I’m back from the Tiny House & Simple Living Jamboree in Arlington, Texas, and I had a great time! I met so many interesting people and I think my speech went ok. It was such a great adventure and now I want to go to ALL the tiny house festivals! lol! Ok, maybe not all of them (yes, all of them). I am very happy to be back home and do a little introverting! lol!
I made it to the hotel without any problems and got on the elevator and there was Derek Diedricksen standing there, and he was very charming and funny. He’s the author of Microshelters: 59 Creative Cabins, Tiny Houses, Tree Houses, and other small structures and I’m sure it’s as witty as he is.
Later I met Jay Shafer, and that was pretty amazing. He’s a gentle soul and is the father of the Tiny House movement. His book, The Small House Book really rocked my world when I read it back in 2011 (it came out in 2010) and I loved his focus on beauty, simplicity, and quality. All of that totally resonated with me and clearly it resonated with a lot of other folks as well – because look around – the tiny house movement is HERE! (And it rocks!)
Then I stumbled across Susan Schaefer Bernardo (poet) and Courtney Fletcher (artist) who created The Big Adventures of Tiny House which is the most charming children’s book ever created (except for the other ones they’ve created) and these women were also just as lovely as you’d expect them to be given all the wonder and charm of the books they create. PLUS they introduced me to the couple who own the tiny haven-home that the tiny house in the book is based on (visually). What a pleasure it was to meet all of them! And why didn’t I get a photo?!
I was getting pretty bummed by Sunday when it appeared that I was going to catch my flight home without meeting Dee Williams. I read her book The Big Tiny: A Built-it-Myself Memoir and let me tell you, this woman is fierce! I reviewed her book on my other blog a while back. Let’s just say I am a fan! (I am!) I knew I would be at the airport when she and Jay Shafer were on the main stage, but that morning when I was wondering around hoping to soak up the last bit of tiny house goodness, I stumbled into her session in one of the smaller side rooms and let me tell you… and that quickly became one of the highlights of the event for me. Hearing her speak and watching her engage with the audience was such a respectful and life affirming time, I HATED having to scoot out early to go catch my plane. Still, I was so glad I had been there to catch some of it. She asked the questions: 1) who/what do you love? 2) how do you want to spend your time? 3) what do you want to have in your hands as you die? (People/stuff) and then I watched as the audience participated with her by telling their own stories. There was sacred space in that room.
It was also great fun to visit the tiny houses, skoolies, vans, and other creative dwellings around the property, especially the DIY homes, and ask the home owners how their food habits have changed since they started to live tiny. It was fun to hear that their answers are the same as ours so I think my book is very much on target to help other folks walk through this transition.
If there is going to be a tiny house festival near you – GO! Even if you have to make a real trip out of it. It was so much fun and I’d do it again in a heartbeat!
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