" Hobbies were in style"
Once upon a time, In the old days, -really not so very long ago, people had hobbies.
Perhaps when they had enough clocks and were maddened by excesses of trout flies, ceramic pots and wooden tick-tocks, they sallied off to America for high adventure. Sailors showed them how to built perfectly-scaled model sailing-ships inside glass bottles on the way. They discovered stuff, drank whiskey, and pursued dreams of gold.
" The End. "
The fact is, that wasn't the end at all. Hobbies, skills, and interests did migrate to North America with people from all over the world.
In America, congregating at the town smithy and hammering iron into useful, durable artifacts, they twisted white-hot metal into horseshoes, fancy utilities, perfect iron oak leaves and wrought-iron gates. "Blacksmithing" remains a hobby today.
Ceramic greenware |
They also tooled leather, made saddles and constructed durable furniture for the homestead. Some whittled corncobs into pipes, made walking-sticks or wooden decorations for the front door.
Some went back to making ceramic pots.
Silver-haired ladies and young women alike, making tea and passing pleasantries, spoke of gardens, flowers, food and the latest fashions from foreign lands while they sewed, knitted, pearled, tatted and gossiped.
A fine selection of colours in oil |
Hobbyists created fine works of art in crochet, needlepoint and other stitchery, and painted in oils, watercolors, and any other medium available in that era.
Antique and modern marbles |
Children played with pet rabbits, tickled trout, carved wood, made toys and collected pebbles, insects, coins, and glass marbles.
Hobbies were in style.
Interestingly, hobbies were often social distraction with a purpose--the lighter, more enjoyable jobs attended to when not working or otherwise occupied with backbreaking labour and the essentials of survival.
Having a hobby kept the hands busy, the mind away from the devil, and most hobbies produced something useful.
Today, H is for hobbies. Hobbies still exist, but associated skills are much diminished.
Hobbies entertain the willing as they always have. Artificial entertainments such as television, social media and other distractions have, unfortunately, reduced the interest in hobbies requiring genuine, specialized skills.
If you have more than one hobby, you are fortunate indeed. As a distraction from mundane life with it's endless assorted problems, even a single hobby is priceless. The prime directive of a hobby is enjoyment of life via one's expression of creativity.
Collections, whether they consist of old and contemporary glass, coins, stamps, baseball cards, toys, old airplanes or automobiles --are equally considered to be hobbies.
Modern hobbies curiously may produce little creativity--resulting in collections of older or contemporary artifacts.
Paradoxically, hobbies may often include attempts to reproduce artifacts that have appreciated in real value --from the skill sets and hobbies of the ' good old days'.
Collecting old and Contemporary glass is a modern hobby
A modern collection of Swans |
What will you choose to do with your spare time? Do you wish to vegetate, numbed by endless, boring sitcoms on television, or playing Bridge or 'Monopoly'?
Why not enjoy using hobby skills brilliantly gleaned from years of practice and enjoyment? Why not collect interesting objects and teach others about your wonderful hobbies?
Hobbies were in style, and can be again.
Go for it. Make something of your time.
Is that incoming I hear?