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Amanda Earl's avatar

I took pottery in my 30s because I thought I should be able to use my hands for more than just writing or feeding myself. It turns out I loved handbuilding pots, especially pinch pots. My pots were always covered in little cracks because I cuddled the clay. I came up against that little voice that told me how terrible my pots were, how incompetent I was, how imperfect. My instructor called my work charmingly uneven. I realized that I am charmingly uneven. I learned to embrace this character in myself and my work. I am not smooth or symmetrical or even or perfect. I am charmingly uneven. To celebrate my 48th birthday i made 48 pinch pots and gave them away to friends, asking them to donate to food banks. Friends cherish these little uneven pots to this day. I am 60 now and eczema prevents me from doing pottery but I have pots and plates I made with my own hands. My husband doesn't want to eat off any other plates. His favourite bowl is a thick tiger eye glazed bowl that is heavy and sturdy.

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Marcy Goldman's avatar

I loved this beautiful osting about creative crossing training – I’m a cookbook author but have been a tango dancer for 27 years as well. Movement to music is the perfect tonic for being in a test kitchen all day or typing up recipes but tango has also allowed me, as a follower (versus a lead) to relax and let go. I can get out of the driver’s seat at tango. And yet? I wrote a whole memoir about tango and at that point, I guess my writing moved into the tango realm and a new ‘dance’ was born. More than cross creative training, tango, like writing, feeds my soul.

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