Artwork for podcast Your Positive Imprint
Sports Medicine To Paintbrush. The Art of Retirement. Dr. Bob Parks
Episode 14030th August 2021 • Your Positive Imprint • Catherine Praiswater
00:00:00 00:22:32

Share Episode

Shownotes

Opportunities abound! Fill your life with action and endeavor! Dr. Bob Parks transitioned from his precision and accuracy of sports medicine to creative art using a paintbrush. This talented and professional artist started with zero experience and is now legendary! How did he do it? For Bob it’s the art of retirement. 



Transcripts

Catherine:

Well, hello, this is Catherine your host of the podcast,

Catherine:

your positive imprint, the variety show, featuring people all over the

Catherine:

world whose positive actions are inspiring positive achievements.

Catherine:

Exceptional people rise to the challenge.

Catherine:

Music by the talented Chris Nole.

Catherine:

Check out his music and learn so much more about his pretty rad, awesome background.

Catherine:

ChrisNole.com.

Catherine:

Follow me on Facebook and Instagram, your positive imprint.

Catherine:

Connect with me on LinkedIn.

Catherine:

Check out my YouTube channel, your positive imprint and my

Catherine:

website, yourpositiveimprint.com.

Catherine:

Where of course you can sign up for email updates to learn more about the podcast

Catherine:

as well as listen to the podcast, or of course listen from any podcast

Catherine:

platform, apple podcasts, Google podcasts, Spotify, any, or just

Catherine:

your favorite podcast platform.

Catherine:

And you can also go shopping.

Catherine:

Your positive imprint.com.

Catherine:

Your positive imprint.

Catherine:

What's your P.I.?

Catherine:

I sat outside in the mountains with the birds and also with

Catherine:

legendary podiatrist, Dr.

Catherine:

Bob Parks.

Catherine:

Bob was born and raised in Tacoma, Washington during a time that

Catherine:

he says was a bit simpler then.

Catherine:

In high school, he ran track and cross country and living a typical family

Catherine:

life in the Pacific Northwest, which he considers an astounding beauty with the

Catherine:

mountains and the greenery and forests.

Catherine:

Life was special every day.

Catherine:

But like most kids, he grew up and moved away.

Catherine:

Last week episode 139, Bob shared his positive imprints as a pioneer

Catherine:

of sports medicine and podiatry, and how he helped these practices evolve.

Catherine:

Decades later, Bob retired and he had this amazing transition

Catherine:

in his life that had little to do with the precision of science.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I went from left brain to right brain, literally put it that way.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Yes.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I did it on purpose.

Dr. Bob Parks:

The exactness of surgery is so unbelievable.

Dr. Bob Parks:

There is very little margin for error and with art, you are so loose with

Dr. Bob Parks:

the brush because the composition will tell you what it wants, if you let it.

Dr. Bob Parks:

The composition and the piece of art will evolve.

Dr. Bob Parks:

But in, in medicine and particularly surgery, you don't have do-overs.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You have to have a plan, A a plan B a plan C, and particularly

Dr. Bob Parks:

with trauma, it doesn't always work out exactly like you'd hope.

Dr. Bob Parks:

But transitioning from medicine where I use my hands in a very exacting

Dr. Bob Parks:

manner into art where it's right brain, and you have to just be a

Dr. Bob Parks:

free thinker it was a struggle.

Dr. Bob Parks:

In fact, when I first took a lesson, my art teacher who's unbelievably good

Dr. Bob Parks:

and he says, oh God, not another surgeon, and I said, why?

Dr. Bob Parks:

And, and I've, I've found over the years why is because we are very

Dr. Bob Parks:

exact and with art being exact, isn't the best way to be oftentimes.

Dr. Bob Parks:

But.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I wanted something completely different.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I always kind of thought when I heard that somebody was an artist, I thought that

Dr. Bob Parks:

was kind of strange and kind of unique.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I thought, well, that would be something interesting.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And someone else asked me, they said, well, why did you pick art?

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I said, you know, I have found through my sports and my, athleticism that

Dr. Bob Parks:

the journey is the most enjoyable part.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It's not the destination or the outcome of your marathon time

Dr. Bob Parks:

but it's the journey of training and becoming more proficient at a, uh, at

Dr. Bob Parks:

a hobby or vocation or profession that is really, to me, the most appealing.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I wanted something that I could do for many years.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Now, looking back historically, I started with photography and that

Dr. Bob Parks:

has helped me tremendously, as far as

Dr. Bob Parks:

composition and the photography kind of worked in conjunction with sculpting.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So I did wood sculpting and I would make totem poles.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Large ones.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I would make, Kachina dolls.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Life-sized kachina dolls, which is rather unusual.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I hadn't seen them before, but I'm using chainsaws and large tools.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I realized over a period of time, I wouldn't be able to do that any longer.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So, um, as the chainsaw, it's heavy, it's heavy work.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You get tired after a while.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Not, not to mention the fact you might injure yourself.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I had a question about some, , necklace I was putting on a

Dr. Bob Parks:

Kachina, carving it and painting it.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I called this one teacher , and his answer wasn't appropriate for what I

Dr. Bob Parks:

needed but, there was something that intrigued me about what he talked about.

Catherine:

And intrigued bob was, he purchased some cheap

Catherine:

paint and paint brushes, and began painting a few pictures.

Catherine:

He even took online lessons from the art Sherpa.

Dr. Bob Parks:

This is a lot of fun, but more importantly,

Dr. Bob Parks:

it was a heck of a challenge.

Dr. Bob Parks:

, Hmm, I think I like this.

Catherine:

Bob contacted the art teacher who intrigued him weeks earlier

Catherine:

and signed up for classes with him.

Catherine:

Classes are once a week and they're not just hands-on with the brush.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It's not uncommon that we'll never pick up a

Dr. Bob Parks:

paintbrush in three hours time.

Dr. Bob Parks:

We'll talk entirely about composition color theory, and I'll bring in

Dr. Bob Parks:

something that I've been working on.

Dr. Bob Parks:

We'll look at it, we'll discuss it.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And the time just flies.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I might add for your listeners, Catherine, before I forget, is that

Dr. Bob Parks:

when you're seeking out a hobby or anything that really drives

Dr. Bob Parks:

you, Think of those times when you might be pursuing that endeavor.

Dr. Bob Parks:

At 12 or one in the morning and your wife says, Bob, are you coming to bed?

Dr. Bob Parks:

That that is something that drives you and you probably should tune

Dr. Bob Parks:

into that and maybe make that one of your life choices as far as hobbies.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I enjoy the process.

Dr. Bob Parks:

The learning curve with painting is extreme, the frustrations possibly,

Dr. Bob Parks:

but only through frustration and failure can you actually achieve

Dr. Bob Parks:

the proper course of success.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And that's true with any walk of life.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I think as you probably know, Teddy Roosevelt, Abraham Lincoln, so many

Dr. Bob Parks:

other famous people have said without failure, you have no success because

Dr. Bob Parks:

you don't know your boundaries.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So I found that the learning curve for art and particularly painting was just

Dr. Bob Parks:

something that really attracted, me.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And it's something that one painting you may work a month

Dr. Bob Parks:

on and it's layer after layer.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It's this is good.

Dr. Bob Parks:

This is bad, but this directs me in a new direction.

Dr. Bob Parks:

That I just find so rewarding.

Catherine:

My mouth has just dropped because you weren't

Catherine:

even painting prior to this,

Dr. Bob Parks:

I never took a painting course.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I never drew, I never took a class in sketching, nothing.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I said, I want to do something where I start out baseline zero and

Dr. Bob Parks:

I study and I study and I continue to study and try new things.

Catherine:

you have an incredible talent.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Like, you know, you look at, uh, you look at a movie star

Dr. Bob Parks:

and you say, oh, that looks easy.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Well, you don't know what went into all of that.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Or a person says, how, how much is this painting?

Dr. Bob Parks:

And a person might say, well, this is $10,000.

Dr. Bob Parks:

How could you ask so much?

Dr. Bob Parks:

It's just paint on a canvas.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It will take 30 to 50 hours oftentimes and oftentimes developing the composition

Dr. Bob Parks:

before you even put paint on canvas takes as long as the actual painting

Dr. Bob Parks:

process to come up with an idea, the color scheme that you're going to

Dr. Bob Parks:

use, that's going to be attractive

Dr. Bob Parks:

and it's going to satisfy you as an artist.

Catherine:

Oh, my gosh, your paintings are incredible.

Catherine:

And oh, your house is just covered with Bob Parks paintings, and

Dr. Bob Parks:

I might add Catherine that I feel bad.

Dr. Bob Parks:

No, no, I do feel bad.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I do feel bad that my wife and I do have a fair amount of original art in our house.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And as I find a piece that I like of my own, I take down this original

Dr. Bob Parks:

art from somebody else and put it in a closet and put my, own up.

Dr. Bob Parks:

But I guess that's good.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I do enjoy looking at my own work.

Catherine:

I don't know that I could pick up a paintbrush and do what you're doing.

Catherine:

What kind of mindset goes on?

Catherine:

What'd you have to have, cause you did go from left to, right?

Dr. Bob Parks:

Yes.

Dr. Bob Parks:

That's that's a real good question.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Because for example, we've been up here in the Brazos for three or four days

Dr. Bob Parks:

and I haven't picked up a paintbrush.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You do have to be in the right mindset and I don't think I'm unique in that.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I have to be relaxed.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Fortunately, I, I find that going out for a run or a bike ride to just

Dr. Bob Parks:

loose some steam, so to speak and get into a relaxed type of, uh, feeling.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And also I like to paint with music.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So I mean the stars have to be aligned.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Although I do paint probably 20 hours a week, it's almost full-time work for me.

Dr. Bob Parks:

The thing I do, I might add, enjoy about my painting is I

Dr. Bob Parks:

don't rely on it for income.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I think a lot of people that do they get stuck in a rut of

Dr. Bob Parks:

painting a certain composition.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And that's good.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I would have loved to have done that as, as a career potentially, but I

Dr. Bob Parks:

continue to shift between abstract and photo realism and, and other unique

Dr. Bob Parks:

types of painting just because I like to continue to pursue challenges.

Dr. Bob Parks:

, but you have to getting back to your question.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You have to be in the proper mindset before you sit down.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And my wife, Allison, she gets a kick because I'll be up in my

Dr. Bob Parks:

studio for three or four hours and I'll come down and she goes, well?

Dr. Bob Parks:

I lost the war this time.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I think it was Winston Churchill, who was a painter.

Dr. Bob Parks:

He said painting is like going to war and you never know who's gonna win.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And sometimes you can just feel it.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Sometimes when you get on a roll and it just flows.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And other times it's like you're fighting against the, the paint and the canvas.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And when that happens, you have to set it all down and you just walk away.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Maybe you go out and exercise, you need to give it a day or two.

Dr. Bob Parks:

But, uh, um, being in the right frame of mind to let the energy flow.

Dr. Bob Parks:

My teacher told me at first, and I didn't really believe it that a

Dr. Bob Parks:

person's personality and how they're feeling while they're painting

Dr. Bob Parks:

actually comes out onto the canvas.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And to me, it just sounded like a bunch of baloney, but it's actually true.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It is actually true.

Dr. Bob Parks:

For example, when I, when I painted a Mick Jagger and in a, uh, Style called

Dr. Bob Parks:

a spontaneous realism where you take color values, different colors, but

Dr. Bob Parks:

the color values light versus dark.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And you paint these very abstract and vivid compositions.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I would play, , Mick Jagger music, only Mick Jagger music.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I just finished a character portrait on Freddie Mercury, and I

Dr. Bob Parks:

am just stuck on Freddie Mercury.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And my wife says, please paint another artist.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I can't take it anymore.

Dr. Bob Parks:

so you have to get in the mood.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You have to appreciate it.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And also what I find is that if you have personal experience,

Dr. Bob Parks:

Let's say, for example, you visit a place and you see something.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I'm painting

Dr. Bob Parks:

cape Royal now from the north room of the grand canyon.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Well, I've been there.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I've, I've photographed it.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I know it very well.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And, and that's the thing.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I find that if you're a photographer or if you're a painter, you appreciate

Dr. Bob Parks:

the environment so much more.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You look differently.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You look at the shadows, you'll look at the petals of a, flower and you'll

Dr. Bob Parks:

look how parts are , are radiolucent.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Other parts are opaque and the color variation.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So I can't remember.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I think it was Ansel Adams that said, 'a camera allows a person to really see

Dr. Bob Parks:

better.' And I think that's very true and I've taken up painting, particularly

Dr. Bob Parks:

for that reason too, that allows me to really appreciate nature, but you have

Dr. Bob Parks:

to have a connection to what you're painting, unless there's a connection

Dr. Bob Parks:

and certainly if you're simply copying a photograph, like my art teacher would

Dr. Bob Parks:

say, just put the photograph on the wall.

Dr. Bob Parks:

What are you doing?

Dr. Bob Parks:

Like you're just copying somebody else's work.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So there has to be a force of energy that, that is transmitted from you onto

Dr. Bob Parks:

the canvas that hopefully the person that looks at it can get a feeling for.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Um, Frank Sinatra.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I painted him and, uh, I use blues.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Why?

Dr. Bob Parks:

Blue eyes?

Dr. Bob Parks:

Ol', blue eyes.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Um, I painted Beethoven, uh, which is in Seattle right now.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It's hanging in Seattle and.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I painted real dark colors with Beethoven.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I felt that he has this presence, this very dark presence and

Dr. Bob Parks:

his music music is dark.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I did the same thing with that.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I listened to Beethoven the whole time I was painting him.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I think it comes across.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Sure.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Now you don't just do portraits.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You have done horses and you do landscapes and, a menagerie.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Yes.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I must admit part of that is just trying to find my niche and, and I've

Dr. Bob Parks:

only been painting for six years.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Why can't a niche, be a variety.

Dr. Bob Parks:

My show is a variety show.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It really can.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It certainly can.

Dr. Bob Parks:

but when I, an artist jumps from near photo realism that I'll do sometimes

Dr. Bob Parks:

to the somewhat more abstract, that is a, quite a breadth of, of styles.

Dr. Bob Parks:

But, but I think at this point, people can look at the brush strokes

Dr. Bob Parks:

and say, ah, yeah, I think that's consistent with your other work.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So what I'm saying is that, if you're looking at a John singer Sargent or,

Dr. Bob Parks:

or, uh, Pollock, I mean, you know, you can kind of tell from a distance,

Dr. Bob Parks:

oh, well that style is consistent with Monet or whoever it may be.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And most people end up evolving into a particular style that's recognizable.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And, and I agree with you at this point in time

Dr. Bob Parks:

I don't care.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I'm doing it because I liked doing it.

Catherine:

And they're awesome, I really love looking at the paintings and can

Catherine:

anybody pick up a paintbrush, even if they have all of this energy flowing

Catherine:

and they're in the right mindset, what kind of talent do you need to have?

Catherine:

To become a surgeon, you certainly have to go to training and practicing and so on.

Catherine:

Can you do that or do you need to have something inside that you're born with?

Dr. Bob Parks:

You, you have to have drive and you have to set your goals high.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And if you keep plugging away, you'll achieve those goals.

Dr. Bob Parks:

, and you have to be patient, you know, I, I rarely will see anybody's completed,

Dr. Bob Parks:

completed a painting that I won't find some joy with and they may be a beginner.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So who are we?

Dr. Bob Parks:

You know, to judge and say, oh, this painter is better than another painter.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So I clearly recommend that if a person just likes the feel of a paint brush

Dr. Bob Parks:

in their hand and wants to throw some paint by all means, give it a try.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I think the cheapest way I do it is go on the internet and

Dr. Bob Parks:

all you have to do is Google.

Dr. Bob Parks:

How do I paint a tree?

Dr. Bob Parks:

How do I paint a bird?

Dr. Bob Parks:

How do I paint a flower?

Dr. Bob Parks:

And there are so many websites that will take you through a video process.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Within an hour you'll have something that you can say.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I did that.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And if you're happy with that, and you say, gee, maybe there's something to that.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I encourage people to give it a try because it certainly was

Dr. Bob Parks:

nothing I ever thought I would be doing as I, as I got older.

Catherine:

Sure.

Catherine:

And now you're retired and you're able to just enjoy that.

Catherine:

People can go to your website.

Catherine:

I think they can purchase as well, but they can go to the website

Catherine:

and look at all of your artwork.

Dr. Bob Parks:

It's six-Robert-Parks.Pixels.com.

Dr. Bob Parks:

, it's a good website, I think.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And the images are professionally photographed.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So they're done fairly well.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So, I think the listeners would , enjoy taking a look at that.

Catherine:

I enjoy looking at all the different variety landscapes and horses

Catherine:

and other animals, photography as well.

Catherine:

And some of your photography is there.

Catherine:

So I like to end with last inspiring words from my guests.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Well, I think in today's world, I was just reading an article

Dr. Bob Parks:

in the paper today about people that are working from home and how there's a

Dr. Bob Parks:

heightened level of depression, uh, with and in conjunction with working at home.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And the fact that we're spending so much time on the internet and

Dr. Bob Parks:

Facebook and these other sites, but we're finding that the joy and the

Dr. Bob Parks:

happiness in our lives is not there.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I don't speak for myself, but I see this happening.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I mean, you can talk about suicide rates, you can talk about any of

Dr. Bob Parks:

these other indices, uh, but they're all pretty consistent that people

Dr. Bob Parks:

are in a mental state of turmoil.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I really think that if people would become participants in life

Dr. Bob Parks:

instead of viewers or spectators, you know, instead of watching a

Dr. Bob Parks:

sport on TV, go out and do something.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So I always advocate that being a participant, whether you're painting

Dr. Bob Parks:

or taking a walk in the morning, all of these things are so important.

Dr. Bob Parks:

and I really think that our society is leading us in some respects down the

Dr. Bob Parks:

wrong pathway when you consider that, for example, some of the happiest people

Dr. Bob Parks:

in the world are in Papua or however you pronounce it, New Guinea, , they have

Dr. Bob Parks:

nothing and yet they are, they're smiling.

Dr. Bob Parks:

They've done these studies and they find that there's no correlation

Dr. Bob Parks:

between materialistic or financial, um, wellbeing and happiness.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And so I would suggest to the listeners that they take advantage of these

Dr. Bob Parks:

great opportunities, whether it be a hobby or a sport activity and fill

Dr. Bob Parks:

their life with action and endeavor instead of being a spectator in life.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I think.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You know, the, the, all of these niceties that we have that make

Dr. Bob Parks:

our lives easier in some regards have, I think backfired on us.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I think there's going to be a reckoning and a riding of

Dr. Bob Parks:

the ship, but I feel bad that so many other people feel bad.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I think we're starting to find out now exactly why this is the case.

Dr. Bob Parks:

So I would, I would, I would certainly like to put that out there.

Catherine:

That's good advice full of wisdom.

Catherine:

Bob, this has been so enlightening and having you share your

Catherine:

positive imprints with everybody.

Catherine:

And I so much appreciate it.

Catherine:

And I like that you have led a life, a very virtuous life, and you have

Catherine:

attained your happiness and the journey is not your destination, and you

Catherine:

are still traveling on your journey.

Catherine:

And I wish you the best of luck with all of your endeavors and

Catherine:

continue enjoying the process.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Thank you, Catherine.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I would just lastly, like to say that.

Dr. Bob Parks:

The fact that you have this podcast positive imprint,

Dr. Bob Parks:

I've listened to some of them.

Dr. Bob Parks:

And I am so inspired.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Cody Unser.

Dr. Bob Parks:

My goodness.

Dr. Bob Parks:

I did not know her story.

Dr. Bob Parks:

You know, we all know the Unser family.

Dr. Bob Parks:

In fact, some of them live up here, but that was so inspiring what she's

Dr. Bob Parks:

done and how she's teaching OB GYN, doctors on the subtleties of an OB GYN

Dr. Bob Parks:

Table, for paraplegics and all of this that, I just think what you're doing with

Dr. Bob Parks:

all the bad news we get in the world it's good to be able to escape and hear some

Dr. Bob Parks:

positive news that people might be doing.

Catherine:

Oh, thank you so much for that, Bob.

Catherine:

And, and of course I like you, would like people to go and find their

Catherine:

positive imprint and put it into action.

Dr. Bob Parks:

Thank you.

Catherine:

And I thank you for your positive imprint.

Catherine:

Bob's website is six spelled out S I X dash, Robert R O B

Catherine:

E R T dash parks, P a R K S.

Catherine:

Dot pixels, P I X E L s.com six-robert-parks.pixels.com.

Catherine:

Your positive imprint.

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube