加纳肯特织布学徒的耐心与蜕变
In the dusty weaving compounds of Kumasi, Ghana, young men begin their apprenticeship in kente cloth at age fourteen or fifteen. They expect to create brilliant masterpieces immediately, but the first lesson is always disappointment. Real growth, they soon learn, does not come from ambition alone.
For the first six months, a new apprentice does not touch the loom. He sits on a low stool, untangling silk threads and winding them onto bobbins. This repetitive work teaches patience — a quality more valuable than speed. His master, a weaver of forty years, watches silently. Only when the apprentice stops complaining does real learning begin.
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