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Breaking the Seal
A single coin won’t break you. It may not even be even be missed. Why not tuck away all those single coins in one place and watch them make magic?

Breaking the Seal

Originally published December 28, 2014:

One year ago, I made a vow to attend a retreat hosted by Squam Art Workshops (SAW). This I promised after completing an online class via SAW where I learned random weaving and was completely swept up in the teaching style and encouragement. Me. Weaving. Randomly. Don’t judge me.

The night of December 4, 2013, I felt a bit lighthearted and tricked out a canning jar to act as both a reminder and a savings vehicle for me to attend one of the SAW retreats in person. It would take a bit of doing, since these are held in the woods of central New Hampshire and I live, well, no where near there. But I could work toward it.

Squam Jar The first night after making the jar when I filled it with all the coin and currency I had in my car and in my wallet that night. (Hmm, I’ve painted the table since then.)

I sent the picture to the founder of Squam, thinking she might find it amusing. At the time, I did not know if anything would come of it, but I placed the jar on the windowsill above my kitchen sink where it would be a daily reminder of something I wanted. Of course, I could always move it if the thought faded. Or seemed too distance. Or an unexpected bill needed to be paid.

Surprisingly, it remained on the sill for a year, getting a bit more packed with money as the days passed. The last several weeks saw me having to forcibly shove any additions into the narrow slot I cut in the top. I had just taken the leap of shoving a $20 bill into the top of the jar on the morning that I received an email from SAW, stating that pre-registration for the 2015 retreats had begun and full registration would open on January 5, 2015. Oh, sings my soul and pass the margaritas!

Since that day, I have spent the last few weeks pondering which classes I would take during my retreat in the woods. With my final decisions made, my registration forms complete, and an envelope addressed, it was time to break the seal.

Squam Jar My Squam jar with a full belly.

A couple months ago, I watched an interview with author Elizabeth Gilbert who retold a story that was shared by one of her readers. Year ago, before divorce was as common as it is now, a young wife and mother found herself at the age of 26 with four children, ages 3 months to 7 years. Her husband had just walked out and never returned to their lives. After the dust settled, this mother realized that her life would not always be this way — alone, poor, overwhelmed. She grabbed a coffee can and put it high on a shelf in her closet where her kids would not find it, and every week she put a bit of money in it. She told herself that she was already poor, so a dollar into the coffee can would not break them. And she saved for years.

After all her children were grown and on their own, she gathered up all her coffee cans and bought a ticket on a ship. She had always wanted to see the world, and she finally boarded that ship that took her to faraway places she had always dreamed of seeing. It started with a coffee can.

Squam Jar Seal, broken.

Now, my journey to this retreat is not nearly as profound a journey as the woman in Liz Gilbert’s story, but it is something I have wanted a long while. I never realized the power of a simple jar sitting on a window sill that quietly called to me everyday, reminding me to stay focused and keep working toward the goal.

Whatever your goal, your dream, your wish, grab a coffee can, a canning jar, a shoe box and get started. The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step and planning the trip of a lifetime starts with a single coin.

A single coin won’t break you. It may not even be even be missed. Why not tuck away all those single coins in one place and watch them make magic? Magic that takes years to happen is still magic.

The now-empty Squam jar will go back to the windowsill to gather more and more before the actual trip begins. I did not miss one coin.

Squam Registration Nearly ready for the post office on January 5.
Update: This week I returned from the retreat with which I was so enamored in this original post. Words fail me at the moment, but I am safe in saying, every coin was worth it.
Rita Herrmann lives in the Ozark Mountains with her two dogs and Netflix subscription. A lifelong writer, she's learned to draw deep thoughts from the simplest of observations. Through her work on She Wears Red Shoes, she inspires others to be the best version of themselves, even though she often eats too much chocolate. A good road trip with a great playlist is how she rolls. Her core beliefs include dancing spontaneously, singing randomly, laughing often, living simply, and learning to forgive.

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"Most of the shadows of this life are caused by standing in our own sunshine. "
Ralph Waldo Emerson