DIFFERENT IS GOOD

 

Recently, I read an interesting article about a speed-skating nun.

When she was young, Sister Catherine Holum was destined to be a world-class athlete.

Her mum had been an Olympic gold medallist.

She’d trained three Olympic squads.

Young Catherine had been skating competitively since she was seven.

She’s been competing internationally since she was thirteen.

She became the US national champion.

She became the Junior World Champion.

She broke world records.

She trained really hard, five hours a day.

At age sixteen she competed in the Olympics in Japan.

But she contracted exercise-induced asthma.

She couldn’t even train without massive quantities of drugs, much less compete at an Olympic level.

So at 17 she retired.

One day, Catherine had a vision at Fatima in Portugal.

At the spot where three little girls had seen The Virgin Mary.

As she stood there, Catherine felt peace and joy and bliss come rushing through her.

God spoke to her, and she knew with absolute clarity that one day she would devote her life to being a nun.

But meanwhile, Catherine returned to Chicago.

She went to the Chicago Institute of Art and studied photography for four years.

Of course, she had a deeply based faith, and firm religious beliefs.

Like the sanctity of life.

She felt so strongly that she would go and pray outside abortion clinics.

Pray for the terminated lives, for the pregnant women, for the doctors.

She wouldn’t protest, she would just kneel on the pavement and pray.

The journalist who was interviewing Catherine said this must have made her deeply unpopular, knowing the liberal views of art schools.

Catherine’s reply made me feel proud.

She said “Oh no, I didn’t get any hostility because, honestly, in art school people are very accepting of other people’s views.”

I love that.

It explains so much about art school and the sort of people who go there.

In ordinary daily life and conventional institutions, everyone is trying to fit in.

To be part of the mass.

But some people are more interested in what makes people different than in what makes them the same.

These people are seen as rebels and rejects, eccentrics.

These people don’t do well in the standard academic atmosphere.

Where everyone has to fit in, and outsiders are ostracised.

These outsiders, the rebels and rejects, tend to end up at art school.

Where everyone isn’t interested in being the same.

Where people are more interested in what makes other people different.

What makes them interesting.

So at art school, Catherine Holum wasn’t picked on for kneeling on the pavement and praying.

People found it interesting that she’d do that.

Obviously most of them didn’t agree with her, but that was okay.

The interesting thing was having the guts to kneel on a crowded pavement in a hostile environment for what she believed in.

In a gentle way, without hurting anyone else.

At art school it doesn’t matter whether you agree with someone.

What matters is, are they interesting.

What are they doing that’s different from everyone else, and why?

What can you learn from them that’s useful?

Everyone isn’t trying to be part of a large group of like-minded people.

This isn’t the home counties or a conventional academic institution or the Daily Mail,

This is the place where differences are enjoyed, celebrated.

Where difference is good.

 

And that made me proud of going to art school.

 

 

 

8 Comments

  1. Dave,
    I had a dream about not fitting in last night. My mind raced around from recruitment agents with their cosy ideals of who is right for the job to brands. I settled on ‘The only thing we’re looking to fit in with is you’ for Levis.

    john p woods - 27 June 2012 9:58 am

  2. We were invited to see “the life of christ” in a stately home in Guildford.
    The missus really did not want to go as we’d just got back from holiday the day before.
    It was absolutely brilliant.
    I asked her:-
    “Did you enjoy that?”
    “Да”,
    She said.
    “Это было ничего подобного я себе это было бы”.

    Kev - 27 June 2012 10:57 am

  3. What did it for me was how she got on with her life,
    after retiring something she worked hard for almost all her life,
    at such a young age.
    That’s faith I think.
    If it was me, I would sulk.
    Sulker than Anelka.

    I concur with the art school.
    Went there and fitted in nicely,
    best time of my academic years!

    Irfan - 27 June 2012 11:36 am

  4. Kev,
    The translation says “It was anything like this I to itself it would be.”
    Which I take it means something like “If it really looked as good as that I’d be a Christian too.”
    Is that right?

    Dave Trott - 27 June 2012 11:37 am

  5. Dave

    While @ art school I created a series of installations of bananas sliced in half lengthways + suspended in formaldehyde.

    ‘Bananas sliced in half lengthways and suspended in formaldehyde’ I called it.

    I’ve seen it done less successfully since.

    (It wasn’t Slade btw – The thought of 3 years sharing the same linseed oil fumes as Noddy Holder didn’t appeal.)

    Grilla Login - 27 June 2012 1:06 pm

  6. The translation of: Это было ничего подобного я себе это было бы = It was nothing like I imagined it would be…

    That’s preconception for you…

    Ian Williams - 27 June 2012 3:56 pm

  7. Dave, maybe art school people have opened minds. But I think by the time they get to advertising, most are anti-organized religions. Not having any beliefs makes it easier to explore – no boundaries.

    Robin. - 27 June 2012 4:28 pm

  8. Dave,
    LOL!
    It should have read:-
    “Yes” she said “It was better than I expected”.
    However your reseach highlights why computers
    should never be put in charge of
    Weapons of Masss Destruction if they
    cannot even decode meaning.
    However, there is a flipside to this.
    My brother believes my wife and I
    get on so well because we only understand
    half of what each is saying to the other.
    Hence in a fit of “hell hath no fury like a woman’s scorn”
    “xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xx x xxxxx”
    Is translated into “Hmmm… she may be angry with me.”
    As the Scotsman in Dad’s Army says:-
    “We’re all doomed” (and it’s only Monday).
    Other research highlights that most women
    don’t say:-”It was better than I expected”.
    And maybe that’s why different is good.

    Kev - 2 July 2012 9:21 am

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