The weavers of the plains are tireless workers poor but honest, always trusting the generosity of an unlocked door to let in a husband working nights at the print and design shop, finishing that last small sign full of eclairs glazed with the most deliciously appealing serif font for the new French bakery off of main and twenty-third
or the plumber who heard about that slow running toilet on the second floor who leaves the bill neatly near the vanity knowing the check will come with the Wednesday amble and update chat
or the mechanic who can be trusted with the keys and a blank check on the front seat of that old blue Ford that is leaking green.
The weaver mother with seven children, threads pieces for their school newspaper, spins fine clear aqua yarn showing other kids how to swim, substitute teaches so that she can bind their minds into a chalkboard panel of good knowledge, even drives the school bus if that is what the thread requires to be strong.
The weaver farmer sees the Nebraska soil is thready, dry, hard to till, harder to water, that crops can’t be harvested without the abundant help of others.
In it they see a tapestry, the people it’s colors everything needing a tight loom for it to work, survive and thrive and bind forever together.
So, they are intentionally local knowing machine yarn eventually unravels, that good thread can’t be found online, and that the best panels in the tapestry are the ones that come from common life.