Friday, May 14, 2010

I belong to Fire Petal Books

For any of the following to make sense, you must read this post on belonging by Molly O'Neill. Go now. I'll wait until you get back.

Thinking about my belonging to something, I realize there are two that immediately strike me. The first is my home state of Utah. Most people don't realize how incredibly beautiful it is here. Often I don't either, at least until
I move away for a few months or years. Then I start to ache for my mountains. Actually, I get lost without them. How else am I supposed to know which way is east?

And in almost striking contrast, farther south along the highway are the glorious red deserts of central and southern Utah. The first morning of waking up, bundling up in sweatshirts and blankets as the sun just begins to rise, and peeking my head outside the tent to a vista of absolute perfection is something I can only describe as spiritual.

Those places have been my home for longer than my memories trace back. They are my birthplace and most likely my final resting place. Though I always long to see new places, I cannot leave my home for long.

In the past few weeks, though, I've begun building a home within that home. This home is largely empty now, though the walls shine with brilliant colors of various hues, still damp from the recent application of paint. Piece by piece, that space will be filled with chairs and shelves, followed soon after by books. Lots and lots of books. The best kinds of books, too. Those especially for kids and teens.

The walls are still bare and I've yet to have boxes of books cross the threshold, but that place is mine. It has already claimed me. Every morning I unlock the door, flick on the lights and open the blinds. Then I see it, and it welcomes me. I could spend hours lying on that floor, looking up at the gorgeous walls, noticing each piece as it finds a place.

Soon enough, this store will claim children as well, and teens and mothers and fathers and anyone who wants a place to read and laugh and live.

A friend commented the other day on how this store is me, that it is taking on my personality and becoming part of myself. I daresay she's right. I hope she's right, because that way I can give the best part of myself to others, to give them love and belonging when they may not know how to find it anywhere else.

I belong there because it is part of me, and I am part of it. I can't imagine a greater gift in life.

Michelle who belongs to Fire Petal Books

Monday, May 10, 2010

Quote of the Day


"In a world where it is increasingly possible to seclude yourself in a hive with fellow creatures who buzz the way you do, bookstores, like libraries and newspapers, are among the few places where a variety of ideas and opinions can jostle together for your attention. That tolerance of perspectives, including contradictory ones, isn't a marketing strategy for those institutions. It's part of their DNA. It's why they exist."

—Jim Higgins in a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel editorial defending Next Chapter bookstore owner Lanora Hurley, who has been criticized for scheduling a book signing by Karl Rove.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Brilliance


I had an epiphany today while painting the walls of Fire Petal Books. I've always considered myself a book person, though I enjoy a huge variety of hobbies and interests. Whenever anyone asks what I can't do, I always say I can't draw. While that's true, I've always longed to create art—visual art—on paper or canvas. Since I couldn't draw well, if at all, I never attempted to do anything more than put crayon to paper while playing with kids.

Then today as I sat on the floor, moving the paintbrush across the wall to fill in gaps and tidy up the edges, I realized the movement was very relaxing and even fun. As I was painting the wall all one color, I let myself paint freely without worrying that I wasn't painting it right.

That's when it struck, the thought that changed how I viewed art and my interaction with it. What does it matter if I'm any good at painting, so long as I enjoy it? It doesn't matter at all. If it's something that brings me peace, I'm going to do it whether people gasp in horror at the sight or gush over its magnificence. That's not what matters.

And then a related thought came: there are a lot of people who enjoy writing because it calms them and makes them happy. They don't have to be perfect at it to enjoy doing it. But I think what most of us (and I include myself here) don't realize is that we don't have to do it perfectly or make money from it or get it published to make the writing worthwhile. Sometimes just the doing of it is what matters most.

So tonight after I finished up at the store, I went to the craft shop and bought myself some canvases, paintbrushes, and paints. Tomorrow after I paint walls with a single color, I'm going to let myself go wild and paint whatever colors I like—and maybe even mixing them to create my own—in whatever nonsensical pattern feels natural. Right now it's not important to take classes or learn the theories behind each stroke. What I need is a moment alone with canvas, paint, and brush. It  will be more valuable to me than owning an expensive painting by someone else, because I will create it.

And that, my friends, is the stroke of brilliance I had today.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Why

This, all of this, is for children. These are their books, their stories. Sometimes we adults forget how vital stories are to the life of a child. We start thinking about sentence structure and royalties and the politics of book banning. But then, in a quiet moment in the corner of a bookstore we see the intent face of a boy as he reads of adventure, and the delighted expression on an angelic face as she gazes at pictures of the beautiful fairy princess. And we remember what it was like to believe, to need stories much more than we needed air to breathe.

———

I have a confession.

While most people I know would be mortified to be caught doing something so silly, I walk into the store, turn on the lights, look around, and then flop down on the floor. Arms and legs sprawled whichever way, I let my mind go and just breathe. Minutes, hours later, my mind insists on returning, and I let it back in only because I know I'll be there again tomorrow, filling my lungs with the life of a place dedicated to the happiness of children.

Someday soon, I want to see you walk into my store, flop down in an empty space, and just breathe for a moment or two. I might have to join you.