WAYSTATION WHISTLE
  • Home
  • WhistleStop Blog
  • About
  • Shop
  • My Life's Not That Interesting
  • Home
  • WhistleStop Blog
  • About
  • Shop
  • My Life's Not That Interesting
Search

Journaling: why sharing matters

5/20/2020

2 Comments

 
Bleeding hearts collage with handlettered title
Extraordinary but real
The first time I saw what I would later learn was a bleeding heart plant, I thought it was a fanciful creation. Imaginary flowers created by some skilled craftsperson with an affinity for hearts.

We’d been invited by friends to join them for the weekend at the family “home,” a second home that went back generations. Though no one lived in house, it was occupied regularly by different members of the extended family, often in the way we were using it: a weekend get-away, a few days in the country.

It was a grand old farmhouse with an eclectic mix of antique furniture, professionally painted portraits, pillow-soft sofas, a staircase off the living room and another in the kitchen, threadbare bedspreads, a large lawn, formal garden, and a hand-crafted lamp with bleeding hearts cut from tin.

The bleeding hearts were a life-size decorative element at the base of the lamp. The tin hearts were painted pink, pierced, and threaded with wire to hang and sway like the real thing.

I’d never seen such a plant and the heart shapes seemed too extraordinary to be real. It was only years later when I saw a bleeding heart plant growing in someone’s garden did I learn they were real.

It’s clear the lamp was inspired by nature, but I wonder ... was it created to mirror a passion for gardening? After all, there was that formal garden. Or was it a way to explore the potential of cut metal?

Maybe it was simply a one-and-done hobby project.

Looking back
It’s spring here in Maine and the bleeding hearts are in bloom. Seeing them always reminds me of that lamp. Of my doubt. How I admired the skill and artistry of the lamp, but scoffed at the idea of heart-shaped flowers.

My ignorance colored my perception of what I was looking at. I realize now the artist must have been inspired by one or all of the elements that made the lamp what it was: the flowers, nature, their craft. And how, by creating a lasting reminder of the plant, they preserved a moment in time.

Sharing matters
I’m in the early stages of journaling, but I see that no matter what we create, the materials we use, or the subject we choose to represent, by giving it form, we’re able to share it and touch others in ways we’ll never know. The artist who created that lamp will never know how much I think about it, what I learned from it, what it means to me.

Or how I wish it was in my living room.

So share your art, your craft, your writing. You never know who's looking.

What are you working on?
2 Comments

    Picture
    WhistleStop Blog
    Uncover, write, and share your best stories

    Picture
    Get yours!

    Categories

    All
    Activities
    Activity Book
    Animals
    Baking
    Beginning
    Birds
    Bookmaking
    Books
    Bored
    Cabin Fever
    Carpentry
    Collage
    Collecting
    Conversation
    Cooking
    Craft
    Cursive Writing
    Dance
    Drawing
    Envelope
    Flowers
    Focus
    Food
    Forest Bathing
    Gardening
    Give It A Go
    Good Things
    Hand Lettering
    History
    Hobbies
    Holidays
    I Write Letters To Say
    Journaling
    Letter Writing
    Library
    Magic
    Mandala
    Maps
    Memoir
    Micro Memoir
    Nature
    Paper Flowers
    Paper Mache
    Pastime
    Persistence
    Pets
    Photography
    Poetry
    Pop Up Book
    Posters
    Progress
    Recipe
    Seasons
    Secret Messages
    Sewing
    Sharing
    Shorthand
    Six Word Stories
    Skill
    Snail Mail
    Stationery
    Statues
    Stories Worth Sharing
    Storytelling
    Typewriters
    Vintage
    Walking
    Watercolor
    Winter
    Writing

Waystation Whistle
Uncover, write, and share your best stories.
©2025 Waystation Whistle
Vintage illustrations ©Dover Publications

Got a question?  Drop us a line.

Home
Terms of Service
  • Home
  • WhistleStop Blog
  • About
  • Shop
  • My Life's Not That Interesting