Where are the margins?

An outline of the discussion topics:

  • Introduction and greeting
    • Doodling in the Margins and Valerie Meiss (Tiny Wonder or Valerie from Far Away… go support patreon)
    • Who am I? What is my history with puppetry?
    • What is my privilege that lets me talk to this, and why you shouldn’t listen to me
  • Capitalism Lies to you
    • Imposter Syndrome is a lie too easy to listen to
    • Your value is not about the product you create 
    • Three financial modes for art
      • “Hobby” financially (money goes in, but doesn’t come out)
      • Self Sustaining (Money goes in, money comes out, but generally only enough to keep paying for the money going in)
      • Job/Career – Money goes in, Money comes out… you’re feeding your family or paying your rent at least partially with puppet money (I can’t speak to that one)
  • What is Art
    • You see me? I see you? We see each other? (Perceive instead of See)
    • Alternately: Enable Empathy, Educate, Provide Enrichment, Foster Enjoyment (aka Entertain).
    • It should have meaning, and sometimes that meaning is just fun
  • Why Puppetry?
    • Puppetry is Multifaceted
      • Study/History
      • Writing
      • Building (simple or complex)
      • Practice performance (self tape/monitor setup, etc)
      • Actual performance (Slams, Films, XPT, Cons, etc)
      • Community – Part of what fills your soul is, or can be, the community of puppetry. If you can, take the time to foster that.
  • Professionalism – Taking it seriously doesn’t have to mean not having fun.
    • It is all part of your plan, not a side gig or a hobby
      • This is part of the Capitalism lies to you in some way
      • Things feed your career, your soul, your wallet
      • You are a complete person and the value to you, society, etc isn’t defined by how much of your “income” is derived from the act of creating art
      • Treating it seriously enough to get better at your art, will feed your soul more.
      • Note on the Ira Glass bit on taste
  • Set up your time and space
    • If you can, set up a place that is yours for doing your art… even if it’s transient like the dining room table.
    • If you can, set up a regular or specific time that is for doing your art… if this is 20 minutes a day, or one day a week, or one weekend a month, it’s all valid.

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