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When you see
only the dark know the light will soon return: Louis Buchetto's
journey as an entrepreneur
About a month ago, my family and I
went to Flagstaff, Arizona. We were walking down the street
window-shopping when suddenly I caught an eyeful of bright, cheery
colors and shapes. I peeked into the window of "My Art Place" and
knew I had to go inside.
As soon as I set foot in the
store, I could feel a radiating light, warmth and love wash over
me. The pictures on the wall were of wonderful, childlike and
uplifting scenes that made me smile and feel happy. Everything was
clean and bright and ordered in a way that made me want to take all
of it home.
I knew at that moment that I
had to buy a picture for my son Joshua's room.
I also knew
that I must get the story of the artist who created them. Anyone
who created art that conveyed so much love had to be very connected
to their inner purpose for being on earth. You could not create this
kind of art and be disconnected from your creative soul.
 So I started to talk with Louis
Buchetto, the gallery owner and artist. He agreed to be
interviewed a few weeks later, and this is what he
shared.
Q: What were the major
milestones in your life that brought you to where you are
today?
Louis: At
a very young age, I scored very high on the IQ test. But in school I
was pretty much a straight F student. I thought I was stupid until I
was 32.
I was a very stubborn
child. In kindergarten, I told a teacher "You're not loving. I'm
not listening to you!" When she didn't listen, I closed down and
from that point on never allowed any skills to be built in
school.
I remember glimpses
of wanting to be an artist starting at about four years old.
Then the thought would disappear for about 5-10 years, when it would
reappear again for a brief moment.
My Dad
had a big heart. My mom had big drive. Her staff called her "the
sergeant." She worked for 32 years for Pitney Bowes as a manager.
She is a tough woman. I always tried to balance between the two
energies.
In early adulthood,
I made my living as a housepainter. I was very conscientious and
dependable and did all the right things like show up on time,
protect the furniture and clean up after myself. But I was extremely
depressed and full of despair, because I needed a connection to
something bigger.
At the age
of 32, I had another fleeting glimpse of wanting to be an
artist. But this time I realized that if I didn't do it, I would
end up dead or lifeless.
I've sometimes played around with self-hypnosis
and NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming). And I got a glimpse of
how powerful our minds are at creating changes.
So I took out a small piece of paper and wrote the
following message which I hung next to my bed:
Every night and every morning I would read it
until I felt certainty even if it took six or seven times. I
wouldn't leave my bed until I knew it was true. I did this for three
months straight. Then, when I was absolutely certain it would
happen, I stopped.
One month
later, I was sound asleep and I suddenly became aware of a voice
which said "grab a ruler and a pencil." I did as the voice
instructed, and soon found myself drawing eleven angular faces. My
Dad doodled faces, in fact my first true exposure to art was
watching how magical his hand was when his cartoon like faces would
flow onto paper. When my faces hit the paper it blew my mind - I had
no idea where they came from. For two and a half months, I didn't
care about food or sleep, I just created my art. I looked like a
possessed madman.
This series
of art carried me for 10 years. I did 80 shows all over the
country and sold a very decent amount. I didn't realize it at the
time, but the art represented being able to look at myself very
directly, with humor and healing. And it was always intended to be
of service to others. (you can view this first series here: The First Ten Years).
Being a Dad for the first time inspired me to
create a new series, A Loving Home. I see beauty, purity,
freshness, zaniness, innocence and love reeking from my
daughter.
September 11 was a
significant contributor to this phase of my work. I am not
together with my daughter's mother, but she lives right across the
street. The first time I spent the night alone with my baby girl was
September 10, 2001. She slept on my chest all night long and I was
both scared and overwhelmed by a feeling of intense
beauty.
The morning of
September 11, her mom pounded on my door. I thought she might
have been desperate to see her daughter since it was the first night
away from her since she was born. Instead, she told me what was
going on at the World Trade Center. At that moment, I felt the
incredible paradox of the most beautiful and most horrible times in
my life being present at the same time. Since I had been in the Army
before, I immediately thought, do I become part of the
anti-terrorist effort?
But
then I realized the response had to be love. Because in the Army
though I was platoon leader I found the choice to practice taking
others lives very difficult. And it is from this place of knowing
that love would be the best path that I created A Loving Home
series. I decided to work on it for the next ten years. In many ways
creating art has helped me to heal my relationship with my parents.
I realize that they did the best they could. I hold no grudges. In
fact I went from nearly disliking them to a deep sense of love and
gratitude for having them as parents.
Q: Why do you make your plans in 10 year
blocks?
I don't know - that
is just how it comes to me. I like to build ten year boxes. I work
to the edges, then go for a bigger thing once I outgrow it. It may
be my need for order and organization.
Q: What is the purpose of your
work?
When I am in a peak
place of creation and interaction, I get a feeling of something
bigger than me. It is a universal energy running through a
prism. I'm the prism casting the light of love that we all
contribute to. I am just one person reflecting love, as we all have
the power to do. When I do my work, I ask for help from all the
spirits - any energy that values love. I realize that my work has a
tangible benefit to people. It comes from a place of absolute
certainty that is universal.
Q: How much did you know about the mechanics of
running a business when you started?
I had no clue what I was doing for the first year
and a half. Then I remembered what an artist friend once said to
me; that his gallery was failing until he got advice to offer pieces
at $40.00. He was told "Your place is a museum, everyone loves it
but not everyone could afford it." He now sells about $2 million a
year by making the art accessible. This truly works with my values,
because I love sharing ideals. So I started doing prints for $30
each, which was great for paying the bills and keeping people coming
back. I also started making greeting cards, magnets and bookmarkers.
This helped to build my business.
Q: How did you make your business
grow?
I learned that if I
try to live in the mundane world, nothing works. If I live in
the spiritual world, everything works
beautifully.
I had a series
of serendipitous events starting out. I had been bartering
carpentry skills for rent for a small gallery space upstairs in the
building I'm in now. I had about five thousand dollars credit
accumulated. I was walking on the street and saw the storefront in
the building was for rent. I decided I wanted to open a gallery
there. I walked around the corner and ran into my landlord. I said
"I don't know what I'm doing, but I want to rent the storefront."
She said "sure - it's yours."
The first day I opened the gallery, the paper ran
a story about it. A man came in and spent $1500. It wasn't
always like that. I had to continue to run odd jobs to keep going
for the first couple of years. In the last six months, the gallery
has sustained itself.
Q: How
did you make it through the tough times?
A guy by the name of Gary Null from New York
planted an idea to make a list of negative thoughts in one
column. Then in the other column, write down the truth. I have
pages and pages of an amusing journal of pain. By writing in this
journal, I can see what the destructive thoughts are doing to me.
It's amazing how subtle the thoughts are that drain one's energy.
Now I write them down and see how, laugh at them and move on to
creating what I really want.
I also use white light when I am doubtful or
confused. I get in touch with my intents and try to purify my
thoughts and act from that place. I learn as I
go.
Q: Do you have any advice
for people who want to start their own
business?
First, find out
who you are and what you want to do with your life. I didn't
have a clue myself until I was 32. Once you know, don't quit, that's
the biggest thing. A million times I've been down, but I deal with
it and keep going.
I heard a
talk by a Native American man at a museum which illustrates
this. What he said has given me so much strength. He said that
his father told him to always plant corn, no matter what. One year
it was extremely dry and the ground was hard and unforgiving. No one
else planted. But following his father's advice, he planted his
corn. Everyone said he was crazy and was wasting his time. The corn
came out decrepit and scrawny. But it turns out the seeds were so
strong and hearty that they became world-famous and he sold them all
around the globe.
As we talk
I'm kind of overwhelmed with gratitude for the people I've come
across that lent a word of wisdom or a loving thought. There was
a long time in my life that I wouldn't let any love in. I guess I
thought I wasn't valuable enough. Then I asked the universe to show
me if I was valuable enough and that I wanted to see a bit of love.
Bit by bit love, help and change started to happen. When you're
stuck on anything you have to see if this works for
you.
I am glad that Louis is setting an
example for all of us by creating a viable business out of the work
he feels he is meant to do. Whether or not you use his means of
motivation and inspiration is up to you. But I think that his
clarity and passion is a great example for us
all.
Just in case you are
wondering, this is the picture I got for Josh's room: "All of
creation is in your hands and heart." Josh "talks" to this
picture every day with a big smile on his face and I truly believe
that by the time he gets older he will realize that it is
true.
"All of creation is in your hands and
heart"
You can find
Louis' work at http://www.my-art-place.com/.
If you ever go to see the Grand Canyon, stop in Flagstaff and visit
his store!
Are you inspired
by Louis and want to articulate a big vision for
yourself? Come to Escape from
Cubicle Nation and tell us what it is now! Who knows, you
could be the next Get a Life success story.
You can use this easy-to-use, fully customizable
and spam-free form: click here.
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All the best,
-Pam
Pamela
Stewart Ganas Consulting 7744 E. Albany Street Mesa, AZ
85207 480-663-3252 pcs@ganas.com http://www.ganas.com/
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