
Piano by Rene Margritte
A year and a half ago I blogged about Learning to Play (Again) and wrote this
I played piano as a girl and always regretted giving it up. Lately the thought that I may never play again, never experience the pure pleasure of music slipping out through my finger tips onto the keys–-to lose that forever– -seemed too sad to bear. So I bought myself an electronic piano, something I could set out on my dining room table to play.
Nothing so romantic as a baby grand–-but it has the touch and feel of the real thing. I can close my eyes and listen and imagine that heavy-breathing instrument bowing beneath my body as I play it.
The music I want to play is the kind that sweeps you away–Chopin, Mozart, Brahms, Beethoven . . . . What I yearn for, and seem to remember, is the kind of playing where body and music meld, where the notes sway through my body and spill out on the keyboard, like some lover I’m caressing. A musical love-making.
Sad to say, I did not play my keyboard as much as I had first thought I would and eventually it was put away to make room for my painting, which I also pursued on the dining room table.
But I regretted not having a permanent place for my keyboard, where I could go whenever I wanted and just sit down and make music. I still longed for a “real” piano, but it seemed, even in this large new home of ours that there just wasn’t a good place for one.
Then this summer my daughter came for a visit and stole back the large antique cabinet that I had been storing for her all these years. I knew she would be taking it now that she had her own home to fill up. But what could fill that empty space in the corner of our foyer, which was so much larger and “grander” than any home we had ever had.
And then I knew. Why a grand piano, of course! Which is what I had always wanted but never thought I would have.
I discovered that used baby grand are not so very expensive. And antique baby grands are so inexpensive that some are given away for free. So we found a beautifully cared-for antique on Craigslist and moved it into the corner of our foyer. Now it takes center stage in our home where I pass by numerable times a day. It’s always there, beckoning to me as I pass by, and now I play, not only daily, but several times a day.
But my dining room table is still a mess, covered with tubes of paints, and brushes, and palettes. It’s time to make a permanent home for the newest love in my life, my artwork.
This fall we plan to add an “art studio” to my home office where I do my writing. We’ll build a counter-top across one wall and halfway down the center of the room, to create a T-formation and two work stations. On one side will be my computer and printer and all my writing paraphernalia, and on the other side will be room for my artwork.
When it’s done I finally will have a permanent place to play with all the loves in my life. Sometimes it takes a lifetime to do that, to even discover what all your loves will be, let alone make room for them. My only problem then will be finding time each day to enjoy them.
How do you make room and time for all your creative endeavors?

My new piano
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Right now I trust that that time will come, and I enjoy the vision in knowing that others have achieved it! 🙂 I’m happy for you!
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Thank you, Ka. I do feel blessed. Trust and expectation are powerful tools in realizing our dreams. I’m sure your time will come too.
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Me too 🙂 Thanks so much for your success! 🙂 🙂 Keep going!!!!!
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Oh baby, ain’t she grand! (like the play on words?)
Did she tune up well?
As for: “I finally will have a permanent place to play with all the loves in my life. Sometimes it takes a lifetime to do that, to even discover what all your loves will be, let alone make room for them.”
So true, only your last sentence in that paragraph wouldn’t be a problem for me!!!HA!
😀
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Yes, she’s beautifully tuned. The previous owner was an accomplished pianist and was practicing for a fundraiser concert when I first met my new piano. It had been in his family for three generations and had been completely rebuilt about 20 years ago. He was selling it to make room for his new love, a grand piano! Not the baby he’d played on all those years. So it was a perfect move for all of us.
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Oh such a typically beautiful story of musicians and our instruments…and you get to be a part in its lineage!
hugs!
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I love this. I’m happy for you and the piano. And your sense of life as an adventure.
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Thank you, Claudia!
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Your post made my heart sing…<3
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Ah, that’s what it’s all about. Thank you, Jane.
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Ahh Deborah, I feel that your piano and creative spaces make your heart sing. x
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You are so right!
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It’s beautiful! And it looks lovely in your home. Congratulations!
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Thank you so much, Andrea.
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I love the piano photo. I don’t really do a great job of making room for all my artistic loves, but I’m trying. It’s a work in progress. I like how they feed one another.
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Thank you, Valorie. It is a work in progress. I like that cross-pollination too.
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At nearly eighty, and learning to live in a small is beautiful space, the baby grand is now an unfulfilled dream… how wonderful that you have achieved it… and also that you have room for all your loves…
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Thank you, Valerie. I do feel blessed. I imagine someday we’ll be moving to a smaller place too, and I do love the “small is beautiful” philosophy.
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How wonderful that you will have space for art, music, and words. I feel your joy as I make art in my painting studio and my new shop!
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Thank you, Laura, I’m looking forward to it. If you have any suggestions on essentials to include in my studio, please let me know. I’m in the research, shopping mode now.
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There are so many hours in the day, and even with a dedicated space for my art and the art materials I take to work for me…. I still don’t have a clear table space and do paperwork on the dining room table… lol.
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