by Ed Crumley
I think all of us were born with a
gift or two, but some of us do more with them than others. One of my first
memories was Mom singing Frere Jacques to me as a lullaby. I loved music early
on but it took me a while to figure out what to do with it.
Mom sent me to a piano teacher who plastered
herself beside me on the bench and yelled in my ear, "PLAY",
resulting in my hating the ordeal, fearing recitals, and never learning to
sight-read the notes on the page. Years later, I taught myself to play by ear
after deciding the key and which three chords I needed to play a song.
I took up the clarinet in the
junior high band, but was soon jealous of the guys in the trumpet and trombone
sections because brass seemed more macho and they could make more noise. I
ditched band in my high school senior year to sing in the school chorus. There,
four of us formed a quartet we called "The Stair Steps" and sang Blue Moon on trembling legs before a
packed school assembly. The name fit our shortest-to-tallest, tenor-to-bass lineup.
During those teen years, I also sang in our church youth choir which took a
12-state tour which included Washington D.C.
In college, I taught myself guitar
chords and serenaded my future wife on many sojourns to the park and lake. But,
after that, decades rolled by before I seriously took up music again. When I
finally did by joining a church choir, I realized what I'd missed all that time
while steeped in work and kid's activities. Our lady director, also a voice
teacher, and maybe a marine drill instructor in another life, taught us how to
sing and led us in many enjoyable and creative concerts.
The church eventually declined to a
point where we had to move on and I thought that, sadly, my music days were
over. But the One Who gives us our gifts always has another plan for us to use
them even if we can't see down the road.
We joined a church to be close to
our son and his family and, miracles never cease, found another great choir I
could join. But it didn't stop there. Later, a fellow new to that choir sat
down next to me at practice one night and after some conversation invited me to
join his gospel music band, The Firewheel Gospel Jubilee, which played at
senior centers several times per month. Since then I've been singing, playing
side on harmonica, and writing songs for the group which also includes guitars,
banjo, fiddle, bass, mandolin, and keyboard players.
Neglecting to use our gifts is a
drag on our spirits and we can never be really fulfilled until we find and
develop them. Took me almost a lifetime to realize that. But better late than
never!
About the Author
Radically changing careers after receiving a BBA
degree in business administration from Baylor University in 1961, Ed founded Ed
Crumley/Architectural Arts in Dallas in 1969 and began a forty-three year
career producing architectural illustrations and architectural models for
architects, real estate developers, and corporations locally, across Texas and
around the nation. Later he wrote, illustrated, and self-published a basic
correspondence course on architectural illustration which he marketed through
small ads in art publications.
He has also used his writing talents observing
modern culture as a freelance movie critic for Preview, a publication of Movie Morality Ministries for which he
has detailed the plots and both the redeeming and objectionable material in the
latest motion pictures. He has also written human interest pieces for the
Christian Pulse.
After attending American
Christian Writer’s conferences for several years where he attended many
workshops on various phases of writing, Ed completed his first novel, a
suspense/thriller, The Host, a novel of life and death on the high desert
and has begun a sequel which features the same core characters, adds new ones,
and deals with new issues.
The Host
is available from Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble.com, and Trafford Publishing.
Read an excerpt from The
Host at:
www.edcrumley.com
Ed Crumley may be contacted at:
edsart@sbcglobal.net
214-232-2318
6 comments:
Wonderful accounting! Where we are led with our God-given gifts!
Ed, thank you for this post. One of my favorite passages from Eugene Peterson's Message I Cor 14 is to 'use the gifts God has given you.' You have. The best.
Great post! And praise God, not only for the gifts He's given us, but second and third chances to use them for His glory!
You're obviously a very talented and gifted person! So many different arts: architectural illustration, singing and now fiction writing, congrats! A very fulfilling life, congrats!
And you're absolutely right, one should never neglect one's talents, even the most modest one, e.g. baking cookies, will always be a source of satisfaction...
Thanks for the comments. It didn't post my thank you before. Maybe it will this time.
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