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"Our destiny is written in the hand."
Renate Hiller, co-director of the Fiber Craft Studio at the Threefold Educational Center in Chestnut Ridge, New York

Practicing mindfulness. Paying attention. Listening generously.

For Renate Hiller, the fiber artist whom you see in the film above, these majestic phrases apply in all their richness. Her German lilt of the tongue reaffirms this exquisite eloquence as she connects the importance of using our hands with the way in which we understand and find value in ourselves and in others. There’s something so honest and pure about her thought — that we gain a deeper, more meaningful relationship with our own humanity and our greater world by using our hands.

Using our hands grounds us — in work and in relationship. As we create something, hopefully beautiful, with our hands, we are transforming our moral and social senses. We evolve; we change. We notice things that we passed over the day before: the curve in a sidewalk to make way for a tree in the boulevard, the purl of a scarf, the transition of a capital that greets the ceiling. We observe the mundane and see it anew. The process of creating through the hands becomes a spiritual practice.

Ms. Heller strings together so many “threads” that help me think about raising children; about living a fuller, more physically experiential work life (yes, even about writing marginalia in a script rather than using the track changes option in Word); about hearing differently the many stories from folks who write in to the program, especially the passionate accounts of people and their gardens.

She also reminds me of something Joanna Macy told Krista in a recent interview (show to be released on September 16th):

"I'm looking at my hand right now as we talk. It's got a lot of wrinkles ‘cause I'm 81 years old. But it's linked to hands like this back through the ages. This hand was shaped by when it was a fin in the mother seas, where life was born. This hand is directly linked to hands that learned to reach and grasp and climb and push up on dry land and weave reeds into baskets. It has a fantastic history. Every particle and every atom in this hand goes back to the first — what Thomas Berry calls ‘the primal flaring forth,’ the beginning of space-time. We’re part of that story."

And, for those who are unable to watch the video, here’s a transcript:

Renate HillerRenate Hiller
"On Handwork"

I’m spinning wool with a stone spindle. This tool has been used probably for more than 30,000 years. And when we twist fibers into yarn we are actually creating a spiral. And the spiral is a cosmic gesture of creation.

When we look at our galaxy from outer space it is a spiral. And we find spirals in many, many places — in the plant world — on the back of our head we have a spiral. So, this is an activity that brings us closer to the cosmos, you could say. But at the same time we create something that is useful and beautiful because with the yarn that we have spun we can create sweaters, hats and mittens and scarves and so on.
 
To have the skill of knitting, to have the skill of crocheting, of felting, makes it possible for us not only to make something but it makes us skilled in general. The use of the hands is vital for the human being, for having flexibility, dexterity. In a way the entire human being is in the in the hands. Our destiny is written in the hand. And what do we do in our modern world with our hands? You know we move the mouse, we drive and so on. We feel plastic most of the time. The hands are relegated to very little that’s actually bringing dexterity to our times. So we have come ever more estranged from nature and from also what other human beings are doing. The whole social element comes into play as well because if I make something then I think ‘Hmmm, how was that yarn made?’

In the past there were all the professions of the shoemaker and the tailor and so on, and that’s also being lost. If you do practical work somewhere on the school grounds, there is practical work going on. The children will all go to that. They’re really drawn to that. They want to experience it and however the reality is that there’s less and less of that. In the home, you know you can use already bought vegetables, all chopped up and ready to eat. There is very little activity like kneading the bread, and you know children grasp first an item and then they grasp with their mind. So if they have very little to grasp other than plastic readymade toys then what their mind grasps is very little. The toy automatically moves and you know children can only be kind of astonished by that.

So though there is this loss of understanding the value of things, of the meaning of things, and in handwork, in transforming nature we also make something truly unique that we have made with our hands, stitch by stitch, that maybe we have chosen the yarn, we have even spun the yarn — even better, and that we have designed. And when I do that, I feel whole. I feel I am experiencing my inner core because it’s a meditative process. You have to find your way; you have to listen with your whole being. And that is the schooling that we all need today. Because we’re so egocentric and this makes us think of what is needed by something else. So we are in a way practicing empathy — empathy with the material, empathy with the design. I think this practicing of empathy that we do in the fiber crafts is paramount for being healing to our world. And it’s a service for the divine that we are surrounded by.

(A special thanks to Dorit of the Gerðandisgleðir blog for making connections.)

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16 Comments

This is beautiful.

Very eloquently stated. So many philosopical and social implications to her observations. The Waldorf tradition of childhood education integrates handwork into its curriculum wonderfully, echoing many of the themes stated by Hiller.

I have a friend who taught at a Waldorf school for some years before having children. Being a kid who was raised in the middle of the Plains, this formal methodology is foreign to me; but, the ideas behind it are not since I am a product of farming families and a love of the land — and all that goes with it. Cheers!

Renate Hiller stated the spiritual elements within the creative process so eloquently. I have a BFA in fiber art, and I still feel the most centered when my fingers are experiencing anything with an interesting, natural texture. And the rhythms used to spin wool, to knit, to weave, very quickly lull me into a very meditative, peaceful state. Working with natural yarns is especially powerful. Can’t you picture the three Fates at work, as you watch Renate spin?

Renate's work and her wonderful perspective on work remind me of the wonderful PBS series "Craft in America."

"Blessed are they who have found their work"

What a beautiful sermon!

Ora et Labora.

so many things to like in this. the thoughts of service, of dexterity (physical and mental), of getting to the root of things and understanding our materials.
thank you for so eloquently stating what was once natural and obvious in a world that more and more views these things as remote and strange.

This is very moving for me -- in 2006 I was awarded a Lilly Grant (one for sabbaticals for working pastors) in order to explore much of what Renate Hiller speaks. I knit and have found the mystery of something happening in this work that is also healing and centering and a connector to the world and others for me. It's the hand thing. I have often meditated upon the psalmist's words in regard to these things: "Let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us, and prosper for us the workd of our hands--O prosper, the work of our hands!" -- Psalm 90:17

What an oasis in the day to see this see this lovely video! There is a calmness and rootedness that comes from her words, these simple acts of creation made by hand. Yes, mostly we whiz by at the speed of light, missing texture, context, and roots that serve a purpose. Three cheers for slowing down, feeling the texture, and creating something simple.
Lovely! I feel better already and long to get my fingers busy again so my mind can be free.

Thank you Renate Hiller, you understand, and my friend who sent me this link understands. I also think knitting a project like socks, teaches us to take life one thing at a time, because that is how you knit. as Debbie Macomber says in "A Good Yarn, (paraphrasing) And it is meditative - because anything you do repetitively becomes meditative after about 20 mins., according to Mahareshi Mahesh Yogi. Its news to me that there is a spiral on the back of my head.

Thanyou for this reminder of the reason behind what we wool workers do each day. It is necessary for humanity in the bigger sense than just our own satisfaction!

Thank you. Sometimes I forget the importance of teaching the young. I'm going to push harder to make sure I leave this legacy of fiber I was given by my grandparents.

Thank you for speaking so eloquently for us, the handwork teachers! Beautiful!

Thank you for your eloquent words . The spiral is certainly central to our affinity to the cosmos. It rules our life from DNA to the Milky Way....I say. Both in growth and destruction. Its only possible opposite ,if humans can think to challenge such a force ,is the cross. It is a futile defense but it acts to reassure many somehow.
I like the symbolic unison between the spiral of a clock spring and the cross of the clock face. Time!.

I also like the etymological chain for the origin of the word Craft, Kraft (as you know from German...power) and the ancient Greek kra...which is a component of Demo-cra-cy ,Bureau-cra-cy. I am sure it goes back further but i haven't found from where yet.

This is lovely ~ I agree that when I knit, it is very meditative. I have knit sooooo many hats, cats, socks and sweaters for others. It is one way to serve and love others.

apples