necessary picture. When I am processing photographs I remember the order of what I do to make the photos consistent and try to make them as good as I can for my needs.
But then, doing a craft show and remembering how my square reader works on top of setting up and trying to be informative about my products? Or asking me about any of those things while I am running my track at the theatre and you will often get a blank look, or a jumbled semi-coherent explanation with a lot of ummms and ahhhs and apologies for not being able to call up that piece of information with any clarity. And I will probably spend half of the rest of the day (or night) feeling like a fraud and berating myself for not keeping up with my studies and questioning whether I really know what I'm doing at all.
And it seems I never stop adding to the list. I am certainly a victim of “shiny” syndrome when it comes to learning. I love learning new skills, finding new ways to put things together. And there is so much knowledge that is important to me. Along with everything else I'm doing (or supposed to be doing) right now – you know, focusing on making, building the business, revamping my booth, rebuilding my tin demo box, prepping for demonstrations, applying to shows, working on the permaculture garden and (ha, ha) relaxing, I am immersed in 3 college courses and trying to get in some fiddle practice and learn some music theory. Now, don't get me wrong...I wouldn't change it (clearly, since I don't). But there are many days I ask myself what on earth is wrong with me. Many days. Especially the days when I feel like I'm locked out of that filing cabinet of information.
Photo by KPS
The trouble is, for me it is all important. Every piece of that information from the geology to the history to the attributes of a god to how to tie a knot in a piece of hair, how to do a smooth eyeline on a performer, how to process a photograph or enter something into my inventory – how and where to hit, what is going on in that iron furnace, what is the history of that artifact, what was this street called in 1812 York....every one of those pieces of information has been gathered because it is important to me. Like all of us, I'm aging and my brain doesn't bounce as well from one topic to another as it used to. The smart thing to do would be to narrow my focus – at least for certain periods. But the way life likes to work of course, there are always things colliding in time – working an historic demonstration in the middle of a theatre contract and a bookkeeping job, say. And then, in spite of having prepared for the demo, try calling to hand that obscure bit of information about tin in that period. Hah!
Luckily for me, it is mostly the between times and those bits of information that go missing that are the frustrating bits. Truth is, I do manage to narrow my focus while I'm doing something most of the time.
Photo by unknown.  Maybe Beth Bidwell?
I get utterly immersed most of the time in what it is I am doing, or studying, or reading. The trouble starts when I come up for air, or to switch tasks. Trying to shake my brain free of what I was just doing in order to be able to dive into the next thing or even hold a conversation– that's the difficulty.
I'm going to work on a bit of a theory this summer...most of the time I try to switch tasks pretty much on a dime....most of the time I have to. This summer I'm going to work on either some breathing space or something neutral between tasks. I think that might be what I used to do to make it work better. So I'm going to give it a go and see if letting my hair down between switching tasks helps me keep the information cabinet unlocked. Between tasks do the dishes, feed the fish, go for a walk. They don't need to be long breaks, just breaks to let my brain sort through the last threads of what I was just doing and be ready to be engaged in something new...because there are always a few threads that are left dangling, enticing me to dive back in.