Luann Udell / Durable Goods
Ancient artifacts for modern times




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Tuesday, October 26, 2004
 
Making a Decision
I have to make a hard decision today. I have an opportunity to do a teaching gig that would pay fairly well, a week’s work. Something I would have jumped at a few years ago.

Trouble is, I’m an atypical artist. I don’t want to teach other people how to do what I do. I never really wanted to in the first place. As time goes on, and my art is more important to me, I find I'm even less interested in teaching it. I want to do it.

Running a business based on making your art sucks up a lot of time. I spend lots more time on the business side than the making art side. So setting aside time to allow other people to make art while I watch is particularly painful sometimes.

Nevertheless, it is an opportunity. And I can’t make up my mind whether to do it or not.

A friend once said, “When you have a situation you just can’t make up your mind about, make a list of the pros and cons. Otherwise, it’s like doing long division in your head.” (I originally typed "long decision in your head." Quite Freudian!)

Here’s what my decision list looks like.

Pros: 1) It’s a thousand dollars. 2) It’s a week’s work. 3) It’s teaching, and I’ve always liked teaching. 4) I could really use the money. 5) The guy who asked me is really nice and excited about my work. His enthusiasm is infectious. 6) It’s hard to say no.

Cons: 1) It’s much, much more than a week’s work. It’s actually 8 classes, 6 per day, for 5 days. That’s 30 different teaching sessions. 2) It also means a lot of preparation time. Probably several weeks’ of preparation time, for presentations, projects, etc. 3) It’s a long drive, too. 4) The last time I did something similar to this proposal, it turned into something awful. It was the most miserable day I’ve had in my entire professional career. 5) For a variety of professional reasons I won’t get into, I don’t want to teach how I make my artwork. I’ve made a point of not teaching how to make it, and I don't want to start now. Even in modified form. 6) If I’m going to teach, I want to teach professional skills, which would pay even more than teaching my craft techniques. 7) It’s a month before my major wholesale show, which takes a huge amount of time and energy to prepare for. Including the two to three weeks I'd sink into this teaching opportunity if I take it on. 8) Other than financial, it doesn’t fulfill a single other professional, business, personal or artistic goal I have. 9) As hard as it is to say "no", I have to say "no" sometimes in order to make room for other things that are more important to me.

As I look over my reasons, I can see that some of the cons are fear-based—“The last time I did this, it turned out badly.” And there is some good to be gained—some money to put back into my business, and the opportunity to hone my teaching skills.

I can also see, though, that what I could learn from taking this opportunity is something I’ve already learned. And don’t need to do this same thing again to learn the same lesson again.

The teaching skills I want to hone are as a presenter of professional skills. Teaching my methods will not help me with this teaching goal.

I was talking with the same friend about something completely different, and she said something that’s now stuck in my mind.

I’d said I was VERY excited about teaching the workshops on my schedule now—self-promotion for artists, and wholesaling. It could be something that might conflict with my artistic/professional goals. But it didn't feel that way right now.

I found as I prepared for the seminar, my thoughts clarified. I began to gain more insights into my own processes. While researching press releases, I learned how to make mine even better. I’m actually working out my own roadblocks and obstacles by sharing what I’ve learned along the way with others. I've learned more as I prepare to teach.

She said, “I’ve found that I often teach what I want to know.”

Such a simple phrase, but very useful today.

I'm going to have to call that very nice gentleman and refuse his generous offer. I hope I can think of someone else who might be able to fill the slot, someone who would be grateful for such an opportunity, who finds it a better match for where they are in life. As nice as I'd like to be, I need to be kind to myself, the artist, first.

comment [] 7:41:34 PM    


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Last update: 11/7/2004; 10:57:44 AM.

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