"Repurposing" is a strangely awkward word. Our ancestors didn't need a name for the frugal and often creative uses they found to reuse objects.
My grandfather set a door across file cabinets to use as a worktable. When making repairs he did calculations on an old piece of cardboard. Then he fished used screws and bolts from neatly labeled tin cans, chose from coiled loops of wire and string hanging from hooks, selected wood saved from old projects and proceeded using tools his own father once used.
My grandmother was a talented seamstress who reworked clothes until they were no longer functional, then took off the buttons before using the fabric for anything from hooked rugs to dust clothes. She made do with everything she came across, from leftovers to plant cuttings.
My parents carried on in the same way, although by the sixties and seventies such traditions were regarded as eccentric, even bizarre. They tore junk mail into notepaper, saved wrapping paper in any stage of antiquity, used bread bags and even foil over and over. When our hot water tank had to be replaced my father kept the old one in the garage. He cut metal from it for years to use in various projects. These tactics were a source of amusement to their children, except when our chores included polishing silver with the soft cloth of tattered men’s briefs. There were many equally embarrassing tasks.
As an adult I take a particular delight in repurposing. A wine decanter holds mouthwash in our bathroom and geodes collected by my children serve as our toothbrush holders. I’ve tucked plants into such containers as worn workboots, cracked mixing bowls and unlovely mugs. I’ve made children’s pajamas from their father’s flannel shirt and tote bags from jeans.
Here's a baby toy I made from socks.

After my mother died we were left with many beautiful things, but it wasn't bearable to toss out the broken ones. So I incorporated them into a bit of yard art. My husband and son cut a large piece of iron into the shape of a crescent moon and welded it on a post. Then I made a mosaic on it using broken plates, bits of bright glass, even bisque amputee dolls.
Here it is in a garden bed

I may find small daily ways to repurpose, my husband takes this to art to a higher level.
He's made several handcrafted sinks out of repurposed materials. Recently he took apart, reglued and recoated an antique kitchen table. Into it he affixed an antique copper candy-making vessel to serve as the sink. A leaf from the table provides a mount for the faucet and the drawer is still useable. Our friend Rebecca has it displayed in her store, Planet Green

It feels good to save sweaters, broken plates and old tables from the landfill. It feels even better to make something from them to serve a new use. Repurposing is liberating. It frees us from the oppression of wanting, opening us to a greater freedom.
Journeying god,
pitch your tent with mine
so that I may not become deterred
by hardship, strangeness, doubt.
Show me the movement I must make
toward a wealth not dependent on possessions,
toward a wisdom not based on books,
toward a strength not bolstered by might,
toward a god not confined to heaven.
Help me to find myself as I walk in other's shoes.
(Prayer song from Ghana, traditional, translator unknown)
This is cross posted on our family farm site Bit of Earth Farm


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