Being Open to Magic

Magic is everywhere. Like in my painting it's right outside your window looking in, frequently unnoticed. It's not that we don't believe that anything is possible. Often we are blind to miracles because we have tunnel vision.
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"The world is full of magic things, patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper."
― W.B. Yeats

Magic is everywhere. Like in my painting it's right outside your window looking in, frequently unnoticed. It's not that we don't believe that anything is possible. Often we are blind to miracles because we have tunnel vision. We are so locked into our limited perception we can't see what's smiling at us through the porthole on the ship we're sailing. It's good to have dreams and plans but not to map out how they are to be manifested.

"The eye sees only what the mind is prepared to comprehend." ― Robertson Davies,

Last week while babysitting my grandson, the concept of "seeing only what my mind is prepared to comprehend," was brought to my attention. While Cameron was napping, I went to the refrigerator to get a bottle knowing that he would be waking soon. When I opened the door, I couldn't find the blue carrying case his parents brought his bottles in. From top to bottom, I searched the refrigerator for that case. I looked everywhere, even in the freezer. Eventually, I put on rubber gloves and rooted through the garbage, to make sure I hadn't thrown it out by accident. No luck. I was comforted that I had discovered a bottle of frozen breast milk in my search but didn't know what I was going to do for the rest of the day. Finally, it came to me that I should surrender the situation to God and ask for help. And so I did.

I decided to poor a cup of coffee and relax until my little charge awoke. When I reached into the fridge for the creamer, to my surprise, I saw four baby bottles of milk grouped on the bottom shelf. How could I have missed them? I'll tell you how. I was so fixated on locating the blue case I couldn't see anything else. Surrendering helped me to loosen the grip on my perception and opened me up to what was right in front of me. It made me wonder how many other things in my life I've missed.

"That is certainly one way to look at the matter. There are others." ― Patricia C. Wrede,

In my mermaid image lives the perfect reminder of why I must stay loose with what I think I know. It's good to have a vision but let a higher source fine tune it. That is the formula that brought my porthole painting into being. The figures in it are my daughter-in-law and grandson, Cameron. Pam grew up near Boston and spent her summers by the ocean. She has what we like to call saltwater in her veins. When I found out she was pregnant, I immediately began seeing her as a mermaid, stretched out on a rock, holding a shell to her merbaby's ear. When Cam was born, I prepared for the illustration, by photographing the perfect "mermaid rock" for them to be sunbathing on. Now all I had to do was get photo references of my two muses. That had to be put on hold until Cam was old enough for his mom to hold him while he listened to the sound of the sea in a shell.

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The mermaid rock I came across on Lucy Vincent Beach in Martha's Vineyard.

One day last July, the plan for my illustration took on a new direction when Pam texted me a selfie of her and Cam. In the photo, Pam's hair flowed across a pillow and her little guy, laying next to her, had a look of pure wonder on his face. It was magical. I knew the moment I saw it that it was the photo I would base my art on. I'm so grateful I was open enough to see that the sea creatures I wanted to bring to life weren't sunbathing, but looking through a porthole, right into my soul.

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The selfie that pointed my imagination in another direction.

Text and images © Sue Shanahan. All rights reserved. www.sueshanahan.com

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