August 9, 2023

Random Advice

  • Compliment people- be sincere. See something you like - a piece of jewelry, the color of a shirt and say something. People love it.
  • Say thank you- send note cards by snail mail, have a stack of little gifts like painted rocks and bookmarks to give to clients- I hand out  a lot of hematite, rose quartz, and magnets (law of attraction) and gratitude
  • Take time for yourself- be intentional, don't fight just to get some space. Nor do you have to be sick or cranky. Make it organic.
  • Listen to music- turn on the radio, play CDs in the car, sing in the shower, notice that earworms in your head. Find the lyrics, watch the videos, and dance to them.
  • Love your pets. They are amazing. Enough said.
  • Don't listen to advice that does not resonate with you.

August 2, 2023

Thoughts on Beginner’s Mind

Thoughts on Beginner’s Mind

If the angel deigns to come it will be because you have convinced her not by tears. But by your humble resolve to be always beginning to be a beginner- Rainier Marie Rilke


Beginnings, successes, and failures. I chose to be a beginner when I signed up for the children's illustration class at Cabrillo College. I know my artistic talent needs to be developed so I enrolled in watercolor classes as well as online drawing classes. 


The online classes were complete flunk. I read the essays and watched the videos, but never did the homework. What a difference it makes being in an actual classroom with an actual teacher. I remember taking the nude portrait class at the Corcoran in Washington DC, my senior year of high school. We laughed as the model did a headstand and we had to draw his danger dangling straight down his belly. 


I felt so inept then, still do when confronted by some charcoal or pastels. I completely fail in realism, something my art lacks unless a photograph. My art feels childish more than cartoonish, immature rather than anime, and I comfort myself by saying at least it's mine. At least I'm willing to put it out there. 


Still my inner critics says it's no good, has no value, and in my dad's voice, it will never make any money. Maybe my art is primitive. It certainly is inconsistent. What is consistent is my pattern of doing something  a hundred times, then stopping, just like the batik silk scarves I made to earn money for the Global Walk.


Or the Herland crafts that I would make after hours -  stained glass boxes in the shape of pink and black triangles; decoupage cigar boxes lined in burgundy velvet repurposed from the thrift store; simply scanning objects and adding a pithy quote to create mugs, bookmarks posters. Magnets and more, who knew what you could do with a laminator and a pair of good scissors. 


Some sold and did make money but there was always a feeling of falseness. It wasn't real art, especially any collage work, using somebody else's images, cut from magazines and old calendars as opposed to just doing a google search and downloading an image. Although in this day and age of AI scrapings, whether mixing music or images, who’s to say what is art? 


These days I struggle with colored pencils, I’ve used up all the pastels, I muddy up the watercolors too often. I’m going back to painting with acrylic. Wonder if I do better with oils. We'll see after the next hundred little canvases bloom...


I choose to be a beginner. Not quite the perpetual student, but certainly willing to flip from medium to medium. Never mastering any modality fully, but least feel comfortable getting my hands dirty. The page and the coffee table now splattered as I spray liquid confetti from the ends of an old toothbrush across the page.


July 26, 2023

This Moment


While I look out my window, I remember a few moments ago before class started, I sipped my green tea and brought a mug full of color sharpies to my to be my writing bouquet on the table. During today's class, a glimmer caught my eye and threw the pale lace that offers a modicum of privacy to my office. I saw an emerald-throated hummingbird dipping into the bright orange blossoms of the shrub whose name I do not know that was planted by the neighbor. It has taken over this space.

This plant provides a refreshing screen as we no longer have a fence between us. I come from the sprawling suburbs of Bethesda, were huge yards created all the social distancing needed of the day with their expenses of grass, borders of pink and red inpatients. Here in Santa Cruz where everyone is on top of each other. We have redwood, white, picket, rusted iron and hedges that would defy the middle ages in terms of barriers made of briars.

My neighbor was open to creating a virtual fence once the old fence had fallen over for the update time, rotted with termites and mold, but it took a while for the shrubs to grow in, to feel unexposed, to have good boundary. I see blue sky, a clean roof, healthy plants, a house with white and blue trim. I noticed what dangles in my window. The healing Hamsa hand from Charlie, cobalt blue bottles with crow, hawk, bluejay feathers popping out. rose quartz and purple fluorite, a bottle of holy water next to some sacred honey.

The cobalt bottles are from my parents, a fish and ink bottle, the head of George Washington, a cluster of grapes. There’s also a vial of kosher salt and a glass carving of an iris for my trip to Sweden with my mom ten years ago. My writer's talisman which I made in Lisa's class two years ago. Sage green curtains. All the elements, cozy and complete.

July 19, 2023

Clothes Lines


God is in the details. Yesterday, I gave one of my clients a fistful of dried rose petals from the Coretta Scott King rose bush. It's in the backyard. planted between reputation and love/union/marriage, according to Tibetan Black Hat Feng Shui. This uses the front door as the key alignment instead of the traditional north-south compass.


As she continued her story, I laid my hands on her shoulder blades, sending Reiki along her spine, her angel wings. She was using the blue, pink, and purple sharpies on the clipboard paper to outline her letting go.


In therapy we say you know you're “over it” when you can speak about ”it” in a normal tone of voice. Or I think about Marianne Williamson forgiveness does not mean what happened was okay. It means it no longer affects you.


So I forgive myself for not following up on the health insurance today, or watering the backyard, let alone mowing. Since at least the laundry’s in the washer, not quite ready for the dryer, I give myself permission to write down these few lines. Closing lines. Clothes lines.


July 12, 2023

Lost Loves


My best friend

Lilly Billy little bit Silly

Sue who became Stu

Ice skating

Roller skating

That one black and copper velvet scarf

Mom’s platinum wedding band

My wooden file cabinet sold to make room for your furniture

The Canon camera found in San Francisco

Dad’s broken travel alarm clock  in the dark green leather case

Stained glass art supplies 

Cheesecake


July 5, 2023

Apology

I'm sorry for being so tired.

Sorry for being uninspired. 

Sorry to not be motivated, 

I simply feel inundated.


 You have to see, please understand,

This is completely out of my hands,

Not enough time. Not enough rhyme,

Sometimes I just don't feel fine.


And what do I do with all of this writing?

Post it online, cause more fighting?

Will I be accepted? Be heard, my fear,

 Am I dissed for being pagan or too queer?

 There's too many dishes, too much mess,

All of this just adds to my stress.


So no more excuses. I know my place,

 I take a deep breath. I wash my face,

 Set my intentions, what I've been hoping,

 And I crack my journal wide open...


June 28, 2023

Vinyl Love


Vinyl Love

Is it static cling

Or a more moist thing

Decals, transfers, stickers

California lickers